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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 were the Jews dehumanized?

They were dehumanized by being forced to wear the Star of David, having to give up their valuables and jewelry, and by receiving numbers instead of names.

Why did Adolf Hitler consider him self a German if he was Jewish?

Answer 1

Because Hitler was NOT Jewish.

One can be German AND Jewish. Hitler was Austrian anyway....

While it is wholly possible to be German and Jewish or Austrian and Jewish, Hitler was Austrian and NOT Jewish. There is a rumor that he was Jewish, but there is no support to this rumor.

Answer 2

Whether Adolf Hitler was Jewish or not; it is to be recognized that it is the nationality to be German or not German while it is the faith to be Jewish or not Jewish. One can be German or Austrian while he/she is Christian, Jewish, or Muslim. One should not mix between nationality and religious faith.

What was it like living in concenration camps?

From a child's perspective concentration camps must have been very bad. They couldn't figure out where they were or why.

There were almost no children in concentration camps. The exception being the Gypsy family camps were people were held for experimentation. The vast majority of children were sent to extermination camps, there were of course those who were big enough to pass for adults.

Why were the jews perscuted during world war 2?

The Jewish people were discriminated against so harshly in Germany due to the Nazi belief that they were so inferior as a race that they weren't even people. In comparison to the supremacy of the Aryan race, the Nazis thought, the Jews were a threat to progress as a whole of humanity, and thus needed to be eliminated.

What does SS officer stand for?

Have a look at the answer to this question: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_is_an_SS_officer

What was the worst part of the holocaust and why?

The worst part of the Holocaust was the 'final solution' stage. In Hitler's book, 'Mein Kampf', Hitler laid out a step by step process showing how he would get rid of the Jews. The final solution was extermination through mass murder.

Why were these Nazi camps called concentration camps?

The first concentration camps in Germany were established soon after Hitler's appointment as chancellor in January 1933. In the weeks after the Nazis came to power, The SA (Sturmabteilungen; commonly known as Storm Troopers), the SS (Schutzstaffel; Protection Squadrons -- the elite guard of the Nazi party), the police, and local civilian authorities organized numerous detention camps to incarcerate real and perceived political opponents of Nazi policy.

German authorities established camps all over Germany on an ad hoc basis to handle the masses of people arrested as alleged subversives. The SS established larger camps in Oranienburg, north of Berlin; Esterwegen, near Hamburg; Dachau, northwest of Munich; and Lichtenburg, in Saxony. In Berlin itself, the Columbia Haus facility held prisoners under investigation by the Gestapo (the German secret state police) until 1936.

After the SS gained its independence from the SA in July 1934, in the wake of the Röhm purge, Hitler authorized the Reich SS leader, Heinrich Himmler, to centralize the administration of the concentration camps and formalize them into a system. Himmler chose SS Lieutenant General Theodor Eicke for this task. Eicke had been the commandant of the SS concentration camp at Dachau since June 1933. Himmler appointed him Inspector of Concentration Camps, a new section of the SS subordinate to the SS Main Office.

After December 1934, the SS became the only agency authorized to establish and manage facilities that were formally called concentration camps, though local civilian authorities continued to establish and manage forced-labor camps and detention camps throughout Germany. In 1937, only four concentration camps were left: Dachau, near Munich; Sachsenhausen near Berlin; Buchenwald near Weimar; and Lichtenburg near Merseburg in Saxony for female prisoners.

Already as commandant of Dachau in 1933, Eicke developed an organization and procedures to administer and guard a concentration camp. He issued regulations both for the duties of the perimeter guards and for treatment of the prisoners. The organization, structure, and practice developed at Dachau in 1933-1934 became the model for the Nazi concentration camp system as it expanded. Among Eicke's early trainees at Dachau was Rudolf Höss, who later commanded the Auschwitz concentration camp.

