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The Holocaust
   In 1933 nine million Jews lived in the 21
countries of Europe that would be occupied by
 Nazi Germany during World War 2. By 1945
two out of every three European Jews had been
                     killed.
Anti -Semitism
 This is the term given to
   political, social and
economic agitation against
 Jews. In simple terms it
 means ‘Hatred of Jews’.




                                       Aryan Race
                              This was the name of what Hitler
                             believed was the perfect race. These
                             were people with full German blood,
                                  blonde hair and blue eyes.
For hundreds of years Christian Europe had regarded the Jews as the
Christ -killers. At one time or another Jews had been driven out of
almost every European country. The way they were treated in
England in the thirteenth century is a typical example.

                                                 AT
In 1275 they were made to wear a yellow badge.
                                              GO
                                 SC APE
In 1287 269 Jews were hanged in the Tower of London.

                    wer ea
This deep prejudice against Jews was still strong in the twentieth

          Jews
century, especially in Germany, Poland and Eastern Europe, where
the Jewish population was very large.

After the First World War hundreds of Jews were blamed for the
defeat in the War. Prejudice against the Jews grew during the
economic depression which followed. Many Germans were poor
and unemployed and wanted someone to blame. They turned on the
Jews, many of whom were rich and successful in business.
“Until September 14, 1939 my life
  was typical of a young Jewish boy
  in that part of the world in that
  period of time.
  I lived in a Jewish community
  surrounded by gentiles. Aside
  from my immediate family, I had




WHY?
  many relatives and knew all the
  town people, both Jews and
  gentiles. Almost two weeks after
  the outbreak of the war and
  shortly after my Bar Mitzvah, my
  world exploded.
  In the course of the next five and a
  half years I lost my entire family
  and almost everyone I ever knew.
  Death, violence and brutality
  became a daily occurrence in my
  life while I was still a young
  teenager.”
  Leonard Lerer, 1991
Steps to the Holocaust

      A Timeline
19
• Hitler comes to Power
                                                   33
• New legislation set to exclude Jews from
  the life of Germany.
  – Laws were passed banning Jews from working
    in professional capacities; schools were
    established exclusively for Jewish children and
    quotas limited their entry into Universities.
  – They could neither join the army nor participate
    in the artistic life of the country.
• This Nazi propaganda
  poster from 1932 links
  Jews with the
  development of
  capitalism, communism,
  & socialism.
NUREMBERG LAW FOR THE PROTECTION OF
        GERMAN BLOOD AND GERMAN HONOUR,
               SEPTEMBER 15, 1935
•   Moved by the understanding that purity of the German Blood is the essential
    condition for the continued existence of the German people, and inspired by
    the inflexible determination to ensure the existence of the German Nation for
    all times, the Reichstag has unanimously adopted the following Law, which is
    promulgated herewith:
     – §1
         1. Marriages between Jews and subjects of the state of German or related blood are forbidden.
            Marriages nevertheless concluded are invalid, even if conducted abroad to circumvent this
            law.
         2. Annulment proceedings can be initiated only by the State Prosecutor.
     – §2
         1. Extramarital intercourse between Jews and subjects of the state of German or related blood is
            forbidden.
     – §3
         1. Jews may not employ in their households female subjects of the state of German or related
            blood who are under 45 years old.
– §4
    1.   Jews are forbidden to fly the Reich or National flag or to display the Reich colours.
    2.   They are, on the other hand, permitted to display the Jewish colours. The exercise
         of this right is protected by the State.
– §5
    1.   Any person who violates the prohibition under § 1 will be punished by a prison
         sentence with hard labour.
    2.   A male who violates the prohibition under § 2 will be punished with a prison
         sentence with or without hard labour.
    3.   Any person violating the provisions under § § 3 or 4 will be punished with a prison
         sentence of up to one year and a fine, or with one or the other of these penalties.
– §6
    1.   The Reich Minister of the Interior, in co-ordination with the Deputy of the Führer
         and the Reich Minister of Justice, will issue the Legal and Administrative
         regulations required to implement and complete this Law.
– § 7 The Law takes effect on the day following promulgation except for
  § 3, which goes into force on January 1, 1936.
Why was this allowed?
• "Since we have no racial problem, we are not desirous
  of importing one."
     – Australian delegate, Evian Conference.
• "I can only hope and expect that the other world, which
  has such deep sympathy for these criminals, will at least
  be generous enough to convert this sympathy into
  practical aid. We, on our part, are ready to put all these
  criminals at the disposal of these countries, for all I
  care, even on luxury ships"
     – Adolph Hitler March 1938

   From 1938 onwards, it was obvious to Jews that they should leave Germany as soon as
    possible. The stage of expulsion had started. Although half of the Jews left Germany before
    1941, over half a million remained, at the mercy of Hitler and the Nazis.
• Germans invaded Poland                          19
• The millions of Jews who had fled to Poland to 39
  escape the Nazis now suddenly came under
  Germany's control.
• Over three million Jews lived in Poland
• The Nazi's first act was to round up all Jews and
  send them into ghettos.
   – These were small areas of towns which were sealed
     off and allocated to the Jews.
   – Life within the ghetto was intolerable
      • overcrowding, hunger and disease
 Despite this, many Jews survived, thinking and
  hoping that their suffering must one day cease.
Between 1939 and 1945
six million Jews were
murdered, along with
hundreds of thousands of
others, such as Gypsies,
Jehovah’s Witnesses,
disabled and the
mentally ill.
Percentage of Jews killed in each country




