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Introduction to The Holocaust

Steps to Genocide
1933 to 1945
CHC 2D0
holocaust (noun):
Greek word meaning “sacrifice by fire”

The Holocaust (proper noun):
The Holocaust was the systematic,
bureaucratic, state-sponsored
persecution and murder of
approximately six million Jews by the
Nazi regime and its collaborators.
genocide (noun):
The crime of destroying a group of people
because of their ethnic, national, racial, or
religious identity

Nazi target groups:
Ethnicities:
Nationalities:
“Degenerates”:
Political rivals:
Religions:
Asocials:

Jews & Gypsies (Roma),
Slavs (Poles & Russians)
homosexuals,
the mentally & physically disabled
communists & socialists
Jehovah Witnesses & Jews
Anybody else who opposed the Nazis
Genocide was NOT the first step!
Concentration Camp:
Upon their ascent to power on January 30,
1933, the Nazis established concentration
camps for the imprisonment of all “enemies”
of their regime. Sentences could be a few
months or a few years.
They came for the Communists,
and I didn't object
- For I wasn't a Communist;
They came for the Socialists,
and I didn't object
- For I wasn't a Socialist;
They came for the labour leaders,
and I didn't object
- For I wasn't a labour leader;
They came for the Jews,
and I didn't object
- For I wasn't a Jew;
Then they came for me
-And there was no one left
to object.
Martin Niemoller, (1892-1984 )
German Protestant Pastor,
& Nazi Political Prisoner from 1937
to 1945
Concentration camp prisoners wearing triangles and inmate numbers.






Essential to Nazi’s
systematic oppression
and eventual mass
murder of enemies of
Nazi Germany
Slave labor moved
them towards their
ultimate goal“annihilation by work”
What was taken from
Jews was used to
provide goods for the
German People
1.

2.

3.

You cannot live
among us as
Jews.
You cannot live
among us.
You cannot live.
Burning of Jewish books,
including the Torah, 1934
Genocide

Institutionalized, government sponsored
racism

Discrimination

Prejudice

Stereotyping
Prejudiced Attitudes: Stereotyping

Discrimination & Harassment

Systemic Racism
You cannot live among us as Jews.
anti-semitism
(noun):
hostility toward or
discrimination
against Jews as a
religious, ethnic,
or racial group
Jewish caricature for anti-semitic
Viennese magazine, Kikeriki, 1900 –
The Jews try to conquer the world
through a black market in grain.
Hitler’s minister of propaganda Joseph Goebbels, links
love of Germany with hatred of the Jews
You cannot live among us as Jews.
Eugenics:
Based loosely on early 20th century
understanding of the science of genetics,
eugenicists believed that people should be
bred as farmers breed animals: deliberately
weeding out “inferior” traits through genetic
selection. The Nazis believed that they could
create a “a master race”.
You cannot live among us as Jews.
Aryan race:
The Nazis believed that people of Northern
European ancestry – especially those with blue
eyes and blonde hair – were superior to all other
people, including people of African, Asian, and
Middle-Eastern ancestry.
In 1933, there were few people of African or Asian
ancestry living in Germany.
There were,
however, 500,000 Jews who seemed to threaten
“racial purity”.
You cannot live among us as Jews.
The Power of Words…

• “The great masses of the people will more easily
fall victim to a big lie than a small one”
• “How fortunate for leaders that men do not think”
• The victor will never be asked if he told the truth”
• “ I believe today I am acting in the sense of the
Almighty Creator. By warding off the Jews I am
doing the Lord’s work”
• What do all these quotations have in common?
All were said by Adolf Hitler…
You cannot live among us as Jews.

Above: “Juden Rause” (“Jews Get
Out”), Nazi children’s board game
A group at exit 2 are “off to Palestine”
How did they know who was Jewish?
• November 1935 German
churches begin to
collaborate with Nazis by
supplying records indicating
who is Christian
• State of the art data
processing was used to
take a census in all German
territory. Early on the Nazis
included questions on
religious heritage
German Hollenith Machine
• The machine allowed Nazi – a subsidiary of IBM
officials to tabulate huge
amounts of data very
quickly
You cannot live among us as Jews.
In 1934, Nazi scientists
developed
This kit, which contained 29
samples of human hair. The
samples were used by
geneticists, anthropologists,
and doctors to determine
ancestry. Hair colour also
became a means to prove
the supposed superiority of
Aryans and the inferiority of
Jews, Gypsies, and those of
“mixed breeds”.
You cannot live among us as Jews.
“The Eternal Jew” – a degenerate-art exhibition
in Munich opened on November, 1937. The
largest prewar anti-semitic exhibit produced
by the Nazis, it depicted Jews as vile,
subhuman creatures. The exhibit featured
photographs pointing out the typically
“Jewish” traits. The Jew was stereotyped as
having a large hooked nose, enormous lips
and sloping forehead.
You cannot live among us as Jews.
You cannot live among us as Jews.
You cannot live among us as Jews.

