Archives de l'OSE (Oeuvre de Secours aux Enfants)

http://lod.ehri-project-test.eu/institutions/fr-002371 an entity of type: Institution

Some 3,700 files of children from the Shoah who passed through the association's children's homes, as well as around 3,500 files of children who emigrated from the Maghreb countries and Egypt, are kept in the association's premises. Each file traces the history of the child and his or her family.
Archives de l'OSE (Oeuvre de Secours aux Enfants) 
The Society for the Health of the Jewish Population (today Oeuvre de Secours aux Enfants-OSE) was created in 1912 in Saint Petersburg (Russia). Its initial mission: to protect, feed and support Jewish children who were victims of poverty and persecution. During the dark years of World War II in France, OSE turned into a Resistance organization. Its leaders, trainers and educators became rescuers, caretakers and heroes, hiding children under their responsibility behind false identities. Once the War had ended, OSE faced the daunting task of accompanying to adulthood the children who had been orphaned and to take in others who had just been freed from concentration camps. Years later, with the end of the War in North Africa, came waves of migrants, children and families, who needed help integrating into France. In 1951, OSE was recognized as a “Non-Profit Organization for the Public Good”. Today, it is open to people of all backgrounds and has diversified its missions to accommodate different needs and sectors of society. Based on its strong and unique experience in rescuing generations of uprooted children, OSE has developed more than ever before its commitment to children and to health issues. The Organization also invests its efforts in the areas of handicap and dependency, as well as support to Holocaust survivors. Read more on OSE's history [here](http://www.ose-france.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Bochure-100-ans-OSE-anglais.pdf). 
ClaimsCon'06/Maison d'Izieu 
The service also provides support and guidance to historians, teachers, film-makers, documentalists and genealogists working on specific aspects of the association's history. 

data from the linked data cloud