Horowitz, Jason (8. november 2019). «Holocaust Survivor Is Swept Up in Italy’s Storm of Vitriol». The New York Times (på engelsk). ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 9. november 2019. «Ms. Segre, who at 13 was deported to Auschwitz, where Nazis killed much of her family, received a police escort this week after the Milan police determined that anti-Semitic messages and language — much of it online and some of it expressing outrage at her creation of a parliamentary commission to investigate hate and racism — constituted a threat.»
Giuffrida, Angela (7. november 2019). «Italian Holocaust survivor given police escort after far-right threats». The Guardian (på engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 9. november 2019. «The attacks have increased since her proposal to establish a parliamentary commission to combat racism, antisemitism and incitement to hatred was passed by the government last week. Animosity towards Segre, 89, was amplified after the far-right parties, the League and Brothers of Italy, as well as Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia, refused to back the proposal, sparking fury from the Vatican and Rome’s Jewish community.»
worldcat.org
Horowitz, Jason (8. november 2019). «Holocaust Survivor Is Swept Up in Italy’s Storm of Vitriol». The New York Times (på engelsk). ISSN0362-4331. Besøkt 9. november 2019. «Ms. Segre, who at 13 was deported to Auschwitz, where Nazis killed much of her family, received a police escort this week after the Milan police determined that anti-Semitic messages and language — much of it online and some of it expressing outrage at her creation of a parliamentary commission to investigate hate and racism — constituted a threat.»
Giuffrida, Angela (7. november 2019). «Italian Holocaust survivor given police escort after far-right threats». The Guardian (på engelsk). ISSN0261-3077. Besøkt 9. november 2019. «The attacks have increased since her proposal to establish a parliamentary commission to combat racism, antisemitism and incitement to hatred was passed by the government last week. Animosity towards Segre, 89, was amplified after the far-right parties, the League and Brothers of Italy, as well as Silvio Berlusconi’s Forza Italia, refused to back the proposal, sparking fury from the Vatican and Rome’s Jewish community.»