Germans were suspicious of Jews who were seen as conspiring
(with the help of communists) to take over the world.
You cannot live among us as Jews.
On April 1, 1933,
Hitler declared a
one-day boycott
of Jewish shops
Many German
citizens
voluntarily
participated
You cannot live among us as Jews.
May 1933,
Jewish
books were
burned in
public
bonfires
You cannot live among us as Jews.
Below: Aerial view of Nuremberg,
Germany,
prewar period

“The Nuremberg Laws”
turned prejudice &
discrimination into
systemic racism.
For example:
•1935: Jewish
Newspapers could no
longer be sold
•1936: Jews lost the
right to vote
•1938: Jews had to
surrender drivers’
licences & car
registrations
You cannot live among us as Jews.
•The Nuremberg Laws also
classified “degrees “ of
Jewish blood
•One use for this
classification was to
permit or to deny couples
the right to marry (and
thus to reproduce)
•One proposed “solution”
to the Jewish problem was
sterilization
You cannot live among us as Jews.
•By 1938, all
Jews were
required to
carry
identification
cards
•Jewish
passports &
papers were
marked with a
“J”
You cannot live among us as Jews.
You cannot live among us.
Many Jews
attempted to
leave
Germany. But
many nations,
including
Great Britain,
Canada & the
United States
limited Jewish
immigration
Left: In 1939, 850
Jewish refugees
attempt to enter
British-controlled
Palestine illegally.
You cannot live among us.
British officials
arrested the 850
European Jewish
immigrants and
interned them in a
detention center
near Haifa.
•Similarly, in 1939
the German
refugee ship St.
Louis attempted to
find safe harbour
for its Jewish
passengers in
Cuba & the US.
Most end up back
in Belgium & the
Netherlands.
You cannot live among us.
Ghetto:

Evacuating the Jews from Germany, the Nazis created
compulsory “Jewish Quarters” in most Polish cities and towns.
The ghetto was a section of a city where all Jews from the
surrounding areas were forced to reside, surrounded by
barbed wire or walls

Left: Jewish labourers are forced to
build a wall around the Warsaw
ghetto
Nazi ghettos were a preliminary step in the annihilation of the
Jews. Ghettos became transition areas, used as collection points for
deportation to concentration & death camps
You cannot live among us.
By spring of 1941, conditions inside Poland’s Warsaw Ghetto
were hellish: Food was scarce, clothing consisted many of
old rags, and medical supplies were virtually non-existent.
Child mortality rates skyrocketed

Left: Orphan sleeping in
Warsaw ghetto, 1941
You cannot live among us.
You cannot live among us.
You cannot live among us.
In 1941, German Jews were taken into “protective
custody” and deported to concentration camps, build in
eastern Germany & Poland.

