The holocaust was a time in history when Hitler persuaded everybody to agree to his opinion that the Jews were useless people and that they deserved to die, thus leading the Nazi’s to kidnapping the Jews and sending them to concentration camps. The Nazi’s helped Hitler make the “perfect race” by killing everyone who had brown hair and brown eyes. The holocaust initially began in January 1933, but officially ended when Hitler killed both himself and his wife in May 1945. The word holocaust comes from the Greek words “holos” (whole) and “kaustos” (burned). During the Holocaust the Nazi’s murdered about six million Jews. Over 1.1 million of them were children. They hunted down any Jewish person to take to the various places where the concentration camps were located.
The concentration camps are where the Jews were taken to. The camps were practically torture camps. The Jews would be transported to these camps in a small train-like vehicle where they would be so close together half of them died of suffocation when they arrived to their destination. The people, who were still alive by the time they got there, were separated into two groups, left and right. They would choose either the left group or right group and either shoot them or take them to the gas chamber where they would suffocate. For the other group, they were separated by boy and girl. The boys would go to one side of the camp while the girls went to the other. For many children, when they got to the concentration camps they were automatically targeted by the Nazi’s, that was because the Nazi’s thought that if the children were to survive this then they would parent another generation of Jews. If the people did not follow instructions or disobeyed them, the Germans would...
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...before the whole event even started. The many people who survived the holocaust was mainly because they were liberated by the Russian army or they got by, by doing the hard life of labor and stayed there until it was all over. The survivors were to scared to go back to their former homes because of the hatred of Jews. The very few who returned home did fear for their lives. Some Jewish agencies worked to facilitate the Jewish displaced persons. The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee supplied the survivors with food and clothing items. The largest survivor organization, Sh’erit ha-Pletah (Hebrew for “surviving remnant”), urged for better emigration opportunities. With all of that help, though, it was still a struggle for them to get their lives back on track. Many people had no nationality, they traveled with a false pass port, they had no name, no home
The Holocaust could be best described as the widespread genocide of over eleven million Jews and other undesirables throughout Europe from 1933 to 1945. It all began when Adolf Hitler, Germany's newest leader, enforced the Nuremburg Race Laws. These laws discriminated against Jews and other undesirables and segregated them from the rest of the population. As things grew worse, Jews were forced to wear the Star of David on their clothing. The laws even stripped them of their citizenship.
Eventually, the “camp had eight sections: detention camp, two camps for women, a special camp, neutrals camp, ‘star camp’, Hungarian Camp, and a tent camp.” (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, p.165) It also held prisoners who were too ill/weak to work at the “convalescent camp” (Bauer, Yehuda, p.359) Each section had its own function and its type of prisoners. The “Detention camp housed Jewish prisoners brought in to construct the camp.”
Jewish citizens and families are being sent to these camps, held there forced to do work. They are put in chambers where multiple people, large groups and families are gassed with Zyklon B, and are left for dead. Nazis are sent to kidnap Jewish people right out of their houses to send them to these camps. Others were also just shot and killed on the spot. The jewish people tried to resist, but it is difficult with lack of weapons and resources. Hitler was trying to gain power and land from this genocide. He thought that if he took over the world he could be the most powerful person. He also wanted revenge, he was angry about the outcome of WWI and this sparked his interest to get back at his
The Holocaust was the time period when Adolf Hitler was in control of the territory of Germany and wanted the extinction of the Jews. The Holocaust was a very vigorous on the Jews because they were treated the worst and had the worst living conditions. The Holocaust derived the Jews of their wealth, and little bit of humanity that they held dear to themselves. Adolf Hitler established laws to make it basically illegal to be a Jew in Germany. Since Adolf Hitler was in power he commanded that all Jews properties and valuables be taken. For example, in the book “Maus” it states, “He had to sell his business to a German and run out from the country without even the money.”(
In the concentration camps, the prisoners had to go through a massacre, which is a mass killing of people. The prisoners of Auschwitz were starved to death and
Dehumanization was a big part of these camps. The Nazis would kick innocent Jewish families and send them to concentration or death camps. The main way they dehumanized these Jewish people is when they take all their possessions. In Night they go around taking all there gold and silver, make them leave their small bags of clothing on the train, and finally give them crappy clothing. All this reduces their emotions; they go from owing all these possessions to not having a cent to their name. If I was in that situation I would just be in shock with such a huge change in such a short amount of time. The next way they dehumanized the Jewish people were they stopped using names and gave them all numbers. For example in Night Eliezer’s number was A-7713. Not only were all their possessions taken, but also their names. Your name can be something that separates you from another person. Now they are being kept by their number, almost as if that’s all they are, a number. If I was in their place I would question my importance, why am I here, am I just a number waiting to be replaced? The third way they were dehumanized was that on their “death march” they were forced to run nonstop all day with no food or water. If you stopped or slowed down, you were killed with no regards for your life. The prisoners were treated like cattle. They were being yelled at to run, run faster and such. They were not treated as equal humans. If the officers were tired, they got replaced. Dehumanization affected all the victims of the Holocaust in some sort of way from them losing all their possessions, their name, or being treated unfairly/ like animals.