                               0Jews
                  ,000     ,00
   o ta    l of 6
AT
A MAP OF THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS AND DEATH CAMPS
                USED BY THE NAZIS.
ch au
D a• KZ Dachau was the first concentration camp established in
     Nazi Germany - the camp was opened on March 22, 1933.
   • First inmates were primarily:
                   Political prisoners          Habitual Criminals
                   Social Democrats                Homosexuals
                     Communists                 Jehovah’s Witnesses
                    Trade unionists                   Beggars

   •   "On Wednesday the first concentration camp is to be opened in Dachau with
       an accommodation for 5000 persons. 'All Communists and—where necessary
       —Reichsbanner and Social Democratic functionaries who endanger state
       security are to be concentrated here, as in the long run it is not possible to
       keep individual functionaries in the state prisons without overburdening these
       prisons, and on the other hand these people cannot be released because
       attempts have shown that they persist in their efforts to agitate and organise
       as soon as they are released.”
Types of Camps
•   Hostage camps (or death camps)
     – Hostages were held and killed as reprisals.
•   Labor camps
     – Had to do hard physical labor under inhumane conditions and cruel treatment.
•   POW camps:
     – Prisoners of war were held after capture
     – Endured torture and liquidation on a large scale.
•   Camps for rehabilitation and re-education of Poles:
     – Intelligentsia of the ethnic Poles were held, and "re-educated" according to Nazi
       values as slaves.
•   Transit and collection camps:
     – camps where inmates were collected and routed to main camps, or temporarily held
       (Durchgangslager or Dulag).
•   Externmination Camps
Road to Death Camps
• In the late 1930's the Nazis killed thousands of
  handicapped Germans by lethal injection and poisonous
  gas. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in
  June 1941, mobile killing units following in the wake of
  the German Army began shooting massive numbers of
  Jews and Gypsies in open fields and ravines on the
  outskirts of conquered cities and towns.
• Eventually the Nazis created a more secluded and
  organized method of killing. Extermination centers were
  established in occupied Poland with special apparatus
  especially designed for mass murder.
 Giant death machines.
Part of a stockpile of Zyklon-B poison
                          gas pellets found at Majdanek death
                          camp.




Before poison gas was used ,
Jews were gassed in mobile gas
vans. Carbon monoxide gas
from the engine’s exhaust was
fed into the sealed rear
compartment. Victims were
dead by the time they reached
the burial site.
Smoke rises as the
 bodies are burnt.
Auschwitz
• Largest numbers of European Jews were killed.
• By mid 1942, mass gassing of Jews using Zyklon-B began
   – where extermination was conducted on an industrial scale with
     some estimates running as high as three million persons eventually
     killed through gassing, starvation, disease, shooting, and burning.
   – 9 out of 10 were Jews.
   – Gypsies, Soviet POWs, and prisoners of all nationalities died in
     the gas chambers.
• Private diaries of Goebbels and Himmler (developers of
  Auschwitz) unearthed from the secret Soviet archives
  show that Hitler personally ordered the mass extermination
  of the Jews - as Goebbels wrote "With regards to the
  Jewish question, the Fuhrer decided to make a clean sweep
  ..."
In 1943, when the number of murdered Jews exceeded 1 million. Nazis
ordered the bodies of those buried to be dug up and burned to destroy all
traces.




Soviet POWs at forced labor in 1943 exhuming bodies in the ravine at
Babi Yar, where the Nazis had murdered over 33,000 Jews in September
of 1941.
Children
• The number of children killed during the Holocaust is
  not fathomable and full statistics for the tragic fate of
  children who died will never be known. Estimates range
  as high as 1.5 million murdered children. This figure
  includes more than 1.2 million Jewish children, tens of
  thousands of Gypsy children and thousands of
  institutionalized handicapped children.
• Plucked from their homes and stripped of their
  childhoods, the children had witnessed the murder of
  parents, siblings, and relatives. They faced starvation,
  illness and brutal labor, until they were consigned to the
  gas chambers.
16 of the 44 children taken
                               from a French children’s
                               home, sent to Auschwitz and
                               killed immediately upon
                               arrival.
                               ONLY 1 SURVIVED*


The Jewish Children Of Izieu




    A group of
   children at a
  concentration
camp in Poland.
Jewish women, some holding infants, are forced to wait in a line
before their execution by Germans and Ukrainian collaborators.
A German policeman shoots individual Jewish women who remain alive
in the ravine after the mass execution.
Portrait of two-year-old
Mania Halef, a Jewish
child who was among the
33,771 persons shot by
the SS during the mass
executions at Babi Yar,
September, 1941.
Nazis sift through a huge pile of clothes left by victims of
the massacre.
Bales of hair shaven
                                 from women at
                                 Auschwitz, used to
                                 make felt-yarn.