Left: Jews being
deported from German
city of Baden-Baden
You cannot live among us.
In response to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the Nazis
destroyed the ghetto and moved the residents farther east “to
safety”.
You cannot live among us.
Jews carried their few remaining possessions to train stations. They were
then transported in freight and cattle cars. Not only were there no chairs,
but the trains also lacked sanitation, food, water, and air.
Concentration
Camps
• Camps were built
on railroad lines for
efficient
transportation
• On arrival, all are
given numberssome have this
tattooed on their
wrist
You cannot live among us
In 1941, Romania also began to deport its Jews. The 2500 occupants of the
lasi train were allowed to disembark for a few minutes. Burning and
dehydrated, they immediately sought refuge in the cool mud before returning
to the torture of the sealed railcars.
Step 3: You Cannot Live
Law for the Protection of Hereditary
Health
• Idea was to improve the quality
of the German race
• Nazi policy to eliminate those
“unworthy of life” (mentally or
physically challenged) to
promote Aryan “racial integrity”
• Policy halted in 1941 due to
outcry within Germany
Einsatzgruppen
• (mobile killing units) had began
killing operations aimed at entire
Jewish communities in the
1930s.
• Thought to have killed as many
as 1 million people in six months
• Vigorous participation of local
police helped facilitate the killing
You cannot live
Fewer than half the 2500 Romanian Jews on the lasi death train
survived the eight day train journey.
Death due to exhaustion, starvation, dehydration, and suffocation
was common on the train transports.
You cannot live.
1941 kamenets-podolski ukraine, members of Einsatzkommandos and local
Ukrainian nationalists murdered 25 000 Jews in huge open pits. Mass shoots
and graves in Estonia and Poland were inefficient and demoralized German
soldiers. The Germans began to seek a more permanent solution to the Jewish
problem.
You cannot live
Final Solution:
The code name for the plan to destroy the
Jews of Europe. In December, 1941,
Jews were rounded up -- under the
excuse of a “resettlement” program -and sent to death camps in the East.
You cannot live.
•On July 31, 1941, SS Major General Reinhard
Heydrich (1904 – 1942), was empowered to
prepare “a total solution of the Jewish question
in the German sphere of influence in Europe”.
This document did not specify what the
“solution” would be, but it did permit him to
handle “the Jewish question” in ways that went
beyond “emigration and evacuation”.
•Blond and blue-eyed Heydrich fit the “Aryan”
ideal
•On January 20, 1942 Heydrich convened the
Wannsee Conference, a meeting with top Nazi
officials, in which the plans to coordinated the
“final solution” were outlined.
•Ambushed by Czech Resistance fighters near
Prague, Heydrich died on June 4, 1942.
•The Germans took revenge by razing the Czech
village of Lidice and killing all of its male
inhabitants
You cannot live.
•At the Wannsee Conference, SS Officer Adolf
Eichmann (1906 - 1962) was given the task of
implementing the “Final Solution”.
•An extremely efficient bureaucrat, Eichmann
organized the round-ups and the train
convoys to the extermination camps
•Eichmann observed that poison gas was
already being used to exterminate the
mentally handicapped. He devised the
gassing procedures and set the death quotas
in the extermination camps.
•Eichmann fled Germany for Buenos Aires
after the war.
•In the 1960, the Isreali government found
him, kidnapped him, tried him in Isreal, and
hanged him.
You cannot live.
Taking place at the beautiful Wannsee estate, the 1942 conference was
attended by fifteen men, eight of whom had advanced university degrees
ranging from law to philosophy and theology. Nearly all knew about the
deportations and killings already in progress.
Ten days after the
meeting, on January
30, 1942, Hitler
proclaimed that “the
results of this war
will be the total
annihilation of the
Jews.”
You cannot live.
Leader of the SS and head of all
police forces – including the Gestapo
--, Heinrich Himmler (1900 – 1945)
spent much of 1943 implementing
the “final Solution” by using his
control over the courts and civil
service to advance the racial
reordering of Europe.
Himmler paid particular attention to
the fate of the 600,000 Jews of
France.
When trying to pass a British
checkpoint in May 1945, the
fugative was recognised & arrested;
he bit a cyanide pill, dying in
moments.
You cannot live.
The SS were put in charge of the day-to-day operations of the death camps.
You cannot live.
Many SS guards claimed
after the war that they
had just “been following
orders.”
Rudolf Hoess,
Commander at Auschwitz
said, “We were all so
trained to obey orders
without even thinking....”

Left: SS guards at Sobibor
Death Camp, 1942
You cannot live
The sign over the entrance to Auschwitz said “Work makes one free.”
However, Auschwitz was NOT a labour camp. It was actually the largest
of the death camps.
You cannot live
You cannot live
This pile of clothes
belonged to
prisoners of the
Dachau
concentration
camp
Most of it would
be resold to
German civilians.
You cannot live
•The Germans
deported the
Dutch Jews
east starting
in mid-1942
•Most
believed they
were going to
labour camps
•Few believed
the death
camps even
existed.
You cannot live
Mauthausen
labour camp
at liberation
in 1945
Note how
relatively
well-fed and
well-dressed
the inmates
look.
You cannot live
Compare the
previous picture
to this one
showing the
inmates of a
death camp.
Many who were
not immediatedly
taken to the gas
chambers, died
more slowly from
malnutrition &
overwork.
Once selected, you began the
process of extermination

