...Who Is Responsible For The Holocaust All over 22 countries, approximately 5,962,129 Jewish people were murdered during the Holocaust.The Holocaust was a death massacre of the Jewish race and many other humanly races. It was Hitler’s idea to create a “perfect race” of people. Concentration camps and the ghettos were created to keep the prisoners sanctioned in and to work. Crematoriums were big pits of fire where prisoners were burned. Throughout the entire Holocaust, the three groups of people most responsible for the cause are the top SS soldiers, the minor SS soldiers, and lastly Hitler. Top SS soldiers inflicted many harsh punishments along with giving out the orders to minor SS to carry out more orders and discipline. An example of a top SS was Heinrich Himmler. He established the concentration camp for Third Reich and was the head of Germany’s extermination camps. Himmler gave out most of the orders to the rest of SS. He was the one who carried out the order from Hitler to kill the range of 6 million Jews. Himmler was brilliant on the setting up of the concentration camps and how they would work. He believed too in the “purity” of the German race....
Words: 493 - Pages: 2
...Elie Wiesel was born in 1928, in the town of Sighet, now part of Romania. During World War II, he, with his family and other Jews from the area, were deported to the German concentration and extermination camps, where his parents and little sister perished. Wiesel and his two older sisters survived. Night, narrated by Eliezer Wiesel, chronicles his experiences as a Jew during the Holocaust. His family is deported from Hungary, brought to Auschwitz, and experiences starvation, abuse, and death. In the preface of Night, Ellie explains. “And those words are: For the dead and the living, we must bear witness. Not only are we responsible for the memories of the dead, we are also responsible for what we are doing with those memories.” After reviewing...
Words: 682 - Pages: 3
...and agony. Only the men and women who were eligible to work were to live. Many women, children, and elder were sent to die. Living in concentration camps, not knowing when their last day will be. The Jews have lost their lives in the most cruel ways possible. Dying of disease, being shot, hangings, and sending them to burn in chambers. What if the Germans weren’t aware of what was going on? They were completely clueless of what was happening. The Germans were not responsible for the Holocaust. Before the ending of WWII, The Germans took a survey regarding their knowledge of the Holocaust. They surveyed throughout Cologne, Dresden, and Berlin. 9.85% of the Germans knew about the Holocaust, which is 255 people. 85.12% Germans didn’t know about the Holocaust, 2,289 people had no idea what was happening to the Jews. Should the ones who didn’t know be the ones to blame? The one’s to blame are the ones who knew about the Holocaust. Why didn’t the Germans stand up for the Jews? They knew about it, so why didn’t they say anything? The Germans had great fear of Hitler. They feared o stand up for the Jews. They risked their life if they were to do so. You can’t blame all the Germans for the Holocaust. You should blame the one’s who knew about the torture the Jews had gone through. They’re the one’s who should’ve spoken up. If they were to stand up in the beginning, it would have never happened. There wouldn’t have been a Holocaust. The Jews would’ve lived a peaceful...
Words: 573 - Pages: 3
...“All that was left was a shape that resembled me. My soul had been invaded and devoured by a black flame” (Wisel). The Holocaust was a very traumatic and scary event for many people. Hitler and his idea of the Aryan race drove his acts of violence throughout the Holocaust. It was mass killing motivated through racism towards mostly Jews. Not only were Jews targeted, over 11 million people were killed during the Holocaust. The Holocaust left an impact on many people around the world. Besides Adolf Hitler, German citizens and SS officers were the most responsible for the Holocaust because the German citizens watched their neighbors get killed and did not do anything. The SS officers should be held responsible for their violence and coming up...
Words: 1089 - Pages: 5
...“For me the Holocaust was not only a Jewish tragedy, but also a human tragedy,” said Simon Wiesenthal. “After the war, when I saw that the Jews were talking only about the tragedy of six million Jews, I sent letters to Jewish organizations asking them to talk also about the millions of others who were persecuted with us together – many of them only because they helped Jews.” Mr. Wiesenthal was just one of the survivors from the brutal Holocaust who will forever remember the worst time of his life. How he was torn away from his family and was used as a slave for the Nazis. Yet he was still able to have sympathy and think about others. The Holocaust had a significant impact on America by giving lessons about genocides and preventing other genocides, how they punished war criminals after the...