Each camp was responsible for a different part, but all were after the same thing: elimination of the Jewish race. In these camps they had cruel punishments, harsh housing, and they had Nazi guards watching them and killing them on a daily basis. While being forced to live in Auschwitz, they endured many cruel and harsh punishments. The main form of punishment is the gas chambers. These chambers were cells that were made underground and were able to be sealed.
A holocaust is defined as a disaster that results with the tremendous loss of human life. History, however, generally identifies the Holocaust to be the series of events that occurred in the years before and during World War II. The Holocaust started in 1933 with the persecuting and terrorizing of Jews by the Nazi Party, and ended in 1945 with the murder of millions of helpless Jews by the Nazi war-machine. "The Holocaust has become a symbol of brutality and of one people's inhumanity to another." (Resnick p. 11)
A genocide can occur in other ways where a person or a body of people act wrongful resulting in mass killing. An event that I chose to write through an image is called Holodomor. Holodomor started in 1932 and lasted until 1933 and about six million to seven million people died. During the year, the person who was in control of the country was Stalin because Ukraine was still under Soviet Union’s control. The people that died there was caused from starvation and left to rot since they were no longer needed as shown above. For me I remember the feelings this brought on when I reclaim seeing this again. The reasons that I chose this picture to portray this important moment were power, pity, and grief.
The Holocaust was the great plan to make Jews to become instinct and other people that Hitler considered inferior to him. Adolf Hitler and the Nazis in Germany led this great plan from 1933 to 1945. Approximately twelve million people had their lives taken, half being Jews. Everything changed and became impacted all around the world when Hitler took over Germany, he had a strong prejudice against the Jews. His goal was to create the perfect race of human, blonde hair, blue eyed Germans. The soldiers in Hitler’s camp was his followers, the Nazis, which did all of his dirty work for him. There were also many other people that contributed to his massive event. There became different clans and groups of people going out on their own and doing the killing also, not only Jews. For example, the doctors that ran test on people and experimented on the people didn’t care about their patients wellbeing or health
They were kicked out of their homes, shoved into cattle cars, killed, and made to work in a concentration camps and many other terrible things. The worst of all, they were experimented on. The following pages are going to tell you how the concentration camps were built, who ran the experiment camps. Also about the experiments and what the effects were.
Soon after Germany separated from Austria in March 1938, the Nazi soldiers arrested and imprisoned Jews in concentration camps all over Germany. Only eight months after annexation, the violent anti-jew Kristallnacht , also known as Night of the Broken Glass, pogroms took place. The Nazi soldiers arrested masses of male adult Jews and held them captive in camps for short periods of time. A death camp is a concentration camp designed with the intention of mass murder, using strategies such as gas chambers. Six death concentration camps exis...
The Holocaust began in 1933 during World War II in Germany when the Nazi regime under Adolf Hitler 's rule attempted to wipe out the "inferior" people of the country. This primarily included Jews, but also included Gypsies, the disabled, some Slavic people, Jehovah 's Witnesses, and homosexuals. By the end of the Holocaust in 1945, more than 6 million Jews had been killed. [17] Of these 6 million that had been killed, one and a half million were children between ages zero and eighteen. By killing off this many children that were Jews, the Nazi regime hoped to exterminate the core and root of the Jews. [18]
Before they were actually sent to the concentration camps they were first taken to a ghetto. The mass killing centers was where many of the Jews were sent to through 1942 - 1945.
The Holocaust was the execution of the Jews and other people whom Hitler considered mediocre. About 12 million people were killed and about half of them were Jews. When Hitler became powerful and took control over Germany, everything changed. He was against Jews and wanted to wipe them out at once and his prejudice against Jews was very strong. Hitler enforced his soldier, The Nazis, to killing not only Jews but many other as well. The most crucial thing that they did was the medical experiments; doctors don’t care if they treated them right or not and most of the surgeries were performed without any anesthetic. Many of them are killed painfully because of the medical treatment were not right. There were three camps that they used ...