Your luggage would be left for collection later
First you removed your valuables
Then you removed your shoes and clothes
Eyeglasses

Confiscated property from prisoners was kept in
storerooms nicknamed “Kanada”. The sheer
amount of loot stored there was associated with
the riches of Canada
Then they removed your hair
Finally
•

Prisoners were sent to gas
chambers disguised as showers

•

Zyklon B gas used to gas people
in 3 – 15 minutes

•

Up to 8000 people were gassed
per day at Auschwitz-Birkenau,
the largest death camp with 4
operating gas chambers

•

Gold fillings from victims teeth
were melted down to make gold
bars

•

Prisoners moved dead bodies to
massive crematoriums
You cannot live among us

The gas chambers, disguised as showers, mainly used carbon
monoxide and Xylon-B. To meet the daily death quota, the SS
guards gassed men, & women; the elderly & children.
You cannot live among us
Large industrial
ovens were used to
cremate the
remains. Jewish
inmates operated
the ovens under SS
supervision.
Major Death Factories
•
•
•
•
•
•

Sobibor Chlemno Majdanek
Belzec
Treblinka
Auschwitz-Birkenau

250 000
255 000
360 000
601 500
750 000 - 870 000
1 100 000 – 1 600 000
Nearing the End of the War
By

1945, the Nazis’ began to destroy crematoriums and camps as Allied
troops closed in
Death

Marches (Todesmarsche): Between 1944-1945, Nazis ordered
marches over long distances. Approximately 250 000 – 375 000 prisoners
perished in Death Marches

•

On January 27,
1945, the Soviet
army entered
Auschwitz (largest
camp) and liberated
more than 7,000
remaining prisoners,
who were mostly ill
and dying.
You cannot live among us
1945 - Corpse-laden-cart
Allied soldiers liberating the camps often had to dig
mass graves.
You cannot live among us
“Inspite of everything I
still believe that
people are really good
at heart”
- Diary of Anne Frank
In March 1945,
Fifteen-year-old Anne
Frank died at BergenBelsen of typhus
You cannot live among us

When the British liberated Bergen-Belsen April 15, 1945,
they discovered tens of thousands of unburied bodies.
At 4:00 am on April 29,
1945, the last day of his
life, Adolph Hitler made
one last address to the
German people:
“Above all I charge the
leaders of the nation
and those under them
to scrupulous
observance of the laws
of race and to merciless
opposition to the
universal poisoner of all
peoples, international
Jewry.”
You cannot live among us
Even after liberation,
Bergen-Belsen inmates
continued to die. 14 000
prisoners died from April 15
to June 20, 1945.
You cannot live among us
Buchenwald, 1945: The
human remains on this
table included two
shrunken heads and a
lampshade allegedly
made from human skin.
The commandant’s wife,
Ilse Koch, kept a
collection of tattooed
human skin
You cannot live among us
Nazi doctors did high pressure experiments
(left) and radiation experiments (below).
You cannot live among us

1945, Soviet troops liberated Auschwitz. Rudolf Hoess, Commander of
Auschwitz, was asked if the Jews whom he had murdered had in any way
deserved their fate. He answered, “Don’t you see, we SS men were not
supposed to think about these things ... Besides, it was something already
taken for granted that the Jews were to blame for everything.”
European Jewish Population in
1933 was 9,508,340
Estimated Jewish Survivors of
Holocaust: 3,546,211
There were some revolts.
• In October 1942, the
Sobibor armed revolt
and escape attempt
closed the camp.
• In October 1944,
Auschwitz inmates
revolted, but failed to
achieve their goal: the
destruction of the
ovens & gas chambers.
There were some heroes.
Oscar Schindler (19081974) A German
businessman who first
profitted from the war
but who later saved over
1,300 Jews from the gas
chambers by declaring
them essential workers –
regardless of age or
capacity to work.
There was some justice.
On November 22, 1945, the Nuremberg War
Crimes Tribunal began.
There were some survivors.
Stanislaw “Shlomo” Smajzner
– survivor of Sobibor escape

Thomas Blatt – survivor of Sobibor escape
There was a promise: Never Again.
Works Cited
Chartock, Roselle and Jack Spencer. The Holocaust
Years: Society on Trial. New York: Bantam
Books, 1978.
Harran, Marilyn, et. al. The Holocaust Chronicle:
Ahistory in Words and Pictures. Lincolnwood:
Publications International, Ltd., 2000.
Schumacher, Julie A. Voices of the Holocaust.
Logan: Perfection Learning Corporation, 2000.

