Slide 1 - Pasadena City College

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Wei Deng

Mark Gonzales

Peter Huerta

Enrique Martinez

Adolf Hitler

Leader of the Nazi Party

In 1921, Hitler took over the party DAP, which was the German’s Working party. “He gave the party a new name: The National Socialist German

Worker’s Party. This was a shortened to the acronym “Nazi” from the first syllable of NAtional and the second syllable of soZIalist.”

“In the Development of the Nazi state, Hitler’s personality and ideas naturally played and important role. One of his most critical beliefs was in the social Darwinism – the idea that within society or politics constant struggle would lead the fittest to survive.”

After losing WWII, Hitler blamed Jews and disabled people for all loses and all problems. He wanted a “pure” and perfect population and therefore came out with “The Final Solution”.

Reinhard Heydrich and Rolf Otto Schiller were some of the key SS

Majors who helped Hitler carry out his plan.

Matthew Hughes, and Chris Mann. Inside Hitler’s Germany: Life Under the Third Reich.

Virginia: Dulles, 2002

A HOLOCAUST TIMELINE

Jan 30, 1933 Adolf Hitler is appointed Chancellor of Germany, a nation with a Jewish population of

566,000.

March 24, 1933 German Parliament passes Enabling Act giving Hitler dictatorial powers.

April 1, 1933 – Nazis stage boycott of Jewish shops and businesses.

April 26, 1933 The Gestapo is born, created by

Hermann Göring in the German state of Prussia.

July 14, 1933 Nazi Party is declared the only legal party in Germany; Also, Nazis pass Law to strip Jewish immigrants from Poland of their German citizenship.

In July Nazis pass law allowing for forced sterilization of those found by a Hereditary Health Court to have genetic defects.

Sept 29, 1933 Nazis prohibit Jews from owning land.

Jan 24, 1934 Jews are banned from the German Labor Front.

May 17, 1934 Jews not allowed national health insurance.

Aug 19, 1934 Hitler receives a 90 percent 'Yes' vote from German voters approving his new powers.

July 22, 1934 Jews are prohibited from getting legal qualifications.

Aug 19, 1934 Hitler receives a 90 percent 'Yes' vote from German voters approving his new powers.

June 26, 1935 Nazis pass law allowing forced abortions on women to prevent them from passing on hereditary diseases.

www.historyplace.com/worlwar2

Sept 27, 1938 Jews are prohibited from all legal practices.

Oct 5, 1938 Law requires Jewish passports to be stamped with a large red "J."

Nov 15, 1938 Jewish pupils are expelled from all non-Jewish German schools.

Feb 21, 1939 Nazis force Jews to hand over all gold and silver items.

April 30, 1939 Jews lose rights as tenants and are relocated into Jewish houses.

In May St. Louis, a ship crowded with 930 Jewish refugees, is turned away by Cuba, the United States and other countries and returns to Europe.

Sept 1, 1939 Nazis invade Poland (Jewish pop. 3.35 million, the largest in Europe). Beginning of SS activity in Poland.

Sept 1, 1939 Jews in Germany are forbidden to be outdoors after 8 p.m. in winter and 9 p.m. in summer.

Sept 23, 1939 German Jews are forbidden to own wireless (radio) sets.

Oct 6, 1939 Proclamation by Hitler on the isolation of Jews.

In Jan A pogrom in Romania results in over 2,000 Jews killed

June 29/30 Romanian troops conduct a pogrom against Jews in the town of Jassy, killing 10,000.

Sept 1, 1941 German Jews were ordered to wear yellow stars.

Sept 27/28 23,000 Jews killed at Kamenets-Podolsk, in the Ukraine.

In Nov SS Einsatzgruppe B reports a tally of 45,476 Jews killed.

Dec 11, 1941 Hitler declares war on the United States. Roosevelt then declares war on Germany saying, "Never before has there been a greater challenge to life, liberty and civilization." The U.S.A. then enters the war in Europe and will concentrate nearly 90 percent of its military resources to defeat Hitler.

www.historyplace.com/worlwar2

Jan 31, 1942 SS Einsatzgruppe A reports a tally of 229,052 Jews killed.

June 30 and July 2 The New York Times reports via the London Daily Telegraph that over

1,000,000 Jews have already been killed by Nazis.

Oct 22, 1942 SS put down a revolt at Sachsenhausen by a group of Jews about to be sent to

Auschwitz.

In Nov The mass killing of 170,000 Jews in the area of Bialystok.

Dec 10, 1942 The first transport of Jews from Germany arrives at Auschwitz.

In Dec Exterminations at Belzec cease after an estimated 600,000 Jews have been murdered. he camp is then dismantled, plowed over and planted.