Special "political units on alert" (Politische Bereitschaften), originall guarded the SS concentration camps. They were renamed "SS Guard Units" (SS-Wachverbände) in 1935 and "SS Death's-Head Units" (SS-Totenkopfverbände) in April 1936. One SS Death's-Head Unit was assigned to each concentration camp. After 1936, the camp administration, including the commandant, was also a part of the SS Death's-Head Unit. Although all SS units wore the Death's-Head symbol (skull and crossbones) on their caps, only the SS Death's-Head Units were authorized to wear the Death's Head Symbol on their lapels. After the creation of the "SS Death's-Head Division" of the Waffen SS in 1940, whose officers had been recruited from concentration camp service, members of this division also wore the Death's-Head symbol on their lapel.

The SS Death's-Head Unit at each camp was divided into two groups. The first was the camp staff, which encompassed: 1) the commandant and his personal staff; 2) a Security Police officer and an assistant to maintain and update prisoner records; 3) the commandant of the so-called protective detention camp (Schutzhaftlagerführer) which housed the prisoners, and his staff (including the labor allocation officer, the roll call officer, and the Blockführer, who were responsible for the individual prisoner barracks); 4) an administrative staff responsible for the fiscal and supply administration of the camp; and 5) an infirmary run by an SS physician, who was assisted by one or two SS sanitation officers and/or medical orderlies. The second group constituted the guard detachment (SS-Wachbataillion), which prior to 1939 was at battalion strength.

After 1938, authority to incarcerate persons in a concentration camp formallly rested exclusively with the German Security Police (made up of the Gestapo and the Criminal Police), which held this exclusive authority de facto since 1936. The "legal" instrument of incarceration was either the "protective detention" (Schutzhaft) order (which the Gestapo could issue for persons considered a political danger after 1933) and the "preventative detention" (Vorbeugungshaft) order, which the Criminal Police could issue after December 1937 for persons considered to be habitual and professional criminals, or to be engaging in what the regime defined as "asocial" behavior. Neither order was subject to judicial review, or any review by any German agency outside of the German Security Police.

The model thus established by Eicke in the mid-1930s characterized the concentration camp system until the collapse of the Nazi regime in the spring of 1945. The daily routine at Dachau, the methods of punishment, and the duties of the SS staff and guards became the norm, with some variation, at all German concentration camps.

EXPANSION OF THE CAMP SYSTEM 1939

As Nazi Germany expanded by bloodless conquest between 1938 and 1939, the numbers of those labeled as political opponents and social deviants increased, requiring the establishment of new concentration camps. By the time the Germans invaded Poland in September 1939, unleashing World War II, there were six concentration camps in the so-called Greater German Reich: Dachau (founded 1933), Sachsenhausen (1936), Buchenwald (1937), Flossenbürg in northeastern Bavaria near the 1937 Czech border (1938), Mauthausen, near Linz, Austria (1938), and Ravensbrück, the women's camp, established in Brandenburg Province, southeast of Berlin (1939), after the dissolution of Lichtenburg.

From as early as early as 1934, concentration camp commandants deployed prisoners as forced laborers for the benefit of SS construction projects, including the construction or expansion of the camps themselves. By 1938, SS leaders envisioned using the reservoirs of forced laborers incarcerated in the camps for a variety of SS-commissioned construction projects. To mobilize and finance such projects, Himmler revamped and expanded the administrative offices of the SS and created a new SS office for business operations. Both agencies were led by SS Major General Oswald Pohl, who would take over the Inspectorate of Concentration Camps in 1942.

Beginning a pattern that would become typical after the war began, economic considerations had an increasing impact on the selection of sites for concentration camps after 1937. For instance, Mauthausen and Flossenbürg were located near large stone quarries. Likewise, concentration camp authorities increasingly diverted prisoners from meaningless, backbreaking labor to more goal-oriented if still backbreaking and dangerous labor in extractive industries, such as stone quarries and coal mines, and construction labor.

After Nazi Germany unleashed World War II in September 1939, vast new territorial conquests and larger groups of potential prisoners inspired the rapid expansion of the concentration camp system to the east. The war did not change the original function of the concentration camps as detention sites for the incarceration of political enemies. The climate of national emergency that the conflict granted to the Nazi leaders, however, permitted the SS to expand the functions of the camps.