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Introduction to theholocaust[1][1]

  • 1. Introduction to The Holocaust Steps to Genocide 1933 to 1945 CHC 2D0
  • 2. holocaust (noun): Greek word meaning “sacrifice by fire” The Holocaust (proper noun): The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of approximately six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators.
  • 3. genocide (noun): The crime of destroying a group of people because of their ethnic, national, racial, or religious identity Nazi target groups: Ethnicities: Nationalities: “Degenerates”: Political rivals: Religions: Asocials: Jews & Gypsies (Roma), Slavs (Poles & Russians) homosexuals, the mentally & physically disabled communists & socialists Jehovah Witnesses & Jews Anybody else who opposed the Nazis
  • 4. Genocide was NOT the first step! Concentration Camp: Upon their ascent to power on January 30, 1933, the Nazis established concentration camps for the imprisonment of all “enemies” of their regime. Sentences could be a few months or a few years.
  • 5. They came for the Communists, and I didn't object - For I wasn't a Communist; They came for the Socialists, and I didn't object - For I wasn't a Socialist; They came for the labour leaders, and I didn't object - For I wasn't a labour leader; They came for the Jews, and I didn't object - For I wasn't a Jew; Then they came for me -And there was no one left to object. Martin Niemoller, (1892-1984 ) German Protestant Pastor, & Nazi Political Prisoner from 1937 to 1945
  • 6.
  • 7.
  • 8. Concentration camp prisoners wearing triangles and inmate numbers.
  • 9.    Essential to Nazi’s systematic oppression and eventual mass murder of enemies of Nazi Germany Slave labor moved them towards their ultimate goal“annihilation by work” What was taken from Jews was used to provide goods for the German People
  • 10. 1. 2. 3. You cannot live among us as Jews. You cannot live among us. You cannot live. Burning of Jewish books, including the Torah, 1934
  • 13. You cannot live among us as Jews. anti-semitism (noun): hostility toward or discrimination against Jews as a religious, ethnic, or racial group Jewish caricature for anti-semitic Viennese magazine, Kikeriki, 1900 – The Jews try to conquer the world through a black market in grain.
  • 14. Hitler’s minister of propaganda Joseph Goebbels, links love of Germany with hatred of the Jews
  • 15. You cannot live among us as Jews. Eugenics: Based loosely on early 20th century understanding of the science of genetics, eugenicists believed that people should be bred as farmers breed animals: deliberately weeding out “inferior” traits through genetic selection. The Nazis believed that they could create a “a master race”.
  • 16. You cannot live among us as Jews. Aryan race: The Nazis believed that people of Northern European ancestry – especially those with blue eyes and blonde hair – were superior to all other people, including people of African, Asian, and Middle-Eastern ancestry. In 1933, there were few people of African or Asian ancestry living in Germany. There were, however, 500,000 Jews who seemed to threaten “racial purity”.
  • 17. You cannot live among us as Jews.
  • 18. The Power of Words… • “The great masses of the people will more easily fall victim to a big lie than a small one” • “How fortunate for leaders that men do not think” • The victor will never be asked if he told the truth” • “ I believe today I am acting in the sense of the Almighty Creator. By warding off the Jews I am doing the Lord’s work” • What do all these quotations have in common?
  • 19. All were said by Adolf Hitler…
  • 20. You cannot live among us as Jews. Above: “Juden Rause” (“Jews Get Out”), Nazi children’s board game A group at exit 2 are “off to Palestine”
  • 21. How did they know who was Jewish? • November 1935 German churches begin to collaborate with Nazis by supplying records indicating who is Christian • State of the art data processing was used to take a census in all German territory. Early on the Nazis included questions on religious heritage German Hollenith Machine • The machine allowed Nazi – a subsidiary of IBM officials to tabulate huge amounts of data very quickly
  • 22. You cannot live among us as Jews. In 1934, Nazi scientists developed This kit, which contained 29 samples of human hair. The samples were used by geneticists, anthropologists, and doctors to determine ancestry. Hair colour also became a means to prove the supposed superiority of Aryans and the inferiority of Jews, Gypsies, and those of “mixed breeds”.