   After liberation, an Allied
   soldier displays a stash of
   gold wedding rings taken
from victims at Buchenwald.
Aftermath
• American army units were the first to
  discover the camps, when on 4 April 1945
  they liberated the recently-abandoned slave
  labor camp at Ohrdruf, in Thuringia,
  Germany.
• Then, on 11 April, American forces
  liberated the camps at Buchenwald, near
  Weimar, and the V2 rocket slave-labour
  camp at Nordhausen in the Harz Mountains.
Problems with Liberation
•   The first task for the liberators was to tackle this medical nightmare.
•   Limited: Roughly 50,000 inmates still living, 20,000 were seriously or
    critically ill.
•   With those prisoners who seemed to stand some chance of living, the
    medical teams first washed and deloused them, before disinfecting
    them with DDT powder. I
•   nmates were then admitted to a makeshift hospital established in the
    camp.
•    Here, the doctors attempted to rehydrate and feed them, while treating
    their illnesses. Even so, many were just too ill to be saved.
     – ... 13,000 Belsen inmates died after liberation.
•   Some inmates had been starved for so long that they had lost the
    ability to digest the rations that well-meaning British soldiers offered
    them; within minutes of taking a biscuit, some inmates just passed
    away.
What to do with the bodies?
•   Another task was to dispose of the 20,000 diseased bodies, in order to
    contain the spread of typhus.
•   The British forces made the surrendered German and Hungarian SS
    camp guards carry the corpses into mass graves that had been dug by
    British bulldozer teams.
     – As punishment for their crimes, the camp guards were prevented from using
       protective gloves, and consequently some of them contracted typhus and died.
•   This method of burial soon proved too slow, and subsequently the
    bulldozers simply shoveled the corpses into the graves.
•   As the weeks went by the British steadily relocated the recovering
    inmates to local housing commandeered from German civilians.
     – As this process unfolded, the local populace were forced to inspect the camp, to see
       for themselves the evils committed in their name.
Survivors
• Feared to return to their former homes because of the
  anti-semitism they had suffered before.
   – Some who returned home feared for their lives.
   – In postwar Poland, for example, there were a number of violent
     anti-Jewish riots.
• With few possibilities for emigration, tens of thousands
  of homeless Holocaust survivors migrated westward to
  other European territories liberated by the western
  Allies.
• There they were housed in hundreds of refugee centers
  and displaced persons (DP) camps such as Bergen-
  Belsen in Germany.
   – The United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration
     (UNRRA) and the occupying armies of the United States, Great
     Britain, and France administered these camps.
Problems
• Opportunities for legal immigration to the
  United States above the existing quota
  restrictions were still limited.
• The British restricted immigration to
  Palestine.
• Many borders in Europe were also closed to
  these homeless people.
M
                                                                                      ov
•   With the establishment of the State of Israel in May 1948, Jewish
    displaced persons and refugees began streaming into the new sovereign                   ing
    state.
     – Possibly as many as 170,000 Jewish displaced persons and refugees had immigrated
       to Israel by 1953.
•   December 1945, President Truman issued a directive that loosened
    quota restrictions on immigration to the U.S. of persons displaced by
    the Nazi regime.
     – Under this directive, more than 41,000 displaced persons immigrated to the United
       States; approximately 28,000 were Jews.
     – In 1948, the U.S. Congress passed the Displaced Persons Act, which provided
       approximately 400,000 U.S. immigration visas for displaced persons between January
       1, 1949, and December 31, 1952.
     – Of the 400,000 displaced persons who entered the U.S. under the DP Act,
       approximately 68,000 were Jews.
•   Other Jewish refugees in Europe emigrated as displaced persons or
    refugees to Canada, Australia, New Zealand, western Europe, Mexico,
    South America, and South Africa.
Age of
Name                        From             Death
                                                      Camp
Judith Schwed               Hungary            12     Auschwitz

Herta Scheer-Krygier        German             21     Auschwitz

Peter Winternitz            Czechoslovakia     21     Auschwitz

Henoch Kornfeld             Poland             3½     Belzec

Henny Schermann             Germany            30     Ravensbrueck
                                                      & Bernburg
Thomas Elek                 Hungary            20     POW in Paris

Eva Heyman                  Romania            13     Auschwitz

Erzsebet Markovics Katz     Hungary            40     Bergen-Belsen

Esther Morgansztern         Poland             15     Treblinka

Smiljka Ljoljic Visnjevac   Yugoslavia         30     Banjinca
Age of
Name                     From             Death
                                                   Camp
Shulim Saleschutz        Poland             12     Belzec

Hela Szabszevicz         Poland             43     Lodz ghetto

Barbara Kertesz Nemeth   Hungary            34     Strasshof

Ilona Karfunkel Kalman   Hungary            38     Auschwitz

Welwel Wainkranc         Poland             24     Kaluszyn ghetto

Ethel Stern              Poland             24     Trawniki

Yves Oppert              France             35     POW at Etercy

Zuzana Gruenberger       Czechoslovakia     11     Auschwitz

Eva Brigitte Marum       Germany            26     Sobibor

Fischel Felman           Poland             31     Treblinka
NAME               From        Date of Birth Life during War
Jeannine Burk      Belgium     9/15/1939      Hidden Child

