Holocaust Notes Pre-War Jews were living in every country in Europe before the Nazis came into power in 1933 Approximately 9 million Jews Poland and.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Holocaust Reading: Incorporates into lecture and Farewell to Manzanar.
Advertisements

THE HOLOCAUST OBJECTIVES: DEFINE THE TERMS HOLOCAUST AND GENOCIDE. DESCRIBE ANTI- JEWISH POLICIES PASSED BY THE NAZIS IN THE 1930’S. IDENTIFY AND DESCRIBE.
Between 1933 and 1945, the German government led by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party carried out the systematic persecution and murder of Europe’s Jews.
THE HOLOCAUST.
A Timeline of the Holocaust The Nazi regime passed civil laws that barred Jews from holding public office or positions in civil service. They were.
The Holocaust. What can you learn? History doesn’t just “happen.” It occurs because individuals, organizations, and governments made choices.
Warm Up Students will take notes on the Holocaust from this PPT, lecture, and vocabulary. You WILL be able to use that paper on the exam.
The Holocaust LESSON 4.7. KNIGHT’S CHARGE Who were the Allied Powers during WWII? What do you know about the Holocaust? When did the U.S. become involved.
The Holocaust. The Beginning Stages Vocabulary Anti-Semitism - Prejudices toward Jews or discrimination against them. Genocide - Deliberate, systematic.
The Holocaust.
 Victims There were million victims of the Holocaust, including Jews, Gypsies, political prisoners, Jehovah Witnesses, and homosexuals. “Not every.
Ch 19, Sec 3: The Holocaust. Holocaust Persecution of Jews by Nazi Germany under Hitler that killed 6 million Jews 5 million others will killed including.
Holocaust Timeline. Hitler Appointed Chancellor January 1933 As head of government, Hitler can now begin to carry out the anti- Semitic policies of the.
The Holocaust An event of Human Suffering and ignorance.
HOLOCAUST The Final Solution HOLOCAUST RESULTED IN THE DEATH OF 6 MILLION JEWS 4-6 MILLION OTHERS (“INFERIORS” - SLAVS, GYPSIES, POLES, THE.
Holocaust: The systemic slaughter of Europe’s Jews by the Nazis during World War II. Holocaust: The systemic slaughter of Europe’s Jews by the Nazis during.
What It Means  Holocaust In Greek it means complete destruction by fire. However, it usually applies to the period during the late 1930s and early.
The Holocaust Def. - Nazi Germany’s systematic murder of European Jews –6 million Jews –2/3’s of Europe’s Jewish population –6 million others’ Gypsies,
Chapter 24, Section 3 “The Holocaust”.
STARTER---DEFINE (IN YOUR OWN WORDS): HOLOCAUST A PROGRAM OF MASS MURDER GENOCIDE THE ANNIHILATON OF ENTIRE RACE OF PEOPLE.
19-3 The Holocaust Learning Targets: 1. Describe Nazi prejudices against Jews and early persecution of German Jews 2. Explain the methods Hitler used to.
Genocide - a systematic killing of a specific group
The Holocaust. There were 9 million Jews located in the countries occupied by Germany during WWII By war’s end – 2/3 were dead as a result of the Holocaust.
Tuesday May 20, 2014 Agenda: Notes on the Holocaust
literally: “all-consuming fire”
Children from an orphanage in Marysin, Poland wait in line to board a truck which will take them to the Chelmno concentration camp where they will be killed.
THE HOLOCAUST PART II THE FINAL SOLUTION WHEN? WHERE? APPLIED TO ALL NAZI-OCCUPIED EUROPE AREAS? DEPENDED ON SIZE OF NAZI CONQUESTS.
THE “FINAL SOLUTION”. Men and women were separated. Pregnant women, elderly, and children usually didn’t make it. Nazi’s decided if the people were healthy.
THE HOLOCAUST
Ch 19, Sec 3: The Holocaust. Holocaust Persecution of Jews by Nazi Germany under Hitler that killed 6 million Jews 5 million others will killed including.
The Holocaust. Facts During the Holocaust 11 million men, women, and children were murdered. Approximately six million of those were Jews. Two thirds.
Phase 3 = The Camps Nazi leaders decided to drastically speed up the Final Solution there were two different types of camps: CONCENTRATION CAMPS EXTERMINATION.
The Holocaust. Part I: The Beginning Stages Vocabulary Anti-Semitism - Prejudices toward Jews or discrimination against them. Genocide -Planned, systematic.
THE HOLOCAUST Anti -Semitism This is the term given to political, social and economic agitation against Jews. In simple terms it means ‘Hatred of Jews’.
THE HOLOCAUST 1940 German Jews are deported to Poland Ghettos of Lodz, Krakow and Warsaw are sealed off. Total of 600,000 Jews These ghettos will be.
Genocide: The systematic & purposeful destruction of a racial, political, religious, or cultural group Anti-Semitism: Prejudice against or hostility toward.
Holocaust Notes 10 Historical Core Concepts. 1. Pre-War 2. Antisemitism 3. Weimar Republic 4. Totalitarian State 5. Persecution 6. U.S. and World Response.
THE HOLOCAUST. HOLOCAUST Greek: Sacrifice by fire Systematic, State- Sponsored persecution and murder Jews, Slavic peoples, Gypsies, Handicapped, Mentally.
WAR AND THE FINAL SOLUTION Pages WAR AND THE FINAL SOLUTION 1 September 1939 – Germany invade Poland End 1941 – Germany control most of Europe.
The Holocaust 1. Why did the Holocaust occur? A. Genocide: The systematic and purposeful destruction of a racial, political, religious, or cultural group.
Holocaust Nazi Ideals about Race –Race is the most important characteristic. It outweighs experience, education and nationality. –Some races are more.
Chapter 11 Section 3 THE HOLOCAUST AND THE NEW ORDER.
THE NEW ORDER AND THE HOLOCAUST. THE NEW ORDER IN EUROPE NAZI GERMANY 1942 WAS MADE UP OF A LARGE AREA. WEST POLAND WAS ANNEXED OTHER AREAS WERE RUN BY.
Holocaust Vocabulary 1.Prejudice against or hatred of Jews, often rooted in their culture, background and/or religion. A person who practices anti- semitism.
The Holocaust. Prior to World War II, Europe’s Jews had been persecuted for centuries. Anti-Semitism is the word used to describe discrimination or hostility.
The Holocaust Discrimination Toward the Jews 1933  NAZIS boycott Jewish businesses  first concentration camps are built 1934  Jews are not allowed.
The Holocaust and Night
( ) The Holocaust.
The New Order and The Holocaust
A Timeline of the Holocaust
What I know about the Holocaust...
The Holocaust and Night
New Order Holocaust.
Ch 19, Sec 3: The Holocaust.
Holocaust Background.
THE HOLOCAUST.
The Holocaust.
The Holocaust.
Nazi Germany and the Holocaust
11 million people were exterminated
Background to the Holocaust
THE HOLOCAUST LEARNING GOAL:
The Holocaust.
Presentation transcript:

