33
The History of WWII: An introduction to the Holocaust English 8 – Scott Middle School Mrs. Clifford

The History of WWII: An i ntroduction to the Holocaust

  • Upload
    melody

  • View
    42

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

The History of WWII: An i ntroduction to the Holocaust. English 8 – Scott Middle School Mrs. Clifford. Important Words:. Civilians: People that belong to a community that are not registered with the military Treaty: A formal agreement/contract between two countries - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

The History of WWII: An introduction to the HolocaustEnglish 8 – Scott Middle School

Mrs. Clifford

Page 2: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Important Words:

Civilians: People that belong to a community that are not involved in the military

Treaty: A formal agreement/contract between two countries

Allies: A group of nations – including the United States, Great Britain, France and the Soviet Union – who fought Nazi Germany and Fascist Italy in World War II

Nazi: Abbreviation for the National Socialist German Workers’ party that ruled Germany from 1933-1945

Page 3: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

WWI (1914-1918)• WWI took the lives of

millions of people

• WWI was called the “War to End all Wars.”

• The conflict was left unsettled after WWI, which led to WWII only 20 years later

Page 4: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

WWII (1939-1945)• WWII involved most of

the world’s nations

• 25 million soldiers and 50 million civilians were killed

• In the end the United States, Great Britain, and the Soviet Union defeated Japan and Germany.

Page 5: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

The Treaty of Versailles (1918)• A peace agreement that ended

WWI in 1918

• Treaty made Germany responsible for the war

• Germany had to pay billions to the Allied Nations for war damages

• Germany lost territory

• Land was given to Belgium, France, the United Kingdom, and Japan

• Czechoslovakia became a new country

Page 6: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Adolf Hitler• German soldier during

WWI

• Believed Germany was “stabbed in the back” by its own government

• Vowed to bring Germany back to the country it once was

Page 7: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Adolf Hitler• Born in Austria in 1889

• Dropped out of High School when he was 16

• Joined National Socialist German Workers’ Party (later known as the Nazi party)

• Tried to overthrow the German government and failed – Hitler was imprisoned

• While in prison, Hitler wrote a book; Mein Kampf (My Struggle)

Page 8: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Great Depression 1930’s• 1929 – Stock market

crashed on Wall Street

• Germany was greatly affected

• Millions of people were without work

• Hitler spoke publically inspiring the broken nation by giving them the feeling of power

Page 9: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

1933• Hitler was named

German Chancellor

• Hitler declared Nazis to be the only political party

• Hitler became the dictator of Germany

• The first anti-Jewish law was passed in Germany

• The first concentration camp opened--Dachau

Page 10: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Important Words:

Aryan race: People the Nazis considered to be of “pure” racial background; Caucasian (superior race)

Anti-Semitism: Extreme or irrational prejudice of discrimination against Jews

Ghetto: A section of a city where Jews were forced to live

Concentration camp: A prison camp – inmates were political prisoners: Jews, Gypsies, and other “undesirables”

Page 11: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Aryan Race• Hitler publically blamed

the Jews for Germany’s problems

• Hitler declared the Aryan race to be superior

• Aryan race: white people of Northern European heritage

• Other cultures/ethnicities were inferior

Page 12: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Anti-Semitism• Laws were passed that

discriminated against Jews

• Jews lost their jobs, their property was stolen (then sold), and their communities were walled off into ghettos

• Jews were forced to identify themselves by sewing a gold star patch on to their clothing

Page 13: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Ghettos• First action by the Nazi

party was to isolate Jews

• Jews were forced to leave their homes/communities and take with them only what they could carry

• Jews marched or were shipped in freight cars to ghettos

Page 14: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Ghettos Continued…• Ghettos were located

in the oldest, most run-down section of town

• Ghettos were enclosed with fences, barbed wire, or brick wall

• Food was rationed

• Jews tried to find whatever work they could

Page 15: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

November 9, 1938: “Kristallnacht” or “Night of Broken Glass”• Nazis raided Jewish

businesses

• Nearly 100 Jews were beaten to death

• 100’s were injured

• Thousands of businesses and synagogues were destroyed

• Streets were filled with broken glass

Page 16: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Concentration Camps• Hitler created concentration

camps to put into effect “The Final Solution”

• Camps were located in places that were easy to get to by road or train

• Jews were moved from the ghettos to the concentration camps

• Number tattoos were given to mark the camp prisoners upon their arrival

• Tattoo was tragically symbolic, marked like slaves or cattle

Page 17: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Germany Rising• Hitler ignored the rules of

the treaty, and worked to rebuild the military

• Hitler killed or imprisoned anyone in the country that opposed him

• Hitler sent Jews and other target groups to concentration camps where they worked for war effort or were murdered.

