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Page 1: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Introduction to the Introduction to the HolocaustHolocaust

Page 2: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

•The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European Jews. Roma and Sinti, homosexuals and other people that the Nazis deemed “unwanted” or “not worthy of living” were also victims. In an unimaginable extermination program these persons were exploited, tortured, humiliated and murdered in death factories and concentration camps. The deaths were preceded by the propaganda-driven enforcement of a racist, anti-Semitic ideology, the swift repeal of civil rights of the Jews, the appropriation of their belongings, and their confinement to ghettoes. Not only all state organs but also the military elite, industry, banks, academia and the medical professions were directly involved with the Holocaust.

Page 3: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

The declarations of war in 1914 were met enthusiastically in Europe. On 6 August, Austria-Hungary declared war on Russia, and young Adolf Hitler celebrated with the rest of Munich on the Odean Platz

before he offered his services to the German Army.

Page 4: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

In 1919, the victorious allies packed the Hall of Mirrors in Versaiiles. Of the “Big Four” - the United States, Italy, France, and England – represented by Woodrow Wilson, Vittorio Orlando, Georges Clemenceau, and David Lloyd George – only Wilson pushed for his own

Fourteen Points for a “just peace,” the reason Germany had agreed to the armistice.

Page 5: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Germany, however, was not invited to the negotiations. Occupied and still blockaded, they were summoned to sign the treaty on 28 June 1919. They protested the ruinous reparations

and the degrading Article 231, which blamed them alone for starting the war. The delegation reluctantly signed to alleviate the suffering in Germany. The document became

known as “The Versailles Dictate” in Germany.

Page 6: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Temporarily blinded by a British chlorine gas attack in October of 1918, Hitler was still convalescing in hospital when the war ended on 11 November. In Mein Kampf, he recalled,

"There followed terrible days and even worse nights - I knew that all was lost...in these nights hatred grew in me, hatred for those responsible for this deed." This feeling, shared

by many Germans, led to the formation of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party – Die Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeitspartei (NSDAP) – commonly shortened to Nazi.

Page 7: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

In January, 1923, because Germany had defaulted on the punitive reparations imposed by “Die Diktat vom Versailles,” France occupied the Rhineland to work the industries and

mines there for its own benefit. To further humiliate the Germans, the French occupation troops were brought in from its African colonies. The children they fathered became known

as the “Rhineland Bastards” and were some of the earliest victims of the Nazis when they were involuntarily sterilized.

Page 8: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

The economic crisis that had been growing since the end of the war finally broke in 1923. The hyperinflation in the young Weimar Republic was crippling – savings and investments were wiped out, businesses bankrupted, and unemployment was wide-spread. So was discontent.

Page 9: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

By October of 1923, the exchange rate was 6,250,000 Reichsmarks to one U.S. penny. It took bushel baskets of

mark notes to buy a loaf of bread – when there was any, and the city bakers often had to stretch their limited supplies of

flour by adding sawdust. Workers were paid twice a day and threw their pay to their families to buy dinner before

prices went up. Communists took over Saxony and Thuringia, and on 17 October riots broke out in Berlin –

over the price of bread.

Page 10: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

On 8 November 1923, Hitler and General Erich Ludendorff started a revolt in Munich which was designed to spread over the nation and defeat the forces of communism and socialism. It had been planned in a beer hall in that town.

The Sturmabteilungen, also known as the SA and the Brown Shirts, made up Hitler’s strike force, and included such party stalwarts as the future head of the Schutzstaffel (SS) and the secret state police, Geheime Staatspolizei (Gestapo), former chicken farmer Heinrich Himmler, at right.

Page 11: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

The putsch collapsed the next day after several Nazis died under police gunfire. Defendants Ludendorff and Hitler pose with their supporters including Ernst Roehm, second from the

right, the commander of the SA and one of Hitler’s closest friends. A notorious homosexual, he was killed on Hitler’s orders during “Die Nacht dem Langen Messers,” “The Night of the

Long Knives,” the party blood purge of 30 June 1934.

Page 12: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

On 11 November Hitler was arrested and imprisoned in Landsberg Prison. He was given a comfortable cell, as shown below, and had lots of visitors. He was convicted of treason in April of 1924 and sentenced to five years, but was released by December, 1924. During that brief stay he dictated to his secretary, Rudolf Hess (second from the right, below), his political testament, Mein Kampf (My Struggle).

Page 13: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

30 January 1933 – Following the Munich Beer Hall Putsch of 1923, Hitler rebuilt the party. After the German Great Depression of 1930, he came to power by the ballot when President Paul von Hindenberg asked him to form a government as chancellor.