Holocaust Notes

Pre-War Jews were living in every country in Europe before the Nazis came into power in 1933 Approximately 9 million Jews Poland and the Soviet Union had the largest populations Jews could be found in all walks of life: farmers, factory workers, business people, doctors, teachers, and craftsmen

Antisemitism Political leaders who used antisemitism as a tool relied on the ideas of racial science to portray Jews as a race instead of a religion. Nazi teachers began to apply the “principles” of racial science by measuring skull size and nose length and recording students’ eye color and hair to determine whether students belonged the “Aryan race.” German soldiers on the way to Poland. The inscription on the railway car reads: "We are going to Poland to strike at the Jews". On the left, an antisemitic drawing of a Jew.

Weimar Republic After Germany lost World War I, a new government formed and became the Weimar Republic. Many Germans were upset not only that they had lost the war but also that they had to repay (make reparations) to all of the countries that they had “damaged” in the war.

Weimar Republic The German mark became worth less than the paper it was printed on—hyperinflation occurred. Nearly 6 million Germans were unemployed. A ten million mark Reichsbanknote [paper currency] that was issued by the German national bank during the height of the inflation in 1923.

Totalitarian State Totalitarianism is the total control of a country in the government’s hands It subjugates individual rights. It demonstrates a policy of aggression.

