absolutely none.
nothing really, you could say that Nazism was supported [in the early years] by the Fascists. But the Fascist states did not support what the Nazis were doing in the Holocaust.
we can prevent another holocaust by not getting into hatred, not discriminating or being racist. If the Nazis realized everyone was equeal there wouldn't have been a first holocaust. And if we learn at an early age about how Hitler and the Nazi regime hated on Jews, maybe it will teach kids a lesson on how not to descriminate, be racist, or anything like that.
Great successes were the pro-wookie organization. Also, the raid on Tantive IV. Failiures was the abolition of Jedi Knights, and astromech reprogramming.
It allowed the German forces to overwelm enemy forces by sheer force.
None and the Nazis were a polotical power in Germany starting in early 1930s and fell in 1945 (by there defeat in world war 2) Germany was not a democratic government they were a dictatorship although most dictators were supporting of there people but then the Nazis were an extremist group that apposed the treaty that ended world war 1 (cause it inflicted harsh punishment on Germany) and brutaly ended all opposition. In my opinion at the begining the Nazis had a just cause witch was to return prosperity to there people but in the end they murdered millions of people
nothing really, you could say that Nazism was supported [in the early years] by the Fascists. But the Fascist states did not support what the Nazis were doing in the Holocaust.
Taken early on in the war by the fascist Nazis.
gas vans, they were the main gas extermination method until the spring of 1943, which was when the large gas chambers started ______ In the early stages of the Holocaust (1941-42) the Nazis relied mainly on mass open air shootings.
Ian Thorpe's earliest successes include becoming the youngest male swimmer to break a world record, winning a gold medal at the 1998 World Championships at the age of 15, and breaking multiple world records in the 200m and 400m freestyle events in the early 2000s.
The Holocaust took place from about 1940 to 1945, the international conflict was the Second World War.
Important consequences included these: * Germany began rearming on a vast scale. * The Nazis, using the injustices of the Treaty of Versailles as an excuse, embarked on a policy of boundless expansion in Europe. This made war practically inevitable. * The adoption of policies that culminated in the Holocaust, though this was not obvious in the early years.
we can prevent another holocaust by not getting into hatred, not discriminating or being racist. If the Nazis realized everyone was equeal there wouldn't have been a first holocaust. And if we learn at an early age about how Hitler and the Nazi regime hated on Jews, maybe it will teach kids a lesson on how not to descriminate, be racist, or anything like that.
Routine major deportations began in October 1941 with the deportation of the Berlin Jews. (At the time, the Nazis didn't have extermination camps, so many of the German Jews were dumped in the already overcrowded ghettos in Warsaw and Lodz, but most were sent to Riga, Latvia, where they were shot).In the early stages of the Holocaust the Nazis sent the killers - the mobile killing units - to the victims, but later they transported the victims to the extermination camps, as they found this simpler, less messy and more 'efficient'.
This is a phrase used in some school books to describe the individual executions, rather than the mass murder that the Holocaust would become.
depends on what you mean by "executed". this number is most likely impossible to knowHowever it is estimated that between 11 and 17 million people died in the holocaust. Obviously this number is open to argument and interpretation. There are even some that believe that the Holocaust never happened, we call them crackpots.
Sergei korolev
His first literary success was his poem Venus and Adonis.