Shep Zitler        Lithuania   5/27/1917      Polish Soldier and
                                              Prisoner of War
Eva Galler         Poland      1/1/1924       Escaped a Death
                                              Train
Solomon Radasky    Poland      5/17/1910      Warsaw Ghetto and
                                              Auschwitz
Isak Borenstein    Poland      5/5/1918       Prisoner of War

Joseph Sher        Poland      7/27/1917      Labor Camps

Esther Raab        Poland      1922           Sobibor

Joseph Bau         Poland      18 June 1920   Plaszow

Rivka Yosselevka   Belarus     Unknown        Zagrodski
                                              Ghetto
NAME                From             Date of Birth      Life during War

Ernest Domby        Czechoslovakia   March 9, 1925      Theresienstadt
                                                        ghetto,
                                                        Auschwitz, Gross-
Franz Wohlfahrt     Austria          January 18, 1920   Rosen Rodgau
                                                        Rollwald

Ruth (Huppert)      Czechoslovakia   October 6, 1922    Theresienstadt
Elias                                                   ghetto, Auschwitz
Saul Ingber         Romania          April 16, 1921     Dachau

Arthur Karl Heinz   Germany          January 13, 1921   Theresienstadt
Oertelt                                                 and Flossenbürg
Thomas              Czechoslovakia   May 11, 1934       Auschwitz
Buergenthal
Wolfgang Munzer     Germany          February 26, 1920 Auschwitz

Wolf Himmelfarb     Poland           June 19, 1927      Theresienstadt

Szlamach            Poland           May 17, 1912       Auschwitz
Radoszynski
To find out more on your
    Victim or Survivor go to…
• http://go.fold3.com/holocaust_stories/
• http://www.holocaustsurvivors.org/survivor
  s.php
• http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/su
  rvivor/index.html

