Kristallnacht The Night of Broken Glass. THESIS Kristallnacht, the night of broken glass, was a violent attacks on Jews and their property which signaled.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
  Across Germany and German-occupied Austria  November 9 th & 10 th, 1938.
Advertisements

Night of Broken Glass.
Do Now: What is your favorite aspect of spring? Why? What are you most looking forward to doing? Four sentences. Take out your brainstorm.
Holocaust: a reporter’s perspective
Jews in Nazi Germany
Terrorism And Terrorists By: Helen Zhao According to Wikipedia - Terrorism is an act of violence against people for religious and political sort of reasons.
Kristellnacht was the name of the first major attack on the Jewish people. “Kristallnacht” means “night of broken glass” and with good reason. The Germans.
Kristallnacht (the November Pogroms) in Austria
Description History Victims Concentration Camps Liberation and Beyond
Aviva Berkowitz Alex Scott James Statts Matt Lark
The Holocaust Begins The Nazis propose a new racial order
Review  Why was Adolf Hitler able to rise to power?  What is Mein Kampf?  What was the basis of Hitler’s hatred for Jews?
German History/Kristallnacht Background Notes
The Holocaust Chapter 24, section 3. Nazi Persecution of the Jews The Jews will receive the worst of the racial policies outlined by Hitler in Mein Kampf.
Holocaust and Final Solution Numbers before the war Germany: ½ million Jews or < 1% of the population Fascist Italy: less than 50,000, 0.1%
The Nazi Attack on German Jews Begins
Do Now 1)Why do you think Hitler targeted the Jews? 2)Why do you think so many Germans went along with Hitler’s plans?
Susi Hilsenrath and the Night of Broken Glass By Chance Forney.
The Persecution Begins. Phases of Persecution Anti-Jewish policies are often divided into phases Each more aggressive than the last Each more aggressive.
Created by Jacqueline Bouley Period 5. Where Did This Take Place?
What was it? And why did it happen?
Review  Why was Adolf Hitler able to rise to power?  What is Mein Kampf?  How do the Nazis rescind emancipation?  What does this mean to German Jews?
Chapter 24, Section 3 “The Holocaust”.
The Holocaust. Nazi Policies Jews were one of several groups targeted by the Nazis, in addition to Slavs, homosexuals, gypsies and others who opposed.
BY: GAVIN AND SEAN MINORITIES IN NAZI GERMANY. THE BEGINNING Germany and the east: Wanted lebensraum for his Aryan super race Forced Darwinism To remove.
Holocaust Retrospective
The Holocaust and the U.N. Another Reason to Fight a War.
November 9-10,  Night of the Broken Glass  Took place in Germany, Austria, Sudetenland, and parts of Czechoslovakia.  Why?  In response to the.
How did the Nazis treat German Jews before the war?
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.
Kristallnacht aka “The night of broken glass”
The Holocaust
Holocaust 2. What is: Holocaust? Killing of 6,000,000 Jews Trying to enact genocide on the Jewish people By 1938 The German people had seen enough propaganda.
Graphic Organizer Answers
 In 1933 there was a total of 9 million Jews.  By the end of the war 2/3 of those Jews would die.  Many Jews spoke Yiddish.  Many older Jews dressed.
WWII How did it start? Hitler is given the role of Reich Chancellor and begins his fascist movement.
The Holocaust Adolf Hitler becomes Chancellor of Germany January 30, 1933.
KRISTALLNACHT “The Night of Broken Glass” November 9 & 10, 1938.
Chapter 32 C Section. Kristallnacht: “Night of Broken Glass” 1.In 1935 Germans passed laws forbidding Jews from holding public offices.
Starter: How effective was the persecution of the Jews?
Nuremburg Laws Kristallnacht
A Brief Introduction to the Holocaust
Jewish Refugees US History.
November 1938 “The Night of Broken Glass”
The Holocaust.
By Jessica,Sunny,Rachel
Bell ringer Why did Hitler turn to the systematic killing of Jews? Weren’t there other ways to get rid of them?
By: Geoffrey Fallon Byron Ayala & Fabricio Garcia
Kristallnacht “The Night of Broken Glass”
How were the aggression policies heightened in the year 1938?
THE HOLOCAUST CHAPTER 13 Section 3.
By: Parminder Singh Mike Osorno P.4
The Holocaust Chapter 11 Lesson 3 Notes.
''THE NIGHT OF BROKEN GLASS''
Chapter 24: Section 2: Day 1 The Holocaust.
The Holocaust. The Holocaust The Holocaust Nazi’s propose new racial order Holocaust begins Aryans- master race of Germanic peoples All non-Aryans.
Hitler’s Anti-Semitism
For teachers Print out slides with events and stick them around the classroom. Make sure students have the dates down but it does not have to be in order.
THE HOLOCAUST LEARNING GOAL:
“The Night of Broken Glass”
Kristallnacht & The Diary of Anne Frank
The Holocaust.
Outline to essay Adding the vital sentence elements into your outline and transferring them to your paragraphs.
The Holocaust “Sacrifice by fire”
Introduction to Elie Wiesel’s Night
Warm-Up (Today we will not share our answers, but you will need to write down a response) Have you ever done something to be accepted by others, even.
In what ways was Kristallnacht a turning point in Nazi Germany?
Presentation transcript:

Kristallnacht The Night of Broken Glass

THESIS Kristallnacht, the night of broken glass, was a violent attacks on Jews and their property which signaled to the world Adolf Hitler’s intentions.

Homeless In ,000 Polish Jews living in Germany were ordered to leave. Dropped at the Polish border, Poland refused to accept them. Without adequate food or shelter, they waited. One family wrote their son, desperate for help.

Herschel Grynszpan 17 and broke, he had no way to help. He bought a gun and went to the German Embassy. He shot and killed a member of the German Embassy staff.

His Protest to the World With God's help. My dear parents, I could not do otherwise, may God forgive me, the heart bleeds when I hear of your tragedy and that of the 12,000 Jews. I must protest so that the whole world hears my protest, and that I will do. Forgive me.

Kristallnacht

The Night of Broken Glass 1,000 German Synagogues were burned or looted

German Firefighters kept fires from spreading to non-Jewish property

Revenge against all Jews in Germany and Austria 7,000 business looted or vandalized Jewish children banned from public schools German Jews fined to pay for the clean up

Jewish leaders were major targets of arrest and humiliation

Kristallnacht was the first open violence against German Jews 25,000 men were arrested They were the first to enter concentration camps