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Holocaust 1933-1945

Holocaust

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Holocaust. 1933-1945. Life Before Hitler. 1933 Hitler was appointed Chancellor. In 1933 there was a fire in the main building of the government (Reichstag) and Hitler used this as an excuse to blame “those working against the government” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Holocaust1933-1945

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Life Before Hitler

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1933 Hitler was appointed Chancellor

• In 1933 there was a fire in the main building of the government (Reichstag) and Hitler used this as an excuse to blame “those working against the government”

• He suspended all civil liberties and took complete control of the government (for the “protection” of Germany)

• To make sure everyone was conforming to Hitler’s new rules, new laws were passed

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Boycott of Jewish Businesses

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Burning of non-Nazi Books

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Arrests of Enemies of the State• Enemies included:

– Jews– Communists– Gypsies – Homosexuals

• This list also came to include those who would “weaken” the German race, ie. the physically and mentally handicapped

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Enforcers of Hitler’s Laws• SS Troops• Gestapo• H.J. (Hitler Youth)

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Everyday Germans also helped to support Hitler’s regime

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1935 Nuremburg Laws• Separated Aryans from

non-Aryans– Restricted lives of non-

German citizens (especially those that did not have 4 German, non-Jewish Grandparents)

– Jews forced to wear yellow stars

– Marriage was not allowed between Jews and non-Jews

– Jewish business were further boycotted and even closed

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Nuremburg Laws cont.

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1938 Kristallnacht

• Massive violence against Jews included:– Destruction of property– Murders– Beatings– Arrests

• Costs millions in damage and Jews were expected to pay for it

• Enacted to encourage Jews to leave Germany

• Many tried to, but very few were able to get out.

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1939 WWII Begins• With each

country that Hitler took over, all “non-desirables” were rounded-up and disposed of.

• Many were sent to Ghettos and later to concentration camps.

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1940 Ghettos• Ghettos built all over Germany & Eastern

Europe as temporary holding locations for Jews until extermination.

• Ghettos were usually in areas of towns w/ high concentration Jewish population.

• Those that did not already live in a Jewish community were “relocated” to the ghettos.

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Relocation

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Greek Ghetto

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Polish Ghetto (Lodz)

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Warsaw Ghetto (largest ghetto)

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Lithuania Ghetto (Kovno)

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1941• Einsatzgruppen (mobile killing

units)– Followed behind advancing

German armies liquidating “undesirables” from conquered towns (mostly Jews)

– Many of those doing the killing were not officially German military, they were “average” people being swept up by the fervor of the Nazis and turning on their neighbors.

• U.S. joins the war in the end of 1941

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1942 Wannsee Conference• German officials

decided on the “Final Solution”

• Gassing at certain concentration camps began as an efficient method of extermination

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Concentration Camps

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Gas Chambers

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Auschwitz-Birkenau 1941-44

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1943 Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

• Jews in one of the largest Ghettos fought back against the Germans. Most died.

• The Germans were infuriated because the Jews were successful at holding them back for 1 month!

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1944 - 1945• D-Day• Soviets begin moving into Germany• Many camps are discovered and liberated• Nazis retreated from the Soviets and Allies. • They began to destroy evidence:

– Mass murder of prisoners– Death Marches = evacuation of other camps to

interior camps• End of 1945 – Germany surrenders = V-E Day!

– Full evil of the Nazis discovered

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Liberation of Camps

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Patton forced German citizens from nearby towns to walk through the camps to see what they’d allowed to happen in their country.

See next slide

General Patton

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Innocent Victims

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