Wednesday, November 13, 2019

The Holocaust: World War Two Essay -- Socialist Nazi Germany Hitler

The Holocaust: World War II The Nazis and their collaborators accounted for the execution of over six million Jews in World War II. In 1933 the twenty one countries that Germany would come to occupy as a result of the war, were occupied by nine million Jews. By 1945 two out of three of these Jews were heartlessly executed. Adding to these victims, Hitler targeted social outcasts such as homosexuals, the disabled, and Gypsies. Poles and Slavs were targeted for their labor, and Soviets faced death by the millions as prisoners of war. Still more, political and religious leaders were exterminated because they were seen as threats. The Holocaust was an example of the terror felt during the Nazi regime. The end of World War I up until 1933 was a time of economic and political crisis for Germany as a result of this war. President Hindenburg looked towards the right wing group, the National Socialist German Workers (Nazi for short), one of Germany strongest parties to help the nation out of its rut. At the time the leader of the Nazi’s was Adolf Hitler. Hindenburg saw his potential as a leader and made him Chancellor, Germany’s most powerful position in government on January 30, 1933. In less then three months Hitler used his cabinet, Security Police, Storm Troppers, and the State Police to change Germany from a democracy to a dictatorship under his power. With his cabinet he rewrote the constitution and took away individual freedoms, the right to assemble, and the freedom of speech and the press. Hitler’s group of specialty officers arrested political leaders who opposed him. By March of 1933 he had so much control he w... ...s most shameful events, and the Nazi terror was so much worse because it was unprovoked. - Poltorak,A. and Y. Zaitsev. Remember Nuremberg. Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishing House, 1966. - Horn, Daniel. Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich. St. Louis: Forum Press, 1976 - Kauders, Anthony. German Politics and the Jews. Oxford: Claredon Press, 1996 - Nachmann, Werner, Nahum Goldmann, and Helmut Schmidt. An Exhortation and Obligation. Cologne: Federal Republic of Germany, 1978. - Lewin, Abraham. A Cup of Tears: A Diary of the Warsaw Ghetto. Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988. - Lifton, Robert Jay, The Nazi Doctors: Medical Killings and the Psychology of Genocide. New York: Basic Books Inc, 1986. - Gutman, Isreal. Resistance: The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising. Boston. Houghton Mifflin Company, 1994.

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