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Holocaust

The genocide of approximately 6 million European Jews during World War II planned by Adolf Hitler.

11,094 Questions

How many Gypsies were killed in the Holocaust?

The people known as the Roma (they prefer that word over the derogatory "Gypsy") suffered between 500,000 and 600.000 deaths at the hands of the Nazis in World War II. Most of those were at Auschwitz.

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They most certainly do not prefer to be called 'Roma'. The Roma were one tribe particular to southern Germany (and the region) there were a dozen other tribes that were almost completely eliminated it is insulting to pretend that they did not exist.

In what year was Yad Vashem built?

It aws built in 1953Type your answer here...

Did Miep Gies have any kids of her own?

Miep Gies had one biological sister, about ten years younger than her.

Miep's adoptive family in the Netherlands, the Nieuwenburgs, had one daughter and four sons (Miep's adoptive siblings).

Did some Jews fight back?

Yes, there were a number of Jewish resistance groups in Europe - and there was the Wasaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943. (Please see related question for details).

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They were unarmed civilians who had for many years been harrassed and closely monitored by the apparatus of the German state, so there was no way they could have organized themselves to fight back. In those instances where they were armed and organized, such as in the Warsaw ghetto in 1943, they fought back heroically.

One really needs to ask: Resist or fight back at what stage? In the early stages the Jews knew of course that they were being persecuted - monstrously persecuted - but did not know they were going to be subject to mass murder. By the time they knew they were going to be killed, it was generally rather late to resist. However, as the links show, even at an earlier stage, resistance was beset with all kinds of problems.

The predominant image is of lambs going meekly to the slaughter. This image is (or was) widespread among Jews as well as non-Jews. In Western Europe and much of Central Europe (such as France, the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Austria) the Jews were too scattered to offer much resistance. However, in Eastern Europe (for example, parts of Poland and Belarus) many of the Jews lived in identifiable communities and were better placed to resist. The best known example of resistance is the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising of April-May 1943. Early research tended to stress lack of resistance, but since the 1980s there has been a growing emphasis on Jewish resistance to the Nazis.

Bear in mind that:

  1. The Jews transported to extermination camps had often been in cattle trucks for 2-5 days and were weak, hungry and thirsty on arrival. Moreover, long before being loaded on to trains they hadn't had enough to eat. They had been subject to endless petty restrictions since 1939-40, such as not being allowed to shop before 3.30pm, by which time shelves in many shops were often half empty, as the war created all kinds of shortages. They were forbidden to own radios or buy newspapers, too, and they were subject to curfews. Their warm clothing had been seized. In many places they were banned from city centres and from theatres, cinemas and most cafes and restaurants.
  2. Many of the Jews sent to the camps had spent the previous 2-4 years or so in ghettos, with insufficient food and no medication and in appalling conditions.
  3. Usually, Jews living in Western and Central Europe were rather scattered. Even in the traditional, well established 'Jewish quarters' of many European cities the majority of the population often wasn't Jewish. In other words, the Jews were rather isolated and didn't have the cohesion that is generally necessary for resistance.
  4. Most Jewish communities in Europe had a long tradition of not trying to meet force with force: they knew, from generations of experience, that it never succeeded and usually ended in disaster. This time they did not know that disaster was inevitable, whether they resisted or not.
  5. Suggestions, such as those made by Paul Johnson in his History of the Jews, that there were long-standing Jewish cultural obstacles to armed resistance are very difficult to evaluate.

However, in some parts of Eastern Europe the Jews DID fight the Nazis, for example in Belarus. However, the best known example is that of the Warsaw Ghetto uprising in 1943. Obviously, inhabitants of the ghetto were physically weak and not well placed to take on the SS but they went down fighting. There were also uprisings in the Bialystock and Vilnius ghettos. There were also the uprisings and mass breakouts at Sobibor in October 1943 and at Treblinka ...

At first there was no reason for most Jews to think they would have to fight. Even as late as 1943, many got off the train at Treblinka and Sobibor thinking they were on their way to "resettlement in the east". There is no point in doing battle if you can trick your enemy into letting you kill them, and that is what the Nazis did.

The Jews had two choices. Either they did what the Nazis told them to do...or die. The Nazis forced them into the cattle cars. If they had fought back, they would have been shot. The Nazis forced them into the ghettos. If they had fought back, they would get shot and killed. Lastly, the Nazis forced them into the concentration camps.

Some further points

Traditionally, many European Jews had been rather pro-German. They shared the general view of Germany as a highly civilized country ... There is some evidence that a number of Jews had great difficulty understanding what was really happening to them until it was far too late to do anything. Obviously, by the time they were in those cattle-trucks it was much too late.