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Holocaust

  • 1. The Holocaust In 1933 nine million Jews lived in the 21 countries of Europe that would be occupied by Nazi Germany during World War 2. By 1945 two out of every three European Jews had been killed.
  • 2. Anti -Semitism This is the term given to political, social and economic agitation against Jews. In simple terms it means ‘Hatred of Jews’. Aryan Race This was the name of what Hitler believed was the perfect race. These were people with full German blood, blonde hair and blue eyes.
  • 3. For hundreds of years Christian Europe had regarded the Jews as the Christ -killers. At one time or another Jews had been driven out of almost every European country. The way they were treated in England in the thirteenth century is a typical example. AT In 1275 they were made to wear a yellow badge. GO SC APE In 1287 269 Jews were hanged in the Tower of London. wer ea This deep prejudice against Jews was still strong in the twentieth Jews century, especially in Germany, Poland and Eastern Europe, where the Jewish population was very large. After the First World War hundreds of Jews were blamed for the defeat in the War. Prejudice against the Jews grew during the economic depression which followed. Many Germans were poor and unemployed and wanted someone to blame. They turned on the Jews, many of whom were rich and successful in business.
  • 4. “Until September 14, 1939 my life was typical of a young Jewish boy in that part of the world in that period of time. I lived in a Jewish community surrounded by gentiles. Aside from my immediate family, I had WHY? many relatives and knew all the town people, both Jews and gentiles. Almost two weeks after the outbreak of the war and shortly after my Bar Mitzvah, my world exploded. In the course of the next five and a half years I lost my entire family and almost everyone I ever knew. Death, violence and brutality became a daily occurrence in my life while I was still a young teenager.” Leonard Lerer, 1991
  • 5. Steps to the Holocaust A Timeline
  • 6.
  • 7. 19 • Hitler comes to Power 33 • New legislation set to exclude Jews from the life of Germany. – Laws were passed banning Jews from working in professional capacities; schools were established exclusively for Jewish children and quotas limited their entry into Universities. – They could neither join the army nor participate in the artistic life of the country.
  • 8. • This Nazi propaganda poster from 1932 links Jews with the development of capitalism, communism, & socialism.
  • 9. NUREMBERG LAW FOR THE PROTECTION OF GERMAN BLOOD AND GERMAN HONOUR, SEPTEMBER 15, 1935 • Moved by the understanding that purity of the German Blood is the essential condition for the continued existence of the German people, and inspired by the inflexible determination to ensure the existence of the German Nation for all times, the Reichstag has unanimously adopted the following Law, which is promulgated herewith: – §1 1. Marriages between Jews and subjects of the state of German or related blood are forbidden. Marriages nevertheless concluded are invalid, even if conducted abroad to circumvent this law. 2. Annulment proceedings can be initiated only by the State Prosecutor. – §2 1. Extramarital intercourse between Jews and subjects of the state of German or related blood is forbidden. – §3 1. Jews may not employ in their households female subjects of the state of German or related blood who are under 45 years old.
  • 10. – §4 1. Jews are forbidden to fly the Reich or National flag or to display the Reich colours. 2. They are, on the other hand, permitted to display the Jewish colours. The exercise of this right is protected by the State. – §5 1. Any person who violates the prohibition under § 1 will be punished by a prison sentence with hard labour. 2. A male who violates the prohibition under § 2 will be punished with a prison sentence with or without hard labour. 3. Any person violating the provisions under § § 3 or 4 will be punished with a prison sentence of up to one year and a fine, or with one or the other of these penalties. – §6 1. The Reich Minister of the Interior, in co-ordination with the Deputy of the Führer and the Reich Minister of Justice, will issue the Legal and Administrative regulations required to implement and complete this Law. – § 7 The Law takes effect on the day following promulgation except for § 3, which goes into force on January 1, 1936.
  • 11. Why was this allowed? • "Since we have no racial problem, we are not desirous of importing one." – Australian delegate, Evian Conference. • "I can only hope and expect that the other world, which has such deep sympathy for these criminals, will at least be generous enough to convert this sympathy into practical aid. We, on our part, are ready to put all these criminals at the disposal of these countries, for all I care, even on luxury ships" – Adolph Hitler March 1938  From 1938 onwards, it was obvious to Jews that they should leave Germany as soon as possible. The stage of expulsion had started. Although half of the Jews left Germany before 1941, over half a million remained, at the mercy of Hitler and the Nazis.
  • 12. • Germans invaded Poland 19 • The millions of Jews who had fled to Poland to 39 escape the Nazis now suddenly came under Germany's control. • Over three million Jews lived in Poland • The Nazi's first act was to round up all Jews and send them into ghettos. – These were small areas of towns which were sealed off and allocated to the Jews. – Life within the ghetto was intolerable • overcrowding, hunger and disease  Despite this, many Jews survived, thinking and hoping that their suffering must one day cease.
  • 13.
