The Holocaust The Holocaust Macaulay with Claggett, Gladovic, Goodsell, Kurtz, and Lawrance The Holocaust 1. Introduction to the Holocaust 2. Judaism 3. Antisemitism 4. The Odessa Pogrom 5. Pre Nazi Jewish culture 6. Rise of Nazism 7. Hitler's ideas 8. Film Study: The book thief 9. Jewish persecution 10. Wearing the star 11. War in the East 12. Einsatzgruppen 13. Concentration camps 1 slave labour 14. Ghettos 15. Himmler and the SS 16. Resistance/Warsaw uprising etc 17. Anne Frank 18. Concentration camps 2 life in 19. Other victims/symbols 20. Auschwitz Research Assignment 21. Film Study: Auschwitz 22. Killing centres: Treblinka 23.Death marches 24. Liberation 25. Nuremburg Trials 26. Reflection Version 2. November 2018 Created at Bonnyrigg High School by Warren Macaulay With help from Claggett, Gladovic, Goodsell, Kurtz, and Lawrance Questions, comments to warren.macauley@det.nsw.edu.au The Holocaust Macaulay with Claggett, Gladovic, Goodsell, Kurtz, and Lawrance 1 Introduction to The Holocaust In the middle of the twentieth Century, in an advanced, enlightened country in the heart of Europe an event took place that would come to symbolise the worst that humanity is capable of. It is known as The Holocaust. During the years between 1933 and 1945, Germany was ruled by the Nazi Party, and led by Adolf Hitler. Hitler and the Nazis defined themselves by a racist policy toward people of Jewish heritage. They initially enacted laws which removed the rights of anyone in Germany considered Jewish. Jewish people were restricted from working in certain professions, not allowed to marry non-Jewish Germans, lost their rights to own businesses, even forbidden from using parks, public transport, or owning radios. This persecution would become more violent as the Nazi Party held its grip on Germany and hundreds of people would die in anti-Jewish boycotts and vandalism. These persecutions, while terrible, were only the beginning of what many people consider to be the worst crime in history. In 1939 the Nazis would take Europe into a second world war, only 20 years after the first, and under the cover of this warfare would attempt to eliminate all Jewish people wherever they could be found. As the Nazis conquered different parts of Europe, they took control of millions of Jewish people. Nazi racial policy forced Jews to wear identifying symbols on their clothes, and endure further persecution such as deportations to concentration camps and the confinement of Jews into ghettos. Finally, the decision was taken to exterminate all Jewish people in Europe. This decision was a policy that led to the mass killing of millions people. This was done by shooting, starving to death, and by gassing at extermination centres. By the end of World War Two the Nazis had exterminated 6 million Jews. No one was spared this industrialised killing process. Men, women, and children of all ages, from babies, to the elderly were caught up in The Holocaust. The Holocaust Macaulay 1 Introduction to The Holocaust The Language of the Holocaust • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Anti-Semitism Arbeit Macht Frei Aryan Auschwitz Concentration Camp Crematorium Einsatzgruppen Final Solution Ghetto Holocaust Jude Judenrat Kristallnacht Lebensraum Nazi Nuremberg Laws Pogrom Shoah Sonderkommando SS Swastika Third Reich Zyklon-B Thinking Questions 1. Why do you think people feel the study of the holocaust is still relevant today? 2. Do you think something like this could happen today? Give reasons for your answer. Understanding 1. Define each of the words and phrases from the language of the holocaust list in bold. 2. When was the holocaust? 3. Where did it take place? 4. What restrictions were placed on Jewish people by Nazi laws? 5. How many Jewish people died in the holocaust? Research 1. What do each of the three pictures on this sheet represent? The Holocaust Macaulay 1 Introduction to The Holocaust Teacher’s notes • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Anti-Semitism : The hatred of people who are either of the Jewish faith or descended from Jewish people ad are considered to be of a Jewish “race” Arbeit Macht Frei : German for “Work Will Make You Free”, a cynical message above the gates of Auschwitz and elsewhere Aryan : German’s considered the Germanic groups of white European to be this Auschwitz : The largest concentration camp of the Nazis and the place of the most deaths Concentration Camp : A prison or labour camp where people the Nazis didn’t like were sent to work under horrendous conditions. Most died Crematorium : A building used for the burning of corpses in ovens Einsatzgruppen : German word for “mobile killing squad. They followed the army into war zones and were used to shoot and gas civilians Final Solution : The name given to the policy of the extermination all of the Jews of Europe by the Germans Ghetto : An enclosed area of a city where Jewish people were confined in cramped and unhygienic conditions Holocaust : The word used for the killing of 6 million Jews during WW2 Jude : German word for Jew Judenrat : German word for a committee of Jews who were ordered by the Germans to help run the ghettoes Kristallnacht : German word for “The “Night of Broken Glass” was a government encouraged riot against the Jews of Germany where shop windows were smashed, synagogues burnt, and Jews bashed and sometimes killed Lebensraum : German word for “Living Space” the land that Hitler thought Germans needed to take from countries in Eastern Europe Nazi Party : Short for Nationalist Socialist German Worker’s Party, the political party that was led by Hitler Nuremberg Laws : Laws enacted by the Nazi Party in 1934 which were aimed at persecution of Jews and to protect the “purity” of Aryan Germans. Pogrom : A violent attack on a community of Jews Shoah : The Hebrew word for The Holocaust Sonderkommando : A German word for a work detail of Jews in the camps who were responsible for collecting and disposing bodies SS : Hitler’s personal Nazi guard unit which grew into a powerful military organisation. Was responsible for running the concentration and extermination camps Swastika : The symbol of the Nazis Third Reich : The name given to the period of Nazi government Zyklon B : The poison used at Auschwitz to kill Jews in the gas chambers The Holocaust Macaulay 2 Judaism and Jewishness Judaism is the word used for the religious faith of people who call themselves Jewish. But defining Jewishness is not a simple matter. Being Jewish is not dependent upon only having a particular faith, it is also intertwined with cultural values, nationhood, and ethnicity. The ideas that Jewish people are of a particular race is the defining characteristic used by the Nazis to persecute, and them attempt to exterminate the Jews in Europe. As a religion A Jewish Menorah Millions of people around the world have Judaism as their religion, majority of whom live in Israel today, with other large populations in America and Britain. Judaism is a monotheistic religion, one of the oldest in the world, which means they believe in a single God. Part of their religious beliefs can be found in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible, and many of the names of Jewish historical legends and figures can be found there. The main book of scripture for Jewish people is called the Torah. Jewish faith is similar to other religions in that it has rules for its believers to follow, some foods are forbidden such as pork, boys are circumcised, and on the day of rest believers are not supposed to do any work. The Jewish day of rest is called the Shabbat, or the Sabbath. Children who are born to a Jewish mother are considered Jewish, but non-Jews, called Gentiles can convert to Judaism. Some Orthodox Jews follow rules about clothing and hairstyles which has meant they stand out in a community. Many people who call themselves Jewish have little or no religious belief. These secular Jews follow the customs and traditions such as holidays and food rules without feeling the need for faith. Nazi Racial theory The Torah Scroll During the late 19th Century science became interested in learning about what they called the different races. Seen as pseudo-science now, there was a common view that races of people have special skills or deficits, and that some races were naturally better than others. Often, Charles Darwin’s theory of Survival of the Fittest was used for racist policies. The Nazis had the view that Jewishness was a race, and an inferior, and dangerous one. The Nazis believed that Germans had their own “Aryan” race and the people from the Jewish race were corrupting German purity. This view of Jewishness as a racial trait meant that anyone with Jewish grandparents were considered Jewish, even non-believers, and people who had converted to other religions from Judaism. Jewishness was in the blood. This idea of an inferior race of Jewish people in Europe would lead to the persecutions, imprisonment, and eventual killing of millions of Jewish people throughout Europe. The Holocaust Macaulay 2 Judaism and Jewishness Understanding 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. Thinking Define the words in bold. What is Judaism? What factors make up Jewishness? Where do most Jewish people live today? List 5 facts about the Jewish religion. What does a Jewish person without faith call themselves? What was the pseudo-scientific view of races in the 19th Century? How did the Nazis view Jewishness? Creativity 1. How do you think people of the following faiths see themselves, as a religious group, a cultural group, an ethnic group, or a race? a. Buddhists? b. Hindus? c. Christians? d. Muslims? 2. Give a reason for your answers to question 1. 3. Is religion an important part of the world today? Give a reason and an example for your answer. Research 1. Draw the Menorah, and the Star of David in your book. 1. What do each of the two pictures on this sheet represent? 2. Visit the website below. Draw and describe 5 symbols of Judaism. The Star of David http://www.jewfaq.org/signs.htm The Holocaust Macaulay 3 Historical Anti-Semitism Anti-Semitism is a prejudice against, or a hatred of Jews. While the worst aspects of this racial hatred took place took place in holocaust of the twentieth century, it has a long and ugly past going back thousands of years. Although the word anti-Semitism was only coined in the 19th Century, it has become the term used for hatred of Jews throughout history. Jewish people have been forced to leave their traditional homeland, Israel, many times, beginning in the 8th Century BC. The leaving of Israel because of invaders and the spreading throughout the world is known as the diaspora. The resettling of Jewish community into new lands has brought them into conflict with different groups, and this has resulted in resentment, racism, and prejudice. Jewish communities have been frequently attacked, sometimes by the local legal system, other times violently by mobs, in displays of antiSemitic behaviour known as pogroms. In Ancient times Jews came into conflict with the Roman Empire when Israel was taken over by the Romans. When the Romans became Christian, Jews became the victims of religious intolerance, they were banned from occupations and heavily taxed. Medieval Drawing showing Jews collecting blood During the Middle Ages antiSemitic feeling led to Jews being blamed for the Black Death which killed millions. Jews were falsely accused of spreading the plague by poisoning wells. Jews were also accused of making a pact with the Devil, and of partaking in rituals involving the drinking of Christian children’s blood. These false rumours led to the destruction of hundreds of Jewish communities in Europe. All Jews were expelled from England during this time, but anti-Semitism lingered on in the writings of Shakespeare and the interpretation of a Jew as an underhanded moneylender in the form of Shylock. Scholarly writers such as the reformer of the Christian church Martin Luther would write on the subject of Jews in a predominately Christian Western world. In 1543 Luther published a pamphlet titled “The Jews and Their Lies” which called for the burning of Jewish schools and synagogues The Holocaust Shylock remains a difficult stereotype for modern audiences Macaulay 3 Historical Anti-Semitism and described Jews as "full of the devil's feces... which they wallow in like swine." Writings such as this would be the beginning of modern anti-Semitism. The 18th Century in Europe was called the “Age of Enlightenment”. It was an age where societies tried to break free of traditions and live life, and organise society, based on science and reason. But this era of freedom gave rise to the notion of “The Jewish question", what was to be done with the Jews in this new age? Anti-Semitism flourished during these years throughout Europe. Britain, France and Germany all debated “The Jewish Question”, the question seeking to ask what should be the economic, legal, spiritual, and moral answer. This question would lead to the Nazis in Germany answering by using the phrase “The Final Solution to the Jewish Question,” ultimately the attempt to exterminate all the Understanding Jews of Europe. 