...the Persecution of the Jews How accurate is it to say that the persecution of Jews in Germany steadily increased in the years 1933-42? The question of whether or not the persecution of Jewish race has had a steady intensification, relates closely to whether you adopt an intentionalist or structuralist viewpoint on this historical event. An intentionalist will claim that the process of persecuting Jews in Germany is a planned sequence and was outlined by the Nazi Party; they claim that the roots of Hitler’s politics was about eliminating the Jewish race from Germany and the evidence can be found in Mein Kampf. On the other hand, structuralist historians will claim that the persecution of the Jews was never planned and it was improvised all the way through to the Holocaust; furthermore, they will state that the Nazi’s did not come to power based on policies towards the Jews as the electorate was never as enthusiastic as Hitler was about this.Although it increased it was more gradual than steady, It did increase but there were times where it stopped, but it was at a very low key when not much attention was taken towards the situation. However, in 1938 when the Nazi’s had invaded Austria and Sudetenland, there was more of an increase in persecution of Jews. In the year 1933, the Boycott of Jewish businesses and professional offices, the exclusion of Jews from civil service as well as the Quota for non-Aryan students occurred serving the purpose of isolating the Jews from...
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...support of the Nazi policy towards the Jews by the German People. Source B says that ‘Anti-Semitism has undoubtedly taken root in wide circles of the population’, implying that many German people were in favour of Anti-Semitism. The source then goes on to say that if a German citizen was to buy from a Jewish person, it would have been just to annoy the Nazi’s, not ‘in order to help the Jews’. This also suggests that many German’s were not in favour of the Jews. Source B also mentions these people being in favour of ‘restricting Jews to certain activities’, once again supporting the Nazi policy. This relates to my own knowledge on the Nazi policy, as I know that the Nazi party bought in many laws which restricted Jews from certain activities; such as the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour, which forbade marriage between Germans and Jews. Many German’s supported such Laws opposing the Jews. This source originates from A Socialist Party report in 1936, therefore the reliability is debatable. As an opposing party to the Nazi’s, the Socialist Party would be like to give biased information, against the Nazi Party. Similarly, Source C discusses the ‘reprisals were carried out against Jewish buildings and places of businesses’, suggesting that many German’s participated in the Kristallnacht. In this Source, Goebbels goes on to say that ‘the whole population is now firmly asked to abstain from all further action of whatever nature against the Jews’. Goebbels uses...
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...supported Hitler’s quest to annihilate the Jews; some Germans opposed it or remained neutral towards it. The reasons for why Germans supported Hitler’s quest to annihilate the Jews was split between the distress of Germany that had been created by an economic crisis, threats that were carried out by the Nazi regime, and propaganda that was used to persuade Germans. Firstly, many Germans supported Hitler because during the Great Depression, which hit the citizens of Germany harshly, Germans were in need of a political savior. Therefore, they looked to Hitler and saw him as a determined leader who could save the nation (“Great Depression”). Furthermore, the Nazi Party threatened those who dared to oppose them. Some members of individual Nazi Party units were granted license to punish whomever they felt was against them, and perceived opponents were thrown in concentration camps (“Nazi Terror Begins”). In addition to pressuring the Germans with fear,...
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...of European Jews by the Nazis before and during World War II. When Hitler came into power, Germany turned into a totalitarian government, “The Nazis, who came to power in Germany in January 1933, believed that Germans were “racially superior” and that the Jews, deemed “inferior,” were an alien threat to the so-called German racial community” ("Introduction to the Holocaust." United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. United States Holocaust Memorial Council. Web. 20 Mar. 2016). Hitler’s goal for Germany was to create the perfect Aryan race. The Nazis accepted that it was their duty to exterminate the Jews. Hitler’s twisted notion brainwashed German citizens into thinking that it was fine if other people...
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...In 1933, Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany and transformed it into a totalitarian state. Through persecution and propaganda, Hitler convinced the German people that all of their problems could be blamed on the Jews, making the events of the Holocaust plausible. Throughout Europe, Jews were historically ostracized due to their minority status and beliefs contrasting with those of Christians. For these reasons, when Hitler came to power the Jews were a natural group to blame Germany’s struggles on. During World War One, people often said that “The Jews, [...] had done much to spread defeatism and thus destroy the German army” (Rise of the Nazis and Beginning of Persecution). As a result of this rumor, many people in Germany already had...
