Did Nazis use hot water to kill Jews?
it wasnt really a shower, they were actually gas chambers but tricked the jews in thinking they were showers.
What mental illness did Hitler have?
People have speculated Hitler had Parkinson's disease. You can see this for your self in News reels In which you can see tremors in his hand. He also had syphilis his shuffling walk is evidence to this fact.
How does Titinius kill himself?
Committed suicide with the same sword that Cassius killed himself with.
Speaking is an everyday action. Quite often, it is actually annoying. There are many different ways of speaking, known as languages. For each country there is a different language (except for some specific countries, UK, US, Australia, Canada and New Zealand all speak English.) Its scary you had to ask...
How many resistors died in Holocaust?
resistors do not die, they just lose their charge.
If you want to ask how many people died resisting the Holocaust, or how many resistance fighters died during the Holocaust, then ask it. If you cannot be bothered to phrase your question so that people can understand it, why should people be bothered to answer it.
What had happened during the holocaust?
Hitler, leader of the Nazi's, wanted to get rid of other races, mainly Jews, so they made concentration camps to kill them all.
What country did the nazi take over in 1938?
In !938, Austria joined the extention of German law.
the full list of countries Gemany occopied during WW2 is this:
* Albania * Austria * Belgium * Byelorussia (part of the USSR) * Channel Islands (part of Britain) * The Crimea (part of the USSR) * Czechoslovakia (absorbed half, the other half forming the country of Slovakia) * Denmark * Estonia * France * Greece * Latvia * Lithuania * Luxembourg * Netherlands (Holland) * Norway * Poland * Russia (partially) * The Sudentenland * Parts of the Transcaucus region (part of the USSR) * Ukraine (part of the USSR) * Yugoslavia yhea, alot of countries, i know.
It depends what you mean when you say Nazi, Neo Nazis were always racist and idiots they have no idea what Nazism stood for and i doubt they ever will
during Hitlers time, they weren't really that racist , yes they had some ideologys but not so much in action, they talked about it but in action they employed black Africans , Muslims, Asians, Indians, they were one of the most multicultural groups on the planet , you'll never hear that in school though, they even had Jews working for them, the Gostopo had tons of Jewish workers , and so did the wehrmact . so many different cultures worked with the Nazis and had better lives then they did under their own people, but today the neo Nazis who have no idea what Nazism is and they are the racist ones realize the difference is that one is a politcal Socialist party that works for one party dominance of the planet , todays neo nazis are fool who disgrace National socialism and any self respecting nazi of the past.
What was your reaction to the Holocaust?
that Hitler was wrong for killing the Jews. all people should be treated the same.
How did World War 2 officially begin?
World War begins officially when The Attack on Pearl Harbor happens.
Who administered the Nazis' final solution?
The Nazi official who had the greatest role in supervising the Holocaust was Heinrich Himmler. However, all the members of the High Command were involved.
Himmler was in overall controll and oversaw all of the different aspects.
The most notorious administrator was Eichmann, he was mainly involved in the process of collecting and deporting people to the ghettos and the camps, which were run by a different department. Eichmann was responsible for implementing the plans formulated by Heydrich and ordered by Himmler (and initially by Goering).
Why would the Nazis focus on controlling the lives of young people?
Youth & children are more likely to be influenced & then believe the propaganda. It is the same today as it was then. It is easier to mislead younger people.
What caused Hitler to hate the Hungarians?
The question presumes that Hitler hate all of those categories of people: Jews, Egyptians, Americans, and Hungarians. This is not the case. Going back to front, Hitler had no issue at all with Hungarians. He saw them as a lesser race than the Nordic/Aryan Race that he considered to be the highest apex of humanity, but believed that the Hungarians were an acceptable "White Race". Similarly, Hitler saw White Americans as being an acceptable White Race, especially since a large percentage of Americans were ethnic Germans. Hitler was racist towards African-Americans, but considering that African-Americans were quite repressed in the United States at the time, especially in the South with Jim Crow, Hitler did not see the presence of African-Americans as a true issue. As concern Egyptians, he considered Egyptians, like all Arabs, as a subhuman race, but one with which he could have open and honest relations since Germany had no real ambitions in controlling the Islamic World and because they shared Jew-hatred with Hitler.