Page 18: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Rome-Berlin Axis• Hitler made friends with

Italy’s leader, Mussolini

• Together Germany and Italy formed the Rome-Berlin Axis and would later include Japan

• By the end of 1939 Germany had taken over much of Europe

• The French and British vowed to defend Poland from Germany’s attack

Page 19: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Blitzkrieg (September 1, 1939):• Germany flew in to

Poland and attacked by surprise

• Surprise attack called “Blitzkrieg” (Lightening War)

• Soviet Union signed an alliance with Germany

• Next on Hitler’s agenda: Belgium, Netherlands, and France

Page 20: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Nazi Advance• 1940: Germany took

over Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Netherlands and Luxemburg

• British and French soldiers were trapped by German soldiers with their backs to the English Channel

Page 21: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Battle of Britain• 1940: Germans attacked Great

Britain by air

• Attack became known as Battle of Britain

• Great Britain fought back and bombed Berlin, Germany

• Bombing postponed Hitler’s English invasion

• United States provided 50 battle ships to Britain

• Britain gave United States a military base in Canada and the Caribbean

Page 22: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Operation Barbarossa• June 1941: Germany dishonored

their alliance with the Soviet Union

• Using thousands of tanks, aircraft and artillery, Germany attacked the Soviet Union

• Fighting continued for 4 years

• Stalingrad- an industrial city on the Volga River

• Germany wanted to raid Stalingrad for materials (oil, airplanes, war machines)

• The Soviets surrounded 250,000 German troops until the Germans surrendered

Page 23: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Attack on Pearl Harbor• December 7, 1941

(7:55AM): Japanese launch surprise attack on United States

• 2300 Americans killed

• President Roosevelt declared war the next day against Japan

• Germany and Italy declared war on US to defend Japan

Page 24: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

United States • Thousands of Americans

joined armed forces

• Factories began making war materials: tanks, airplanes, guns and ammunition

• Women went to work to support their families while the men went to war

• Women worked in factories making tanks and battleships

Page 25: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

“The Big Three”: leaders of the Allied forces• Franklin Roosevelt,

Winston Churchill and Joseph Stalin

• Churchill and Roosevelt were the leaders of the world’s two greatest democracies

• Churchill and Roosevelt were both distrustful of Stalin, a Communist.

Page 26: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Invasion of Italy• Great Britain and United

States invade Sicily

• Germany formed a Gustav Line (defensive wall of soldiers) up Italy to keep Allied troops from invading

• June 4, 1944: United States and Great Britain break through German troops and take over Italy

Page 27: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Island Hopping• Island Hopping is a strategy the

United States came up with to overcome Japan

• United States attacked and occupied one island at a time- across the Pacific all the way to Japan

• Midway Island: Japan took aim at Midway Island 1,000 miles north of Hawaii to attack United States

• United States broke a secret Japanese code and attacked the Japanese fleet

• Japan never recovered

Page 28: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

D-Day• Europe’s liberation had

begun

• 2,800,000 Soviet Union, United States and Great Britain Soldiers are in Europe

• Freezing temperatures grounded US planes

• German forced seemed to be gaining ground, and then their tanks ran out of gas

• January 1945: the Germans retreated- more than 100,000 Germans died

Page 29: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

The Final Battle• Soviet Union

surrounded city of Berlin, German troops could not stop them

• Hitler hid in a Bunker below the city as 300,000 German soldiers defended the city

Page 30: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

End of the War in Europe• The German occupied

areas were divided into zones

• The Soviets, British, Americans and French would each control one zone post-war

• Hitler and his wife and other leaders committed suicide before capture

Page 31: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Liberation in Europe• Allied soldiers moved

into Nazi-held areas of Europe and discovered the death camps

• Nazis murdered between 9-11 million innocent people

• Jews and other targeted groups were put to death in gas chambers, shot, hung and starved while working as slaves

Page 32: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

Liberation continued• Allied troops freed

camp prisoners

• Some of the concentration camps are now museums to honor the victims of the Holocaust

Page 33: The History of WWII: An  i ntroduction to the Holocaust

WWII comes to an end• United States bombed

Japan by dropping the first atomic bomb on Hiroshima

• 3 days later the United States dropped the second bomb on Nagasaki

• Japan’s Emperor announced unconditional surrender

• September 1945 ends WWII – the greatest conflict in human history ends