  • 14. Between 1939 and 1945 six million Jews were murdered, along with hundreds of thousands of others, such as Gypsies, Jehovah’s Witnesses, disabled and the mentally ill.
  • 15. Percentage of Jews killed in each country 0Jews ,000 ,00 o ta l of 6 AT
  • 16. A MAP OF THE CONCENTRATION CAMPS AND DEATH CAMPS USED BY THE NAZIS.
  • 17. ch au D a• KZ Dachau was the first concentration camp established in Nazi Germany - the camp was opened on March 22, 1933. • First inmates were primarily: Political prisoners Habitual Criminals Social Democrats Homosexuals Communists Jehovah’s Witnesses Trade unionists Beggars • "On Wednesday the first concentration camp is to be opened in Dachau with an accommodation for 5000 persons. 'All Communists and—where necessary —Reichsbanner and Social Democratic functionaries who endanger state security are to be concentrated here, as in the long run it is not possible to keep individual functionaries in the state prisons without overburdening these prisons, and on the other hand these people cannot be released because attempts have shown that they persist in their efforts to agitate and organise as soon as they are released.”
  • 18. Types of Camps • Hostage camps (or death camps) – Hostages were held and killed as reprisals. • Labor camps – Had to do hard physical labor under inhumane conditions and cruel treatment. • POW camps: – Prisoners of war were held after capture – Endured torture and liquidation on a large scale. • Camps for rehabilitation and re-education of Poles: – Intelligentsia of the ethnic Poles were held, and "re-educated" according to Nazi values as slaves. • Transit and collection camps: – camps where inmates were collected and routed to main camps, or temporarily held (Durchgangslager or Dulag). • Externmination Camps
  • 19. Road to Death Camps • In the late 1930's the Nazis killed thousands of handicapped Germans by lethal injection and poisonous gas. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, mobile killing units following in the wake of the German Army began shooting massive numbers of Jews and Gypsies in open fields and ravines on the outskirts of conquered cities and towns. • Eventually the Nazis created a more secluded and organized method of killing. Extermination centers were established in occupied Poland with special apparatus especially designed for mass murder.  Giant death machines.
  • 20. Part of a stockpile of Zyklon-B poison gas pellets found at Majdanek death camp. Before poison gas was used , Jews were gassed in mobile gas vans. Carbon monoxide gas from the engine’s exhaust was fed into the sealed rear compartment. Victims were dead by the time they reached the burial site.
  • 21. Smoke rises as the bodies are burnt.
  • 22. Auschwitz • Largest numbers of European Jews were killed. • By mid 1942, mass gassing of Jews using Zyklon-B began – where extermination was conducted on an industrial scale with some estimates running as high as three million persons eventually killed through gassing, starvation, disease, shooting, and burning. – 9 out of 10 were Jews. – Gypsies, Soviet POWs, and prisoners of all nationalities died in the gas chambers. • Private diaries of Goebbels and Himmler (developers of Auschwitz) unearthed from the secret Soviet archives show that Hitler personally ordered the mass extermination of the Jews - as Goebbels wrote "With regards to the Jewish question, the Fuhrer decided to make a clean sweep ..."
  • 23.
  • 24. In 1943, when the number of murdered Jews exceeded 1 million. Nazis ordered the bodies of those buried to be dug up and burned to destroy all traces. Soviet POWs at forced labor in 1943 exhuming bodies in the ravine at Babi Yar, where the Nazis had murdered over 33,000 Jews in September of 1941.
  • 25. Children • The number of children killed during the Holocaust is not fathomable and full statistics for the tragic fate of children who died will never be known. Estimates range as high as 1.5 million murdered children. This figure includes more than 1.2 million Jewish children, tens of thousands of Gypsy children and thousands of institutionalized handicapped children. • Plucked from their homes and stripped of their childhoods, the children had witnessed the murder of parents, siblings, and relatives. They faced starvation, illness and brutal labor, until they were consigned to the gas chambers.
  • 26. 16 of the 44 children taken from a French children’s home, sent to Auschwitz and killed immediately upon arrival. ONLY 1 SURVIVED* The Jewish Children Of Izieu A group of children at a concentration camp in Poland.
  • 27. Jewish women, some holding infants, are forced to wait in a line before their execution by Germans and Ukrainian collaborators.
  • 28. A German policeman shoots individual Jewish women who remain alive in the ravine after the mass execution.
  • 29. Portrait of two-year-old Mania Halef, a Jewish child who was among the 33,771 persons shot by the SS during the mass executions at Babi Yar, September, 1941.
  • 30. Nazis sift through a huge pile of clothes left by victims of the massacre.
  • 31. Bales of hair shaven from women at Auschwitz, used to make felt-yarn. After liberation, an Allied soldier displays a stash of gold wedding rings taken from victims at Buchenwald.
  • 32. Aftermath • American army units were the first to discover the camps, when on 4 April 1945 they liberated the recently-abandoned slave labor camp at Ohrdruf, in Thuringia, Germany. • Then, on 11 April, American forces liberated the camps at Buchenwald, near Weimar, and the V2 rocket slave-labour camp at Nordhausen in the Harz Mountains.
