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Holocaust

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

11,094 Questions

What was Fritz Sauckel Job in Holocaust?

As General Plenipotentiary of Labour Deployment, Sauckel was chiefly responsible for the commission of slave labour. His complicity in the "Holocaust" merits debate. Fritz Sauckel's death sentence has been much the contentious subject among historians. Sauckel's ministerial responsibilities were part of Goering's "Four Year Plan" the so-called economic solution for greater Germany. The common misconception is that Albert Speer was his direct superior on account of his demands to meet the quota of foreign labourers in his munitions divisions. This assertion is incorrect, as Goering was effectively his direct superior. It is true that Speer inherited vital economic responsibility from Goering with his assumption as minister of armaments, but the policy of acquiring foreign labour was enabled by then armaments minister Fritz Todt and Hermann Goering. Moreover, the mistreatment of dragooned prisoners was ultimately left up to the discretion of the respective commandant of the division, not Sauckel. He expressly stated in a memorandum to his delegates of foreign labour that the men and women be treated accordingly with adequate care. In this sense the mistreatment of foreign labourers falls neither, on Sauckel, or on Speer for that matter.

Why the holocaust is a problem for Jews?

it forced them to answer difficult questions about their relationship with God

What song were the German soldiers singing as they marched in to stop Warsaw uprising?

We're off to see the Wizard, the wonderful Wizard of Oz; from the 1939 movie of the same title.

It was the marching song "Erika" or "Auf der Heide blüht ein kleines Blümelein".

What was Auschwitz concentration camp how may Jews died in it?

Auschwitz was an network of concentration camps and sub camps. Auschwitz had 3 main camps and 51 sub camps. Auschwitz is located known today as Oswiecim in Poland. Auschwitz concentration camp is known in history for many things and they are; Millions of people died in them, Auschwitz Birkenau was an death factory, how it was ran and what else apart from the killings happened in it.

Auschwitz was established after the Nazi occupation of Poland in 1939. At first Auschwitz was an military barrack for the Polish Cavalry unit but it was turn into an concentration camp. Once Auschwitz was established, killings didn't began straight away. At first Auschwitz was an Labour camp which in the early years, the main inmates were Soviet POW's and Poles. All of this changed in 1941 after the Wansee Conference and the idea of the Final Solution came to place. Once the Final Solution was ordered, that is when the mass killings began.

When the mass killings began, millions of Jews, Poles and POW's were deported to Auschwitz. it's known that 5 Million people were deported to Auschwitz withing the years of 1940-1945. when people were deported to Auschwitz, from 1941 onwards, prisoners had to be part of the "Selection Process." This means that an processes taken place and to see who were fit enough to work and who were to be sent to the gas chambers. This how it worked;

1. Prisoners deported from cattle wagons.

2. Prisoners sent to area where the Selection Process would take place.

3. SS ordered everyone in the middle area (between 10,000-248,000 prisoners did this)

3. People who were fit to work was sent to the SS Officer's Right hand side. (Who was ordering the selection Process ) This was mainly men and kids about the ages of 15.

4. People who weren't fit to work was sent to the SS Officer's left hand side, where they would be gassed immediately. This mainly included Woman, Children and the elderly.

5. After the process; The left side people were sent to gas chambers and the right side were sent to work.

NOTE: Jews were always sent to Gas Chambers despite if they were or weren't fit to Work.

The number of death toll of Jews in Auschwitz has been an Major issue to historians for nearly 70 Years. Their has been an range of 1.1 Million - 2 Millions of Jews died in Auschwitz. However, the numbers have fallen in. After many Testimonies from the SS Functionaries and Prisoners in Auschwitz, the ruff official death toll of Jews at Auschwitz is 1,765,000. This is proved from various documents the allies got and from the testimonies given from the years February 1945- November 1991.

Is Grobler a German surname or What is the origin of the surname?

Jewish Family Names and Their Origins HW Guggenheimer. GROB (w) "coarse, thick, strong (MHG) (Bahl) cf G Dick Stark. Pol Drabkin Patr Grobard, Grober, Groberman, Grobler, Grobard, Grobman, Grobmanow, Grobstein (of Grobstein), Grobtuch (stupca- stupca (Lodz).