  • 23. You cannot live among us as Jews. “The Eternal Jew” – a degenerate-art exhibition in Munich opened on November, 1937. The largest prewar anti-semitic exhibit produced by the Nazis, it depicted Jews as vile, subhuman creatures. The exhibit featured photographs pointing out the typically “Jewish” traits. The Jew was stereotyped as having a large hooked nose, enormous lips and sloping forehead.
  • 24. You cannot live among us as Jews.
  • 25. You cannot live among us as Jews.
  • 26. You cannot live among us as Jews. Germans were suspicious of Jews who were seen as conspiring (with the help of communists) to take over the world.
  • 27. You cannot live among us as Jews. On April 1, 1933, Hitler declared a one-day boycott of Jewish shops Many German citizens voluntarily participated
  • 28. You cannot live among us as Jews. May 1933, Jewish books were burned in public bonfires
  • 29. You cannot live among us as Jews. Below: Aerial view of Nuremberg, Germany, prewar period “The Nuremberg Laws” turned prejudice & discrimination into systemic racism. For example: •1935: Jewish Newspapers could no longer be sold •1936: Jews lost the right to vote •1938: Jews had to surrender drivers’ licences & car registrations
  • 30. You cannot live among us as Jews. •The Nuremberg Laws also classified “degrees “ of Jewish blood •One use for this classification was to permit or to deny couples the right to marry (and thus to reproduce) •One proposed “solution” to the Jewish problem was sterilization
  • 31. You cannot live among us as Jews. •By 1938, all Jews were required to carry identification cards •Jewish passports & papers were marked with a “J”
  • 32. You cannot live among us as Jews.
  • 33. You cannot live among us. Many Jews attempted to leave Germany. But many nations, including Great Britain, Canada & the United States limited Jewish immigration Left: In 1939, 850 Jewish refugees attempt to enter British-controlled Palestine illegally.
  • 34. You cannot live among us. British officials arrested the 850 European Jewish immigrants and interned them in a detention center near Haifa. •Similarly, in 1939 the German refugee ship St. Louis attempted to find safe harbour for its Jewish passengers in Cuba & the US. Most end up back in Belgium & the Netherlands.
  • 35. You cannot live among us. Ghetto: Evacuating the Jews from Germany, the Nazis created compulsory “Jewish Quarters” in most Polish cities and towns. The ghetto was a section of a city where all Jews from the surrounding areas were forced to reside, surrounded by barbed wire or walls Left: Jewish labourers are forced to build a wall around the Warsaw ghetto
  • 36. Nazi ghettos were a preliminary step in the annihilation of the Jews. Ghettos became transition areas, used as collection points for deportation to concentration & death camps
  • 37. You cannot live among us. By spring of 1941, conditions inside Poland’s Warsaw Ghetto were hellish: Food was scarce, clothing consisted many of old rags, and medical supplies were virtually non-existent. Child mortality rates skyrocketed Left: Orphan sleeping in Warsaw ghetto, 1941
  • 38. You cannot live among us.
  • 39. You cannot live among us.
  • 40. You cannot live among us. In 1941, German Jews were taken into “protective custody” and deported to concentration camps, build in eastern Germany & Poland. Left: Jews being deported from German city of Baden-Baden
  • 41. You cannot live among us. In response to the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, the Nazis destroyed the ghetto and moved the residents farther east “to safety”.
  • 42. You cannot live among us. Jews carried their few remaining possessions to train stations. They were then transported in freight and cattle cars. Not only were there no chairs, but the trains also lacked sanitation, food, water, and air.
  • 43. Concentration Camps • Camps were built on railroad lines for efficient transportation • On arrival, all are given numberssome have this tattooed on their wrist
  • 44. You cannot live among us In 1941, Romania also began to deport its Jews. The 2500 occupants of the lasi train were allowed to disembark for a few minutes. Burning and dehydrated, they immediately sought refuge in the cool mud before returning to the torture of the sealed railcars.
  • 45. Step 3: You Cannot Live Law for the Protection of Hereditary Health • Idea was to improve the quality of the German race • Nazi policy to eliminate those “unworthy of life” (mentally or physically challenged) to promote Aryan “racial integrity” • Policy halted in 1941 due to outcry within Germany Einsatzgruppen • (mobile killing units) had began killing operations aimed at entire Jewish communities in the 1930s. • Thought to have killed as many as 1 million people in six months • Vigorous participation of local police helped facilitate the killing
