two reasons:
the British cracked the Nazi codes and heard their radio transmissions
and some people escaped and toll their stories
Hitler and the Nazis were responsible for the Holocaust.
The Nazis didn't want to carry out the Holocaust publicly, for example in the street.
yes very much, it ruined there lives. they did horrible things to the jews. If you want to know more then read the historical fiction book about the holocaust: The Boy in the Striped Pajamas its sad but just if you want to know more.
You don't say when ... During the actual Holocaust 'the world' didn't, on the whole, want to know about it. ___ Self-conscious memorialization of the Holocaust is very recent indeed (mainly dating from the 1990s).
The genocide of nearly six million Jews is known as the Holocaust.
6,000,000 people died in the holocaust. Although they were not all Jews, some were Greek Jews, homosexuals, or anybody who stood up against the Nazis. These are all of the people i know of to be killed but i am pretty sure there are more types of people who died.
Preventing the Holocaust implies the the US have advance knowledge of Nazi intentions. This was not the case. Obviously, the US did know that the Nazis were persecuting the Jews and others but it was not known that the Nazis were going to commit genocide. Even when the genocide had started, many American politicians did not believe the reports coming in about it. During World War 2 ending the genocide was not a specific war aim.Please see the related question below, which may shed further light on the answers.
The Holocaust happened. Jews know it, the Germans know it, and all serious international scholarship knows it. The Nazis kept records, including film. The Allied forces saw the horror of the concentration camps when they invaded. The Warsaw Ghetto is also on film.Answer:I don't think there's a specifically Jewish "belief" about the Holocaust. As implied in the above answer, the events of the Holocaust are not a matter of belief; they are facts. The mass graves are still there. Several million names and records of Holocaust victims are extant in searchable lists. A number of the death camps, crematoria and all, still stand. And hundreds of thousands of people who witnessed the Holocaust are still among us today. Note: Many groups, especially in the Islamic World, like to cast Jewish defense and passion towards defending the historicity of the Holocaust as a religious belief. The motive for this recasting is because then they can claim that it is false and only surviving because Jews "are not letting people scrutinize their beliefs". However, the evidence of the Holocaust is so overwhelming that even without the millions of documents that Nazis burned before the Concentration Camps were retaken by the Allies, the Holocaust is probably the most documented crime against humanity to have ever occurred.
The Holocaust refers to the Nazi genocide of the Jews and other groups. It is not synonymous with World War 2. The Japanese were not involved in the slaughter of the Jews and found the Nazis' antisemitism utterly bewildering.
they were sent into camps were the Jews were separated from the 'normal' people. Then they were sent to torture camps but they didnt know this. the Nazis said they were holiday camps, but they were not. they were starved, tested on and somtimes shot for the sake of it. Then they were gased and killed.
It depends what for, if you want to know how the Romans were more sucessful at growing corn than the Saxons, then it is not worth while. But if you are interested in how Western Jews tried to evade the Nazis, then it is worthy.
AnswerNo. The holocaust was the attempted wholesale extermination, by Nazi Germany, of all Jews, Slavs and other people the Nazis considered "subhuman". the United States, and its allies, stopped the holocaust by winning the war.