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Published byImogen Blankenship Modified over 8 years ago
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The Holocaust
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I.Nuremburg Laws anti-Jewish legislation, initiated in 1935 marriage restrictions (1935) stripped Jews of German citizenship (1935) business & job restrictions (1938) forbidden to use the RR (1940) yellow Star of David identification band (1939)
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II.Kristallnacht – Nov. 9-10, 1938 “Night of Broken Glass” a pogrom that attacked synagogues, businesses & homes carried out by the SS & Nazi party officers 91 Jews killed; 30,000 arrested & sent to concentration camps led to heightened emigration from the Reich – 115,000 Jews in 10 months
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III. The Camps Concentration Camps 1 st concentration camp – Dachau – opened in 1933 primarily for political prisoners, homosexuals & Jehovah’s Witnesses Jews were not housed in concentration camps until the death marches of January & February 1945
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Labor Camps were attached to either concentration camps or death camps provided slave labor provided 20% of Germany’s labor force by mid-1944 see map, p. 826 http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/media_nm.php?ModuleId=10005143& MediaId=7827 http://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/media_nm.php?ModuleId=10005143& MediaId=7827
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Death Camps six specific facilities, all located in occupied Poland became operational in 1941-42 as part of the Final Solution were created to murder Jews 1 st death camp: Chelmno (near Lodz, Poland) Einsatzgruppen – led by Reinhard Heydrich mobile killing units (esp. active in the USSR) – see map, p. 826
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IV.Liberation by 1942, there were rumors of the camps, but their existence was not common knowledge 1 st liberation was at Majdanek (near Lublin, Poland) – July 24, 1944 Auschwitz liberated Jan. 29, 1945 liberation experiences – East vs. West see handout “The things I saw beggar description.” – Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
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