1. Define the words in bold. 2. How long has anti-Semitism been part of human history? 3. What brought Jewish people into conflict with others? 4. What happened to Jews during the Roman Empire? 5. Name two things the Jews were blamed for during the Middle Ages. 6. What happened to Jews because of these rumours? 7. Who was Shylock? 8. Who was Martin Luther and what did say about Jews? 9. When at what was the Age of Enlightenment? 10.How were Jews affected by debates during this time? Thinking 1. Why do you think the portrayal of Jews in the two pictures could be considered anti-Semitic? 2. Why do you think anti-Semitism and racism has been part of human culture for so long? 3. Does racism still exist in the world today? Extension 1. Visit the link below. 2. Describe what happened at the siege of Masada. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=11iPrDv8aBE The Holocaust Macaulay 4 The Odessa Pogrom In the late 19th century and early 20th century the majority of Jews lived in Eastern Europe, in what is now Poland and the Ukraine, but which then was a part of the Russian Empire. For decades the Russian Empire had faced problems under the rule of the Tsars, poverty, uprisings, and violence were part of everyday life. Under the Tsars the Jews had varying degrees of acceptance, however, when tensions were high, just like elsewhere in Europe, Jews were often made the scapegoats. In Odessa, in 1905, the worst Jewish pogrom up to that time took place. From The Times Newspaper 5 November, 1905 Every Jewish bakery has been destroyed, and 600 families have been rendered homeless. Some of the ruffians put their victims to death by hammering nails into their heads. Eyes were gouged out, ears cut off, and tongues were wrenched out with pincers. Numbers of women were disemboweled. The aged and sick, who were found hidden in the cellars, were soaked in petroleum and burnt alive in their homes… The police would not allow any assistance to be given to the wounded, actually firing upon the Red Cross workers. From the Wenatchee, Washington Newspaper 6 November, 1905 The latest estimates of the casualties in Odessa proper, which are founded on statements made by police authorities, are that 3500 persons were killed and 12,000 were wounded. In the suburbs of Moldavanka 1000 dead lay in the streets from midnight until noon Sunday, when the authorities dug large pits in the graveyards and buried them without coffins or regard to age or sex, simply throwing them into a hole and shovelling dirt over them in order to conceal the number of dead. In Brokhorva a neighbourhood in the Jewish quarters, men, women and children, and even women with infants in their arms, were butchered ruthlessly by marauders…. It is alleged that the police and soldiers everywhere marched at the head of the mobs, inciting them to destroy the Jews… The Holocaust Macaulay 4 The Odessa Pogrom From Robert Weinberg, "The Pogrom of 1905 in Odessa: A Case Study" 1992 In the port city of Odessa alone, the police reported that at least 400 Jews and 100 non-Jews were killed and approximately 300 people, mostly Jews, were injured, with slightly over 1,600 Jewish houses, apartments, and stores incurring damage. These official figures undoubtedly underestimate the true extent of the damage, as other informed sources indicate substantially higher numbers of persons killed and injured. For example, Dmitri Neidhardt, City Governor of Odessa during the pogrom and brother-in-law of the future Prime Minister Peter Stolypin, estimated the number of casualties at 2,500, and the Jewish newspaper Voskhod reported that over 800 were killed and another several thousand were wounded. Moreover, various hospitals and clinics reported treating at least 600 persons for injuries sustained during the pogrom. Indeed, no other city in the Russian Empire in 1905 experienced a pogrom comparable in its destruction and violence to the one unleashed against the Jews of Odessa. Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. Where did the majority of Jews live in the 19th and early 20th Century? 3. Why were the Jews scapegoated? 4. What occurred in Odessa in 1905? Extension 1. What sources exist for people get news about atrocities today? 2. Are modern day news sources more reliable or not? 3. Why might the use of mobile phones and the internet be a positive thing in places where atrocities happen? Source Questions 1. Make a list of the number of victims from each source. 2. Why do you think the casualty reports differ? 3. Which is the most sensationalised of the two newspaper reports? Give examples. 4. What is happening in the drawing? 5. Which source do you think would be the most accurate? Give reasons for your answer. 6. What do you think the response would be from the public reading the newspaper articles at the time? Give reasons for your answer. https://odessasecrets.wordpress.com/2015/06/23/how-many-may-have-died-in-the-odessa-pogrom/ The Holocaust Macaulay 5 Jewish life before the Nazis The Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933 and began persecution of the Jews almost immediately, as promised in the rhetoric of Hitler’s campaign speeches. Prior to Hitler’s rise, and the destruction of Jewish culture all over Europe, the Jewish communities had a thriving place in various part of European society. The largest group of Jews were living in Poland. When the Nazis invaded Poland in 1939 over 3,000,000 of the approximately 11,000,000 Jews of Europe lived there. Within 5 years this community, which had survived for over 800 years, was destroyed. Today, there are approximately 80,000 Jews remaining in Poland. An extract from Stolen Youth, a collection of Jewish memoirs published by Yad Vashem, 2005. Our Life Before the War I was born in 1924 on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement, the holiest and most solemn day of the Jewish calendar. Like most of the Jewish population in Będzin, a city in southwest Poland, my parents Hadassa and Meyer Joseph Szpigelman fasted and prayed all day long in the synagogue. They sat apart from one another, because according to orthodox Jewish tradition, women did not pray near the Ark and the Torah or sit with the men in the main sanctuary. Rather, my mother and the other women prayed from the floor above, where they could clearly hear the men chanting and observe the Torah being lifted out from the Ark. In the late afternoon Hadassa felt her first contractions. Not wishing to disturb her husband, she stepped quietly down the stairs and slipped unnoticed out of the prayer house. She headed home with the knowledge that she could call upon the local midwife, who lived in our building and who came to her at once. Meyer Joseph prayed through Ne’ilah, the day’s closing service, as the early October sun dipped below the horizon. It was only afterward that he found out, while waiting for his wife by the stairwell, that she had left hours earlier. By the time he arrived home and heard my cry from the bedroom, I had already been cleaned up and a red ribbon tied in my wispy blond hair to protect me from the evil eye. I came into my parents’ lives rather late. My mother had delivered five children before me, of whom three were alive at the time of my birth. My brother Poldek was 15 years old, my sister Helen was 13 and Hania was 6. Even though my parents were probably hoping for another son, having lost two, they were happy with the healthy newborn daughter that God had given them. They named me Jadzia, after an aunt, Jachet, who had died when she was over 100 and supposedly had been very clever as well as hardy. For the rest of their lives, my parents called me their Yom Kippur girl, although I could never celebrate my birthday with a party, because everyone would be fasting, meditating and asking forgiveness of God on that holy day. Come to think of it, my family never had birthday parties, and I don’t remember going to any, so maybe it simply wasn’t the custom. We lived in an enormous, five-story, double-courtyard building on Kołątaja Street, one of three main boulevards that ran through the city. More than a hundred families resided in the building’s one- to four-room apartments. Even the basements and attics were occupied by tenants, except on the side of the attic where everyone hung their laundry to dry. Professional people, such as doctors, lawyers, professors, and schoolteachers, lived in the front apartments where the windows faced the street. The rear apartments were mostly occupied by trades people, including tailors, seamstresses, shoemakers, brassiere and underwear makers, and milliners, all of whom worked at home. The building also housed a bakery, a hair mattress factory, a chicken wire fence factory, and a blacksmith, as well as a school for ballroom dancing, a trumpet school, a merchant’s organization, a private school for girls that my oldest sister Helen attended, a sports club called Hakoach, where I exercised when I was grammar school age, and a cheder (a small religious school), where a rabbi taught young boys to read the Torah. There seemed to be a whole city within the confines of this one urban dwelling, a city densely populated with vivid sounds, smells and characters that I have never forgotten. The Holocaust Macaulay 5 Jewish life before the Nazis Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. When did the Nazis come to power? 3. How many Jews lived in Poland and Europe in 1939? Use the extract to answer the following 4. What is Yom Kippur? 5. Describe what happened on the day of the author’s birth. 6. How do we know Jewish life could be superstitious? 7. Describe the building the author lived in as a child. 8. What occupations did the occupants of the building have? 9. What services were available in the building? Thinking 1. Why do you think a Jewish community might be self contained in the way the extract describes the “whole city within…this one dwelling”? 2. What inferences can you make about Jewish life in Poland before 1939? Give evidence to support your answer. 3. The war ended over 70 years ago why do you think the Jewish population has not revived? Research 1. Visit the website below. Creativity 1. What does the video show us about life before the holocaust? Create a table showing a comparison between your childhood and the author of the extract. http://www.yadvashem.org/yv/en/education/video/hevt_life_before.asp The Holocaust Macaulay 6 Rise of Nazism Germany in the early 1930’s was a deeply troubled nation. The Great Depression of 1929 meant that millions were unemployed and many people had become disillusioned with the democratic governments of the day. Losing faith in the mainstream parties’ ability to help ordinary people caused many people to look to extreme politicians who promised to make Germany great again. One such politician was the leader of the National Socialist German Worker Party (or Nazi Party), Adolf Hitler. Hitler had been leader of the Nazi Party and involved in politics throughout the 1920’s. In 1923 he had attempted a violent takeover of the government, known as a Putsch. This attempt failed, and Hitler spent 9 months in prison where he wrote a book about his ideas for Germany called “Mein Kampf” or “My Struggle”. Upon release from prison Hitler began to rebuild the Nazi Hitler practised his moves in front of a camera before giving speeches. Party into a legitimate political organisation. He was convinced he could use democracy to get himself and his party into power. Throughout the 1920’s the Nazis remained a small fringe party, extremely anti-communist and anti-Semitic, and very few people took them seriously. They were mostly seen as a radical right wing party supported by brown shirted thugs, who roamed the streets beating up opponents. For the Nazis to gain power and popularity something had to change. In November 1929 the Great Depression began with the Wall Street Crash in New York. The Great Depression caused millions of people worldwide to lose their jobs. Germany was hit particularly hard by the Great Depression. People who were now destitute, and reliant on handouts, looked to a strong leader for guidance. Hitler gave people someone to blame for their problems (the Jews and Communists) and promised bread and work for all the hungry, unemployed Germans. Hitler flew across Germany in one of the earliest aeroplanes giving speeches, and made use of the radio to get his message to as many Germans as he could. His angry speeches matched the mood of the people and the Nazis became the largest party in the Reichstag (the parliament). With a large percentage of the votes Hitler was able to control politics in Germany, banning other parties, and soon there was no one to stand in the way of his racist policies. The Holocaust Macaulay 6 Rise of Nazism Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. What occurred in 1929 which made millions of people unemployed? 