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INTRODUCTION TO ANTI- SEMITISM AND THE BEGINNINGS OF EXTERMINATION.

Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

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Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination. Main debates in historiographical Holocaust. What are the arguments on why Hitler proceeded to commit genocide ? Intentionalism - Hitler intended to murder all Jews from an early date. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

INTRODUCTION TO ANTI -SEMITISM AND THE BEGINNINGS

OF EXTERMINATION.

Page 2: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

MAIN DEBATES IN HISTORIOGRAPHICAL

HOLOCAUST

What are the arguments on why Hitler proceeded to commit genocide?

Intentionalism- Hitler intended to murder all Jews from an early date.

Functionalism/Structuralism- The murder of European Jewry was a function of the Nazi State’s structure

Page 3: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

PHASE S O F NAZI ANTI -SEM IT IC PO LICY

Phase 1- Legal persecution and exclusion from German society (1933-1938).

Phase 2- Forced emigration and expansion of the Judenfrage (1938-1941).

Phase 3- Extermination of European Jewry (1942-1945).

Page 4: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination
Page 5: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

PHASE I

Legal ways in which the Nazi regime persecuted Jewry.

Minor:

April boycott (1933).

Re-establishment of the Professional Civil Service, 1933.

Page 6: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

PHASE I CONTINUED

The major law in which instituted Jewish discrimination

The Nuremberg Laws (1935).

Two degrees of considering who was a Jew, called Mischling.

Does this sound familiar towards anything done in any other countries?

Page 7: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination
Page 8: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

PHASE II

Forced emigration and expansion of the Judenfrage.

Flight tax implemented called, reichsfluchtstuer..

Laws on names were made to identify Jews (1938).

Jewish passports with stamps.

Page 9: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

PHASE II CONTINUED

What event ushered in the 2nd phase of Nazi persecution of Jews?

The Kristallnacht that took place 11/91938.

Outbreak of war impacts Nazi Jewish policy.

Quota systems placed on the Jews, making it hard to escape and flee from war and persecution.

Page 10: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination
Page 11: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

PHASE III

Extermination of European Jewry .

Jews are forced to move into Ghettos.

Conditions in Ghettos are horrible.

What happened in these Ghettos?

Ghettos administered through Schenllbrief.

Page 12: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

PHASE III CONTINUED

Extermination & eugenics program performed on all unwanted people or attributes.

Operations and decrees make mass killings legal in Germany.

Code name T4 implemented.

Operation Barbarossa implemented.

Page 13: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

OPERATION BARBAROSSA

The new policy which Operation Barbarossa instated made it easy for Nazi Germany to round up all Jews and start committing mass murder.

Why would the Nazis make the decision to murder all the Jews?

Those who would round up the Jews were called the Einsatzgruppen.

Page 14: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination
Page 15: Introduction to Anti-Semitism and the beginnings of extermination

CONCLUSION

The Jewish community went through stages of persecution starting with legal rights to persecute, emigration, and then extermination.

Hitler believed he could get away with it, used the cover of war to cloud intentions.

More than 5 million individuals are killed because of decrees and policy.