Words: 1721 - Pages: 7
...therefore, some responsibility over the Jewish Holocaust. It may have been that without the participation of ordinary citizens, there never would have been a holocaust and Germany’s history would have been forever changed. However, without the dedication and ideologies of the Nazi Party, the holocaust may have never been invented. And without the Allies ‘by-stander’ position, the holocaust may have never been so successful in their mass murder. ORDINARY PEOPLE: When the ordinary citizens of Germany cast their votes to elect Hitler the Chancellor of Germany they were unknowingly signing the death sentence of between five to six million...
Words: 712 - Pages: 3
...The Holocaust was a mad murder of Jews under the German Nazi rule during 1933-45. The Bangladesh genocide was the deliberate and systematic destruction, in a whole or in a part, of an ethnic, racial, religious, or national group. The Holocaust and Bangladesh genocide are similar and different. The Holocaust and Bangladesh genocide are similar and different in three different ways; lives lost, ethnic identities, and the effect it had after. The Holocaust started on January 30th, 1933 and ended May 8th, 1945. The Nazi were the ones responsible for this tragedy. The victims of these concentration camps were, Jews, slaves, ethnic poles of color, disabled or mentally ill, homosexuals, Jehovah's witnesses, and Spanish republicans. Anyone who was...
Words: 636 - Pages: 3
...opinion; he met other German clergymen who shared the same opinion and admits that the tendency to believe that God has had a unique relationship with the Jews exists also among the Jewish people. According to that, Rubenstein then states that “the idea that the Nazi slaughter of the Jews was somehow God’s will, that God really wanted the Jewish People to be exterminated.” Rubenstein’s belief in the evil of the Holocaust is opposed by the Dean’s idea of God’s absolute power over human lives and his just intentions. He says, “When God desires my death, I give it to him…For some reason, it was part of God’s plan that the Jews died. God demands our death daily. He is the Lord, He is the...
Words: 1635 - Pages: 7
...There are many reasons on why the Holocaust happened. One of the main reasons was because it was Hitler’s belief that the Jewish people had been responsible for the downfall of Germany at the time. As I just stated, probably the biggest reason on why the Holocaust happened is because Germany’s dictator, Hitler thought that the Jewish people were responsible for the misery that Germany had been going through at the time. What doesn’t make sense is that there had been roughly 550,000 Jewish people (Out of the 66 million percent of the population in the country) that had been contributing to the country’s economy. Another fact is that 10% of the doctors were Jewish, at least 16-20% of lawyers were Jewish and more or less than 5% of Germany’s...
Words: 427 - Pages: 2
...The Holocaust The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. Holocaust is a word of Greek origin meaning "sacrifice by fire." Adolf Hitler and the German Nazis were responsible for the innocent people who had died during this tragic time. The Nazis set up giant prisons called concentration camps, where prisoners were starved, tortured, and worked to death. Approximately nine million Jews lived in the twenty-one countries. It is impossible to know the real amount of people who died, but six million is a estimate. The Jews were not a threat, they were people who lived in a society where they were alone, hurt, and died brutally in the Holocaust, for no reason....