As for the Jews, yes, Hitler hated them vehemently. Hitler provided numerous rationales during that period as to why he believed that the Jews were worthy of hate. However, the only person qualified to answer this question fully and accurately, without speculation, (Hitler) killed himself on April 30, 1945. Various contributors have stated that the following were some of the reasons that Hitler claimed to hate the Jews:
1) Superiority of the German People: Hitler believed that the Germans as a "race" of Nordic of peoples were superior in all ways to all non-German people. Since the Jews were not a Nordic people, Hitler reviled them (as he reviled the Romani, Slavs, and other ethnic minorities).
2) Decay of the German State: During the 1800s, Jews began to become more integrated in German National Life. They served in its government, its military divisions, and its industry. As was typical of Western Europe, the Jews had more of a hand in the higher echelons of government than their population percentage would account for. The Nazis saw this increasing Jewish percentage in the government as a slow takeover of German policy and a corruption of the German people. They contrasted the great victories under Bismarck with the depressing failure of World War I and noted how a much larger percentage of soldiers in the latter war were Jewish. There was also the sentiment than in the early 20th century, values were beginning to ebb (this is similar to current politics in the United States) and the Jewish integration in the German apparatus (becoming teachers, lawyers, doctors, etc.) was to blame for this recession of values as opposed to modernity as a process.
3) Nationalism: Germany was brought together under the Nationalist conception that all peoples with German culture, history, and language should be united regardless of which principality currently held control. The German self-conception also had an ethnic component, holding that the perfect German was blond and blue eyed. Regardless of the fact that the majority of Germans were dark haired, Jews stuck out like a sore thumb because they overwhelmingly had darker hair. In addition, the idea of a German Jew was still rather new and both Jews and non-Jews tended to see the Jews in Germany as being part of a vast Jewish network and that these Jews just happened to be in Germany. The Nazis capitalized on this cosmopolitan sensibility by claiming that Jews' allegiances were not to the German State, but to secret Jewish Councils organizing world events.
4) Economy: Whether it was true or not, there was perception among Germans and the Nazis in particular that Jews were wealthy individuals and had a higher per-capita income than the Germans. In many ways (because of the above two reasons) Germans felt that the Jews were "stealing" their money while they were poor and suffering. Adolf Hitler blamed the Jewish population for the social and economic problems of the era. A popular anti-Semitic belief was that Jewish families were shrewd and sought to control the wealth of a community at the expense of other members in the community. This being the case he thought that the world would be a better place if the Jews were no longer in charge of finance.
5) Pseudo-Science: The late 19th and early 20th century was filled with radical new ideas concerning Social Darwinism. It was believed by the Pseudo-Scientific community (which was rather in vogue) that different groups of people or races exhibited different emotional traits that were linked to physical differences. This led to the belief that Jews were corrupt and thieving by their irreversible nature and that they could not be "cured" and brought up as proper Europeans. This formalized Racial Anti-Semitism in Germany and made the situation much more dire for German Jews.
6) Heresy/Christian Anti-Semitism: Although not as much an issue in World War II as it may have been 500 years prior, Jews were still considered the heretics who murdered the LORD and Savior. This helped to justify Anti-Semitism as the Jewish comeuppance for their accepting of the "Christ Bloodguilt". Jews were called Christ-killers by the Nazis, as they had by most Christian churches for centuries, and that was behind a lot of the hatred. This existed regardless of the fact that the Bible names the Jews as God's Chosen people first.
7) Hitler's Ambition: Adolf Hitler was very ambitious. His dream was to see Germany at the top. After the First World War he became more and more ambitious. He blamed the Jews for the misery and suffering of Germans. Moreover, he held Jews responsible for the loss of World War I. He claimed that they held high position and were very rich. This was one of reason for his hatred for the Jews.
8) Populism: Adolf Hitler's "hatred" of the Jews was one of the tools he used to convince the people of Germany that he knew the source of their economic problems and that he was the person who could correct the situation. He chose to use the long standing antisemitism in Germany to gain the people's support.
9) Anti-Semitic Childhood: When Hitler was studying Art in Munich as a teenager he was rejected from the academy he wished to attend and for some reason, he blamed it on the city's Jewish population. He was also brought up in an anti-Semitic family (at least some believe).
10) Foreigners: Hitler argued that the German Jews were not 'native' members of the country and should not be able to enjoy the benefits of citizenship. Their motives would be suspect as their loyalty was to something other than Germany. (Of course, this argument has been used against all minorities and is equally fatuous as concerns the Jews.)