In 1943 The number of Jews killed by SS Einsatzgruppen passes one million. Nazis then use special units of slave laborers to dig up and burn the bodies to remove all traces.

April 1943 Newly built gas chamber/crematories open at Auschwitz. With their completion, the four new crematories at Auschwitz have a daily capacity of 4,756 bodies.

Jan 27, 1945 Soviet troops liberate Auschwitz. By this time, an estimated 2,000,000 persons, including 1,500,000 Jews, have been murdered there.

April 30, 1945 Hitler commits suicide in his Berlin bunker

April 30, 1945 Americans free 33,000 inmates from concentration camps. www.historyplace.com/worlwar2

Newspaper Headlines

• In Sep 4, 1933 Alzada Comstock wrote an article about “Nazi

Germany’s Recovery Program”

The Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune wrote a “5 Million Jews Slain by

Nazis at Auschwitz, Hungarian Says” article on Wednesday April 11, 1945

• Der Stürmer published “The time is near when a machine will go into motion which is going to prepare a grave for the world's criminal - Judah

- from which there will be no resurrection." January 1940

Direct Quotes from people in

Response to the Genocide

“This war no longer bears the characteristics of former inter-European conflicts. It is one of those elemental conflicts which usher in a new millennium and which shake the world once in a thousand years.”

-Hitler speaking to the Reichstag, April 26, 1942.

"When Hitler shouted "on to victory" he was urging his countrymen to exterminate Jews, making way for the "pure" Aryan race. That sick agenda was no joke: Six million Jews perished in Europe before the world defeated Hitler.Hitler used soldiers, fear and torture to advance his agenda and hid the evidence by burning the bodies of innocent Jews in ovens or by dumping them in mass graves. It took a bloody world war to stop the

Holocaust. Tens of thousands of soldiers died in that war, including thousands of Americans.Why did Hitler and Goebbels hate Jews? Because they were Jews, period. Their hatred still lives in the minds of some demented admirers of Hitler's racist doctrine."

The Charlotte Observer, N.C. Nov. 8 2006.

• Bard, Mitchell G. The Complete Idiot’s Guide to World War II. Indianapolis, Indiana, 1999.

• When Kids Play With Evil, Adults Must Take It Seriously." Editorial. Knight Ridder Tribune

Business News. Washington: 8 Nov. 2006, pg. 1. Proquest. Pasadena City College, Shatford

Library. 9 Nov. 2006.

Genocide Photojournalist and Reporters

Some of the Journalist and photographers who covered the genocide were:

Erich Salomon Died 1944 Photojournalist

Philip Mechanicus Died 1945 Journalist

• Milena Jesenská

Died 1944 Journalist http:// en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Holocaust_victims

The Victims

Adolf Hitler's regime, the Third Reich, killed approximately 6 million Jews, and 7 million other

Europeans in the Death Camps from 1933 to 1945 .

The languages most spoken by the victims affected were:

Byelorussian

Croatian

Czech

Dutch

English

French

German

Hungarian

Italian

Norwegian

Polish

Romany

Rumanian

Russian

Serbian

Slovak Ukrainian

Yiddish.

Greek

Hebrew http://www.heritageabroad.gov/projects/poland3.html

International Response

Evian Conference: The Evian Conference was convened at initiative of the US President Franklin D.

Roosevelt in July 1938 to discuss the problem of Jewish refugees. For nine days delegates from thirty two countries met at Evian-les-Brains, France. However not much was accomplished, since most western countries were reluctant to accept Jewish refugees. The conference did not pass a resolution condemning German treatment of the Jews.

The International Red Cross did relatively little to save Jews during the Holocaust and discounted reports of the organized Nazi genocide, such as of the murder of Polish Jewish prisoners that took place at Lublin that the Red Cross discounted. At the time, the Red Cross justified its actions by suggesting that aiding

Jews prisoners would harm its ability to help other Allied POWs. In addition, the Red Cross claimed that if it would take a major stance to improve the situation of those European Jews, the neutrality of

Switzerland, where the International Red Cross was based, would be jeopardized. Today, the Red Cross acknowledges its passivity during the Holocaust, and has apologized for this.

Pope Pius XII: Although he did not publicly speak out against the murder of the Jews during the Holocaust, the Vatican did take action to save many Jews in Italy from deportation, including sheltering several hundred Jews in the catacombs of St. Peter’s Basilica. In his Christmas addresses of 1941 and 1942, the pontiff was forceful on the topic but did not mention the Nazis by name. The Pope encouraged the bishops to speak out against the Nazi regime and to open the religious houses in their dioceses to hide

Jews. In recent years, the Vatican has expressed its remorse for not speaking out with more authority against the genocide.