  • 33. Problems with Liberation • The first task for the liberators was to tackle this medical nightmare. • Limited: Roughly 50,000 inmates still living, 20,000 were seriously or critically ill. • With those prisoners who seemed to stand some chance of living, the medical teams first washed and deloused them, before disinfecting them with DDT powder. I • nmates were then admitted to a makeshift hospital established in the camp. • Here, the doctors attempted to rehydrate and feed them, while treating their illnesses. Even so, many were just too ill to be saved. – ... 13,000 Belsen inmates died after liberation. • Some inmates had been starved for so long that they had lost the ability to digest the rations that well-meaning British soldiers offered them; within minutes of taking a biscuit, some inmates just passed away.
  • 34. What to do with the bodies? • Another task was to dispose of the 20,000 diseased bodies, in order to contain the spread of typhus. • The British forces made the surrendered German and Hungarian SS camp guards carry the corpses into mass graves that had been dug by British bulldozer teams. – As punishment for their crimes, the camp guards were prevented from using protective gloves, and consequently some of them contracted typhus and died. • This method of burial soon proved too slow, and subsequently the bulldozers simply shoveled the corpses into the graves. • As the weeks went by the British steadily relocated the recovering inmates to local housing commandeered from German civilians. – As this process unfolded, the local populace were forced to inspect the camp, to see for themselves the evils committed in their name.
  • 35. Survivors • Feared to return to their former homes because of the anti-semitism they had suffered before. – Some who returned home feared for their lives. – In postwar Poland, for example, there were a number of violent anti-Jewish riots. • With few possibilities for emigration, tens of thousands of homeless Holocaust survivors migrated westward to other European territories liberated by the western Allies. • There they were housed in hundreds of refugee centers and displaced persons (DP) camps such as Bergen- Belsen in Germany. – The United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation Administration (UNRRA) and the occupying armies of the United States, Great Britain, and France administered these camps.
  • 36. Problems • Opportunities for legal immigration to the United States above the existing quota restrictions were still limited. • The British restricted immigration to Palestine. • Many borders in Europe were also closed to these homeless people.
  • 37. M ov • With the establishment of the State of Israel in May 1948, Jewish displaced persons and refugees began streaming into the new sovereign ing state. – Possibly as many as 170,000 Jewish displaced persons and refugees had immigrated to Israel by 1953. • December 1945, President Truman issued a directive that loosened quota restrictions on immigration to the U.S. of persons displaced by the Nazi regime. – Under this directive, more than 41,000 displaced persons immigrated to the United States; approximately 28,000 were Jews. – In 1948, the U.S. Congress passed the Displaced Persons Act, which provided approximately 400,000 U.S. immigration visas for displaced persons between January 1, 1949, and December 31, 1952. – Of the 400,000 displaced persons who entered the U.S. under the DP Act, approximately 68,000 were Jews. • Other Jewish refugees in Europe emigrated as displaced persons or refugees to Canada, Australia, New Zealand, western Europe, Mexico, South America, and South Africa.
  • 38. Age of Name From Death Camp Judith Schwed Hungary 12 Auschwitz Herta Scheer-Krygier German 21 Auschwitz Peter Winternitz Czechoslovakia 21 Auschwitz Henoch Kornfeld Poland 3½ Belzec Henny Schermann Germany 30 Ravensbrueck & Bernburg Thomas Elek Hungary 20 POW in Paris Eva Heyman Romania 13 Auschwitz Erzsebet Markovics Katz Hungary 40 Bergen-Belsen Esther Morgansztern Poland 15 Treblinka Smiljka Ljoljic Visnjevac Yugoslavia 30 Banjinca
  • 39. Age of Name From Death Camp Shulim Saleschutz Poland 12 Belzec Hela Szabszevicz Poland 43 Lodz ghetto Barbara Kertesz Nemeth Hungary 34 Strasshof Ilona Karfunkel Kalman Hungary 38 Auschwitz Welwel Wainkranc Poland 24 Kaluszyn ghetto Ethel Stern Poland 24 Trawniki Yves Oppert France 35 POW at Etercy Zuzana Gruenberger Czechoslovakia 11 Auschwitz Eva Brigitte Marum Germany 26 Sobibor Fischel Felman Poland 31 Treblinka
  • 40. NAME From Date of Birth Life during War Jeannine Burk Belgium 9/15/1939 Hidden Child Shep Zitler Lithuania 5/27/1917 Polish Soldier and Prisoner of War Eva Galler Poland 1/1/1924 Escaped a Death Train Solomon Radasky Poland 5/17/1910 Warsaw Ghetto and Auschwitz Isak Borenstein Poland 5/5/1918 Prisoner of War Joseph Sher Poland 7/27/1917 Labor Camps Esther Raab Poland 1922 Sobibor Joseph Bau Poland 18 June 1920 Plaszow Rivka Yosselevka Belarus Unknown Zagrodski Ghetto
  • 41. NAME From Date of Birth Life during War Ernest Domby Czechoslovakia March 9, 1925 Theresienstadt ghetto, Auschwitz, Gross- Franz Wohlfahrt Austria January 18, 1920 Rosen Rodgau Rollwald Ruth (Huppert) Czechoslovakia October 6, 1922 Theresienstadt Elias ghetto, Auschwitz Saul Ingber Romania April 16, 1921 Dachau Arthur Karl Heinz Germany January 13, 1921 Theresienstadt Oertelt and Flossenbürg Thomas Czechoslovakia May 11, 1934 Auschwitz Buergenthal Wolfgang Munzer Germany February 26, 1920 Auschwitz Wolf Himmelfarb Poland June 19, 1927 Theresienstadt Szlamach Poland May 17, 1912 Auschwitz Radoszynski
  • 42. To find out more on your Victim or Survivor go to… • http://go.fold3.com/holocaust_stories/ • http://www.holocaustsurvivors.org/survivor s.php • http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/su rvivor/index.html