The concentration camps increasingly became sites where the SS authorities could kill targeted groups of real or perceived enemies of Nazi Germany. They also came to serve as holding centers for a rapidly expanding pool of forced laborers deployed on SS construction projects, SS-commissioned extractive industrial sites, and, by 1942, in the production of armaments, weapons, and related goods for the German war effort.

Despite the chronic need for forced labor, the SS authorities continued to deliberately undernourish and mistreat prisoners incarcerated in the concentration camps, deploying them so ruthlessly and without regard to safety at forced labor, with such rates of mortality that many prisoners believed that they were in effect being "annihilated through work."

Who did Hitler blame germanys defeat in ww1 upon?

The Treaty of Versailles was a dictated peace; it was not negotiated. The German delegation was ordered to sign on the dotted line and this included accepting sole responbility for WW1. Some German politicians such as Noske argued against signing and were willing to continue the war in 1919. However the army told them that this was impossible. In practice, Germany claimed (unofficially) that most of the European powers slid into war without any country being particularly blameworthy. This view is still pretty much the popular standard view in America. A few perceptive commentators knew that the remarkable thing had been that Germany and its weak allies had managed to hold out for four years against a more powerful alliance. The stab-in-the-back legend - a conspiracy theory that belamed defeat on subsersion on the "home front" - was popular on the hardline, nationalist right. Later, the Nazis mulcted this for all it was worth and much more besides. Hindsight is a wonderful thing. However, it can be very distorting. The notion that German history in the Weimar period was just one vast build-up to Hitler's rise is an example of how hindsight can distort. Most ordinary people got on as best they could with everyday life and weren't consumed by the "blame game". Interestingly enough, the view that Germany was overhwelmingly responsible for the outbreak of WW1 was advanced again by some German historians in the 1960s. Fritz Fischer and others had unimpeded access to the documents and they tell a damning story. So, to return to the original question, the German General Staff took an irresponsible gamble in 1914 - and lost. Germany's chances of winning were never very good.

What were the punishments in the holocaust?

If you disobeyed in the camps or annoyed the guards you were whipped (usually 15 or 25 lashes). If you were unlucky you could have your wrists tied behind your back and be hoisted off the ground for hours, and one of the worst punishments was death by starvation.

What Holocaust words that begin with b?

One word would be 'Brutal'. The word means 'Harsh when you get a beating'. Jews got beaten by the Nazis.

Why must you never forget the Holocaust?

The Holocaust shouldn't be fogotten because it was one of the world's great disasters, and known as one of the bigest tragedies in history.

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There is no 'should', that would be imposing your own morals onto other people.

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The Holocaust will never be forgotten as we now have methods of recording what has happened.

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It is a period in time where millions of innocent people lost their lives. It was a sensless act so thats why is to honor the people who died.

What type of people did Hitler want to kill?

The people that Adolph Hitler wanted to kill was the Jewish he would either kill them straight away or send them to a concentration camp where they would work and after words be killed and if you want to find out more you could read The boy in the striped pyjamas.

How many people died during the American Revolution?

American Revolution Battle DeathsVarious sites on the internet give the following figures for the American Revolution, regarding American Revolutionary War battle deaths. The best way to find the answer would be to visit the website listed below, although here is a rough estimate.

American Revolution (1775�1783) Total people in service--217,000 Battle deaths: 4,435 Non mortal woundings: 6,188

http:/www.teacheroz.com/toc.htm

MrV

27,500 Americans 10,000 british so about 37,500

IMPROVED ANSWER:

When it came to the war and the losses of life, about 7,200 Americans were killed in battle during the Revolutionary War. Approximately 8,200 were wounded. Around 10,000 others died in military camps from disease or exposure. Some 8,500 would die in prison after being captured by the British. American military deaths from all causes during the war adds up to 25,700 people.

In addition, approximately 1,400 soldiers were missing.

British military deaths total about 10,000.