3. How did it affect people’s view of politicians in Germany? 4. What had Hitler attempted in 1923? 5. What was the result of the 1923 putsch? 6. How influential were the Nazis during the 1920’s? 7. How badly was Germany affected by the Great Depression? (Give 2 examples) 8. Name 4 ways in which Hitler tried to win support of Germans. Source Questions 1. What does the photo tell us about Hitler’s character? 2. Describe the election results in Germany using percentages for a) May 1928 b) September 1930 c) November 1933 3. Describe in your own words the reasons for the change in percentages for the Nazi Party in the years above. Research Creativity 1. Draw a graph which visually represents the changing elections in German from 1928 to 1933. You could use a column graph, a bar graph, or a pie chart. 1. Using the link below, describe how the Nazis came to power. The information you need is in the menu on the left of the web page. http://www.theholocaustexplained.org/ks3/the-nazi-rise-to-power/how-did-nazis-gainpower/#.WKKGRWc0M5s The Holocaust Macaulay 7 Hitler’s Ideas Hitler was a man with many ideas about how Germany should be run, the kinds of people who were good for Germany, and about those people who were not welcome. Before he came to power he often gave speeches talking about the problems of Germany, and his solutions. Hitler spent 9 months in prison during 1923 and 1924 for an attempted violent takeover of the Government where he wrote a book about his ideas. The book was called Mein Kampf (My Struggle) and the thoughts he had about Germany, other countries, war, nationalism and race. Very few people bought his book to begin with, and fewer people took it seriously. But within a decade these ideas would lead to World War 2 and to the Holocaust. Once he was leader of Germany the book sold millions of copies. Mein Kampf even became the official wedding present of Germany. Hitler believed that race was a factor in the quality and character of a person. His race, the Aryan race was to him, the Master Race, the best race of all. Other races, even ones he was allied with during the war, were inferior. But the most inferior races according to Hitler were the Gypsies and the Jews. He referred to them as “untermenschen”, a German word meaning sub human. It was this idea that Jews were not even human which eventually allowed for the thinking that they could be exterminated. Hitler also believed strongly that the nations to the east SOURCE A of Germany were filled with In the course of my life I have very often been a prophet, and have inferior races and that usually been ridiculed for it. During the time of my struggle for power it Germany should take their was in the first instance only the Jewish race that received my land to give Germans more prophecies with laughter when I said that I would one day take over the “lebensraum” – living space. leadership of the State, and with it that of the whole nation, and that I This idea that the people of would then among other things settle the Jewish problem. Their laughter was uproarious, but I think that for some time now they have been countries such as Poland, Czechoslovakia, Ukraine and laughing on the other side of their face. Today I will once more be a prophet: if the international Jewish financiers in and outside Europe Russia were inferior led should succeed in plunging the nations once more into a world war, then Hitler to send his armies the result will not be the Bolshevizing of the earth, and thus the victory into the East. This attack of Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe! towards, and into Russia Hitler, speech to the Reichstag, 30 January 1939, meant that millions of people would be under the control of the Nazis, and millions of people, especially Jewish people would be killed. The Holocaust Macaulay 7 Hitler’s Ideas Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. What were Hitler’s speeches about? 3. Why was Hitler in prison and what did he do there? 4. What was his book Mein Kampf about? 5. What did Hitler believe about race? 6. Why did Hitler’s views on race affect Jews and Gypsies? 7. How did Hitler’s idea of “lebensraum” affect people of Eastern Europe? Creativity 1. Germany had banned Mein Kampf from being sold in Germany from 1945 until 2017 when a new edition with annotations from scholars pointing out the book’s errors and fallacies was released. Write a letter to the publisher stating why the book should, or shouldn’t still be banned. Source 1. When was the speech in Source A given? 2. What is the intended audience of Source A? 3. What are the two prophecies that Hitler makes reference to in the speech? 4. Who does Hitler think are trying to plunge the world into war? 5. What is important about the year of the speech? 6. Why is the answer to question 4 ironic? Research 1. Visit the link below. 2. What other ideas did Hitler have that are not mentioned on this sheet. http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/modern-world-history-1918-to-1980/weimargermany/mein-kampf/ The Holocaust Macaulay 8 Film Study : The Book Thief The Book Thief is 2014 film based on a novel by Markus Zusak. The film takes place in Germany during the time of the Nazis. We meet a young German girl who has been sent to a foster family because of political troubles faced by her mother. Throughout the film we follow her experiences as she learns to love reading, but we also see a society that is increasingly under the control of the Nazis. The events of the film occur before the holocaust, but show the growing persecution of the Jews in Germany, and the attitudes of Germans to the Nazi policies. Kristallnacht, 1938 Before/After you watch the film 1. Research • Book Burning in Germany • Kristallnacht • Hitler Youth • Jessie Owens Write a paragraph describing each of the above points. 2. Make a list of any other films you have seen or heard about that takes place during The Holocaust The Holocaust Jesse Owens, Berlin Olympics 1936 Macaulay 8 Film Study : The Book Thief While you watch the film 1. What character is narrating the film? 2. What is your impression of Leisel’s new foster mother and father? 3. Name two difficulties faced by Leisel at school. 4. What happens at the book burning ceremony? 5. Who is Max and why is he being hidden? 6. How does Max help Leisel? 7. Name 3 ways Leisel acquires books to read 8. What finally happens to a. Rudy? b. Max? c. Leisel? After you watch the film 1. Write a 100 word review of the film. 2. Describe what you can learn about the treatment of Jews in Germany from watching the film. 3. Illustrate the section of the film you liked the best 4. Create a poster for the film, you can use the images below for inspiration. The Book Thief The Holocaust Macaulay 9 Persecution in Nazi Germany The Nazis came to power in Germany in 1933. Anti-Semitic laws were passed, Jews were stripped of their rights and citizenship, and violence became more common. Boycotts of Jewish stores occurred, and in 1938 a violent and destructive night would see synagogues burn and Jewish owned windows smashed. Finally, in the last few years of Hitler’s rule, the policies of persecution would change to extermination. Dozens of laws were passed, each designed to remove Jews from everyday German life, and actions were taking by Hitler’s thugs, the SA to intimidate them. In 1933 the SA encouraged boycotts of Jewishowned businesses. Jewish stores were painted with anti-Semitic slogans In 1935 two new laws were passed •The Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour. This defined a Jew as a person with either three or four Jewish grandparents. Marriages or sex between Jews and Aryans was forbidden. Jewish store with Star of David Between 1935 and 1940 life for Jews in Germany were increasing restricted •Banned from working in the Army, as Veterinarians, Tax Advisors, in government schools, as auctioneers, as doctors for Aryans, or being a student or a lecturer at university. •No longer allowed to change their surname and had to add either “Israel” or “Sara” to their given names, and must have a large ‘J’ stamped on their passports. •Prohibited from owning gun stores or weapons, moving around Germany without permission, having carrier pigeons, owning a car or a driver’s license, having a telephone or a radio banned from health spas and resorts, forbidden from buying lottery tickets. In November 1938, after a German diplomat had been shot by a Jew in Paris, people were encouraged to form mobs, and led by the SA a night of vandalism, violence, and murder occurred, almost 100 Jews died. Synagogues were burnt down all over Germany. Shop windows of Jewish businesses were smashed and because of this it became known as the night of broken glass, or Kristallnacht. Passport with J stamp The Holocaust Macaulay 9 Persecution in Nazi Germany SOURCE A A Letter by a Firefighter This letter was written by a retired fireman, who remembered "Kristallnacht in Laupheim (Germany) The alarm went off between 5-5:30 A.M., and as usual, I jumped on my bicycle towards the firehouse. I had a strange feeling when I got there and saw many people standing in front of it. I was not allowed to go into the firehouse to take the engines out, or even to open the doors. One of my friends, who lived next to the Synagogue, whispered to me, "Be quiet - the Synagogue is burning; I was beaten up already when I wanted to put out the fire." Eventually we were allowed to take the fire engines out, but only very slowly. We were ordered not to use any water till the whole synagogue was burned down. Many of us did not like to do that, but we had to be careful not to voice our opinions, because "the enemy is listening." SOURCE B Personal Memoir by Michael Bruce about Kristallnacht The object of the mob's hate was a hospital for sick Jewish children, many of them cripples or consumptives. In minutes the windows had been smashed and the doors forced. When we arrived, the swine were driving the wee mites out over the broken glass, bare-footed and wearing nothing but their nightshirts. The nurses, doctors, and attendants were being kicked and beaten by the mob leaders, most of whom were women. Understanding 1. What was the underlying reason for anti-Semitic laws being passed by the Nazis? 2. Make a list of restrictions placed on Jews in Germany between 1935 and 1940. 3. What happened in November 1938? 4. What is the difference in perspective of each of the sources about Kristallnacht? 5. What can we learn about differing attitudes of Germans from the 2 sources? (Give reasons for your answer) The Holocaust Research and extension 1. Visit the website below. 2. Describe the responses to Kristallnacht 3. Why do you think there was a lack of empathy around the world for Jews who wanted to flee Germany. http://www.history.com/topics/kristallnacht Essay Question Describe how anti-Semitism has impacted Jewish people throughout history. Macaulay 10 Wearing the Star During the rise to power of Hitler it was still possible for many Jewish people to fit in with the rest of German and European society. Some Jews in Eastern Europe wore clothes and had lifestyles that separated them from the rest of society, but in Western Europe most Jews had assimilated and unless someone already knew they were Jewish, they could live their lives in relative anonymity. This anonymity was to change during Nazi propaganda leaflet: "Whoever bears this sign is an Hitler’s rule, in Germany, and in the places enemy of our people" that the German’s conquered. From 1939 in Poland, and increasingly elsewhere in Europe, Jews were forced to wear the Star on their clothes prominently whenever they were in public. Jews were to be marked, never being allowed to go out in public without being clearly identified. Leslie Meisels’ Suddenly the Shadow Fell The German army occupied Hungary on March 19, 1944. Within weeks, they decreed that Jewish people put a cloth yellow Star of David on their garments, which had to be visible so that everybody could see that we were Jews. My paternal grandfather, sadly, experienced this degradation. This same Hungarian-looking gentleman whose forefathers were born in the town and who had lived respectful lives there, said that he wouldn’t be humiliated, he wouldn’t wear the yellow star. He brooded about it for two days, not leaving the house. Then, he had a heart attack and passed away a couple of days later. He died without ever putting that symbol on his clothing. Anna Molnár Hegedűs, As the Lilacs Bloomed We kept hearing about people being attacked, beaten up, bullied and mobbed while wearing the yellow star. A few days later, my husband had to take the train back to Szatmár. Other travellers insulted Jews with yellow stars on the trains, so I was worried about him all day until his return… That morning, he had left as a gentleman, composed, but he returned as a broken, wan and dejected man… I could tell that he had some bad news to deliver. I started quizzing him, wanting him to tell me what had happened, to share his troubles with me. I told him it would ease his heart, but he wouldn’t say a word. We went to bed, but I could hear him tossing, turning, sighing. I implored him to tell me what had upset him so much. At last, he related to me that he had heard rumours that the Jewish population would be confined to a ghetto. The Holocaust Macaulay and Goodsell 10 Wearing the Star From Eva Meisels’ memoir By this time, we were wearing the yellow star on our clothing, according to a law that had been enforced a few weeks after the Nazi occupation on March 19, 1944. My mother took it off me once and explained how to leave our building and get to the nearby small market. There, I had to look amongst the stalls for our former neighbour. I saw her at a counter and when she noticed me, she reached down behind the counter and gave me some bread to take home to my mother. She must have liked us and cared about us, to risk being caught and punished for giving bread to a Jewish girl. She certainly didn’t want anyone to know I was Jewish. I had no right being out without the yellow star and if anyone had recognized me and turned me in, that would have been the end of both of us. Understanding and Source Questions 1. Define the words in bold. 2. How did the lives of Jews in Eastern and Western Europe change under Hitler’s rule? 3. What was the Nazi propaganda? 