  • 46. You cannot live Fewer than half the 2500 Romanian Jews on the lasi death train survived the eight day train journey. Death due to exhaustion, starvation, dehydration, and suffocation was common on the train transports.
  • 47. You cannot live. 1941 kamenets-podolski ukraine, members of Einsatzkommandos and local Ukrainian nationalists murdered 25 000 Jews in huge open pits. Mass shoots and graves in Estonia and Poland were inefficient and demoralized German soldiers. The Germans began to seek a more permanent solution to the Jewish problem.
  • 48. You cannot live Final Solution: The code name for the plan to destroy the Jews of Europe. In December, 1941, Jews were rounded up -- under the excuse of a “resettlement” program -and sent to death camps in the East.
  • 49. You cannot live. •On July 31, 1941, SS Major General Reinhard Heydrich (1904 – 1942), was empowered to prepare “a total solution of the Jewish question in the German sphere of influence in Europe”. This document did not specify what the “solution” would be, but it did permit him to handle “the Jewish question” in ways that went beyond “emigration and evacuation”. •Blond and blue-eyed Heydrich fit the “Aryan” ideal •On January 20, 1942 Heydrich convened the Wannsee Conference, a meeting with top Nazi officials, in which the plans to coordinated the “final solution” were outlined. •Ambushed by Czech Resistance fighters near Prague, Heydrich died on June 4, 1942. •The Germans took revenge by razing the Czech village of Lidice and killing all of its male inhabitants
  • 50. You cannot live. •At the Wannsee Conference, SS Officer Adolf Eichmann (1906 - 1962) was given the task of implementing the “Final Solution”. •An extremely efficient bureaucrat, Eichmann organized the round-ups and the train convoys to the extermination camps •Eichmann observed that poison gas was already being used to exterminate the mentally handicapped. He devised the gassing procedures and set the death quotas in the extermination camps. •Eichmann fled Germany for Buenos Aires after the war. •In the 1960, the Isreali government found him, kidnapped him, tried him in Isreal, and hanged him.
  • 51. You cannot live. Taking place at the beautiful Wannsee estate, the 1942 conference was attended by fifteen men, eight of whom had advanced university degrees ranging from law to philosophy and theology. Nearly all knew about the deportations and killings already in progress. Ten days after the meeting, on January 30, 1942, Hitler proclaimed that “the results of this war will be the total annihilation of the Jews.”
  • 52. You cannot live. Leader of the SS and head of all police forces – including the Gestapo --, Heinrich Himmler (1900 – 1945) spent much of 1943 implementing the “final Solution” by using his control over the courts and civil service to advance the racial reordering of Europe. Himmler paid particular attention to the fate of the 600,000 Jews of France. When trying to pass a British checkpoint in May 1945, the fugative was recognised & arrested; he bit a cyanide pill, dying in moments.
  • 53. You cannot live. The SS were put in charge of the day-to-day operations of the death camps.
  • 54. You cannot live. Many SS guards claimed after the war that they had just “been following orders.” Rudolf Hoess, Commander at Auschwitz said, “We were all so trained to obey orders without even thinking....” Left: SS guards at Sobibor Death Camp, 1942
  • 55. You cannot live The sign over the entrance to Auschwitz said “Work makes one free.” However, Auschwitz was NOT a labour camp. It was actually the largest of the death camps.
  • 57. You cannot live This pile of clothes belonged to prisoners of the Dachau concentration camp Most of it would be resold to German civilians.
  • 58. You cannot live •The Germans deported the Dutch Jews east starting in mid-1942 •Most believed they were going to labour camps •Few believed the death camps even existed.
  • 59. You cannot live Mauthausen labour camp at liberation in 1945 Note how relatively well-fed and well-dressed the inmates look.
  • 60. You cannot live Compare the previous picture to this one showing the inmates of a death camp. Many who were not immediatedly taken to the gas chambers, died more slowly from malnutrition & overwork.
  • 61. Once selected, you began the process of extermination Your luggage would be left for collection later