Fighting began on April 19, 1775 at Lexington, Mass. and nearby Concord. British strategy called for crushing the rebellion in the North. Several times the British nearly defeated the Continental Army. But victories at Trenton and Princeton, N.J., in late 1776 and early 1777 restored patriot hopes, and victory at Saratoga, N.Y., which halted a British advance from Canada, led France to intervene on behalf of the rebels.In 1778, fighting shifted to the South. Britain succeeded in capturing Georgia and Charleston, S.C. and defeating an American army at Camden, S.C. But bands of patriots harassed loyalists and disrupted supply lines, and Britain failed to achieve control over the southern countryside before advancing northward to Yorktown, Va. In 1781, an American and French force defeated the British at Yorktown in the war's last major battle.CONSEQUENCES:

How many Jews were killed in the relocation camps each day during World War 2?

AnswerI suspect a daily count would vary, with each camp and day.

But perhaps more importantly, there clearly was no "relocation" intended. The people brought there already had, for the years before, been dislocated and relocated and put in ghettos, etc. The places you refer to were, or are, more correctly called either death or extermination camps. All sent there were intended to, and many did, die. To imply there was anything less harsh than that going to happen, is repulsive itself.

The renowned aptitude for the German ability to engineer and do any job proves this...since there are really no known places anyone brought to these camps was found o be "relocated" by those very efficent Germans in all the years they were running them.

According to recent news, much more information will be available soon. The German Government has extensive, believed to be detailed records of the daily activities in the camps, which they have fought revealing and are only now going to open to researchers.

When did the Final Solution end?

  • The Nazi mobile killing units first went into action in Kaunas, Lithuania, on 25 June 1941.
  • Routine mass gassings started at Chelmno on 8 December 1941. (There had been some earlier experimental gassings).

The systematic killings and the Holocaust are usually taken to be the same thing.

The start of the Holocaust is now often given as June 1941. Almost immediately after the start of the German invasion of the Soviet Union mobile death squads started to operate in the areas occupied by German army.

It used to be common to date the start of the Holocaust from the Wannsee Conference of January 1942. However, this was a quite short meeting concerned with administative matters. The policy decision had already been taken and at a much higher level.

The persecution of the Jews by the Nazis began soon after they came to power in January 1933, and many Jews were killed by the Nazis before the Holocaust began. The position of the Jews in Germany became particularly bad from late 1938 onwards.

From November 1939 onwards the Nazis set up ghettos in Polish cities such as Warsaw, Lodz and Lublin. Conditions in these ghettos soon became very bad indeed and death-rates rose sharply.

(The Holocaust ended finally in May 1945).

The Final Solution was the Nazi genocide of the Jews in 1941-1945. It did not have 'stages', but if your teacher thinks it did, then look at the related question.

The Final Solution was final and didn't really have 'stages'. If you mean 'When did the Nazi genocide of the Jews begin?' there is no single agreed date, as it started piecemeal in the June-December 1941. The traditional idea that Hitler barked out a single order, and that the Holocaust (Final Solution) started with a 'big bang' on a definite date is rejected by practically all historians of the Holocaust). However, you may wish to note the following dates:

25 June 1941: The German mobile killing units went into action in Kaunas, Lithuania.

8 December 1941: Routine mass gassings started at Chelmno.

Obviously, the 'invention' of fixed gas chambers marked a significant intensification of the Holocaust/Final Solution.

1941, and it was stopped in 1945.

1941

It started in 1942 after the Wannsee conference, Here some stuff about the Wannsee conference and some qutoes from the conference.

On January, 20, 1942, Reinhard Heydrich, Himmler's second in command of the SS, convened the Wannsee Conference in Berlin with 15 top Nazi bureaucrats to coordinate the Final Solution (Endlösung) in which the Nazis would attempt to exterminate the entire Jewish population of Europe, an estimated 11 million persons.

"Europe would be combed of Jews from east to west," Heydrich stated.

The minutes of that meeting have been preserved but were edited by Heydrich substituting the coded language Nazis used when referring to lethal actions to be taken against Jews.

"Instead of emigration, there is now a further possible solution to which the Führer has already signified his consent - namely deportation to the east," Heydrich stated for example when referring to mass deportations of Jews to ghettos in occupied Poland and then on to the soon-opened death camps at Belzec, Sobibor, and Treblinka.

