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BELLWORK What is genocide?

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Presentation on theme: "BELLWORK What is genocide?"— Presentation transcript:

1 BELLWORK What is genocide?
What racial, ethnic, or cultural groups have been subjected to genocide in the past or in the present? THINKER: What steps could a country take to eliminate genocide? Should the U.S. help other countries that are experiencing genocide?

2 “Once I really am in power, my first and foremost task will be the annihilation of the Jews. . . until all Germany has completely been cleansed of Jews.” Adolf Hitler

3 Photo Response. Get out a separate sheet of paper- Divide it into 2 columns. As we take a look at the following pictures & listen to the stories… You are to keep track of your Thoughts, Reactions, Emotions, Questions. What comes to mind when you hear this information and see these real-life images of human atrocity?

4 Anti-Semitism Aryans > Semites
When Hitler became leader in 1933, he made anti-Semitism (discrimination directed at Jews) the official policy of Germany. This hatred led to the Holocaust: Nazi Germany’s mass murder of European Jews. Included Jews, gypsies, homosexuals, disabled, mentally challenged, communists, homeless, and dissenters.

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7 Kristallnacht “Night of the Broken Glass”
November 9, 1938: Nazi thugs in Germany and Austria destroyed Jewish stores, houses and synagogues.

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9 Warsaw ghetto Nazi plans for dealing with Jews included establishment of ghettos: areas in which minority groups are concentrated. Nazis took 30% of Warsaw’s population and sealed them off in the Warsaw ghetto. Ghettos were surrounded with walls and barbed wire.

10 Concentration Camps

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12 German Jewish Family before the war- only two survived the Holocaust

13 A sign, in both German and Latvian, warning that people attempting to cross the fence or to contact inhabitants of the Riga ghetto will be shot. Riga, Latvia,

14 Deportation of Jewish children from an orphanage. Lodz ghetto, Poland.

15 Jews move into the Kovno ghetto. Lithuania, 1941.

16 Child forced laborer in a ghetto factory
Child forced laborer in a ghetto factory. Kovno, Lithuania, between 1941 and 1944

17 A child eats in the streets of the Warsaw ghetto. Warsaw, Poland.

18 Children eating in the ghetto streets. Warsaw, Poland.

19 A Jewish victim of life in a concentration camp

20 Mass grave of Holocaust victims

21 Once the people were killed, they were cremated in large furnaces like this one

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24 Auschwitz

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26 Auschwitz 3 million died here by systematic starvation, forced labor, lack of disease control, individual executions, and "medical experiments". Camp was divided into three parts: Auschwitz I – administration Auschwitz II – extermination camp Auschwitz III – labor camp. Soviet troops liberated the camp on January 27, 1947, which came to be known as Holocaust Remembrance day.

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30 Allied Help Witold Pilecki: Polish army captain who agreed to spend 945 days in Auschwitz. He gathered evidence of genocide and sent it to Britain. Two prisoners, Rudolf Vrba and Alfred Wetzler, escaped and gave a detailed report about the camp. Convinced Allied leaders about the truth of Auschwitz.

31 Birkenau Revolt On October 7, 1944, the Jewish Sonderkommandos of Auschwitz II staged an uprising. They attacked prison guards and blew up the Crematorium IV. Joined by other inmates who overpowered guards and broke out of the compound.

32 Liberation of Auschwitz
In November 1945, generals ordered the crematoriums to be destroyed before the Red Army reached Auschwitz. Gas chambers were blown up to hide evidence of German crimes. The Death March: there were 60,000 prisoners left in Auschwitz. Forced them to walk to Loslau, another Polish concentration camp. 15,000 died on the way, but eventually Soviet forces infiltrated all camps.

33 Holocaust Comes to an End
In 1944, FDR created War Refugee Board (WRB): programs and funding to help rescue Jews Nazis began abandoning camps for fear of Allied advances. In 1945, American armies reached the concentration camps. Nuremburg Trials: Former Nazi leaders on trial for crimes against peace, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. 24 Nazi defendants – 12 executed

34 Total Deaths: 9-11 Million

35 Where was America? Did Americans know the Holocaust was happening? If so, why didn’t they do anything earlier? Why did they wait so long to help? Similar stories during WWI Thought it was an exaggeration Major news sources downplayed its importance New York Times reported the victims as “refugees” Were timid about mixed Jewish – German readership Never highlighted its importance

36 CLOSURE What fact/term/concept/idea about the Holocaust sticks out the most to you? Explain! Many German citizens knew about the Holocaust as it was happening but chose to do nothing. Do you think this makes them just as guilty? What could they have done to help? What might have happened if they decided to speak out against the government?


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