4. What are the three types of sources? Leslie 1. What can this source tell us about how Jews were forced to dress? 2. Why might Leslie’s Grandfather have refused to wear the star? Anna 1. What can this source tell us about the treatment of the Jews who were forced to wear the star? Eva 1. Why would Eva have to hide her Jewishness to buy bread? Thinking Questions 1. What are the purposes of the three types of sources? 2. Using the sources, and your own knowledge, describe the experiences of those forced to wear the Star of David. Use PEEL paragraphs and quotes from the sources as evidence. Research and extension 1. Visit the link below to hear an audio recording and other written memoirs about the wearing the star. 2. Describe the experience of these Hungarian Jews of 1944. https://medium.com/@azrielimemoirs/death-was-in-the-stars-1af2b8d80aa5#.7o94fhcxv The Holocaust Macaulay and Goodsell 11 War in the East After annexing Poland in 1939, Hitler quickly sent his armies to the west, conquering most of western Europe during 1940. From this point Hitler was ready to pursue his dream of “lebensraum” for Germans. During 1941, the seemingly unstoppable Nazis, would invade the USSR, and for the next 4 years a bloody war of annihilation and attempted subjugation would take place in the East. Hitler’s plans included the forced starvation of millions of Russians and Slavic people, and the colonisation of the land by Germans to create a Greater Germany. The early part of this offensive, during the summer of 1941, saw Hitler’s armies take huge areas of land from the USSR. Ultimately Hitler would not be able to defeat the Soviet Union, but during the 3 years that the Nazis occupied this territory, millions would die. The racial ideology of the Nazis meant that the ethnic groups most affected by the occupation would be the Jews and the Roma. As Hitler’s armies moved east they encountered large Jewish populations, throughout countries like Poland, the Ukraine, Russia, and Hungary. These countries had been home to Jewish culture for centuries, with the arrival of war these communities would be devastated, most communities would never recover from the horrors that were about to be unleashed. Source A Hitler speaking in 1941 The war against Russia will be such that it cannot be conducted in a knightly fashion. This struggle is one of ideologies and racial differences and will have to be conducted with unprecedented, unmerciful, and unrelenting harshness. All officers will have to rid themselves of obsolete ideologies. I know that the necessity for such means of waging war is beyond the comprehension of you generals but . . . I insist absolutely that my orders be executed without contradiction. The Holocaust Macaulay 11 War in the East Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. What was Hitler doing between 1939 and 1940? 3. Where did Hitler attack during 1941? 4. What were Hitler’s plans for the land he intended to conquer in the East? 5. Why were Jews and the Roma affected? 6. What did the armies encounter as they marched east? Creativity 1. Use a blank map of Europe and an atlas to label the countries and territories under Nazi occupation during WW2. Source and extension 1. Who is the intended audience for Source A? 2. What is meant by “knightly fashion”? 3. Why does Hitler ue the words “unprecedented, unmerciful, and unrelenting”? 4. What are the “obsolete ideologies” that he refers to? 5. Why would he need to make such a speech? Research 1. Use the link below to research the evolution of the idea of Lebensraum in Germany. http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/worldwars/wwtwo/hitler_lebensraum_01.shtml The Holocaust Macaulay 11 War in the East Europe 1942 The Holocaust Macaulay 12 Einsatzgruppen Einsatzgruppen is the name of the special killing groups deployed by Hitler whose job was to follow the army (Wehrmacht) into newly conquered areas of Eastern Europe and kill large groups of people thought to be undesirable. Communists, Polish intellectuals, and male Jews were targeted first, but soon the Einsatzgruppen would be tasked to clear areas completely of Jews, the women and children included. Areas that were declared free of Jews were called Judenfrei, or the term Judenrein was used, clean of Jews. At first the killings were done via mass shootings, over pits where the bodies would be buried, or in secluded wooded areas. The work, shooting thousands of naked, unarmed Jewish women (Judinnen), children (judenkinder), and babies, was deemed to be too stressful a task. A transition to gassing was made, victims were loaded into vans which had poisonous exhaust pumped into the hold, suffocating all inside. The gas vans were not popular with the German officers, it could take twenty minutes for the people inside the van to die, and screams could be heard by the drivers of the van. Although the holocaust is more remembered for the camps such as Auschwitz and extermination sites such as Treblinka, the Einsatzgruppen were responsible for almost a quarter of the overall numbers of Jewish victims, approximately 1.3 million out of 6 million. Source B - Felix Landau, Einsatzgruppen Officer 12 July 1941... At 6:00 in the morning I was suddenly awoken from a deep sleep. Report for an execution. Fine, so I'll just play executioner and then gravedigger, why not?... Twenty-three had to be shot, amongst them ... two women ... We had to find a suitable spot to shoot and bury them. After a few minutes we found a place. The death candidates assembled with shovels to dig their own graves. Two of them were weeping. The others certainly have incredible courage... Strange, I am completely unmoved. No pity, nothing. That's the way it is and then it's all over... Valuables, watches and money are put into a pile... The two women are lined up at one end of the grave ready to be shot first... As the women walked to the grave they were completely composed. They turned around. Six of us had to shoot them. The job was assigned thus: three at the heart, three at the head. I took the heart. The shots were fired and the brains whizzed through the air. Two in the head is too much. They almost tear it off..." Source A - Einsatzgruppen report showing one unit's death tally over 11 days The Holocaust Macaulay 12 Einsatzgruppen Understanding 1. Define the words in bold 2. What was the role of the Einsatzgruppen? 3. Who were the first targets of the Einsatzgruppen? 4. What was the eventual task of the Einsatzgruppen? 5. Why was the work stressful? 6. What was done to try to make the work less stressful? 7. Was this method a success? 8. What were the total number of victims of the Einsatzgruppen? Creativity 1. Imagine you are an officer in the Wehrmacht witnessing the work of the Einsatzgruppen and feeling outraged, as some ordinary, non Einsatzgruppen soldiers were. Write a short, half page letter to your superiors explaining how you feel about what is going on. Sources 1. What is the purpose and audience of Source A? 2. What occurred on 23rd August 1941? 3. What does Source A tell us about the kind of people who worked in the Einsatzgruppen? 4. Who is the intended audience for Source B? 5. Describe the emotions of the writer, use examples from the writing to support your answer. 6. What suggests the writer of Source B has seen other horrible things during the war? 7. How useful are these sources in showing Nazi attitudes towards Jews? Research 1. Visit the link below 2. Describe the four Einsatzgruppen units. 3. What happened to the Einsatzgruppen leaders after the war? http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/einsatz/ The Holocaust Macaulay 13 The Camps : Slave Labour There are names of places that existed during the holocaust so horrifying that even the names have come to symbolise suffering and a lack of humanity. One of these names is Auschwitz. Auschwitz is often known as the place where gas chambers and mass exterminations took place, indeed more Jews died here during the holocaust than at any other place. But its function as a concentration camp, as with many other camps around Germany and Eastern Europe, was also to provide slave labour for the Nazis war effort. These camps were known as Arbeitslager, or forced labour camps. Survivors of the Nordhausen factory where V2 rockets were made. The conditions for the workers varied throughout Europe. Some living in the camps worked nearby as clothes makers, armaments workers or other industrial work. Some were forced on marches to worksites in forests, mines and caves. At some camps a sign hung over the entrance with the lie saying “work will make you free”, arbeit macht frei, encouraging compliance. Regardless of the work and how essential it was to the war effort, the workers were treated as expendable. “Extermination through labour” was a principle the Nazis had. Workers were underfed and ill-treated, often beaten to death. Most worked until they died from exhaustion after a few months. Slave labour was one of the methods used to exterminate the six million jews during the holocaust. The slave labourers would be used in a variety of industries, for companies that are well known even today such as Volkswagen, Philips, and the Ford Motor Company. During the war, as a consequence of the massive loss of working men to the war effort, Jewish slave labourers made up as much as 1/5 of the German workforce. Over 2000 companies profited from slave labour, and there is still debate today in Germany about the question of compensation for the survivors and families of the exploited. IG Farben chemical factory Monowitz The Holocaust Macaulay and Kurtz 13 The Camps : Slave Labour During the long hike to the "work site," two-legged beasts in handsome human skins struck their charges left and right at random, just for fun. Their dogs, enormous, well-trained German shepherds, trotted after their masters, eagerly awaiting a command. At the slightest hint they leapt at the victim and tore him limb from limb; just as senselessly and randomly as their masters did; just for fun… We plunged the rakes into the mud, wincing at their weight when we tried to lift them. Then, as we approached the wheelbarrow, the mud leaked away between the prongs until little was left. Again we bent, aiming for the thickest mud. Even so, little of it reached the wheelbarrow. Again and again we strained our emaciated bodies. I observed my friends at this hopeless, disgusting, senseless work, whose only purpose was to torment, and another tragic scene from long ago came to mind: a picture from a history book, masses of broken Jewish slaves in Egypt building cities for Pharaoh. The caption was: "And straw for brick-making they did not supply." Extract from “To Vanquish The Dragon," by Pearl Benisch Understanding 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Define the words in bold. What was Auschwitz? Auschwitz is usually known as? What was its secondary function? Use arbeitslager in a sentence. What type of work was done in forced labour camps? 7. What sign hung over the entrance of camps? Why? 8. What is meant by extermination through labour and how was it applied by the Nazis? 9. How many companies profited from slave labour? Name three. 