Those responsible for the Holocaust were of course the Nazis and some of their allies and collaborators. I honestly do not see how anyone can be both a Christian and a Nazi. Having said that, I think many would take the view that most of the various Christian churches (demoninations) had done very little to discourage antisemitism, and it has been argued that the Roman Catholic Church at various times even encouraged it.
No. The United States holds absolutely no responsibility for what happened in the Holocaust. It happened in a different continent, perpetrated by a country far more advanced militarily .
Gremlins, small elf-like creatures that caused mischief, were given the blame for mechanical problems on British aircrafts during WW2
During the formal negotiations that followed World War I, as the contending nations both victorious and defeated worked out a final peace treaty, Great Britain's fundamental position was that Germany was responsible for the outbreak of World War I. Despite this general position, Britain's view of reparations (and other punishments) was more lenient than that of France, her ally during the war.
The war guilt clause forced Germany to take all the blame for World War I.
Germans and Russians were to blame .
Because the Christians had many followers which over populted the country
on wich contry did the tready of vercilay take total blame for world war one
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No. The United States holds absolutely no responsibility for what happened in the Holocaust. It happened in a different continent, perpetrated by a country far more advanced militarily .
Nero blamed theChristiansto deflect blame from himself. That he started the fire is just an allegation. The suspicions arose because after the fire he built his wast Golden House (Domus Aurea). That he payed the fiddle during the fire was adistortionby later historians. The fiddle did not exist in his days.Nerodid his best to help the people affected by the fire.
The Germans were to blame
Blame for the Great Fire of Rome has been attached to two sides. The Emperor Nero was blamed for his lack of action, and there were even suggestions that he may have started it himself in order to bypass the senate and rebuild Rome to his liking. Evidence to support this theory includes the fact that the Domus Aurea, Nero's majestic series of villas and pavilions set upon a landscaped park and a man-made lake, was built in the wake of the fire. To direct attention away from himself, Nero used the Christians as scapegoats. Thus began the earliest persecutions of Christians in Rome, action which included feeding them to the lions.
AnswerThere was no division of Christians from Judaism during the time attributed to Jesus, or for some decades afterwards. The final split seems to have come in the 90s of the first century CE, when Christians were barred from attending the synagogues. The principal reason appears to be that the Christians had begun to blame the Jews for the death of Jesus - even Jews who were not present in Jerusalem or who were not even alive at the time.
Rome originally tried stamping out Christianity. Often times the Emporer's would blame the Christians for many problems going on in the country, and went as far as burning many Christians at the stake, driving the religion underground. However, this all changed when Empreror Constatine converted to Christianity.
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Because Hitler (leader of the Nazis) needed someone to blame for the loss of World War 1 and the Great Depression, and the Jews, Gypsies, and gays just happened to be chosen to carry the blame.