"...eliminated by natural causes," refers to death by a combination of hard labor and starvation.

"...treated accordingly," refers to execution by SS firing squads or death by gassing - also seen in other Nazi correspondence in a variety of connotations such as "special treatment" and "special actions" regarding the Jews.

It was the term used at the Wansee Conference of 1942, as a way to describe the escalation of the Holocaust. The whole phrase refers to "the final solution to the Jewish question", implying that the aim was to completely destroy all European Jews through systematic genocide.

The Holocaust (and the "Final Solution") were brought to an end in May 1945, with the collapse of the Nazi government and the surrender of Germany to the Allied forces.

The Final Solution is the same as the Holocaust. Please see the related question.

The Final Solution was secret and there was never any 'announcement'.

_____

Well, there were a couple. (but they happened well after the Final Solution started).

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The second answer would be more plausible if the dates and places of the announcements were named.

There was never any public announcement of the Final Solution.

How many people were killed by firing squads during the holocaust?

About 2 million half of which were not Jewish.

Similar numbers of Chinese and Asian people were subjected to experimentation by Germanys ally Japan but no action was taken in a deal that gave the USA the results gained from these crimes.

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No, the number of Holocaust victims killed by medical experiments is usually given as about 18,000. It is a big mistake to think of it as a major method of killing in the Holocaust.

What were death marches?

Where prisoners were forced to march toward a concentration camp or other prison type facility where they were to be executed. Anyone who fell behind or was not well enough to walk was executed on the spot, often being beaten to death. Those who made it to the prison camp were starved or given very minimal food rations then they were worked to death or executed.

What groups of people died in the Holocaust?

Answer

The largest number of victims were European Jews. About 250,000 Gypsies were killed and 10,000 to 15,000 homosexuals. At least a million Soviet POWs died as did 50,000 African and European Blacks. Jehovah's Witnesses, common criminals, political prisoners and random individuals also were killed.


Millions of people died during the Holocaust, some were killed by machine guns while others died because their bodies just stopped working for starvation and abuse. There were many different kinds of victims, and each had a different colored triangle with a letter on it that they had to wear. Some of the victims were the Jews, Gypsies, people with physical or mental disabilities, and Jehovah's Witnesses. These victims were selected simply because they were disliked by Hitler and the other Germans.

Concentration camps are places where most of the victims of the Nazis were killed. The concentration camps were not a place where you could live and die peacefully. At these camps, the treatment was extremely harsh and cruel.

Was most of the German populace aware of Jewish extermination in concentration camps during the Holocaust?

Yes. There were lots of tasteless jokes ciruclating in Germany in World War 2 to the effect that the standard (government issue) soap was made from the fat of Jews.

Answer #2Honestly nobody can really tell you for sure how much a German knew about what was going on in concentration camps... even regime opponents told later on the concentration camps were proclaimed to be correction camps for dangerous criminals... and who really knows if they really believed in rumours? But it's of course true that some people must have seen something, heard something, knew something... as there are people who delivered family, friends, neighbours, etc. to the secret state police and nowadays pretend knowing nothing...

It's just not that simple that in case you meet an elder German person telling you he/she didn't know about it, you could point the finger at him/her and call him/her a liar... it's just too complicated. I hardly believe someone never heard of it... but nobody can tell for 100%... maybe the rumours seemed too exagerated... look at today's world and how much it takes to believe some facts...

What did Hitler mean by 'the Jewish problem'?

Hitler hated the Jews dispite his grandmother was a Jew. I believe its refers to the "Final Solution" described on his book "Mein Kampf".

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Hitler chose to regard the Jews as a problem. He saw them as the root of Communism and as the cause of all Germany's misfortunes. He believed in fanciful conspiracy theories which saw the Jews as some kind of threat. Please see related question. (Incidentally, there's no evidence that he had a Jewish grandparent and there's no mention of genocide or the 'Final Solution' in 'Mein Kampf').

What was the aim of the Holocaust?