10.What is the debate today in Germany about labour camps? Thinking and extension 1. Describe the Nordhausen survivors in source 1. 2. Read source 3. Make up a list of adjectives that describe the treatment the Jewish labourers. 3. Create a one paragraph cloze passage with a word bank about Jewish slave labour. Ask your friend to complete it. 4. Visit the site below and investigate three of the companies that profited from the Holocaust. http://www.11points.com/News-Politics/11_Companies_That_Surprisingly_Collaborated_With_the_Nazis The Holocaust Macaulay and Kurtz 14 The Ghettos With the Nazis conquering large Jewish populations in Europe as their armies marched East, it was decided that Jews should be segregated from the rest of society. In 1939 and 1940 no decision had yet been made as to what the answer to the “Jewish Question” or Judenfrage would be. The Nazis would soon create what they called the final solution, but in the meantime the Jews were herded into separate areas from the rest of the European population. These areas were known as ghettos. The Germans established thousands of ghettos in Eastern Europe. Some would last only a few days before the inhabitants were taken elsewhere. Some would last for years and become squalid, vermin infested places where people would often die from disease or starvation. People would be forced to live in cramped conditions, dozens of people to a room, without access to proper medical care, and with a starvation level food supply. SOURCE A. Jewish children in the Warsaw Ghetto The Nazis filmed these deplorable conditions to use as propaganda. Having created the conditions of the Ghetto, the Nazis would use these poor conditions as proof that Jews were not fit to live among other people. Eventually the ghettos would be emptied of their inhabitants as the Nazis expanded and industrialised the killing centres in places like Auschwitz and Treblinka. SOURCE B Professor Ludwik Hirszfeld, an escapee from the Warsaw Ghetto in 1943 described what he saw. Often there is something lying on the pavement, covered with newspaper. Emaciated limbs or morbidly swollen legs usually stick out from underneath. These are the corpses of the spotted typhus victims. The other people living in the house simply carry them outside because they cannot afford the burial expenses. Or it may be one of the homeless paupers who has collapsed in the street. All Jews must wear the armband with its Star of David. The children are the only exceptions, and this makes it easier for them to smuggle food in. The thousands of ragged beggars are reminiscent of a famine in India. Horrifying sights are to be seen every day. Here a half-starved mother is trying to suckle her baby at a breast that has no milk. Beside her may lie another, older child, dead. One sees people dying, lying with arms and legs outstretched in the middle of the road. Their legs are bloated, often frost-bitten, and their faces distorted with pain. I hear that every day the beggar children’s frost-bitten fingers and toes, hands and feet are amputated… I once asked a little girl: “What would you like to be?” “A dog,” she answered, “because the sentries like dogs.” The Holocaust Macaulay and Claggett 14 The Ghettos SOURCE C. One of thousands of poems which were buried in the ghetto and found after the war, the writers mostly having been exterminated. Girl Without Soap by Miriam Ulinover And as I sit so desolate worn out by poverty, the inspiration came to me to create a song of need. – Heavy is my shirt with worries, one has to do the wash the weave’s becoming yellowed (close to _________________) It bends my brain with worry and presses like a canker. If only the storekeeper would give me soap on credit No, he did not give it! Stiff as starch he was! For my beautiful dark eyes he will not give away his soap I am estranged from fresh white wash my laundry’s gray with dirt, But my body longs to sing the song of a clean and fresh white shirt. Creativity 1. Imagine what life would have been like living in a ghetto. Write a short poem or journal entry to describe the experience. The Holocaust Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. What does Judenfrage translate to? 3. How were the Jews treated in the lead up to the ‘Final Solution’? 4. Describe the living conditions in the ghettos. 5. How did the Nazi’s use the poor conditions in the ghettos to their advantage? 6. Why were the ghettos eventually emptied? Source Questions: Source A 1. What type of source is this? 2. Describe what you see in this source. Source B 3. List 3 things you might see on the street in a ghetto. 4. Why were there so many dead bodies on the streets? 5. To what/ where does the author compare the situation? 6. Explain why you think the little girl wished to be a dog. How might her life be different if she was one? Source C 7. Describe what this source can tell us about hygiene in the ghettos. Macaulay and Claggett 15 Himmler and the SS Hitler created a special bodyguard unit in the 1925 known as the SS, the Schutzstaffel (Protection Squad). From a small group of around 300 members, the SS grew into an organisation that employed over a million men. The SS took on many roles, especially during World War 2 - security, military, executions, but are infamously known as the group that ran the concentration and extermination camps. Their leader was failed chicken farmer, and devoted Nazi, Heinrich Himmler. Himmler was a fanatical follower of Nazi racial theory, believing in the need for the purity of the German race. He organised the SS into an elite Aryan example, complete with their own mythology about blood and race purity. Himmler had a castle built for special SS ceremonies, and encouraged breeding of the SS men with the purest of Aryan women in an Heinrich Himmler attempt to create a master race. This fanaticism made Himmler the ideal candidate to found the Einsatzgruppen early in WW2, and then to run the extermination camp system in which millions of Jews would die. The camps under Himmler’s control, were known as “Aktion Reinhard” camps. In August 1941 Himmler attended a shooting of 100 Jews at Minsk. At the execution some blood and brain sprayed onto Himmler’s uniform. Himmler was horrified and reportedly ill. He became worried that the close up shooting of civilians – men, women, children, even babies, would be mentally distressing for his men. From this point he ordered that a more humane way of killing be devised, humane for the killers, not for the victims. Within months, at his order, Auschwitz had expanded to become an extermination centre and the gas made from Zyklon B (a pesticide) was being used to kill Jews by the thousands per day. Himmler Speech to SS men October 1943 I want to mention another very difficult matter here before you in all frankness. Among ourselves, it ought to be spoken of quite openly for once – yet we shall never speak of it in public. Just as little as we hesitated to do our duty as ordered on June 30th 1934, when we placed comrades who had failed against the wall and shot them, just as little did we ever speak of it, and we shall never speak of it. It was a matter of course, of duty for us; thank God, never to speak of it, never to talk of it. It made everybody shudder. Yet everyone was clear in his mind that he would do it again if ordered to do so, and if it was necessary… I am referring now of the evacuation of the Jews, the extermination of the Jewish people… To have gone through this [the extermination of the Jews] and at the same time to have remained decent, that has made us hard. This is a chapter of glory in our history which has never been written, and which never shall be written, since we know how hard it would be for us if we still had the Jews, living among us as secret saboteurs, agitators, and slander-mongers. Among us now, in every city — during the bombing raids, with the suffering and deprivations of the war. We would probably already be in the same situation as in 1916 and 1917 if we still had the Jews in the body of the German people. The Holocaust Macaulay & Goodsell 15 Himmler and the SS Understanding 1. Define the words in bold 2. What did Hitler create in 1925? 3. What were the various roles of the SS? 4. Who was the leader of the SS? 5. What was Himmler fanatic about? 6. How do we know he was fanatical about it? 7. What event occurred in 1941 involving Himmler? 8. Why was he horrified? 9. How did he respond? 10.What gas was introduced? Source Work 1. What does the source tell us about Himmler and the SS? 2. How is this source useful to an historian studying the Holocaust? 3. Explain how this source is reliable or unreliable as piece of historical evidence for an Historian studying the Holocaust. Thinking 1. Why do you think ‘fanaticism’ of any kind can be dangerous? 2. What are some synonyms for ‘fanatical’ or ‘fanaticism’? 3. Why do you think people can become so ‘fanatic’? 4. Can you think of anything people are fanatic about in today’s society? Research 1. Visit the link below. 2. Create a timeline of Himmler’s involvement in the Nazi Party. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum https://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10007407 The Holocaust Macaulay & Goodsell 16 Resistance Resistance against the Nazi attempt to persecute and murder the Jews of Europe took many forms, both by Jews and non-Jews. Many Jews defied Nazi laws, hid themselves under occupation, or took up arms and actively fought the Nazi military. Many fought back against overwhelming odds despite knowing it would mean certain death. Some non-Jews risked their own lives and freedom to help their Jewish neighbours escape the terror of the holocaust. Warsaw uprising In the largest Jewish ghetto, in Warsaw, rumours began to circulate in early 1943 that every Jew was about to be deported and killed. Between April and May 1943, the inhabitants of the ghetto decided to fight back, attacking German tanks with Molotov cocktails and small weapons that had been smuggled in. The Germans quickly put down the major resistance, with their superior forces and weapons. The soldiers went house to house burning down buildings, but it would take months to hunt down, and in many cases burn out with flamethrowers the Jews who had hidden in sewers and bunkers. 13,000 Jews were shot, burnt to death, or suffocated before the uprising was crushed and the remaining 50,000 Jews captured Jurgen Stroop, SS General Account of the uprising May 4th 1943. Countless Jews who appeared on the roof-tops during the fire have perished in the flames. Others did not make an appearance on the top storeys until the last minute and could only save themselves from being burned to death by jumping down. Today a total of 2283 Jews have been caught, 204 of which shot, countless Jews destroyed in bunkers and in the fire. The total number of the Jews caught so far has increased to 44,089. The Righteous Among the Nations Most people in Germany, and in occupied Europe were either perpetrators, or bystanders during the holocaust, with few become actively involved in resisting the actions of the Nazis against the Jews. Righteous Among the Nations is a special honour bestowed upon nonJewish people who risked their own lives to assist Jews during the period of the holocaust. The award is given by the State of Israel and gives honorary citizenship, welfare, and other benefits to the recipients if they wish to live in Israel. To date 26,157 people have been recognised from 51 separate countries. The Holocaust Macaulay and Claggett 16 Resistance Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. What are 3 ways that Jews resisted the Nazis? 3. What rumours were circulating in the Warsaw ghetto in 1943? 4. How did the inhabitants resist the Germans? 5. Explain how the Germans responded to the resistance. 6. How many Jews were killed and how many captured during this event? 7. Explain the purpose and benefits of the ‘Righteous Among the Nations’ award. Creativity 1. Imagine you are a Jew living in Warsaw in 1943. You have heard rumours that every Jew is about to be deported and killed. You need to rise up and resist the Germans! Design a pamphlet urging your fellow Jews to take action. Thinking 1. Discuss whether you think Jewish resistance during WWII was effective or not. Do you think it achieved any positive outcomes? Use examples to support your views. 2. If an extreme and violent government took over Australia and your life was at risk, would you resist them? Why/ why not? Explain your answer. Research 1. Visit the first link below. 2. Describe what Oskar Schindler did to earn the title Righteous Among the Nations. 