Notas del editor

  1. THIS PICTURE IS IMPORTANT BECAUSE IT SHOWS A FAMILY WHOSE LIVED THROUGH THIS AWFUL TIME. WE WILL BE LOOKING AT A BOOK CALLED THE SOAPMAKER WHICH TELLS THE STORY OF A YOUNG POLISH BOY'S LIFE THROUGHOUT THE WAR. AFTER ALL THAT HORRIFIC EVIDENCE OF WHAT HAPPENED THERE SHOULD ONLY BE ONE QUESTION ON YOUR MINDS. A QUESTION WHICH WE WILL TRY TO ANSWER OVER THE NEXT FEW LESSONS.... (MOUSE CLICK) WHY.
  2. Most Nazi propaganda was directed at Jews. This early image appeared in the Nazi magazine Der Stürmer in 1930, before the Nazis came into power. It states “The year has ended, the struggle continues”. In such propaganda, Germans are shown as a strong, handsome and superior race. Jews are shown as ugly, weak, deceitful and conniving.
  3. No criticism Nazi propaganda was used to make Germans feel proud of themselves but also superior to others, as a country and also as a race. No criticism was allowed, so all “un-German” books, art, and culture were banned. The Jews are described everywhere as a threat to Germany and the German way of life that had to be dealt with quickly and harshly. They were even compared to rats and cockroaches. Other groups such as Gypsies, Socialists and Blacks were also described in the media as a danger to Germany. Lies and myths The Nazi’s established a special ministry of Propaganda, called the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda. With only one source of information, the German people come to believe many of the lies and myths that the government broadcasts day after day. After years of economic hardship and a sense of loss, it is hard to resist the wave of pride that was promoted by the Nazis.
  4. This slow process increased in tempo in 1935. Following a gigantic rally of the Nazi Party in Nuremberg, laws were passed which removed the right of Jews to be citizens of Germany. They had effectively become non-people.
  5. In 1938 further laws were introduced which removed citizenship from any Jews who was from Polish descent. Several thousand Jews were taken to the Polish border but were refused entry into Poland . Herschl Grynszpan, a Jewish émigré in Paris, as a protest at the treatment of German Jews shot and killed a Nazi diplomat in Paris. This was the excuse that the Nazis had been waiting for. Shortly after the assassination, a night of violence was launched across Germany - synagogues and Jewish shops were attacked, destroyed and burnt down and Jews were beaten and murdered. Ninety Jews were killed and thousands put into concentration camps. Also the Jews were made to pay for the damagae which had been caused to their houses and shops. The night, November 9/10 November 1938, became known as Kristallnacht - the night of the shattered glass. Look at the two sources below: - As Hitler's speech preceded the Evian Conference, why do you think that the delegates from around the world did not pay serious attention to the threats of Hitler? - Why did these countries not want to take in additional Jewish refugees? - What do the comments of the Australian delegate say about atitudes towards Jews around the world?
  6. Major ghettos in occupied Europe   During World War II, the Germans established ghettos mainly in eastern Europe (between 1939 and 1942) and also in Hungary (in 1944). These ghettos were enclosed districts of a city in which the Germans forced the Jewish population to live under miserable conditions. The Germans regarded the establishment of Jewish ghettos as a provisional measure to control, isolate, and segregate Jews. Beginning in 1942, after the decision had been made to kill the Jews, the Germans systematically destroyed the ghettos, deporting the Jews to extermination camps where they were killed.
  7. How did they manage to get together all these Jews to kills them? How did they kill them when they had them? To begin with there were concentration camps.
  8. There were concentration camps and death camps. If you went to a death camp the chances of coming out alive were virtually nil. Even at concentration camps though you were likely to die from the appalling conditions. Or, if you were very young, old, or incapable of hard labour, it was likely you would be transferred to a death camp too. Anne Frank died at Belsen from Typhoid. Leonard Leher's mother and sisters were sent to Sobibor. YOU MAY ASK "WHO WERE THESE PEOPLE WHO WERE SENT TO PLACES LIKE THIS?" THEY WERE CHILDREN JUST LIKE YOU. THE ONLY DIFFERENCE WAS THEIR RACE AND THE RELIGION THEY FOLLOWED.
  9. THIS IS THE GAS THAT WAS INTRODUCED IN 1942. JEWS WERE SENT INTO SEALED SHOWER UNITS ON THE PRETENCE THAT THEY WERE GOING TO BE SHOWERED. PELLETS WERE THEN PLACED INTO THE SHOWER HEADS AND GAS CAME FROM THE SHOWERS INSTEAD OF WATER. 15 MINUTES LATER THE SHOWER ROOM WOULD BE EMPTIED, BODIES WERE ALWAYS IN A PYRAMID SHAPE, PEOPLE TRIED TO CLIMB ON TOP OF ONE ANOTHER TO ESCAPE THE GAS. BEFORE THIS TYPE OF KILLING METHOD WAS INTRODUCED THOUGH A MORE PRIMITIVE GASSING METHOD WAS USED.... I DON'T KNOW HOW, OR EVEN WHY THIS PHOTO WAS TAKEN, BUT IT SHOWS SOME MEN AWAITING DEATH ON THEIR WAY TO THEIR BURIAL PLACE. DID THEY ALWAYS BURY THE DEAD?
  10. NO. MORE OFTEN THAN NOT, ESPECIALLY WHEN THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE MURDERED GREW ESPECIALLY HIGH, NAZIS BURNED THE BODIES. SO WHAT OTHER METHODS WERE USED TO SYSTEMATICALLY MURDER THESE PEOPLE?
  11. OBVIOUSLY TOWARDS THE END OF THE WAR THEY TRIED TO COVER THEIR TRACKS. IT WAS NOT GUILT THOUGH AND THEY DID NOT DO THE WORK THEMSELVES. THEY MADE JEWS AND OTHER PRISONERS OF WAR DIG UP THE BODIES AND BURN THEM INSTEAD.
  12. HOW DID THEY KILL THESE INNOCENT CHILDREN, ALONG WITH THEIR PARENTS, GRANDPARENTS, FRIENDS ETC.. YOU WILL ALL HAVE PROBABLY HEARD OF THE WAY NAZiS GASSED THE JEWS.
  13. MASS EXECUTION USING A FIRING SQUAD WAS COMMON. THESE WOMEN HAVE BEEN ORDERED TO REMOVE EVERYTHING, CLOTHES, JEWELLERY, EVEN WEDDING RINGS AND ARE BEING FORCED TO LINE UP AND WAIT FOR THEIR TURN TO BE KILLED. SOME TIME LATER...
  14. THEY HAVE BEEN ORDERED TO LIE, FACE DOWN ON THE GROUND AND HAVE BEEN SHOT. THE GERMAN POLICEMAN IS SHOOTING INDIVIDUALS WHO HAVE ESCAPED DEATH FROM THE INITIAL ROUND OF BULLETS. THIS IS HORRIFIC BUT WE CANNOT SEE THE INDIVIDUAL FACES OF THOSE KILLED, WE DON'T REALLY KNOW WHO THEY ARE OR WHAT THEY REALLY LOOKED LIKE. SO TAKE A LOOK AT THIS NEXT PICTURE...
  15. THIS PICTURE TELLS US A LOT. HER PARENTS ARE OBVIOUSLY WEALTHY ENOUGH TO HAVE HAD A PORTRAIT DONE, SO IT SHOWS US THAT THE STATUS OF THE JEWS DID NOT MATTER TO THE NAZIS. IT WAS NOT JUST THE POOR WHICH WERE KILLED. THEY WERE KILLED REGARDLESS OF WEALTH OR STATUS, THEIR DEATH WAS DETERMINED BY RELIGION AND RACE.
  16. GIVES SOME IDEA OF THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE. BUT WHY DID THE NAZI WANT THEM TO REMOVE THEIR CLOTHES? WHAT DID THEY WANT WITH THEIR JEWELLERY, CLOTHES, EVEN HAIR?
  17. THESE PICTURES SHOW WHAT THEY WANTED. WERE THE NAZI'S NOT WORRIED ABOUT THE CONSEQUENCES OF THEIR ACTIONS? DID THEY NOT THINK ABOUT WHAT MIGHT HAPPEN IF ALLIED COUNTRIES DISCOVERED WHAT WAS HAPPENING?