Grobler is a Polish Jewish Surname. See JewishGen Poland. There were two Grobler's on Schindlers List. See Grobler Jew's who died in the Holocaust. There was a Grobler professor from Poland whose father survived the Holocaust and was the only Grobler left there - he says that Groblers originated in Holland then moved to Germany. Known as "Soeker" in Holland.

Why might the romans in Judea especially have responded harshly toward anyone arousing strong feelings among the Jewish people?

The greatest crime in the Roman lexicon was that of rebellion. They were constantly concerned that rebellion might spread unrest throughout all of their colonies. Judea was centrally located and possessed a populace with religious motivation and with belief in Redemption.

Background:

Hyrcanus and Aristobulus, the two sons of the Jewish King Yannai (Johanan Hyrcanus, 1st century BCE), got the Romans involved in Judea when they asked them to settle a dispute. At first the Romans were cordial; and they actually became party to a military treaty with Judea (Talmud, Avodah Zara 8b). The Romans didn't interfere much in Jewish internal matters, because the main thing that they wanted was taxes and a quiet populace.
A couple of decades later, however, they unilaterally abrogated the treaty, and placed Roman governors over the land who afflicted the Jews with crushing taxation (Talmud, Yoma 9a).

In the first two centuries CE, things got worse, with the Romans destroying Jerusalem and the Second Temple after the Jewish Zealots attempted to revolt. The Romans sold hundreds of thousands of Jews into slavery (Josephus). From time to time they forbade the observance of the Torah-commands, and they killed several of the leading Sages, despite the fact that the Torah-leaders had advised against revolt (Talmud, Gittin 56a).

Later, Simeon Bar Kochba led a second revolt, in an ill-advised attempt to recreate the independent Judea. The Romans responded by destroying Betar.

See also:

Jewish history timeline

The Jews and the Romans

What is secondary victims?

Secondary victimization occurs when the societal response to a victimizing stigma is more disabling than the primary stigmatic condition itself. This may include the treatment by society of victims of rape, disability, mental disorder, or other social stigma. The consequences may also extend further degrees, e.g. to tertiary victimization and quaternary victimization.

ex. A victim of rape (primary victimization) may be subjected to victim blaming and ostracism as the result of the attack; those who become disabled (primary victimization) may be subjected to non-accommodation, medicalization, and segregation; and those who develop mental disorder (primary victimization) may be subject to institutionalization, that in each case may be far more victimizing to these individuals and limiting of their life opportunity than the primary victimizing stigmatic condition itself, and are thus called secondary victimization. Tertiary victimizations would include the victimizing consequence of secondary victimizations, e.g. results of victim blaming, ostracism, non-accommodation, medicalization, segregation, and institutionalization, etc. by society.

What are the roles of a Statistical Officer?

Statistical officers have many responsibilities including checking source data. They may also be responsible for check code data and compile reports and charts to receive analysis.

What is ghetto church?

A church located in a homogeneously populated community.

Why did Jews hate Adolf Hitler and the Nazis?

Roots of Hitler's and the Nazis' Hatred of Jews.

For a short answer see the Related Questions listed at the bottom.

  1. Many of the 'theories' about Hitler's hatred of the Jews, especially those claiming to be based on a single experience early in his life, are no more than fanciful guesswork.
  2. The reasons given by Hitler in 'Mein Kampf' should be treated with caution. The book is not a reliable source.
  3. In the last 30 years or so historians have generally distinguished between the ordinary prejudices of his background and time (Roman Catholic, Upper Austria, lower middle class, around 1880-1910) and the obsessive hatred that later became one of his hallmarks.
  4. It appears that, contrary to what he says in 'Mein Kampf', Hitler's extreme antisemitism only arose towards the end of World War 1 or even later. (See Volume 1 of Ian Kershaw's two volume biography, Hubris, Penguin Books 1998).
  5. There had been anti Jewish prejudice of varying degrees of intensity in many parts of Europe and elsewhere for a long time. A distinctive feature of Hitler's antisemitism was that it was formulated as conspiracy theory. For many, especially in Bavaria, this went hand in hand with the 'stab-in-the-back' theory, that is, with the view that Germany had not been defeated on the battlefield but had been brought down by liberal, socialist and Communist subversives on the home front. In other words it was claimed that 'the Jews had caused Germany's defeat in World War 1'. Potentially, this made antisemitism explosive in Germany.
  6. In much of Europe it was assumed that Jews were Communists. In many hardline right wing circles there was talk about a supposed 'Judeo-Bolshevist conspiracy'. This was highly inflammatory. Despite his ranting against Jewish businessmen Hitler saw the Jews as the 'biological root' of Bolshevism. (See the link below on the influence of emigres from Russia).
  7. In Bavaria but not in other most parts of Germany a number of Marxists of Jewish origin had been prominent in the upheavals of 1918-1919. Most, like Ernst Toller and Erich Mühsam, for example, were idealistic utopians. They were not conspirators or traitors or anything of that sort. However, their origins were shamelessly exploited for propaganda purposes.
  8. Many extreme German Nationalists (not only the Nazis) called the new German republic a 'Jewish republic' (though almost none of its leaders were Jews). There was a widespread tendency, not only in Germany, to equate the Jews with subversion and Communism. In many of his speeches Hitler often used the words Jews and Bolshevists almost interchangeably. He merged rabid anti communism with equally fanatical antisemitism. To this he later added the claim that Jews were homosexuals, allegedly undermining the manliness and and fighting spirit of the German people. This combination was potentially a 'witches' brew'.