Page 14: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

27 February 1933 – The German parliament building, the Reichstag, caught fire late at night and was destroyed. Hitler and the Nazis blamed the Communists for the fire. On 23 March, Die Ermächtigungsgesetz, or Enabling Act, was passed, giving Hitler and the Nazis the power to rule by decree and eliminating most civil rights, allowing Hitler to claim that everything he did from then on was entirely legal. Evidence seems to support the conclusion that the fire was started by the Nazis to increase their political power by creating an atmosphere of terror.

Page 15: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Berlin, 5 March 1933

Page 16: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Ochstumsand camp, near Bremen, Germany, Ochstumsand camp, near Bremen, Germany, 1933, on board a ship, was one of the early 1933, on board a ship, was one of the early

“wild” camps for political opponents.“wild” camps for political opponents.

Page 17: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

March, 1933 – Dachau, the first concentration camp, opened. Initially it was designed for political prisoners. The motto over the entrance gate, Arbeit macht frei (Work will set you free) was copied over the gates of almost every other camp. Dachau became the training camp for future administrators and personnel of other camps, as well as being a trial site

for innovations.

Page 18: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

April 1, 1933 – The SA announced and enforced a boycott on Jewish stores.

Designed to win international support, the wide-spread

public revulsion resulted in it lasting only one day.

Page 19: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

““Aryanization”Aryanization”

FrankfurtFrankfurt

Page 20: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

10 May 1933 – German university students launched an “Action Against the Un-German Spirit” targeting authors ranging from Helen Keller and Ernest Hemingway to Sigmund Freud. In 1821, Heinrich Heine wrote, “Where they burn books, they will end in burning human beings.”

Page 21: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

1 August 1934 – With the death of von Hindenberg, Hitler’s cabinet, pictured here, passed a law abolishing the presidency and

proclaiming that all power had transferred to Hitler as Fuhrer und Reichskanzler – leader and Reich chancellor.

Page 22: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

The Nuremberg Race Laws (the Reich Citizenship Law and the Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor), were enacted on

September 15, 1935.

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8 November 1937 – The traveling exhibit of the anti-semitic “The Eternal Jew,” to accompany the movie, opened in Munich, based largely on the ficticous Protocols of the Elders of Zion, produced by the tsar’s secret police (Okhrana) to justify the pogroms.

Page 24: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Buchenwald Concentration Camp opened in June 1937 as a camp for male political dissidents, but quickly expanded to include the whole gamut of enemies of the Nazis. The next were “habitual criminals” and “asocials,” including “beggars, tramps, Gypsies, whores, alcoholics with contagious diseases…,” and homosexuals.

1936 – Jews lost the right to vote; Roma and Sinti were rounded up during the Olympics.1937 – Passport restrictions were placed on Jews, and a large red J was stamped – at the request of the Swiss.1938 – Jews lost the right to keep and bear arms, attend plays and concerts, and had to surrender their drivers’ licenses and car registrations.1939 – Jews were subject to a curfew and had to turn in their radios.

Page 25: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

9 November 1938 – Kristallnacht – This was incited by the Nazis after the assassination of Ernst vom Rath in France by Herschel Grynszpan. The Nazis had been waiting for an excuse to begin wide-spread repression of the Jews. This spasm of violence was nation-wide and resulted in the burning of synagogues, the breaking of the windows of Jewish-owned stores (which gave the event its name, The Night of Broken Glass), and the round-up of many Jews.

Page 26: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

1 June 1939 – The S.S. St. Louis was forced to leave Havana harbor after the Jewish refugees aboard found that their entrance papers would not be honored by the Cuban

government. It anchored off Miami Beach, Florida, where FDR ordered the Coast Guard to be sure no one left the ship. They were forced to return to Europe, where many died in the

hands of the Germans.

Page 27: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

T4 – October 1939

Page 28: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

At Tiergartenstrasse 4 in Berlin, the Nazis began their euthanasia program of “Die Umlebenwurdig,” “life unworthy of life.” Using the scientific principles of eugenics the Nazi doctors first eliminated the physically handicapped and then the mentally challenged. The

program grew to include other enemies of the party, and when public outrage grew too loud, the project was “stopped.” In reality it continued even after the surrender and over a

wide area. The lessons of the gas chambers were used in the death camps.

Page 29: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

In November, 1940, the Krakow Ghetto was sealed off. Inside the ghetto order was kept by the Jewish police controlled by the Judenrat. When labor gangs were led out of the ghetto, they had to wear the yellow Magen David, but not inside, as only Jews were in there anyway. With reduced rations and limited medical supplies, the Nazis let starvation and disease empty the ghettoes – until the final liquidations were to take place.