  • 62. First you removed your valuables
  • 63. Then you removed your shoes and clothes
  • 64. Eyeglasses Confiscated property from prisoners was kept in storerooms nicknamed “Kanada”. The sheer amount of loot stored there was associated with the riches of Canada
  • 65. Then they removed your hair
  • 66. Finally • Prisoners were sent to gas chambers disguised as showers • Zyklon B gas used to gas people in 3 – 15 minutes • Up to 8000 people were gassed per day at Auschwitz-Birkenau, the largest death camp with 4 operating gas chambers • Gold fillings from victims teeth were melted down to make gold bars • Prisoners moved dead bodies to massive crematoriums
  • 67. You cannot live among us The gas chambers, disguised as showers, mainly used carbon monoxide and Xylon-B. To meet the daily death quota, the SS guards gassed men, & women; the elderly & children.
  • 68. You cannot live among us Large industrial ovens were used to cremate the remains. Jewish inmates operated the ovens under SS supervision.
  • 69. Major Death Factories • • • • • • Sobibor Chlemno Majdanek Belzec Treblinka Auschwitz-Birkenau 250 000 255 000 360 000 601 500 750 000 - 870 000 1 100 000 – 1 600 000
  • 70. Nearing the End of the War By 1945, the Nazis’ began to destroy crematoriums and camps as Allied troops closed in Death Marches (Todesmarsche): Between 1944-1945, Nazis ordered marches over long distances. Approximately 250 000 – 375 000 prisoners perished in Death Marches • On January 27, 1945, the Soviet army entered Auschwitz (largest camp) and liberated more than 7,000 remaining prisoners, who were mostly ill and dying.
  • 71. You cannot live among us 1945 - Corpse-laden-cart Allied soldiers liberating the camps often had to dig mass graves.
  • 72. You cannot live among us “Inspite of everything I still believe that people are really good at heart” - Diary of Anne Frank In March 1945, Fifteen-year-old Anne Frank died at BergenBelsen of typhus
  • 73. You cannot live among us When the British liberated Bergen-Belsen April 15, 1945, they discovered tens of thousands of unburied bodies. At 4:00 am on April 29, 1945, the last day of his life, Adolph Hitler made one last address to the German people: “Above all I charge the leaders of the nation and those under them to scrupulous observance of the laws of race and to merciless opposition to the universal poisoner of all peoples, international Jewry.”
  • 74. You cannot live among us Even after liberation, Bergen-Belsen inmates continued to die. 14 000 prisoners died from April 15 to June 20, 1945.
  • 75. You cannot live among us Buchenwald, 1945: The human remains on this table included two shrunken heads and a lampshade allegedly made from human skin. The commandant’s wife, Ilse Koch, kept a collection of tattooed human skin
  • 76. You cannot live among us Nazi doctors did high pressure experiments (left) and radiation experiments (below).
  • 77. You cannot live among us 1945, Soviet troops liberated Auschwitz. Rudolf Hoess, Commander of Auschwitz, was asked if the Jews whom he had murdered had in any way deserved their fate. He answered, “Don’t you see, we SS men were not supposed to think about these things ... Besides, it was something already taken for granted that the Jews were to blame for everything.”
  • 78. European Jewish Population in 1933 was 9,508,340
  • 79. Estimated Jewish Survivors of Holocaust: 3,546,211
  • 80. There were some revolts. • In October 1942, the Sobibor armed revolt and escape attempt closed the camp. • In October 1944, Auschwitz inmates revolted, but failed to achieve their goal: the destruction of the ovens & gas chambers.
  • 81. There were some heroes. Oscar Schindler (19081974) A German businessman who first profitted from the war but who later saved over 1,300 Jews from the gas chambers by declaring them essential workers – regardless of age or capacity to work.
  • 82. There was some justice. On November 22, 1945, the Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal began.
  • 83. There were some survivors. Stanislaw “Shlomo” Smajzner – survivor of Sobibor escape Thomas Blatt – survivor of Sobibor escape
  • 84. There was a promise: Never Again.
  • 85. Works Cited Chartock, Roselle and Jack Spencer. The Holocaust Years: Society on Trial. New York: Bantam Books, 1978. Harran, Marilyn, et. al. The Holocaust Chronicle: Ahistory in Words and Pictures. Lincolnwood: Publications International, Ltd., 2000. Schumacher, Julie A. Voices of the Holocaust. Logan: Perfection Learning Corporation, 2000.