Words: 552 - Pages: 3
...Shannon Trubatch Imaginary Worlds Assignment 2 ENG201 Behind the Lens: Photographs of the Holocaust Religion has been found to be, time and time again, a factor that influences the actions taken by many, both kind and cruel, across the globe and throughout history. My mother is a Christian, and I grew up in a household celebrating Christian holidays and attending church on Sundays. My father, however, was raised in Long Island in a Jewish home, where he celebrated Hanukah, had a bar mitzvah, and went to temple. As I grew up, I would learn of the history of the world, but nothing would strike me more than the events of the Holocaust. As I continued to learn and grow older, I would begin to understand the atrocities that took place during this time, half a world a way, and the images and films that I saw in regards to the Holocaust would haunt me most of all. A photo essay, compiled by the English department at the University of Illinois, contains a number of photographs from the Holocaust that demonstrates the atrocities that occurred during this time. These photographs support the argument developed by Susan Sontag that photographers must make the decision between a photograph and a life, and that the viewers of these images also have a responsibility to actions of atrocity and human suffering. In Susan Sontag’s book On Photography, she develops the argument that photography is an act of nonintervention; that the photographer is faced with the choice between capturing...
Words: 3126 - Pages: 13
...War II many events happened such as the Holocaust and of course many important people were involved from Hitler, the president all the way to all the people who suffered in the concentration camps. I will tell you about 5 important people from the Holocaust and their importance, these people are: Adolph Hitler, Elie Wiesel, Sir Nicholas, Winston Churchill and Musolini. The first one I will inform you about is Adolf Hitler, which was the leader of the NAZI group, he was in charge of this group from 1934-1945. Hitler rose to power due to the fact when he came to Germany, it was under a great depression since they had an unstable economy and government, they had to pay reparations to the U.S. and their money value decreased. The people listened to Hitler and brain washed them which helped a lot to make “Germany a better place”. Hitler was the responsible one for the beginning of World War II and The Holocaust. He created a law called “Racial Hygiene” which consisted of a state policy that not everyone was equal and was treated different for their ethnicity, skin color, religion...
Words: 721 - Pages: 3
...society would involve being able to believe in peace within our world. To be human is to forgive those who have wronged us or those who share different beliefs. We are a country who fights for human rights all over the planet. We are a people who see torture and genocide as intolerable. We are one of five countries that still administer the death penalty. Have we learned nothing from the past? "We are witness to human suffering that is caused by violence being treated with violence. The guilty and innocent on death row awaiting their fate is a mental picture that does not seem possible in this century. Killing is never justified! Countless of innocent men are placed in death row with no evidence of wrongdoing and sometimes with clear and unmistakable evidence of innocence. Many groups have committed crimes against other people they viewed as different which meant they must be dangerous and a threat. I know this discussion asked for past injustices and affirmative action as a form of contrition and compensation. I personally think affirmative action is not the answer to past injustices which are still common in every human society around the globe. Just watch the evening news! We will see that the same old inhuman and evil acts against humanity are insidiously creeping back in different parts of the world, even in our own backyard, America! While we may not be directly responsible for past criminal and heinous crimes but we all should remain sensitive not indifferent and “cold”...
Words: 862 - Pages: 4
...In reference to his experience during the Holocaust and why he wrote night, author Elie Wiesel says without the experience he would have not become "… A witness who believes he has a moral obligation to try to prevent the enemy from enjoying one last victory by allowing his crimes to be erased from human memory" (Wiesel ). The Holocaust is a memorable event that occurred in Germany and Eastern Europe in 1933 threw 1945. This tragedy was runned by Adolf Hitler and his Nazi party, killing a massive amount of Jews, homosexuals, Catholics, poles, and gypsies. Hitler strongly believed that the Jews were responsible for economic struggles also known as the great depression. Many people also believed they were to blame for the loss of war. In the...
Words: 1030 - Pages: 5
...killing an estimated 1-1.5 million armenian people. The group responsible for killing so many was the Turks who were in power of the Ottoman Empire. There was a committee called CUP (committee of union and progress) also known as “young Turks.” There were three top people that controlled the government along with others in the organization that carried out the mass killings. The victims involved in these mass murders were Armenian Christians, Christian Assyrians, Syrians, Chaldans, and Greeks. There was corruption and unrest amongst the Empire. The rulers did not like ethnic and religious diversity. This diversity led to independence and decomposition of the empire, leading to less control of the people. A way to get this power back was to force conversion. When this didn’t happen quickly enough or get fast results, murder or persecution was their way of handling it....
Words: 515 - Pages: 3