A problem for the Nazis was that the Lebensraum they wanted in the east was inhabited by untermenschen – sub-humans, as they were called by the Aryan ubermensch. With the press of military needs, the question was how to economically eliminate them while not wasting the labor. The answer was vernichtigung durch arbeit – destruction through work.

Page 30: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

1941 – This was one Lodz ghetto entrance. Officially a “residential area,” by 1942 almost 100 factories had been set up in the ghetto to make use of the cheap – and often skilled –

labor. Known to the Germans as Litzmannstadt, the head of the Judenrat was the problematic Mordechai Chaim Rumkowski. Deportations to Chelmno happened in 1942, and in May of 1944, as the last Polish ghetto, as well as to labor camps in Germany. The

liquidation was completed in August, 1944, by shipment to Auschwitz – Birkenau.

Page 31: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Einsatzgruppen – Mobile killing squads followed the Wehrmacht into the Soviet Union and used different methods to kill Jews, including gas vans, from 1941 to 1943.

Page 32: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

January, 1942 – Nazi leaders met in a house in the Berlin suburb of Wansee to discuss Die Endlosung – The Final Solution of the Jewish Question in Europe. The meeting was chaired by Reinhard Heydrich, the Reichs-protektor of Bohemia and Moravia. After he was assassinated in Prague, Aktion Reinhard, named in his honor, began in Treblinka, Belzec, Sobibor, Chelmno, Majdanek, and Birkenau.

Page 33: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Jews were not just victims, though. They fought in resistance movements in France, Poland, the Soviet Union, and Lithuania. The British form the Jewish Brigade.

Page 34: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

On 19 April 1943, the Jewish resistance movement in the Warsaw Ghetto revolted in the face of liquidation. The revolt lasted almost a month, with no help from the Poles. It took Waffen-SS soldiers under Major-General Jurgen Stroop to destroy the ghetto.These are some of the photographs that he presented as a birthday present to Hitler with the notice, “The Warsaw Ghetto is no more.”

Page 35: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

2 August 1943 – The Sonderkommando at the death camp of Treblinka revolted and many were able to escape.

Page 36: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

14 October 1943 – The Sonderkommando at the death camp of Sobibor revolted. Many who escaped were eventually recaptured, but about 50 remained free and

survived the Holocaust.

Page 37: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

7 October 1944 – The Sonderkommando at Crematoria IV revolted and dynamited the structure. The revolt spread to Crematoria II before the SS guards

put it down. Over 451 prisoners were killed in the fighting and reprisals, with 4,000 gassed two days later.

Page 38: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

April, 1945 – As the forces of the Soviet Union approached the camps in the General Government, Himmler ordered the evacuation and destruction of the camps. In some cases railroad cars were used, and prisoners often rode past columns of German soldiers marching without shoes. For others, movement to Germany meant Death Marches.

Taking pictures of these marches was strictly forbidden, yet some risked death to record these images. If a prisoner fell out on the march, at best they were allowed to lie where he or she fell. More often, the prisoner was killed on the spot by bullet or bayonet.

Page 39: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Liberation – Mauthausen, 6 May 1945Liberation – Mauthausen, 6 May 1945

Page 40: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

29 April 1945 – Dachau was liberated on the same day as Ravensbruck. Mauthhausen, in Austria, was liberated in May. Other camps had been liberated earlier, and for many

soldiers it was their first indication that such atrocities had been committed.

Page 41: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Generals Dwight D. Eisenhower, Omar Bradley, and George S. Patton, Jr., viewed a make-shift crematorium made from a truck chassis at the Ohrdruf camp on 12 April 1945. They

did this to be eye-witnesses to insure that no one in the future would doubt that this had happened.

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The defendant’s dock at the Nuremberg War Crime Trials. From 20 November 1945 to 1 October 1946, the International Military Tribunal, consisting of the United States, England,

France, and the Soviet Union, tried the twenty-four shown above. On 16 October, eleven were executed by hanging. Their bodies were taken to the Dachau concentration camp and were cremated in the ovens there. Nazi war criminals are still being sought and are being

prosecuted to this day.

Page 46: Introduction to the Holocaust. The Holocaust refers to the systematic, bureaucratically planned and industrially perfected murder of six million European

Displaced persons (DP’s) camps existed from 1945 to 1951, often in former concentration camps, although most camps were so vermin infested that they had to be burned down to contain the contagion. Far more people were left homeless, stateless, and without family

than had died, and the effort to reunite family survivors continues.