Against this background there are also many contributing factors and possible theories. Here is some further input:

  • Jealousy. Some Jews were successful and held "visible" positions in Austria and Germany in the 1920s and 1930s. In the Great Depression. Germany was hit the hardest by the worldwide economic depression, and successful Jews were envied.
  • Some Germans believed that "Jewish bankers" were responsible for the Treaty of Versailles.
  • Jews became a scapegoat for Germany's economic problems. (According to this racist sentiment, "international Jewish financiers had plunged the world into a war and the Depression for their business profit.")
  • Hitler and many Nazis were influenced by the notorious anti Semitic book called "Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion."
  • Hitler lived in Vienna from 1907 to 1913 and those were the most difficult years of his life. Hitler was trying to become an artist or to make himself a name in field of arts. He was twice rejected from the Vienna Academy of Fine Art. He claimed that the professors that rejected him were Jewish ... [However, none of the members of the selection panel was Jewish].
  • The Nazis had a vision of an Aryan German race that specifically excluded Jews and many other groups of people.
  • Here is an example of Hitler's anti Semitic racism from a speech given in Munich in July 1922: "His is no master people; he is an exploiter: the Jews are a people of robbers. He has never founded any civilization, though he has destroyed civilizations by the hundred...everything he has stolen. Foreign people, foreign workmen build him his temples, it is foreigners who create and work for him, it is foreigners who shed their blood for him."
  • Some say Hitler and the Nazis were opportunistic demagogues. Inciting hatred of the Jews was the means to an end. The Nazis used hatred of the Jews to unify the German people and create a new German empire. Nothing unites a people more than when they believe they are constantly under attack and fighting a common enemy. The Jews were convenient enemies. Christianity had traditionally blamed the death of Christ on the Jews. One can see in the Bible the statement that the Jews demanded the death of Jesus, and said, "let it be upon our heads and that of our children." This became an excuse to abuse the Jews for more than a thousand years. It was not until the 1960s that the Catholic Church stated that the Jews were NOT to blame for the death of Jesus. Antisemitism was deeply embedded in European and American culture.
  • In the 1930s there was a lot of anti Jewish feeling and resentment in the Western world. Many Jews who tried to escape the persecution in Germany were refused entry into the US and other European countries and also many countries further afield.
  • Antisemitism has been rife throughout European history, largely because the Jews were a distinct, identifiable group, who did not integrate. (Those who really wanted to integrate converted.) Of course, many now see pluralism as a virtue, and a variety of ethnicity's and religions as a positive thing. However, in the inter war period diversity was often regarded as divisive and "disloyal".
  • Another key element of a dictatorship is fear, and a visible scapegoat experiencing the wrath of the state is a good way to keep people from stepping out of line.
  • Hitler stated: "The war is to be a war of annihilation". His henchman Heinrich Himmler declared: "All Poles will disappear from the world. . . . It is essential that the great German people should consider it as a major task to destroy all Poles."
  • The Jews did absolutely nothing to deserve the treatment they got. Like the Africans and the Indians the Jews were just picked for hatred and unjust things but again they did absolutely nothing!
  • Since the 1870s the Jews had been the object of a new wave of demonization and conspiracy theories. On the whole this wasn't taken too seriously in Germany, but in Austria anti Jewish conspiracy theories were spread by extreme right wing politicians and also by the Roman Catholic Church, which knew perfectly well that these theories were rubbish. Young Adolf was a server (altar-boy) and may have been influenced by this.
  • Well, there were more "sub humans", as Hitler called those poor people, than he could handle. He had to find ways to kill them without making it too obvious. That's when the real Holocaust started [1941]! He built extermination camps, where he could kill many thousands of people at a time.
  • Hitler blamed Germany's defeat in WWI on the Jews, and he hated them. When he took power he started rounding them up. He did the same when he started taking over other countries. He used the Jews, Poles, gays, gypsies, Russians and mentally challenged people as slave labor and then started to annihilate them in gas chambers. His reason - hatred. He classed the above mentioned people as sub human and basically in his Nazi world there was no place for the "sub human", only the 'Aryans'.
  • To understand the Holocaust you have to understand the Darwinian biology of the time. There was a growing sense, particularly since Ernst Haeckel, that there were those in society who were 'biologically' inferior and that for a 'fit' world to survive and thrive, those who were 'unfit' should be done away with. Instead of letting nature take its course, there was a unspoken sense that humans could take matters into their own hands. I am obviously not supporting this twisted logic, but that is a key to understanding how a number of things converged to create the nightmare of the century. [However, 'biological inferiority' is subjective. In Britain, for example, many Social Darwinists, especially those active in education, were most impressed by the achievements of Jews in schools and universities and concluded that they were a 'superior breed' ... This view was to some extent echoed in Nazi conspiracy theories, which painted a picture of diabolically cunning Jews].
  • Hitler blamed the Jews for Germany's defeat in World War I.
  • He didn't only kill Jews. He killed Communists, liberals, homosexuals, gypsies and many other groups, including millions of victims of warfare. Why he did is up for debate, but I'd guess a mixture of antisemitism and stereotypes of the as Jews as Communists, subsersives and all kinds of other things - as a means to an end. A common way to gain power is to spread fear and panic about an enemy (real or imaginary), stir up hatred and present yourself as the only person able to 'save' the country.
Of course, hatred does not in itself account for the Holocaust. How the Nazis moved from hatred and persecution to genocide is another matter. Please see the links and related questions. because He Took Over THere Land
The only reason that the Nazi party hated Jews was because of Hitler's convincing. He was convinced that it was a Jewish professor that had rejected his art work; he became convinced that a Jewish doctor had been responsible for his mother

