CH 32 Sec 3
CH 32 Sec 3
CH 32 Sec 3
The Holocaust
MAIN IDEA
Aryan
Holocaust
Kristallnacht
ghetto
Final
Solution
genocide
SETTING THE STAGE As part of their vision for Europe, the Nazis proposed
a new racial order. They proclaimed that the Germanic peoples, or Aryans, were
a master race. (This was a misuse of the term Aryan. The term actually refers
to the Indo-European peoples who began to migrate into the Indian subcontinent
around 1500 B.C.) The Nazis claimed that all non-Aryan peoples, particularly
Jewish people, were inferior. This racist message would eventually lead to the
Holocaust, the systematic mass slaughter of Jews and other groups judged inferior by the Nazis.
TAKING NOTES
Analyzing Bias Use a
web diagram to identify
examples of Nazi
persecution.
Nazi
persecution
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PRIMARY SOURCE
All the things for which my parents had worked for eighteen long years were destroyed
in less than ten minutes. Piles of valuable glasses, expensive furniture, linensin short,
everything was destroyed. . . . The Nazis left us, yelling, Dont try to leave this house!
Well soon be back again and take you to a concentration camp to be shot.
M. I. LIBAU, quoted in Never to Forget: The Jews of the Holocaust
Kristallnacht marked a major step-up in the Nazi policy of Jewish persecution. The
future for Jews in Germany looked truly grim.
A Flood of Refugees After Kristallnacht, some Jews realized that violence
against them was bound to increase. By the end of 1939, a number of German Jews
had fled to other countries. Many however, remained in Germany. Later, Hitler
conquered territories in which millions more Jews lived.
At first, Hitler favored emigration as a solution to what he called the Jewish
problem. Getting other countries to continue admitting Germanys Jews became
an issue, however. After admitting tens of thousands of Jewish refugees, such countries as France, Britain, and the United States abruptly closed their doors to further
immigration. Germanys foreign minister observed, We all want to get rid of our
Jews. The difficulty is that no country wishes to receive them.
Isolating the Jews When Hitler found that he could not get rid of Jews through
Recognizing
Effects
What steps did
Hitler take to rid
Germany of Jews?
emigration, he put another plan into effect. He ordered Jews in all countries under
his control to be moved to designated cities. In those cities, the Nazis herded the
Jews into dismal, overcrowded ghettos, or segregated Jewish areas. The Nazis
then sealed off the ghettos with barbed wire and stone walls. They hoped that the
Jews inside would starve to death or die from disease.
Even under these horrible conditions, the Jews hung on. Some formed resistance organizations within the ghettos. They also struggled to keep their traditions.
Ghetto theaters produced plays and concerts. Teachers taught lessons in secret
schools. Scholars kept records so that one day people would find out the truth.
German soldiers
round up Jews in
the Warsaw ghetto.
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Hitler believed that his plan of conquest depended on the purity of the Aryan
race. To protect racial purity, the Nazis had to eliminate other races, nationalities,
or groups they viewed as inferioras subhumans. They included Roma (gypsies), Poles, Russians, homosexuals, the insane, the disabled, and the incurably ill.
But the Nazis focused especially on the Jews.
The Killings Begin As Nazi troops swept across Eastern Europe and the Soviet
Union, the killings began. Units from the SS (Hitlers elite security force) moved
from town to town to hunt down Jews. The SS and their collaborators rounded up
men, women, children, and even babies and took them to isolated spots. They then
shot their prisoners in pits that became the prisoners graves.
Jews in communities not reached by the killing squads were rounded up and
taken to concentration camps, or slave-labor prisons. These camps were located
mainly in Germany and Poland. Hitler hoped that the horrible conditions in the
camps would speed the total elimination of the Jews.
The prisoners worked seven days a week as slaves for the SS or for German
businesses. Guards severely beat or killed their prisoners for not working fast
enough. With meals of thin soup, a scrap of bread, and potato peelings, most prisoners lost 50 pounds in the first few months. Hunger was so intense, recalled one
survivor, that if a bit of soup spilled over, prisoners would . . . dig their spoons
into the mud and stuff the mess in their mouths.
The Final Stage The Final Solution reached its last stage in 1942. At that time,
the Nazis built extermination camps equipped with huge gas chambers that could
kill as many as 6,000 human beings in a day. (See the map on page 953.)
When prisoners arrived at Auschwitz (OUSHvihts), the largest of the extermination camps, they paraded before a committee of SS doctors. With a wave of the
hand, these doctors separated the strongmostly menfrom the weakmostly
women, young children, the elderly, and the sick. Those labeled as weak would die
that day. They were told to undress for a shower and then led into a chamber with
Jewish Resistance
938 Chapter 32
Ella Gartner
Roza Robota
Analyzing Bias
How was the
Final Solution a
natural outcome of
Nazi racial theory?
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Jews
Killed
Percent
Surviving
Poland
3,300,000
2,800,000
15%
2,100,000
1,500,000
29%
Hungary
404,000
200,000
49%
Romania
850,000
425,000
50%
Germany/Austria
270,000
210,000
22%
*Estimates
fake showerheads. After the doors were closed, cyanide gas poured from the
showerheads. All inside were killed in a matter of minutes. Later, the Nazis
installed crematoriums, or ovens, to burn the bodies.
The Survivors Some six million European Jews died in these death camps and in
Nazi massacres. Fewer than four million survived. Some escaped the horrors of the
death camps with help from non-Jewish people. These rescuers, at great risk to
their own lives, hid Jews in their homes or helped them escape to neutral countries.
Those who survived the camps were changed forever by what they had experienced. As Elie Wiesel, nearly 15 years old when he entered Auschwitz, noted:
PRIMARY SOURCE
Never shall I forget the little faces of the children, whose bodies I saw turned into
wreaths of smoke beneath a silent blue sky. Never shall I forget those flames which
consumed my faith forever. . . . Never shall I forget those moments which murdered
my God and my soul and turned my dreams to dust. . . . Never.
ELIE WIESEL, quoted in Night
SECTION
ASSESSMENT
TERMS & NAMES 1. For each term or name, write a sentence explaining its significance.
Aryan
Holocaust
Kristallnacht
ghetto
Final Solution
genocide
MAIN IDEAS