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...is currently happening. During the Nazi reign, many people in Denmark, France and Poland, strongly resisted Hitler and his beliefs, and would do anything to stop him and his genocide. Denmark didn’t like any of Hitler's beliefs and they thought they were cruel and inhumane. Next, France resisted the Nazis heavily. Also, Poland did not like Hitler and also opposed him. Indeed, Denmark, France, and Poland opposed the Nazis and they did all that they could to resist them or stop them. During World War II in Denmark, the Danish decided to take a stand against Nazi, Germany. The Danish were informed about the Nazi raid and took action to make sure that little ,or no Jews were taken. The Danish moved all of their Jews into the safety of Sweden by fishing boats, Only 600 Jews of the 8000 population was discovered and deported to the Concentration Camps . Georg Duckwitz, informed the Danish about a second raid. The Jewish quickly hid in nearby homes or in churches. Only 284 of the 8000 Jews were found. The Bopa was made to oppose Capitalism with Communism. Students tried to join the Bopa but the Bopa thought the students could be spies, so the Bopa turned them down....
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...3. German soldiers and the German people went along with the Nazi policy of the persecution of the Jews. There are many reasons for this. One reason is the Nazi treatment of those people who disagrees. If German's did not follow Hitler and his rules, they would either be killed or put in jail. Another reason they went along with the Nazi policy is because of all the propaganda. The Nazi party put pictures everywhere putting the Jews down. They blamed them for all the problems of Germany, like economic problems and the lost of World War II. They made Jewish people look like bad people and that it would be a good thing to get rid of them. A last reason that people supported the persecution of the Jews is the political and social conditions in Germany at the time. They didn't have a steady government at all and their economy was going down the drain. So when Hitler said exterminating Jews would help this, people agreed because they were desperate. The German people thought they had no other solution because of how bad everything in Germany was at this time. Homework#6 2. Aftermath of World War II in Europe and Japan Europe Only: -Nazi reign fell and lost power. -There was no power, no food, no shelter, no water. -There was a famine because there was no way for the food to get to the Germans since the transportation system was damaged. Both: -Hundreds of thousands of civilians were killed. -Major cities were destroyed. -Land was taken away. Japan Only: ...
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...persuade a certain group of people to behave in a certain manner/ bias is propaganda. 2. Hitler needed a way for everyone in Germany to in gulp, and develop his thinking on the Jewish race, thus leading to the mass production of Nazi propaganda throughout the German population. C. “No human race is superior; no religious faith is inferior. All collective judgments are wrong. Only racists make them.”- (Elie Wiesel, 1928-2016) 1. Holocaust is a word referring to a genocide, or massive slaughter of something/someone. know the word holocaust...
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...Anti-Semitism is defined as a racial term meaning the negative belief and emotions about “Jews qua Jews” (Newman, 2010, p. 15). Anti-Semitism dates back to 70.C.E where the ancient rebellious Hebrews “exhausted the patience of their Roman masters”, lost their homes and were spread through the Mediterranean lands (Botwinick, 2014, p. 4). Jews were always outcasts to Christians because the Jews denied that Jesus was the “messianic son of God” which therefore added more tension when it was believed that Jews killed Jesus (Botwinick, 2014, p. 5). The Holocaust also known as the “Catastrophe, the Sho’ah, is one of the tragic periods of “Jewish Diaspora” (Keter Books, 1974, p. 1) It started between 1933 and 1945 in Europe. It first started with discrimination...
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...The Holocaust was the effort of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party in Germany to exterminate the Jews and other people that they considered to be inferior. As a result about 12,000,000 people - about half of them Jews - were murdered. The murders were done by every means imaginable but most of the victims perished as a result of shooting, starvation, disease, and poison gas. Others were tortured to death or died in horrible medical experiments. Hitler took power in Germany in 1933 and almost immediately began the chain of events that led to the Holocaust. This first phase was the persecution of Jews in Germany and the other countries invaded by Hitler. It lasted until 1941. During this period, while Hitler built his power, Jews were persecuted and brutalized but there was no organized effort to systematically murder them. In late 1939 Hitler invaded Poland, beginning the Second World War. In mid-1941 Hitler invaded the Soviet Union. At about the same time - historians do not agree on exactly when - Hitler also decided that there should be a "Final Solution" to "the Jewish question." The "Final Solution" was the murder of the Jews and was mainly carried out by a military group known as the SS and a security service known as the SD. The Gestapo was part of the SD. They arrested Jews and other victims, ran the concentration camps and organized the murder squads. During the first part of this extermination 1,500,000 Jews and other people were murdered by military groups which...