What was the Jewish literacy rate during the Holocaust?

Very high indeed. The Jews have traditionally attached great importance to education. Even in the Nazi ghettos they did their utmost to provide some schooling for the children.

Why was the concentration camp at Auschwitz so feared?

Auschwitz was a death camp synonymous with suffering , hopelessness and despair .

Auschwitz was the most notorious concentration camp. Inmates were beaten, starved, worked until they dropped, were subjects of cruel medical experiments, gassed to death in mass showers using Zyclon B pesticide, and the bodies were burned in massive ovens.

Why were blacks killed in the holocaust?

isn:t gender separation a normal penal and paramilitary practice? there aren"t any Co-ed Jails around, are they. oddly this could increase certain problems such as homosexual violence between guards and inmates, as does happen in civil prisons in the United States and elsewhere Holocaust detainees had no rights- period. abuses were built in.

The plan to exterminate all Jewish people was created where?

It is easy to pretend that the plan was to exterminate all Jewish people, it make the plan seem meglomanical and outrageously unattainable. But the fact was that the plan was only to eliminate the Jews from German provinces, which almost succeeded, this was the Holocaust, Six million Jews died in this, to pretend that it was part of an impossible attempt to somehow exterminate all Jewish people world wide is an insult to these people.

As to where it was created, it was not a single plan. It arose from a few different needs and different actions, there was one ideology behind it and all of the various facets were overseen by the same person (Himmler), but it was not part of a single plan.

Does transplantation have a basis in Nazi medicine?

There was no "Nazi medicine". If you are referring to the horrible experiments the Nazis made with human remains, there is no real reason they would attempt organ transplants.

Is extermination the final solution?

The term kill was not heard among the Germans at the camps or read in the documents. Final solution meant extermination.