3. Visit the second link. 4. Find 3 more examples of people named Righteous Among the Nations and what they did. https://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005787 http://www.yadvashem.org/righteous The Holocaust Macaulay and Claggett 17 Anne Frank Anne Frank is possibly the most famous victim of the holocaust. She was a young Jewish girl born in Germany 1929 who fled along with her family to the Netherlands when Hitler came to power and began persecuting Jews. Her family hoped to remain safe in Amsterdam and Anne’s father, Otto Frank established a business there. Anne and her older sister Margot enrolled in a local school. They, along with their mother Edith hoped to avoid the war but the Nazis invaded The Netherlands in 1940 and in 1942, and when Margot was called up to report for a Nazi work camp, the family were forced to go into hiding. For two years the Frank family and 4 other Jews were hidden and supported by friends in a secret annex behind a bookcase hidden in Otto Frank’s business. It was quite spacious, and there is room enough for the 8 people to live together comfortably but they could not leave for fear of being caught and deported to a concentration camp. They relied on Dutch friends to keep them hidden and to supply them with food, necessities, and news of the war. While hidden Anne began writing a diary for which she became famous. Tragically for the Frank family, their hiding place was discovered in 1944 and they were arrested and deported to the Auschwitz concentration camp. Separated from their father, who Anne believed was killed in the gas chambers, Anne and her sister were able to survive with the help of her mother, who refused to eat, and passed on her rations to her daughters. After a few weeks, Anne and her sister were selected to move to Bergen "Of all the multitudes who throughout history have spoken Belsen concentration camp. Their mother, for human dignity in times of great suffering and loss, no left behind, died from starvation. Anne, voice is more compelling than that of Anne Frank” already emaciated and suffering from – John F Kennedy 1961 scabies, contracted Typhus and died only a few weeks before the camp liberation by Allied forces. Anne’s father, Otto, with Anne never knowing, had managed to survive Auschwitz and learned a few weeks after the war that he had lost his daughters. Returning to the Dutch friends who had helped to hide his family he was given a collection of papers, which included Anne’s writings about their time in hiding. Anne wrote extensively about her family and the people she was hidden with, the harrowing times she lived in, and in her writings expressed a desire to be a published author one day. Fulfilling his daughters wish Otto had the writings published as “A Diary of a Young Girl” in 1950. The Holocaust Macaulay and Gladovic 17 Anne Frank The impact of Anne Frank’s diary has been extraordinary. Having sold over 30 million copies in many languages, it has been able to humanise the everyday life of a victim of the holocaust. The Anne Frank "people identified with this child. This was the impact of the Holocaust, this was a family like my family, like your family and so you could understand this." - Simon Wiesenthal Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. Who was Anne Frank? 3. Why were the Franks forced to go into hiding? 4. Where did they hide? 5. How did we learn of their experiences while in hiding? 6. How long did they spend in the secret annex? 7. What happened to each of the family members after they were uncovered in 1944? 8. Who was responsible for the publishing of Anne’s diary in 1950? Thinking 1. How do you think the Nazis discovered the secret annex? 2. Why do you think Anne Frank’s diary has become so famous and important? 3. Why do you think it was important for Otto Frank to publish his daughter’s diary? Research Creativity 1. Imagine that you were Anne Frank living in hiding. Write a one-page diary entry expressing your thoughts and feelings. 1. Visit the website below. Take a virtual tour of Anne Frank’s hiding place. 2. Describe what it might have been like to live in the secret annex for two years http://www.annefrank.org/en/Subsites/Home/ The Holocaust Macaulay and Gladovic 18 The Camps : Daily Life Life in the camps varied greatly from person to person. Some jobs, such as being a cook, or sorting belongings of the arrivals made it easier to survive by stealing a little extra food. However, there were few survivors of the camps, and the experience generally was one of brutality, torture, and death. An account by Pfeffer, a survivor of daily life at the Majdanek camp You get up at 3am. You have to dress quickly, and make the ‘bed’ so that it looks like a matchbox. For the slightest irregularity in bed-making the punishment was 25 lashes, after which it was impossible to lie or sit for a whole month. Everyone had to leave the barracks immediately. Outside it is still dark, unless the moon is shining. People are trembling because of lack of sleep and the cold. There was what was called a washroom, where everyone in the camp was supposed to wash — there were only a few faucets — and we were 4,500 people in that section. Of course there was neither soap nor towel or even a handkerchief, so washing was theoretical rather than practical… At 5am we would get half a litre of black bitter coffee. That was all we got for what was called “breakfast.” At 6am a headcount. After the headcount: work. We went in groups, some to build railway tracks or a road, some to the quarries to carry stones or coal, some to take out manure, or for potato-digging, latrinecleaning, barracks or sewer—repairs. During work the SS men beat up prisoners mercilessly, inhumanly and for no reason. They were like wild beasts and, having found their victim, ordered him to present his backside, and beat him with a stick or a whip, usually until the stick broke. The victim screamed only after the first blows, afterwards he fell unconscious and the SS man then kicked at the ribs, the face, at the most sensitive parts of a man’s body. Another customary SS habit was to kick a Jew with a heavy boot. The Jew was forced to stand to attention and all the while the SS man kicked him until he broke some bones. People who stood near enough to such a victim, often heard the breaking of the bones. The pain was so terrible that people receiving that treatment died in agony. Work was actually unproductive, and its purpose was exhaustion and torture. At noon there was a break for a meal. Standing in line, we received half a litre of soup each. Usually it was cabbage soup, or some other watery liquid, without fats, tasteless. One had to drink the soup out of the bowl and lick it like a dog. From 1pm until 6pm there was work again… There were ‘days of punishment’, when lunch was given together with the evening meal, and it was cold and sour, so our stomach was empty for a whole day. Afternoon work was the same: blows and blows again. At 6pm there was the evening headcount. Usually we were left standing at attention for an hour or two, while some prisoners were called up for ‘punishment parade’, for those who (in the Germans’ eyes) had transgressed in some way during the day or had not been punctilious in their performance. They were stripped naked publicly, laid out on specially constructed benches and whipped with 25 or 50 lashes. All prisoners had to watch the brutal beating and listen to the heart-rending cries. The Holocaust Macaulay 18 The Camps : Daily Life Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. Make a list of the words from the passage that suggest negative treatment of the prisoners. 3. How would some people survive the hardships of the camps? 4. Describe what would happen at 3am. 5. What was “breakfast”? 6. What were the different kinds of work people would do? 7. How did the SS men treat the prisoners? 8. Describe one way people could die. 9. How important was the work? 10.What were punishment days? 11.What happened at 6pm? Thinking 1. Why do you think the prisoners put up with the treatment? 2. What do you think was the motivation for the brutality? 3. Do you think is it impossible to ever imagine a circumstance that could justify anyone treating people in this way? Give a reason for your answer. 4. What do you think should happen to the perpetrators of the treatment of the prisoners? Research Creativity 1. Imagine you were a prisoner. In your own words describe your day. 1. Visit the website below. 2. Describe the selection and processing of newly arrived deportees. http://www.wollheim-memorial.de/en/ankunft_im_kz_bunamonowitz The Holocaust Macaulay 19 More Victims Although the holocaust specifically refers to the persecution and the attempted extermination of Jews of Europe, there were other groups in Europe who suffered under the Nazis. Another ethnic group that were particularly hated by the Nazis were the Roma people, or gypsies. The Nazis also hated communists, homosexuals, Jehovah’s Witnesses, alcoholics, and the disabled. These groups were persecuted, sent to concentration camps, or killed because of the Nazi belief in racial purity. The Nazis passed laws in 1933 to try to keep the German people racially pure, and also healthy. Disabled people began to be sterilised by force so they could not have children. Soon, a program of euthanasia began, starting with disabled children, later adults as well. Doctors would sign a form that would allow patients of mental hospitals to be killed, the family of the patient would be sent a letter saying their loved one had died of illness. SOURCE A. A propaganda poster from 1938, encouraging people to accept euthanasia for disabled people. It says "60,000 Reichsmark (about $420,000 in Australia today) is what this person suffering from a hereditary defect costs the People's community during his lifetime. Fellow citizen, that is your money too.” The Roma (or gypsies) were a traditionally nomadic ethnic group originally from India who were seen by the Nazis as racially inferior. Around a million Roma has settled in Europe before WW2. The Roma were captured and deported to concentration camps as the Nazis marched across Europe. It is estimated that 200,000 to 500,000 of the Roma were killed in pogroms, shootings, or in the gas chambers, but due to poor record keeping this number may be as high as 800,000. In Romani, this genocide is known as Porajmos. SOURCE B A poster showing the triangular badges worn by inmates of the camps, colours were different for political prisoners like communists, homosexuals, Roma, Jehovah’s witnesses and others. The yellow triangle would be added to make the Star of David for Jews. The Holocaust Macaulay 19 More Victims Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. What were the other groups besides Jews that suffered under the Nazis? 3. Why did the Nazis persecute these groups? 4. What laws did the Nazis pass? 5. Why was a program of euthanasia begin? 6. What is Source A about? 7. What happened to the Roma? 8. What is shown in Source B? Creativity 1. Use link 1 below to create a colour version in English of SOURCE B. Thinking 1. Why do you think Nazis had their beliefs about race? 2. How effective do you think the propaganda in Source A would have been? 3. How do you think the public would react if euthanasia was suggested for disabled people today? 4. Why do you think the Nazis physically labelled the people they were persecuting? Research 1. Visit link 2. 