Some Jews did resist, but it didn't help them much. For example, in some places in eastern Poland they refused to board the cattle trucks. The result was usually a delay of perhaps 2-3 hours to the planned departure of the train. One really needs to bear in mind how unevenly matched the Jews and the Nazis were.

There was no armed Jewish resistance in Western Europe but some Jews were active in various resistance movements in occupied countries. In Eastern Europe there was the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, and there were uprisings and mass break-outs in Treblinka and Sobibor. There was also a group of Jewish resistance fighters in Lithuania and also in Belarus. There were, of course, also some individual acts of resistance and defiance.

See also the links, which illustrate the enormous problems associated with non-cooperation, let alone active resistance.

Why did Hitler try to kill all Jews and not just the ones that gave him problems?

Hitler's hatred of the Jews was not Personal. Along with some other groups - Gypsies, non Whites, Homosexuals, Handicapped people, certain Religions - he believed that they were pulling the World down Economically, Socially, Morally, and Biologically. In order to create the kind of World he wanted they had to be exterminated - killed off. As long as they existed, the Aryan Paradise that he envisioned could Not be achieved. He did not believe that Jews, non-Whites, and Gypsies were Human. He believed that they were species of Apes that had infected Humans. While he believed that Homosexuals , the Handicapped, and members of certain Religions were Human, they had so polluted society that they had to be wiped out, for the good of All. Anyone who is interested, and can Stand it, can read Mein Kampf. In it he lays out his belief system, and Philosophy.

Why did Hitler kill Jews and gypsies?

First, the term gypsies is derogatory and the correct name is Romani or Sinti, for one of the cultural subgroups.

For centuries, there has been discrimination against the Romani people, primarily because it has been an unknown culture and people have looked down upon them as a whole. Generally speaking, they are nomadic, but this is because many countries and/or towns banned their presence, even before Hitler. During the Holocaust, 1-1.5 million Romani were killed and many were experimented on. Hitler had an issue at first in regards to the Romani because of their Aryan background, but he decided to focus primarily on 'cultural impurity,' lack of education, and unemployment. Testing their blood to see how much of a Romani they were in order to decide whether or not they should live.

What year were people set free from Auschwitz?

The small number of surving inmates left soon after the camps were liberated, mostly in 1945. Most needed medical and nursing care before they could again try to lead a normal life.

How many people did Hitler kill in the concentration camps?

Six million Jews and five million "undesirables" were killed in concentration camps or elsewhere. The undesirables were people Hitler deemed not welcome in the pure Aryan Europe he dreamed of ruling. They were mentally ill, feeble minded, dwarves, human with anomalies and deformities, communists, Hitler's enemies, and anyone else he chose to throw in the concentration camps and extermination camps.

What day did the Germans give up in World War 2?

Simple answer: never.

An air war called the Battle of Britain between 10 July 1940 and 31 October 1940 prevented Operation Sealion from taking place. Germany failed to defeat the RAF and Fighter Command and was forced to scrap the planned invasion of Britain.

Germany attacked England, but did not invade it during WW2. Germany did have plans to invade, if its air offensive had worked. The English name for the German invasion plan was "Operation Sealion".

Germany never invaded the island of Great Britain proper. The closest they got was capturing several of the Channel Islands that are British territory close to the French coast in the English Channel.

The reason they never invaded in 1940-41 was because the Luftwaffe could not destroy the British RAF and gain air superiority that was needed in order to invade. Hitler got tired of waiting and turned his attentions East in June 1941. One factor of the Luftwaffe inability to take control over the skies of England was that the Raf had a fresh supply of pilots from all over the world. Not only the British commonwealth but as far away as Canada, India, and even black pilots from the U.S. while the Luftwaffe pilots had very little relief.

Why do people discriminate against Jews?

Discrimination of Jewish people is baseless and is not only practised by Americans but by people across the world in general. During World War 2, the fanatical misanthrope, Adolph Hitler managed to convince Germany, Austria and their allies that the Jewish people were the cause of the world's poor economy. Under threats of retribution, he also forced many other countries to "give up the Jews" and rid the world of them. During their long history stretching back over 2000 years, the Jewish people have always been an industrious and hard-working people such that they were seen to be possessed of wealth. Eventually, the Nazis also added many other groups of people to their discrimination list: Jewish sympathisers, Roman Catholics, political opposition, homosexuals and the Romany (Gypsies).