11) Communism: Hitler alleged that the Jews were the primary supporters of Communists and thus also considered them in bed with his political opposition. (It should be noted that there is NO credible evidence the Jews were the main supporters of Communism, and this is yet another stereotype used by bigots for decades.)
America fought Germany to end the reign of adolf Hitler.
What group of people did Adolf Hitler not like?
Christians and Jews, but basically all religious groups
What important events happened in Italy during world war 2?
As an element of the larger German army the Italians had numerous small victories in North Africa. Acting on its own, Italy attacked British Somaliland on 3 August 1940 and conquered the British Colony.
What were the conditions of Jewish ghettos in World War 2?
The ghettos were small districts within a city in which Hitler packed all the Jews so that he knew where they were and could easily cart them off to the death-camps. They were given very little food and many people died. The biggest one was in Warsaw, Poland, which the Nazis burned completely, killing at least 100,000 Jews, after having deported tens of thousands to the death-camps.
The following explains concentration camps, rather than ghettos.
Discrimination against Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals, the disabled, and other minority groups began in 1933 when the Nazis under Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany and it was in 1933 that the first concentration camps in Germany were opened. However, the deportations and roundups did not really begin in large scale until after Kristallnacht (the night of broken glass), a night of riots in 1938 when many Jews were murdered, their businesses destroyed, and synagogues burned. After that time mostly Jews, but also Gypsies and other groups who were not Aryan, as well as political prisoners and people who spoke out against the government, were rounded up and moved into ghettos or taken directly to concentration camps. There were many mass executions, and as the Nazis took over more and more of Europe, their ideology and violence spread with them. Soon there were tens of concentration camps and ghettos in Poland, Austria, Chechoslovakia, and many other places. In 1942 the mass killings at the death camps and concentration camps began. Prisoners were gassed, shot, starved, and worked to death. Those still living were forced to bury the dead in mass graves, or help to work the huge ovens which turned the dead bodies into ash. Many also died of diseases and malnutrition. Prisoners were also forced on death marches towards the end of the war as the Allies approached. By 1945 when World War II ended, 6 million Jews (two out of every three living in what had become Nazi-controlled territory during the war) had been systematically murdered.
Why was it important for families to face to holocaust together?
The reason that I think it was important to face the Holocaust with family members is because this was a time of social breakdown. There were no laws to protect them, no police to come to their aid. All they had were each other, and while that didn't give them much assistance, it was better than nothing at all. It is always important because, no matter what the problem is, family will always be family. During this time, friends could not be trusted, because Nazis were paying for betrayal.
How many Jews were affected during World War 2?
Over 6 million Jews in Europe were exterminated by the Germans and their allies during the war. There were approximately 12 million Jews prior to the war, principally in Poland and the Soviet Union. Many more that survived the death camps, suffered innumberable diseases and hardships after the war.
Most Jews that survived the hell they experienced, were so traumatized that many committed suicide or died before they reached middle age. There will never be an accurate account of the total number of Jews that were murdered,
despite the meticulous records kept by the Germans. Many Jewish survivors immigrated to Palestine and founded the state of Israel and created a new country in the desert, surrounded by hostile Arabs. Others would come to Canada and the United States to start a new life and begin new families. The Jews that remained in Europe were so few in number with most synagogues destroyed and families decimated. Warsaw, before the war, had several hundred thousand Jews-after the war, there were only 5000 survivors! Jewish culture and a way of life in Europe was forever affected by the holocaust!
What Was the Naval power in Germany?
During both "World" wars, Germany relied primarily on its U-boat (submarine) force. Underseaboat, I think many called it.
It did have a regular navy with above water ships too. The battle of Jutland demonstrated that, but the regular navy didn't see much use in WWI, as the British Navy, even bigger and more monstrous, effectively shut it away from action.
But WWII? Germany's navy was pretty...well-armed, we shall say. Bismarck happened to be the largest Battleship assembled, violating international treaties (not that it really mattered). Its sinking was very big news.
It did not have, however, aircraft carriers and naval engagements on the order of the Japanese-US naval engagements.
What does each letter stand for the word teacher?
T - is for truthful
E - is for educated
A - is for adoration
C - is for caring
H - is for humble
E - is for energetic
R - is for real