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The Holocaust and Anti-Semitism

What is Genocide?

Genocide is the deliberate killing of a large number of people from a particular nation or ethnic group with the aim of destroying that nation or group. Genocide often begins with dehumanisation, treating people as less human.

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Examples of Genocide

  • The Holocaust: The most well-known genocide in history.
  • Other examples:
    1. 8 million Indigenous Americans during European expansion in North America.
    2. 1.5 million Christian Armenians in Turkey (1915-1923).
    3. 3.9 million Ukrainians in the Soviet famine (1932-1933).
    4. 200,000 Chinese civilians in the Nanjing Massacre (1937).
    5. 2 million Cambodians by Pol Pot and the Khmer Rouge (1975-1979).
    6. 800,000 Tutsi in Rwanda (1994).
    7. 100,000 Bosniak and Croatian civilians during the Bosnian War (1992-1995).
    8. 400,000 ethnic Darfuri people in Sudan (starting in 2003, ongoing).

The Holocaust

  • Anti-Semitism: Hatred or prejudice against Jewish people, traceable back to ancient times, became extreme under Nazi Germany.
  • Aryans: Nazis claimed Germans and Nordic peoples were a superior race, considering Jews inferior.
  • Mein Kampf: Hitler's manifesto declared Jews a threat to Germany.
  • Nuremberg Laws (1935): Stripped Jews of citizenship, voting rights, property ownership, job opportunities, and the right to marry or have relationships with non-Jews.
    • Star of David: Jews had to wear it on their clothing.
    • Kristallnacht (1938): Nazis attacked Jewish synagogues, homes, and businesses, killing at least 100 Jews and arresting 30,000. image

Jewish Ghettos

  • Ghettos: Over 400 ghettos were established, forcing Jews into segregated, overcrowded areas with high mortality rates due to disease and starvation.
  • First Ghetto: Set up in Łódź, Poland, on 8th February 1940.
  • Ghettos facilitated control and later deportation to concentration camps.

The Einsatzgruppen and the Final Solution

  • Einsatzgruppen: Mobile killing squads followed the German army east, executing about 1.3 million Jews.
  • The Final Solution (1942): The Nazis' plan to exterminate Jews, led by Heinrich Himmler. Ghettos were emptied, and Jews were deported to concentration camps.

Concentration Camps

  • Labour Camps: Since 1933, labour camps existed; the first was Dachau. There were 22 labour camps across Europe.
  • Extermination Camps: Six camps (Auschwitz-Birkenau, Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, Treblinka) were built for mass murder, primarily outside Germany.

Life and Death in the Camps

  • Jews were transported in trains, separated, and had belongings confiscated. The unfit were killed immediately.
  • Living Conditions: Overcrowded barracks, forced labour, medical experiments, and gas chambers (using Zyklon B or carbon monoxide).
  • Death Marches: As Allies closed in, prisoners were forced on marches, many dying from starvation, exposure, or execution.

Liberation of the Camps

  • Soviet Soldiers: First to encounter camps, liberating Majdanek on 23rd July 1944 and Auschwitz on 27th January 1945.
  • Western Allies: British, Canadian, American, and French troops liberated camps by May 1945. image

The Aftermath and Legacy of the Holocaust

  1. Death Toll: Six million Jews were murdered, with millions of others, including Soviet POWs, Poles, Roma, LGBT+ individuals, and communists.
  2. Jewish Diaspora: Many survivors emigrated to the US, Canada, and South Africa. The state of Israel was founded in 1948.
  3. International Holocaust Remembrance Day: 27th January commemorates the victims of the Holocaust.

Famous Jews from the Holocaust

  1. Anne Frank: Died in 1945, known for her diary.
  2. Viktor Frankl: Psychologist and Holocaust survivor, died in 1997.
  3. Elie Wiesel: Holocaust survivor and author, died in 2016.
  4. Tomi Reichental: Holocaust survivor who moved to Ireland in 1959.
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Key Terms

  1. Genocide**:** the deliberate and systematic extermination of a particular ethnic, national, racial, or religious group.
  2. Anti-Semitism: is prejudice, discrimination, or hostility against Jews.
  3. Nuremberg Laws: anti-Jewish statutes enacted by Nazi Germany in 1935 that excluded Jews from German citizenship and prohibited them from marrying or having sexual relations with persons of "German or related blood."
  4. Kristallnacht**:** (Night of Broken Glass) was a pogrom against Jews carried out by Nazi forces on November 9-10, 1938, marked by the destruction of Jewish homes, businesses, and synagogues.
  5. Ghettos: segregated areas in cities where Jews were forced to live under Nazi rule, often in overcrowded and inhumane conditions.
  6. Einsatzgruppen**:** mobile killing units of the Nazi SS that carried out mass shootings of Jews, Roma, and other groups during the Holocaust, primarily in the Soviet Union.
  7. The Final Solution: the Nazi plan to exterminate the Jewish people, leading to the genocide known as the Holocaust.
  8. Concentration Camps: detention centres established by the Nazis where millions of Jews and other targeted groups were imprisoned, forced into labour, and often killed.
  9. Zyklon B**:** a cyanide-based pesticide used by the Nazis in gas chambers to murder millions of Jews and other victims in concentration camps.
  10. Holocaust Remembrance Day: an international day of commemoration for the six million Jews and millions of other victims who were murdered during the Holocaust, observed on January 27.

Revision Questions

  1. What is genocide?
  2. True or False: The Holocaust is the only example of genocide in history.**
  3. Who wrote Mein Kampf?
  4. Fill in the blank: The Nuremberg Laws stripped Jews of their _______ and rights.**
  5. What was Kristallnacht?
  6. True or False: The Einsatzgruppen were mobile killing squads.**
  7. What was the purpose of the ghettos?
  8. Fill in the blank: Auschwitz was one of the six _______ camps.**
  9. What date is International Holocaust Remembrance Day? 10. True or False: Anne Frank survived the Holocaust.**

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