2. Use the link to describe the experiences of the Forgacs and Prigmore children during the holocaust. Link 1 https://s14.postimg.org/xtx6fld8h/IDs.jpg Link 2 https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/voices/two-survivors-roma-genocideshare-their-stories The Holocaust Macaulay 20 Auschwitz : Research Projec t Auschwitz is synonymous with the holocaust, it is the place where more Jews died than anywhere else. Both a slave labour camp and an extermination camp, over 1 million Jews were starved, worked, or beaten to death, died from disease, or were killed in the gas chambers. The stories and images of Auschwitz have come to symbolize the worst that humanity is capable of. SOURCE A : The Gate at Auschwitz SOURCE B : Extract from Night by Elise Wiesel The afternoon went by slowly. Then the doors of the wagon slid open. Two men were given permission to fetch water. When they came back, they told us that they had learned, in exchange for a gold watch, that this was the final destination. We were to leave the train here. There was a labor camp on the site. The conditions were good. Families would not be separated. Only the young would work in the factories. The old and the sick would find work in the fields. Through the windows, we saw barbed wire; we understood that this was the camp. As the train stopped we saw flames rising from a tall chimney into a black sky. SOURCE C : A freight car used to transport Jews We stared at the flames in the darkness. A wretched stench floated in the air. Abruptly, our doors opened. Strange-looking creatures, dressed in striped jackets and black pants, jumped into the wagon. Holding flashlights and sticks, they began to strike at us left and right, shouting: “Everybody out! Leave everything inside. Hurry up!” We jumped out. In the air, the smell of burning flesh. It must have been around midnight. We had arrived. In Birkenau. SOURCE D : Scott Jenkins in the Salisbury Post Newspaper So fierce was Hitler's hatred, trains carrying Jews to the death camps were given priority even over troop trains carrying soldiers to battle, Cernyak-Spatz said. When she stepped off the train and onto the platform at Birkenau, the results assaulted her senses. "The first thing you noticed was an absolutely incredible stink," she said. The noxious, sickly sweet odor hung in the air with a dusky vapor billowing from smokestacks and staining the distant sky, she said. (Continued next page) The Holocaust Macaulay 20 Auschwitz : Research Projec t SOURCE D continued Then, the selection began. The Nazis separated families, those who could work to one side, those who couldn't to another. The second group loaded onto trucks. The women on the trucks asked where they were going. Don't worry the drivers told them, you will be reunited with your families. SOURCE E : The selections at the Auschwitz ramp After a nice hot shower. "Then they took them directly in the direction of that smoke," Cernyak-Spatz said. Soon, those who survived learned what burned in those buildings. Guards led prisoners into the large buildings, told them to take off their clothes, hang them on hooks. And remember, tie your shoe laces together, they said, so you don't lose a shoe. The Nazis had told Jews to dress in their warmest clothes for the journey to the "work" camps, Cernyak-Spatz said. After the gas chambers, they gathered those clothes for their own use. For the years during the war, "that is how the whole German nation was clothed ... in the clothing and property of dead Jews," she said. SOURCE F : An extract from "Mengele, the Complete Story" by Gerald L. Posner and John Ware The memory of this slightly built man, scarcely a hair out of place, his dark green tunic neatly pressed, his face well scrubbed, his Death's Head SS cap tilted rakishly to one side, remains vivid for those who survived his scrutiny when they arrived at the Auschwitz railhead. Polished boots slightly apart, his thumb resting on his pistol belt, he surveyed his prey with those dead gimlet eyes, Death to the left, life to the right. Four hundred thousands souls -- babies, small children, young girls, mothers, fathers, and grandparents -- are said to have been SOURCE G : Josef Mengele casually waved to the lefthand side with a flick of the cane clasped in a gloved hand. Mengele was the chief provider for the gas chambers and their crematoria. He had a look that said 'I am the power,' said one survivor. At the time, Mengele was only 32 years old. The Holocaust Macaulay 20 Auschwitz : Research Projec t SOURCE H : In May 1943 an SS officer conducted an inspection of Auschwitz and compiled this report, for the attention of SS leader Heinrich Himmler The Auschwitz camp plays a special role in the resolution of the Jewish question. The most advanced methods permit the execution of the Fuhrer’s order in the shortest possible time and without arousing much attention. The so-called “resettlement action” runs the following course: The Jews arrive in special trains (freight cars) toward evening and are driven on special tracks to areas of the camp specifically set aside for this purpose. There the Jews are unloaded and examined for their fitness to work by a team of doctors, in the presence of the camp commandant and several SS officers. At this point anyone who can somehow be incorporated into the work program is put in a special camp. The unfit go to cellars in a large house which are entered from outside. They go down five or six steps into a fairly long, well-constructed and well-ventilated cellar area, which is lined with benches to the left and right. It is brightly lit, and the benches are numbered. The prisoners are told that they are to be cleansed and disinfected for their new assignments. They must therefore completely undress to be bathed. To avoid panic and to prevent disturbances of any kind, they are instructed to arrange their clothing neatly under their respective numbers, so that they will be able to find their things again after their bath. Everything proceeds in a perfectly orderly fashion. Then they pass through a small corridor and enter a large cellar room which resembles a shower bath. In this room are three large pillars, into which certain materials can be lowered from outside the cellar room. When three- to four-hundred people have been herded into this room, the doors are shut, and containers filled with the substances are dropped down into the pillars. As soon as the containers touch the base of the pillars, they release particular substances that put the people to sleep in one minute. A few minutes later, the door opens on the other side, where the elevator is located. The hair of the corpses is cut off, and their teeth are extracted (gold-filled teeth) by specialists (Jews). It has been discovered that Jews were hiding pieces of Jewelry, gold, platinum etc., in hollow teeth. Then the corpses are loaded into elevators and brought up to the first floor, where ten large crematoria are located. (Because fresh corpses burn particularly well, only 50-100 lbs. of coke are needed for the whole process.) The job itself is performed by Jewish prisoners, who never step outside this camp again. The results of this “resettlement action” to date: 500,000 Jews. Current capacity of the “resettlement action” ovens: 10,000 in 24 hours. The Holocaust Macaulay 20 Auschwitz : Research Projec t SOURCE I : Smuggled out photo of the burning of bodies at Auschwitz SOURCE J : The Crematorium at Auschwitz Research Activity 1. Using the Sources above and the links below as a starting point you are to create and submit a report on various aspects of the Auschwitz concentration camp. You should have a paragraph about each of the following things • • • • • • • • • • Transportation of Jews The entrance to the camp Selection at the ramp Layout of the camp Collection and use of Jewish belongings Slave labour Daily Life Dr Mengele Extermination methods Disposal methods https://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/media_nm.php?ModuleId=10005189&MediaId=3371 http://alphahistory.com/holocaust/auschwitz/ http://alphahistory.com/holocaust/whos-who-in-the-holocaust/#mengele http://www.history.com/topics/world-war-ii/auschwitz http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/history-and-overview-of-auschwitz-birkenau The Holocaust Macaulay 21 Film Study : Auschwitz Episode 3 This documentary is one of a six part BBC series about Auschwitz called The Nazis and the Final Solution. This documentary looks at the evolution and use of concentration camps across Europe, especially Auschwitz. In 1939, Auschwitz was initially established as a detention centre for political prisoners, protestors, and any other group perceived as enemies of the Nazi regime. Once Hitler had determined what the Final Solution to the Jewish Question was and made it the party’s key policy, Auschwitz was deemed as the ideal location to enact this new rule. Aushwitz, along with multiple other sites throughout Europe would go on to see the death of more than 6 million Jews, 1 million Roma, and hundreds of thousands of political prisoners. The BBC has an interactive map of Auschwitz, which you can view below to get a better understanding of the Aucshwitz camp. http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/interactive/animations/auschwitz_map/index_embed.shtml Before/After you watch the film 1. Research children during the holocaust https://www.ushmm.org/wlc/en/article.php?ModuleId=10005142 2. Write a paragraph about each of the following points with respect to children a. b. c. d. In the Ghettos In the Killing Centres As forced labour In the Resistance 3. Research the role of Joseph Mengele during his time at Auschwitz Concentration Camp. https://encyclopedia.ushmm.org/content/en/article/josef-mengele The Holocaust Macaulay and Lawrance 21 Film Study : Auschwitz Episode 3 While you watch the film The following questions are for minutes 1-13 1. 2. 3. 4. Which Western European countries were the first Jews deported from? How did the French police help? Which Nazi figure organised the deportations? Describe the experience of the children at Drancy Internment Camp and after. The following questions are for minutes 14-23 5. How does Oskar Groening describe the arrival of the transport? 6. How were the children killed? 7. How many were sent without their parents? 8. How does Oskar Groening justify killing children? 9. What was Oskar Groening’s job? 10. What happened to Theresa Steiner? The following questions are for minutes 23-29 11. 12. 13. 14. What did Himmler see at Auschwitz? Why was his gas chamber visit kept secret? How does Kazimierz Piechovski describe living in the camp? Describe his escape attempt. The following questions are for minutes 29-34 15. What was Himmler’s order regarding Polish Jews? 16. Where did Himmler want to kill the Polish Jews? 17. Describe Treblinka. The following questions are for minutes 34-43 18. 19. 20. 21. How did Hoess dispose of the bodies at first? How was Auschwitz made more efficient? Describe what Albert Battel did at Przemysl. How was he honoured? The following questions are for minutes 43-45 22. Describe Treblinka after Franz Stangl arrived. 23. How many people were killed at Treblinka? The following questions are for minutes 45 and onwards 24. How was Auschwitz modified? 25. Who was the notorious new arrival at Auschwitz? The Holocaust Macaulay and Lawrance 22 Extermination Camps During the holocaust, there were different types of camps built by the Nazis. There were concentration camps to hold political or ethnic undesirables, POW camps for captured soldiers, labour camps for slave workers, transit camps for temporary holding, and then there were the extermination camps. Some camps were a combination of the above. The extermination camps had one purpose, to kill as many human beings, mostly Jews, as efficiently as possible. Aside from Auschwitz, where over a million people died in just over 5 years , the deadliest killing centre of the Nazis was Treblinka where 800,000 people were killed in just 15 months between July 1942 and October 1943. Other killing centres included Belzec and Chelmno where 600,000 and 320,000 were killed respectively. With places like Treblinka the Nazis had enacted a policy unseen in human history, industrialised genocide. Treblinka was a secluded place, and its construction was designed to deceive. Jews were brought on railways and disembarked on what was disguised to look like an ordinary railway platform, complete with flower beds, fake timetables, and painted clocks. The deportees were told they were going to a delousing and a shower and to leave their belongings to be collected later. Most arrivals would be dead within 30 minutes of arriving. A rare survivor Oscar Strawczynski, who worked in a slave labour section as a tinsmith reported the killing process. …the people leave all their belongings in Camp 1. Everyone is undressed there. The women already naked, are seated on a long bench and their hair is cut off. This is accomplished by about forty “hairdressers.” The victims come into Camp 2 already naked and shorn, and are immediately squeezed into the cubicles. The doors are hermetically sealed, the motors start to work. The air from inside is sucked out and fumes from burnt gasoline forced in. The cries from inside can be heard for about for about ten minutes and then it becomes quiet. The entire process, from the arrival at the camp to the oven lasts only about half an hour. Most of the victims in the cubicles start to haemorrhage. A German controls the progress of the work through the little window in the ceiling. When he is sure that everyone inside is dead, he opens the side panels, and the corpses fall out onto the cement platform. An elderly Jew from Czestochowa called “the dentist” checks the bodies for gold or metal teeth, which he pulls out. “ Once the Nazis realised they would soon lose the war, Treblinka was destroyed, bricks removed from the The Holocaust Macaulay and Claggett 22 Extermination Camps buildings, and ashes from cremated bodies were spread out around the local area. Archaeological finds, including bones and personal items, and eyewitness testimonies are the only evidence that remain. Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. Identify the purpose of: a. Concentration camps b. POW camps c. Labour camps d. Transit camps e. Extermination camps 3. Which was the deadliest killing centre of the Nazis? Why? 4. Explain the ways that Treblinka’s construction was meant to deceive. 5. What were deportees told when they got off the train? 6. What did the Nazis do to Treblinka once they realised they would lose the war? Why would they do this? Creativity 1. Draw a diagram of the railway platform at Treblinka described above. Label its features. 