Throughout the war, the Allied Powers never tried bombing the death camp of Auschwitz or the train tracks leading there. The Allies said that their planes couldn’t reach the death camp from the airbase and that an airstrike would not be precise enough to ensure the safety of the inmates. Many accusers state that bombing Auschwitz, even if they would have killed all the Jewish inmates, would all together save many more Jews, since the Nazis kept gassing Jews for a long time.

• Makinda, Sam. “Following postnational signs: the trail of human rights.” Futures 37 (Nov. 2005):943-957.

• Power, Samantha. A Problem from Hell, America and the Age of Genocid e.

New York: Basic Books, 2002.

Effects to the Genocide

The Holocaust played an important role to the creation the United Nations

The United Nations, also known as the the League of Nations, “was the first international organization created to maintain peace on the novel idea of

"collective security”. Formed in the wake of World War I, the League failed in its primary mission -keeping the world at peace”.

By the end of WWII, in 1945, the war killed an estimated 61 million people in

Europe, Asia and North Africa, the Holocaust itself having 7 million deaths.

“The United Nations became official on October 24,1945 -- the first United

Nations Day -- when the charter came into force after ratification by all of

The Big Five -- the US, the USSR, the UK, China and France -- and a majority of the other conference attendees. “

“Timeline”.pbs.org/kofiannan

A HOLOCAUST EMBLEM

The Star of David is a representation of Jewish people. Nazis forced Jews to wear a yellow badge of the Star of David so they may identify them. The Red Swastika placement in the middle of the Star of David is a representation of Nazi party staining Jewish history. While the Swastika is normally black, it is made red to represent the blood-stain memory the party now has. The symbol is a reminder of how painful the memory of the Holocaust is.

Concentration Camps and countries involved in the Holocaust

Foods from the Country/Region where the Genocide took place

Bigos is a traditional stew typical of Polish cuisine and Lithuanian cuisine that many consider the Polish National Dish. Typical ingredients include fresh and fermented white cabbage various cuts of meat and Sausage, Tomatoes, Honey and

Mushroom.

Borscht is a vegetable soup, usually including beet roots, which give it a strong red color. The soup is called barsciai in Lithuanian, is often given as Borschtsch in

German (however in East Prussia where the dish was native it was called Bartsch), barszcz in Polish, borshch in Russian and Ukrainian, and bors in Romanian.

Oszczypek is a smoked cheese from Poland and Slovakia. It is an important symbol of the cultural and culinary heritage of Poland's Podhale region in the Tatra mountains (around the town of Zakopane). Oscypek is created from sheep's milk, although cow's milk is sometimes added. The original oscypek is always made with unpasteurized sheep's milk, which is first turned into cottage cheese. This is then repeatedly rinsed with boiling water and squeezed. After this, the mass is pressed into wooden, spindle-shaped forms in decorative shapes. The forms are then placed in a brine-filled barrel for a night or two, after which they are placed close to the roof in a special wooden hut and cured in hot smoke for up to 14 days.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

"A Holocaust Lesson: When Kids Play With Evil, Adults Must Take It

Seriously." Editorial. Knight Ridder Tribune Business News. Washington: 8 Nov. 2006, pg.

1. Proquest. Pasadena City College, Shatford Library. 9 Nov. 2006 Bard, Mitchell G. The

Complete Idiot’s Guide to World War II. Indianapolis, Indiana, 1999.

Bugajski, Janusz. "Poland." World Book Millennium 2000. 2000.

Makinda, Sam. “Following postnational signs: the trail of human rights.” Futures 37 (Nov.

2005):943-957.

Matthew Hughes, and Chris Mann. Inside Hitler’s Germany: Life Under the Third Reich.

Virginia: Dulles, 2002

Power, Samantha. A Problem from Hell, America and the Age of Genocid e.

New York: Basic

Books, 2002.

Sheehan, James J. "Germany." World Book Millennium 2000. 2000.

“Timeline”.pbs.org/kofiannan When Kids Play With Evil, Adults Must Take It

Seriously." Editorial. Knight Ridder Tribune Business News. Washington: 8 Nov. 2006, pg.

1. Proquest. Pasadena City College, Shatford Library. 9 Nov. 2006. wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Holocaust_victims

Wikipedia. 25 Oct. 2006. 2 Nov. 2006. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borscht>.

Wikipedia. 29 Sept. 2006. 2 Nov. 2006. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oscypek>.

www.heritageabroad.gov/projects/poland3.html

www.historyplace.com/worlwar2

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