Title: Introduction to the HOLOCAUST
1Introduction to the HOLOCAUST
2What is the Holocaust?
- Hitler and the Nazi Party gained power in Germany
in 1933 and lost power in 1945 -- only 12 years. - By the end of the Hitler regime, the world had
been plunged into a global world war, Europe was
in shambles and nearly 30 million died. - Among the dead were over 6 million Jews -- men,
women and children --who were systematically and
efficiently slaughtered for no other reason than
that they were Jews. - Additionally, an estimated 5.5 million non-Jews
were systematically murdered.
This immense loss of life became know as THE
HOLOCAUST
3Time Line
1918 - 1933
1938 - 1941
Rise of the Nazis Party following WWI
1941 - 1942
Jews were confined to Ghettos as per Hilters
plan.
1942 - 1944
Concentration camps were the final step in
Hitlers plan.
1944 - 1945
People resisted by any means possible.
Throughout the Holocaust, victims received help
from rescuers.
4Vocabulary
- Anti-Semitism Opposition to and discrimination
against Jews. - Treaty of Versailles Germany and the Allies
signed a peace treaty at the end of World War I. - Nuremberg Laws The Nuremberg Laws were announced
by Hitler at the Nuremberg Party conference,
defining 'Jew' and systematizing and regulating
discrimination and persecution.
5Nazi party holds mass meeting in Buckeberg in
1934. Other Nazi officials walk behind Hitler.
6Time Line
1918 - 1933
1938 - 1941
Rise of the Nazis Party following WWI
1941 - 1942
Jews were confined to Ghettos as per Hilters
plan.
1942 - 1944
Concentration camps were the final step in
Hitlers plan.
1944 - 1945
People resisted by any means possible.
Throughout the Holocaust, victims received help
from rescuers.
7Vocabulary
- Ghettos usually established in the poor
sections of a city, where most of the Jews from
the city and surrounding areas were subsequently
forced to reside. Often surrounded by barbed wire
or walls. - Warsaw ghetto Established in November 1940, it
was surrounded by wall and contained nearly
500,000 Jews. About 45,000 Jews died there in
1941 alone, as a result of overcrowding, hard
labor, lack of sanitation, insufficient food,
starvation, and disease.
8Warsaw ghetto boundary wall on Elektoralna
Street.
9Time Line
1918 - 1933
1938 - 1941
Rise of the Nazis Party following WWI
1941 - 1942
Jews were confined to Ghettos as per Hilters
plan.
1942 - 1944
Death camps were the final step in Hitlers
plan.
1944 - 1945
People resisted by any means possible.
Throughout the Holocaust, victims received help
from rescuers.
10Vocabulary
- Concentration Camp Concentration camps were
prisons used without regard to accepted norms of
arrest and detention. - Death Camp Nazi extermination centers where Jews
and other victims were brought to be killed as
part of Hitler's Final Solution - Labor Camp Those who did not go to their
immediate death, went to "slow death" - the slave
labor camps. Usually it was a quarry. But
sometimes it was working for the German war
effort. - Genocide The deliberate and systematic
destruction of a racial, political, cultural, or
religious group
11Vocabulary
- Gas chamber A sealed room in which numerous
victims could be killed all at once by inhaling
poison gas. Although Auschwitz used Zyklon B
gas, most camps used carbon monoxide. - Crematorium The ovens and furnaces where dead
bodies of prisoners were consumed.
12The woman with the infant is joining those being
sent to the gas chamber.
13Time Line
1918 - 1933
1938 - 1941
Rise of the Nazis Party following WWI
1941 - 1942
Jews were confined to Ghettos as per Hilters
plan.
1942 - 1944
Concentration camps were the final step in
Hitlers plan.
1944 - 1945
People resisted by any means possible.
Throughout the Holocaust, victims received help
from rescuers.
14Vocabulary
- Allies During World War II, the group of nations
including the United States, Britain, the Soviet
Union, and the Free French, who joined in the war
against Germany and other Axis countries. - Axis Germany, Japan, Italy
- Gestapo Secret State Police. Prior to the
outbreak of war, the Gestapo used brutal methods
to investigate and suppress resistance to Nazi
rule within Germany.
15An SS soldier stands among ruins in the Warsaw
ghetto during the suppression of the uprising.
16Time Line
1918 - 1933
1938 - 1941
Rise of the Nazis Party following WWI
1941 - 1942
Jews were confined to Ghettos as per Hilters
plan.
1942 - 1944
Concentration camps were the final step in
Hitlers plan.
1944 - 1945
People resisted by any means possible.
Throughout the Holocaust, victims received help
from rescuers.
17Vocabulary
- Righteous Gentiles Non-Jewish people who, during
the Holocaust, risked their lives to save Jewish
people from Nazi persecution - Underground Organized group acting in secrecy to
oppose government, or, during war, to resist
occupying enemy forces.
18Inmates waving a home-made American flag greet
U.S. Seventh Army troops upon their arrival at a
concentration camp.
19Images
- Many of the images we will be viewing during our
Holocaust unit may be disturbing or graphic. I
expect all of you to act with maturity and
respect the lives lost during the Holocaust.
20Starving inmate of Camp Gusen, Austria
21These are slave laborers in the Buchenwald
concentration camp near Jena many had died from
malnutrition when U.S. troops of the 80th
Division entered the camp.
22A German girl is overcome as she walks past the
exhumed bodies of some of the 800 slave workers
murdered by SS guards near Namering, Germany, and
laid here so that townspeople may view the work
of their Nazi leaders.
23Crematoria
24Children at Auschwitz.
25Entrance to Auschwitz in 1941. The slogan Arbeit
macht frei over the gate translates as "Work
(shall) make (you) free" (or "work liberates").
26An American GI and a French resistance member
inspect an oven in a crematorium in one of the
first concentration camps liberated in Germany in
December 1944.
27Kate BernathDescribes psychology of survival in
Auschwitz
28- We were, uh, in the midst of all our troubles we
were trying to cheer each other up. If one was
feeling very low, we, we tried to tell them, we,
we dreamed about things what we were going to do
when we got liberated. We were all...we never
thought for a minute, I never thought for a
minute that I'm really going to die. I, it just
did not sink in. I mean with all these horrors
around me I, I always thought that we were
dreaming of, of things--when I get home I'm going
to do this and I'm going to do that and I just
want to see this, this war end and just live for
the day when we see the Germans defeated. And
that kept us alive. Never to lose hope. If you
lost hope, that was the end of it. It was so easy
in Auschwitz. All you had to do is reach out for
the barbed wires. They were electrified. We would
not do them the favor. We said if they want to
kill us, they'll have to kill us.
We are not going to die.
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