2. What would you be thinking as a Jew arriving at Treblinka? Write a journal entry to describe your arrival. Source 1. Who is the author of this source? 2. What was his role? 3. What happened to prisoners at camp 1? 4. What type of gas was used in the extermination chamber? 5. How long does the entire process take from arrival to extermination? 6. Describe what happens once everyone inside is dead? 7. Is this a reliable source? Why/ why not? Write a PEEL paragraph to explain your answer (3-4 sentences). Research 1. Visit the link below and watch the video of the animated reconstruction of Treblinka. 2. Using information from the video and your own knowledge describe what happened from arrival to cremation. https://vimeo.com/98382049 The Holocaust Macaulay and Claggett 23 Death Marches By 1944, it was clear even to the most fanatical of Nazis that the War would be lost. As the Russians approached and overran German occupied territories in Eastern Europe the SS began doing their best to hide their genocidal crimes. In many cases, such as Treblinka, building were destroyed, bodies exhumed and cremated, and ashes and evidence spread far and wide. Source A In some places, such as Auschwitz, the still large camp populations were forced on death marches. In these last A secretly months of the war many thousands would die from photographed march exhaustion, exposure, and starvation as the Nazis through a German evacuated the camps and forced their victims into the town. heart of Germany. It was thought that these prisoners might tell the stories of the atrocities if they were left behind, and some prisoners could still be used as slave labour. Any prisoner too weak to walk would be shot. Himmler would eventually order 59 marches, most taking place during the brutal winter at the end of 1944, or early 1945, just 4 months before the Nazis would surrender. Around 250,000 Jews would die on these death marches. Source B From Gerta Solan’s My Heart Is At Ease Auschwitz was liquidated on January 18, 1945. The Soviet front was moving closer every day but the Nazis delayed our liberation as long as they could. This was the beginning of the end for them. The very ill had to stay behind and later we were told that at the end they were all shot, but it wasn’t true. The rest of us were dragged along with the SS officers running from the camp. I, along with Eva Stern and many others, started the long march across the country at night, slipping through villages so as few people as possible would see us. Some did spot us and tried to give us food, which was brave of them. Many inmates were unable to walk the long hours. It was the most exhausting race of our lives — for everyone a matter of life or death. We were weak, undernourished, miserable. People gave up and were shot when they sat down on the road, preferring death to such an unbearable struggle. Many times, I too thought of doing this, but some inner voice told me — no! Gerta Solan, 1941 The Holocaust We went for days with nothing to eat but snow. I moved like a robot. Surprisingly, though, my feet continued to carry me forward. Macaulay 23 Death Marches Understanding 1. Define the words in bold. 2. What was clear by 1944? 3. What were the SS doing as the Russians approached? 4. How did they attempt to do this at Treblinka? 5. What happened to the camp inhabitants at Auschwitz? 6. Why did the guards not want to leave them behind? 7. What were conditions like on the marches? 8. How many Jews would die on these marches? Sources 1. What does Source A tell you about the knowledge of the holocaust amongst ordinary Germans? 2. How do you think ordinary Germans would have felt about seeing these prisoners marching through their town? 3. Using evidence/quotes from Source B to support your answers, what does Source B tell you about a. The secrecy of the marches? b. The attitude of the villagers? c. The resilience of the survivors? Creativity 1. Imagine you are a German teenager watching a death march pass by your window. 2. Write a short description of what you can see and illustrate your description. Research 1. Visit the website below. 2. Describe Freddie’s experience on the death march from Auschwitz http://www.theholocaustexplained.org/ks3/survival-and-legacy/liberation-thesurvivors/freddie-remembers-the-death-march/#.WSuHt2dU2po The Holocaust Macaulay 24 Liberation In 1944 and 1945 Nazi Germany was on the retreat and the war would soon be over. Despite the Nazi attempts to cover up their genocidal crimes, as the Allies took over German occupied lands they found what was left behind of the camps and the horror. For millions the Allies had arrived too late, 6 million Jews had already been killed by Nazi racial policy. For a few the arrival of the Allies meant liberation, but for many, they were so close to death from illness and starvation that they would not survive to enjoy their freedom. At Bergen-Belsen 60,000 survivors were found, many suffering from typhus and dysentery, over 10,000 would shortly die. Source A Sign at Belsen Anne Frank had died from disease here just weeks before liberation. At Buchenwald Camp, the local German civilians were forced to enter to see what the Nazi regime had done in their name. Supervised by Allied soldiers the population of the nearby town were taken on a tour of the huts, the sick and dying victims, and were made to help bury the corpses of the already dead. Source B American war correspondent William Frye, April 20, 1945 I saw Belsen—its piles of lifeless dead and its aimless swarms of living dead. Their great eyes were just animal lights in skin-covered skulls of famine. Some were dying of typhus, some of typhoid, some of tuberculosis, but most were just dying of starvation. Starvation—the flesh on their bodies had fed on itself until there was no flesh left, just skin covering bones and the end of all hope, and nothing left to feed on. Tragically, there is still hope inside these still-breathing cadavers. As long as eyes can stare from the bodies scattered everywhere on the floors and on the ground there is hope. Hope in these for whom there is no hope. They are living but they cannot live. No food, no care can save them. Ahead of them is nothing—nothing but that pit with the bulldozer waiting to cover them with earth. I saw the living beside these dead. Living—they still walked and talked and stared curiously, unemotionally at visitors and snipped cigarette butts tossed from a passing army car, went to the cookhouse for food and knelt around fires. There were supposed to be 29,000 of them alive when the British arrived. Living—but hardly men and women now, their spirits so broken and degraded that the nameless horror around them was without meaning or significance. I saw there was no sex, no shame, no modesty, no self-respect among these people—driven in a few months backward a million years towards primordial scum. Some habits remained. Women stood naked cleaning themselves with cans of water, unconscious of their flat, empty nakedness. Source C Liberated Survivors of Mauthausen Camp, 1945 The Holocaust Macaulay 24 Liberation Source D German civilians at Buchenwald after liberation Understanding 1. What was left behind as the Nazis retreated? 2. What did the arrival of the Allies mean? 3. What were the survivors suffering from? 4. What happened to many survivors? 5. What did the Allies force the local German civilians to do? 6. Who wrote source B? 7. What did the author of source B witness? Creativity 1. Write a diary entry for one of the German civilians in Source D. Extension 1. Make a list of the descriptive phrases used by the author of source B. e.g.”piles of lifeless dead” 2. Why do you think the author used these descriptive terms instead of just writing plain facts? 3. What impact would the images in Sources A, C, and D have on a. Ordinary Germans? b. The rest of the world? 4. How do you think the international community would respond to the information being reported from the liberated camps such as that from Source B? 5. Write a brief description of the audio testimonies of Bergen-Belsen from the link below. http://www.iwm.org.uk/history/the-liberation-of-bergen-belsen The Holocaust Macaulay 25 Nuremberg Trials On April 30, 1945, with the Soviet Army surrounding his Berlin bunker, Hitler committed suicide, effectively ending the war in Europe. The victorious Allies, Britain, USA, France, and the Soviet Union decided to put 24 of the surviving Nazi leadership on trial for the crimes committed during the war and the holocaust. The site of the trial was Nuremberg, home to Hitler’s largest Nazi rallies in the 1930’s, and the trials would last for almost a year between October 1945 and November 1946. Many high ranking Nazis responsible who had survived the war, and who had not committed suicide, were put in front of a panel of judges and were found guilty for crimes including the holocaust. Those found guilty included the head of the Luftwaffe, Herman Goring (pictured below), was the highest ranking Nazi to stand trial. Some were executed; others were given prison sentences in an attempt to show that the civilised world finds some things intolerable and unforgiveable. Goring would commit suicide the day before his execution. Twelve more trials were held at Nuremberg in the next 3 years. Altogether 1416 people were found guilty of crimes, with less than 200 being executed, most would be released from prison in the 1950’s. The trials were also intended to show the world the horrors of the holocaust, because the details and rumours that had been published around the world were difficult for many to believe. Hearing testimony from those who were perpetrators, as well as victims, was a way of proving to the world that the events of the holocaust, as unimaginable as they sounded, actually happened. The phrase the world would learn after these trials was “Never Forget. The trial did not only see justice served to the war criminals, it also led to the creation of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948. Extract from American prosecutor Robert Jackson’s opening address at the Nuremberg war crimes tribunal The conspiracy or common plan to exterminate the Jew was so methodically and thoroughly pursued that despite the German defeat and Nazi prostration, this Nazi aim largely has succeeded. Only remnants of the European Jewish population remain in Germany, in the countries which Germany occupied, and in those which were her satellites or collaborators. Of the 9,600,000 Jews who lived in Nazi dominated Europe, 60 percent are authoritatively estimated to have perished. 5,700,000 Jews are missing from the countries in which they formerly lived, and over 4,500,000 cannot be accounted for by the normal death rate nor by immigration; nor are they included among displaced persons. History does not record a crime ever perpetrated against so many victims or one ever carried out with such calculated cruelty. The Holocaust Macaulay 25 Nuremberg Trials Understanding 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Define the words in bold. Why did Hitler commit suicide? What did the Allies decide to do? Where was the trial? How long did the trial take? What happened to those found guilty? 7. What happened at the subsequent 12 trials? 8. What were the trials intended to show? 9. What does Robert Jackson say the aim of the Nazi’s was? 10.How successful were the Nazis according to Robert Jackson? (Give figures) 11.What does Jackson say about the holocaust’s place in History? Creativity 1. Imagine you are a prosecutor at Nuremberg. Write an opening speech explaining what the Trials are for and their importance. Thinking 1. Why do you think the Nuremberg Trial was important? 2. Explain how you think holocaust survivors would have felt during and after the trials. Research Use the link below to find out who the following were and what happened to them? 1. Nazis a. b. c. d. e. f. g. Rudolf Hess Joseph Goebbels Adolf Eichmann Joseph Mengele Reinhard Heydrich Heinrich Himmler Rudolf Hoess 2. Resisters and victims a. Mordechai Anielewicz b. Oskar Schindler c. Elie Wiesel d. Simon Wiesenthal http://alphahistory.com/holocaust/whos-who-in-the-holocaust/ The Holocaust Macaulay Reflection Use this page to think about the work we that have done this semester. List 10 things that you have learned during the Holocaust topic • • • • • • • • • • Choose one thing from your list and describe it below. Describe something that surprised, shocked, or saddened you during this topic. The Holocaust Macaulay Reflection What do you think the worst thing about the holocaust was? Give reasons for your answer. Do you think the holocaust could ever happen again? Why/Why not? Complete the following. It is important to learn about the holocaust because… Use this space to write or draw something about how the holocaust makes you feel The Holocaust Macaulay