The Holocaust: The Five Characteristics Of The Holocaust

725 Words2 Pages

Our Father in Heaven, hallowed be your name…
Heroes come from every walk of life, the very nature of a hero transcends culture, ethnicity, religion, geographical borders, and any other boundary set by the wicked. The heroes of the Holocaust came from every religion and faith found in the frontier of World War II and the creation of heroes and resistance groups were especially contingent on the indecency and anti-Semitism the Nazi culture would generate. The characteristics of a hero were numerous and various, but what qualities seemed to be exhibited most profoundly and created through religious experience? Compassion, selflessness, duty to others, courage, and integrity were five characteristics I found evident in all three of the examples …show more content…

Ghettos start to take shape throughout German captive territories. Mass killings are perfectly and vividly described in the letters and communications within the Third Reich through communication and the war diaries of men like Lt. Col. Helmuth Groscurth about the massacres of polish citizens in October of 1939; “The woman had to climb into this grave and took her youngest child in her arms…” A culture of inhumanity was being created as certain groups were being targeted and annihilated from institutions for the handicapped and mentally disabled by the spring of 1940. Based on the calculations offered by the Germans the average daily cost for an institutionalized person in 1940 was RM 0.56. The Germans presented the information to the Aryan population as a positive money saving endeavor and affirmative reasoning to justify and execute the handicapped or disabled population institutionalized as wards of the state.
1940 carried in a hollow note as badges of the yellow Star of David, physical declarations of Judaism are required attire by all Jews, and through the winter people were relocated; forced out of their homes, and into hiding, the ghettos, or the newly established concentration camps like Auschwitz. In the spring of 1940 Germany began official occupation of Denmark and Southern Norway. In the Early Summer of 1940 Germany invades Holland, Belgium, and France- France surrenders as a beaten and unorganized

Open Document