The purpose of Hitler's hidden Holocaust was to make a "perfect Aryan (German) race". He told the Nazis such things as "Jews made us lose the First War" "The reason Germany is in poverty is because of Jews" etc. etc.

Taking his racism to another level, he:

  • Torturing Jews in various elements. No Jewish person could receive insurance, call the police, etc. And, most European Jews were forced to wear a Star of David.
  • Threatened to lock the Jews in the synagogue and burn it if he (and the Nazis) did not receive enough gold, jewelry, etc.
  • After all of the above, he finally started the transportations; he sent all of the unlucky Jewish people he could find to concentration, labor, and death camps.

Other racial groups were destroyed by the Nazis, as well. Including:

  • Jehovah's Witnesses (Christians and Catholics also perished, but not as bad)
  • Soviet Prisoner's of War
  • Homosexuals
  • Gypsies

As Allied troops neared, Hitler had nearly achieved his goal. The elimination of "The Final Jewish Question", and six million Jewish people died.

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This view of Hitler as some kind of 'racial perfectionist' is very out of date ... I'm also puzzled to hear JWs, Soviet POWs and homosexuals regarded as races.

How does the holocaust affect the US today?

The United states Stopped the holocaust by defeating the German Army and The Nazi's.

______________

I hope you're not saying that the US defeated Nazi Germany single-handedly ...

What was America's reaction to the Holocaust?

The United States responded the Holocaust during the war by not showing much interest. Congress did not raise immigration quotas, and even the existing quotas for Jews went unfilled. In 1944, nearly two years later of knowing about this, Roosevelt created the War Refugee Board to try to help people that were threatened by Nazis. Despite the late start, the WRB's programs helped saved some 200,000 lives.

Which is one major reason the Holocaust is considered a unique event in modern European history?

Because it was the first time in history that humans (Nazis) performed a genocide on over 6.5 million Jews (including gypsies, Polish and anyone who fought against the Nazi order.)

Presumably, the question means unique in a way other than happening to specific people at a given time in a particular region. In other words, I assume it means something like: Has anything similar happened to other groups, especially peoples?

If that is what's meant, I would say Yes, there have been comparable genocides. The most obviously compable genocide is that of the Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish government in 1915-1917 (continued in 1922).

Unfortunately, there have been genocides throughout human history, including ones that were more successful in wiping out their target.

However, what makes the Holocaust unique is that it was the first (and, thankfully, so far the only) case where the full institutional effort of an industrialized nation was put to the purpose of genocide.

Genocide in human history has been a haphazard affair. Often, while it was the official policy of a government or ruler to kill certain groups, the actual task of performing that action was seldom organized. It such a policy had never before become an institutionalized part of a government. That is, the uniqueness of the Holocaust is that the genocide policy was not just decided upon, but incorporated into the actual German nation's government, in the same manner as one would have a Department of Transportation or similar formal structure.

The Holocaust harnessed the innovations of industrial organization as pertains to government, and used that organization to carry out a genocide in an ultra-efficient manner never before seen. The terror of the Holocaust is that such efficiency of mass-murder is possible, when using the very organs of the state itself to carry it out.

To be explicit: the uniqueness of the Nazi Holocaust is that it harnessed the organizational and mechanical innovations of the Industrial Revolution to genocide into a institutionalized, formalized, planned, and executed government bureaucracy. The Holocaust's "product" was Death: designed, regulated, planned, manufactured, mass-produced, and sold to its victims using all the advancements of the Industrial Revolution.

The horror of this industrialization and efficiency was that it required relatively little effort and materials to accomplish mass murder. Total estimates of the number of people (primarily SS) actually involved directly in the Holocaust is only a few thousand. The mechanization and organization of the Holocaust meant that those few thousand people were able to exterminate over a thousand times their number of victims in a couple of years. This works out to a single SS (or other perpetrator) being able to effictively kill several hundred people per year by working in the extermination system. This meant that the Holocaust required a relatively small portion of the country to participate (something far easier to accomplish than getting a large portion of the army or population involved), it was far easier to hide that it was occuring, and the killings could continue for very extended time periods, all of which are radically different than any other genocide in human history.