Many religious groups especially the Roman Catholics, were encouraged to look upon the Jewish people as "the murders of Jesus Christ" in that they convinced Pontius Pilate to crucify Jesus. As a former Roman Catholic, I can say that the Church, in days gone by encouraged their faithful in this belief. There are also other fundamentalist religious groups including the notorius Ku Klux Klan and Neo Nazis who still believe in the extermination of the Jews. Discrimination of any group of people including the Jewish people, for any religious or cultural reason is totally abhorrent.

What is the meaning of concentration camp?

A concentration camp was where Jews and others from the Holocaust that were targeted, were sent. There, they had little food, and shelters normall built for 2 or 3, had 20 or 30 people packed in one. They were also called death camps beccuase there, people died of exhaustion,hunger,poison, and disease. Their bodies were dumped in a ditch or other places that were easy to hide.

How is the holocaust of world war 2 different from other acts of genocide?

The issue that it was a modern industrialized event, more efficient than any attempted genocide before or since.

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I wouldn't call it a tragedy. It was not comparable to an earthquake, tsuanami, drought or famine. It was entirely deliberate.

What was done to prevent another holocaust?

Nothing was done until the U.S. was drawn into WWII. At that point, the Allies slowly destroyed the Axis powers and eventually marched across Germany. The end of the Holocaust was a bye-product of the Allied victory. None of the Allies did anything specifically aimed at stopping the Holocaust. The U.S. and Britain didn't want to know about the Holocaust. That said, there was no "miracle solution". However, they could have tried to bomb the railways near the extermination camps and could have asked resistance groups to give a high priority to disrupting the Holocaust, for example by stopping trains on their way to Auschwitz and other camps and freeing the prisoners. In reality, stopping the Holocaust didn't figure anywhere on any of the Allies' priorities. Auschwitz III (Monowitz) was bombed by the USAAF because it was producing chemicals, not because of its role in the Holocaust.

How did the Nazis gained support in 1933?

With the government paralyzed by divisions, both Nazis and communists won more seats in the Reichstag, or lower house of legislature. Fearing the growth of communist political power, conservative politicians turned to Hitler. Although they despised him, they believed they could control. Thus, with conservative support, Hitler was appointed chancellor in 1933 through legal means under Weimar constitution. Within a year, Hitler was dictator of Germany.

Where did the surviving Jews go after the Holocaust?

After the conclusion of World War II, most Jews who had been displaced by the war settled in America or in the fledgling new nation of Israel (particularly after its formal founding in 1948). Smaller groups of Jews were welcomed into France, Canada, and Great Britain, especially.

Did Hitler Crucify Jews during the Holocaust?

no that was not it he hated the Jews because they worked harder and got more goods than his people. Basically, Hitler was jealous.

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Nazi antisemitism was racist and political, not religious in motivation. It certainly was not some version of 'Onward, Christian Soldiers' that got out of hand.

Obviously if one goes back to the Middle Ages one finds that that was used as an excuse for persecuting the Jews. However, the Holocaust was politically and ideologically motivated. It had nothing to do with religion.

Please see the related question.

Life of women in Nazi Germany?

women got medals for the amount of children she had, bronze crosses were given to mothers of four or five children, silver for six or seven children and a gold medal for eight or more children. When men and women married they were given a sum of money to set up a home and such things, on the birth of their first baby they would get to keep a quarter of it, and another quarter on the birth of the second child and so on, so this also encouraged women to have lots of children as it was almost as if they are getting paid for being a mother.Hitler wanted to ensure that German women looked traditionally German, so they should have blonde hair worn in peasantish styles for example plaits, have blue eyes, not wear makeup as they would be naturally beautiful, they should have broad hips for child bearing, yet were athletic. Due to a Nazi woman's role being to raise many children, look after the family and to be a good homemaker so in order to do this her clothing needs to be appropriate so she would wear flat shoes, homemade clothes, a full skirt, defiantly not trousers and high heels.

Did Hitler hate his mother?

No. He got on very well with his mother, who spoiled him. The problems in the household were rather with the very strict father.

Why are so many people ghetto?

During World War II, the Reich in Germany began requiring Jews to relocate to ghettos, small self-sufficient areas, where they lived until they were relocated to work camps and systematically exterminated.

Why were Jews sent to concentration camps?

It depended upon their location, going to a camp that was closer was more efficient. It depended on need also, if (for example) a factory in Silesia needed workers, then able bodied inmates would be sent there.

What international laws did Adolf Hitler break against Jews?

Adolf Hitler disobeyed the laws against inhumane treatment of prisoners of war and those against giving orders to harm another human being.