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Holocaust Overview: Causes and Consequences

The document provides background on Jews in Europe before the Holocaust and the rise of anti-Semitism. It then details the Nazis' incremental persecution of Jews through restrictive laws, ghettos, and eventually the 'Final Solution' involving death camps and genocide. After World War 2, survivors faced displacement but some found refuge in places like Israel and the US.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
26 views18 pages

Holocaust Overview: Causes and Consequences

The document provides background on Jews in Europe before the Holocaust and the rise of anti-Semitism. It then details the Nazis' incremental persecution of Jews through restrictive laws, ghettos, and eventually the 'Final Solution' involving death camps and genocide. After World War 2, survivors faced displacement but some found refuge in places like Israel and the US.

Uploaded by

jayamathisds
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Holocaust Introduction

Pre-War
◼ Jews were living in every country in Europe
before the Nazis came into power in 1933
◼ Approximately 9 million Jews found in all walks
of life: farmers, factory workers, business people,
doctors,
teachers, and craftsmen
◼ The Soviet Union and Poland had
the largest populations
Anti-Semitism
◼Jews have faced prejudice
and discrimination for over 2,000 years.
◼Jews were scapegoats for many problems, such as
the “Black Death,” which killed thousands in
Europe during the Middle Ages.
◼Political leaders used anti-Semitism to portray
Jews as a race rather than a religion.
Weimar Republic
◼After Germany lost World War I, a new
government formed and became the Weimar
Republic.
◼Many Germans were upset that they lost the war
and had to repay (make reparations) a total of $70
billion to all of the countries they had “damaged”
in the war.
◼Extremists blamed Jews for Germany’s defeat in
WWI.
Totalitarian State
◼Totalitarianism is the total control of a country
in the government’s hands
◼It rules using fear and paranoia, and crushes
individual’s rights.
◼During this time in Germany, Adolf Hitler and
the Nazis passed
laws which restricted the
rights of Jews: the
Nuremberg Laws.
Totalitarian State
◼ Jews were prohibited from marrying or
having relationships with persons of
“German or related blood.”
◼ Jews were required to carry identity
cards, stamped with a red “J, “which
allowed police to easily identify them.
◼ The Nazis used propaganda to justify the
Nuremberg Laws and promote their anti-
Semitic ideas.
Persecution
The Nazi plan for dealing with the “Jewish
Question” evolved in three steps:
1. Expulsion: Get them out of Germany
2. Containment: Put them all together in one place –
ghettos
3. “Final Solution”: annihilation
Persecution
Nazis targeted other
individuals and groups in ◼ Gypsies (Sinti and
addition to the Jews: Roma)
◼ Homosexual men
◼ Jehovah’s Witness
◼ Handicapped Germans
◼ Poles (Polish people)
◼ Political protesters
U.S. and World Response
◼The Evian Conference took place in the summer
of 1938 in France.
◼32 countries met to discuss what to do about the
Jewish refugees who were trying to leave
Germany and Austria.
◼Despite voicing feelings of
sympathy, most countries
made excuses for not
accepting more refugees.
World War II
◼Germany began World War II when it invaded
Poland in 1939.
◼German forces conquered most of Europe in the
next two years.
◼The Axis powers included Germany, Italy, and
Japan.
◼The Allied powers included the United Kingdom,
France, the Soviet Union, China, and the United
States.
Final Solution
◼ The Nazis aimed to control the Jewish population
by forcing them to live in areas that were only for
Jews, called ghettos.
◼ Ghettos were established across all of Nazi
occupied Europe, especially in areas
where there was already
a large Jewish
population.
Final Solution
◼Ghettos were closed by
barbed wire or walls and
guarded by SS or local
police.
◼Life in the ghettos was hard:
▪ food was rationed;
▪ several families often shared a small space;
▪ disease spread rapidly;
▪ heating and sanitation were limited.
Final Solution
◼In January of 1942, high-ranking Nazis met at
the Wannsee Conference
◼The Final Solution was the plan to establish
death camps with gas chambers.
◼There were six death camps: Auschwitz-
Birkenau, Treblinka, Chelmno, Sobibor,
Majdanek, and Belzec.
Final Solution
There were many other concentration and labor camps where
people died from exposure, lack of food, extreme working
conditions, torture, and executions.
Aftermath
◼Soviet soldiers were the first
to liberate camp prisoners on
July 23, 1944.
◼British, Canadian, American,
and French troops also freed
camps.
◼Prisoners looked like “living
skeletons” and many died
even after liberation.
Aftermath
◼Many of the camp prisoners had nowhere to go.
◼They stayed in Displaced Persons camps in
Germany, which were run by the Allies.
◼Many Jews relocated to the newly formed Jewish
state of Israel.
◼U.S. President Truman allowed Jewish refugees to
enter the US without normal immigration
restrictions.
Aftermath
◼ There were 22 Nazi
criminals tried by the
Allies, 12 were sentenced
to death.
◼ Most claimed that they
◼ The Nuremberg Trials were only following
brought some of those orders.
responsible to justice. ◼ National trials followed
throughout Europe.
Aftermath
Never shall I forget…
Night by Elie Wiesel

Former prisoners of the "little camp" in Buchenwald stare out from the wooden bunks in
which they slept three to a "bed." Elie Wiesel is circled.

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