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...Holocaust. During the 1900s, Germany had recently lost World War One and like many Germans who fought during this war, Adolf Hitler blamed the Jews for the defeat. So, after taking power over Germany, Hitler and his political group, the Nazis, found many ways to persecute the inferior Jews. But eventually, they decided on a more “permanent” solution; gassing the Jews. During this time, Germany had also declared another war, World War Two. After six long...
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...Their misfortune ranged from being evicted from their homes to having to see family members die in front of their eyes, and all of this happened because the Nazis feared that their religion would harm their racial superiority. The Nazi Holocaust impacted the world in a horrible way and if America didn't help what would’ve happened? This is what this essay will be finding out. Before we can examine America’s impact on the Holocaust we should go over it’s history. The holocaust was a persecution and murder of over six million jews in the world. The Holocaust was ran by the Nazi’s and their collaberating partners. The holocaust started in 1933 because the Germans or Nazis believed that they were racially superior and that the jews were inferior to them and they posed a threat towards the Nazis. Because of this the Nazis basically enslaved them and put them in concentration camps to work or be killed. The nazis forced the jews out of their homes...
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...in 250 C.E. For centuries, Jews have endured slavery, land confiscations, massacres, pogroms, blood baths, mass arrests, public torture, banishments, inquisition, slaughter, mass murders and finally, the Holocaust in the 20th century (Grossman, 2014). The Holocaust by far has been the most odious experience that the Jewish community has endured and yet there are many who deny it even took place. The rise of anti-Semitism in early 20th century Germany surely did not begin with Adolf Hitler; however, he was the fulcrum on which it intensified. This hatred for the Jews was not always the case as prior to World War I Jews in Eastern Europe “enjoyed a period of comparative peace, tranquility and the flowering of Jewish religious life” (Jones, 2011). It was after the defeat and subsequent peace settlement at Versailles in 1919, which was followed by a period of depression and burdensome reparations, that nation began to look for a scapegoat. The Jews were seen as the leaders of the parties which had surrendered and ‘stabbed’ Germany in the back by agreeing to the peace accord. Germany slipped into a great depression in the early 1920’s with widespread unemployment and rampant inflation. Hitler and the Nazi party began to capitalize on the unrest and malaise of those most deeply affected the depression and used his deep personal hatred for the Jews as his lynchpin to arouse blame and animosity on which he could rise to power. He and the Nazi party began to spread propaganda...
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...Successful were the Nazis in Creating a Volksgemeinschaft? To simply answer the question, the answer would be that they had very little success in creating their ‘National Community’. Between the years 1933-39 the Nazi party set upon an idea of creating their own race of racially pure Germans, an Aryan race. And to do this they had to remove all the people they had thought of as unfit and against what they saw as the Aryan race, and create a Volksgemeinschaft. Volksgemeinschaft was a people’s community, where everybody was equal in race. The Nazi party was prepared to go to extreme lengths to ensure that they got this racially pure race, killing unfit Germans was a solution. Hitler wanted a community joined only by blood and race, anyone else was not considered to be part of the Volksgemeinschaft program. Hitler wanted his Aryan race to spread throughout the world and for the Nazi party to become the most powerful. By the years 1936 and 1937 Hitler and the Nazi party were strong within Germany, the support of the Nazi party was immense and Hitler saw this as an opportunity to radicalise the Nazi party, take things further and more extreme. Hitler announced new rules for Jews, persecution of the Jews. Hitler first began increasing pressure on them to ‘voluntarily’ sell their business’ this was the beginning of the attack on the Jews. Hitler pressured Jews to sell their well earning business for well under the market value to Aryan race German. With less Jews in charge of business’...
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...36%), but gave the chancellor spot to Adolf to promote political balance. At this point, things start to change dramatically in Germany, such as the form of government changing to a de facto legal dictatorship, and basic rights suspended. These basic rights included disarming citizens, constant control and regulation of the population, and the restriction of negative speech against the government and military. By 1933, not only was the Nazi party the only legal political party in Germany, but Germany also had removed itself from the League of Nations. The next year, the German military collectively killed Paul von Hindenburg, and the cabinet of the German government changed it to where the chancellor would be the head of the country. With this promotion, Adolf became the Commander of the Armed Forces. Also with this promotion, Adolf began his strive for a utopian society, starting no drinking and anti-smoking campaigns throughout the country, as well as veganism. Following this, Adolf and his Nazi regime start to create regulations, mainly against Jews. On April 1, 1933, Adolf implemented a national boycott of...
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