Totalitarian State In a totalitarian state, paranoia and fear dominate. The government maintains total control over the culture. The government is capable of indiscriminate killing. During this time in Germany, the Nazis passed laws which restricted the rights of Jews: including the Nuremberg Laws.

Totalitarian State The Nazis used propaganda to promote their antisemitic ideas. One such book was the children’s book, The Poisonous Mushroom.

Persecution The Nazi plan for dealing with the “Jewish Question” evolved in four steps: 1. Isolation: Make everyone hate them 2. Expulsion: Get them out of Germany 3. Containment: Put them all together in one place – namely ghettos 4. “Final Solution”: annihilation

U.S. and World Response The SS St. Louis, carrying refugees with Cuban visas, were denied admittance both in Cuba and in Florida. After being turned back to Europe, most of the passengers perished in the Holocaust.

Final Solution On January 20, 1942, 15 high-ranking Nazi officials met at the Wannsee Conference to learn about how the Jewish Question would be solved. The Final Solution was outlined by Reinhard Heydrich who detailed the plan to establish death camps with gas chambers. Reinhard Heydrich ( ) was second in importance to Heinrich Himmler in the Nazi SS organization. Nicknamed "The Blond Beast" by the Nazis, and "Hangman Heydrich" by others, Heydrich had insatiable greed for power.

Final Solution The Nazis aimed to control the Jewish population by forcing them to live in areas that were designated for Jews only, called ghettos. Ghettos were established across all of occupied Europe, especially in areas where there was already a large Jewish population. When the Jews of the Warsaw ghetto learned the truth about the "resettlement" action, some of them rebelled. The Nazis responded by shelling and bombing the ghetto, until all the occupants died or surrendered.

Final Solution Life in the ghettos was hard: food was rationed; several families often shared a small space; disease spread rapidly; heating, ventilation, and sanitation were limited. Many children were orphaned in the ghettos.

Final Solution “Now judgement has begun and it will reach its conclusion only when the knowledge of the Jews has been erased from the earth!” Nazi Newspaper there were 3 phases of the Nazi plan to wipe out the Jewish population of Europe

Phase 1 = Shooting Jews were rounded up and told they were to be relocated They were taken to the woods and were shot one by one their bodies were buried in mass graves

Phase 1 = Shooting Einsatzgruppen were mobile killing squads made up of Nazi (SS) units and police. They killed Jews in mass shooting actions throughout eastern Poland and the western Soviet Union.

Phase 2 = Gas Vans Again, Jews were rounded up and told they were to be relocated in vans The vans were equipped so that the van’s exhaust was piped back into the van 700,000 Jews killed in Vans

Phase 3 = The Camps Nazi leaders decided to drastically speed up the Final Solution there were two different types of camps: CONCENTRATION CAMPS EXTERMINATION CAMPS Jews from all over occupied Europe were to be brought here.

CONCENTRATION 100 of these in Nazi-occupied Europe prisoners used for forced labor prisoners usually lasted less than 1/2 year communists, homosexuals, criminals, social-democrats, artists. First camp was opened in 1933, right after Nazis came to power

EXTERMINATION Started out as ordinary concentration camps later modified with gassing installations for use on humans, now “DEATH CAMPS” two sub-groups: 1) Majdanek and Auschwitz, Birkenau 2) Operation Reinhard camps and Chelmno

Final Solution Most of the gas chambers used carbon monoxide from diesel engines. In Auschwitz and Majdanek “Zyklon B” pellets, which were a highly poisonous insecticide, supplied the gas. After the gassings, prisoners removed hair, gold teeth and fillings from the Jews before the bodies were burned in the crematoria or buried in mass graves.

Aftermath Soviet soldiers were the first to liberate camp prisoners on July 23, 1944, at Maidanek in Poland. British, Canadian, American, and French troops also liberated camp prisoners. Troops were shocked at what they saw. A mass grave in the Belsen camp.

Aftermath Most prisoners were emaciated to the point of being skeletal—even children. Many camps had dead bodies lying in piles “like cordwood.” Many prisoners died even after liberation.

Former prisoners of the "little camp" in Buchenwald stare out from the wooden bunks in which they slept three to a "bed." Elie Wiesel is pictured in the second row of bunks, seventh from the left, next to the vertical beam. Why study the Holocaust? Aftermath