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FIVE QUESTIONS ABOUT THE HOLOCAUST
1. What was the Holocaust?
The Holocaust was the state-sponsored, systematic persecution and
annihilation of European Jewry by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between
1933 and 1945. In 1933 approximately nine million Jews lived in the 21 countries
of Europe that would be occupied by Germany during World War II. By 1945 two out
of every three European Jews had been killed. Jews were the primary victims --
six million were murdered; Roma (Gypsies), the handicapped and Poles were also
targeted for destruction or decimation for racial, ethnic or national reasons.
Millions more, including Soviet prisoners of war, political dissidents,
homosexuals and Jehovah's Witnesses suffered grievous oppression and death under
Nazi tyranny.
2. Who were the Nazis?
"Nazi" is a short term for the National Socialist German Workers
Party, a right-wing political party formed in 1919 primarily by unemployed
German veterans of World War I. Adolf Hitler became head of the party in 1921,
and under his leadership the party eventually became a powerful political force
in German elections by the early 1930's. The Nazi party ideology was strongly
anti-Communist, antisemitic, racist, nationalistic, imperialistic and
militaristic.
In 1933, the Nazi Party assumed power in Germany and Adolf Hitler was
appointed Chancellor. He ended German democracy and severely restricted basic
rights, such as freedom of speech, press and assembly. He established a brutal
dictatorship through a reign of terror. This created an atmosphere of fear,
distrust and suspicion in which people betrayed their neighbors and which helped
the Nazis to obtain the acquiescence of social institutions such as the civil
service, the educational system, churches, the judiciary, industry, business and
other professions.
3. Why did the Nazis want to kill large numbers of innocent
people?
The Nazis believed that Germans were "racially superior" and that
there was a struggle for survival between themselves and "inferior races."
Jews, Roma (Gypsies) and the handicapped were seen as a serious biological
threat to the purity of the "German (Aryan) Race" and therefore had to
be "exterminated." The Nazis blamed the Jews for Germany's defeat in
World War I, for its economic problems and for the spread of Communist parties
throughout Europe. Slavic peoples (Poles, Russians and others) were also
considered "inferior" and destined to serve as slave labor for their
German masters. Communists, Socialists, Jehovah's Witnesses, homosexuals and
Free Masons were persecuted, imprisoned and often killed on political and
behavioral (rather than racial) grounds. Sometimes the distinction was not very
clear. Millions of Soviet Prisoners of War perished from starvation, disease and
forced labor or were killed for racial political reasons.
4. How did the Nazis carry out their policy of genocide?
In the late 1930's the Nazis killed thousands of handicapped Germans by
lethal injection and poisonous gas. After the German invasion of the Soviet
Union in June 1941, mobile killing units following in the wake of the German
Army began shooting massive numbers of Jews and Roma (Gypsies) in open fields
and ravines on the outskirts of conquered cities and towns. Eventually the Nazis
created a more secluded and organized method of killing enormous numbers of
civilians -- six extermination centers were established in occupied Poland where
large-scale murder by gas and body disposal by cremation were systematically
conducted. Victims were deported to these centers from Western Europe and from
the ghettos in Eastern Europe which the Nazis had established. In addition,
millions died in the ghettos and concentration camps as a result of forced
labor, starvation, exposure, brutality, disease and execution.
5. How did the world respond to the Holocaust?
The United States and Great Britain as well as other nations outside Nazi
Europe received numerous press reports in the 1930s about the persecution of
Jews. By 1942 the governments of the United States and Great Britain had
confirmed reports about "the Final Solution" -- Germany's intent to
kill all the Jews of the Europe. However, influenced by antisemitism and fear of
a massive influx of refugees, neither country modified their refugee policies.
Their stated intention to defeat Germany militarily took precedence over rescue
efforts, and therefore no specific attempts to stop or slow the genocide were
made until mounting pressure eventually forced the United States to undertake
limited rescue efforts in 1944.
In Europe, rampant antisemitism incited citizens of many German occupied
countries to collaborate with the Nazis in their genocidal policies. There were,
however, individuals and groups in every occupied nation who, at great personal
risk, helped hide those targeted by the Nazis. One nation, Denmark, saved most
of its Jews in a nighttime rescue operation in 1943 in which Jews were ferried
in fishing boats to safety in neutral Sweden.
(Courtesy of The U.S
Holocaust Memorial Museum)
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