The Holocaust was a program of systematic state-sponsored murder by Nazi Germany.
ProgrammeThe Holocaust was a program of systematic state-sponsored murder by Nazi Germany.
The Holocaust was a systematic, and state-sponsored campaign of persecution and murder of six million Jewish men, women, and children by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. Nazi German authorities also targeted other groups based on perceived racial and biological inferiority, including the Roma, Germans with disabilities, certain groups of Slavic peoples;, and groups persecuted based on political, ideological, and behavioral grounds. These included Communists, Socialists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and homosexuals. The number of victims killed during the HolocuastHolocaust is uncertain, as many documents of the period were destroyed by Nazi officials to hide their crimes. But estimates range from 5.4 to 6 million European Jews were murdered, whileand another 3 to 5 million were murdered to total deaths including thea murderrange of Jews have ranged from 9 to 11 million, meaning, on top of the estimated 6 million Jews, another 3 to 5 million people were murdered during the Holocaust.
Nazi anti-Jewish propaganda.
Nazi anti-Jewish propaganda
Between 1933 and 1945, Nazi Germany and its allies and collaborators implemented a wide range of anti-Jewish policies and measures, which varied from place to place. Not all Jews would experienceexperienced the Holocaust in the same way, but millions of people were persecuted because they identified as Jewish. This persecution took a variety of forms, including:
The Holocaust is also referred to as the Sho'ahSho'ah for "Catastrophe" is(catastrophe), a term preferred by Israelies and, the French, and preferred by Hebrew speakers, and those who want to be more particular about the Jewish experience during the Holocaust,. andThe term is also the term preferred by those who are uncomfortable with the religious connotations of the word Holocaust.
The word "Holocaust" comes from the Greek words holos or "(whole") and kaustos or "(burned",) and was historically used to refer to a sacrificial offering burned on an altar,. andIt came from the Hebrew 'olah, used to refer to a burnt offering to God. Since 1945, the word has been used to refer to the ideological and systematic state-sponsored persecution and murder of European Jews, among the millions of others, by the Nazi German regime between 1933 and 1945.
Considered one of the more horrific terms used by Nazi Germany, Lebensunwertes Leben, or "life unworthy of life," was used to designate human beings whose lives were unimportant according to the regime, and therefore, should be killed outright. This term was used to describe the mentally impaired, the "sexually deviant," "enemies of the state" both internal and external , and later to the "racially inferior." The thinking encapsulated in this term, used early on by the Nazi regime, would eventually culminate the in the construction of the extermination camps.
Nazis did not invent antisemitism. It is an old and widespread prejudice that has taken many forms thoughoutthroughout history, with antisemitism dating back to ancient times in Europe. Prejudices, especially from the Middle Ages on, waswere largely based on Christian beliefbeliefs and thought from the belief that Jews were responsible for the death of Jesus. This resulted in suspicion and discrimination that continued into early modern Europe.
However, as Europe became more secular, and the enlightenment period took hold in the 18theighteenth and 19thnineteenth centuries, many in Europe tried to move away from religious prejudice and persecution. But the same period resulted in new types of antisemitism, including economic, nationalist, and racial antisemitism. Theories of race, eugenics, and Social Darwinism would be used to justify antisemitism and would largely inform the later version of antisemitism of Nazi Germany.
In 1918, Germany lost the First World War, and right-wing extremists in the country blamed tehthe Jews. They accused the Jews of being capitalist exploiters who profited at the expense of others, and Jews were accused of being followers of communism bent on world domination through revolution. And theseThese feelings were influential on the antisemitism that Adolf Hitler laid out in his book, Mein Kampf, and in his later speeches, in which Adolf Hitler laid out in his book Mein Kampf, and in his later speeches, where he made no secret of his hatred of the Jews.
The twin goals of racial purity and spatial expansion were at the core of Hitler's worldview. Once the Nazis legally elevated to power over Germany in January 1933, these views would push Nazi domestic and foreign policy. The first official concentration camp opened at DachauDachau in March 1933, where many of the first residents were for political opponents of the Nazi regime, before it would become a killing ground of the Holocaust. In 1933, Jews in Germany were numbered at around 525,000, or around 1 percent of the total German population. But over the next six years, Nazis would undertake an "Aryanization" of Germany, dismissing non-Aryans from civil service, liquidating Jewish-owned businesses, and stripping Jewish lawyers and doctors of their clients.
This law held that Jews, defined as a separate race from Germans, could not be full citizens of Germany and therefore held no political rights, while also defining a citizen as any person who is "of German or related blood."
The first of around 13thirteen ordinances elaborating these laws, the supplementary decree of November 14, 1935, worked to define what a "Jewish" person was. Under this supplement, there were three different cateogirescategories of "Jew":
This was a law against what the Nazis viewed as "race-mixing" or "race defilement," which banned future intermarriages and sexual relations between Jews and people "of German or related blood." These typetypes of relations would lead to "mixed race" children, which, according to Nazi ideology, would undermine the purity of the German race and therefore were considered dangerous. These laws further outlawed Jews from flying the Reich flag or the national German flag, and went as far as displaying Reich colors. They further defined the jail terms any person breaking these laws would face.
In part due to the lack of definition in the Nuremberg Laws of 1935, the Nazi government spent time further clarifying the laws. As part of the clarification, they also extended the application of these laws to further peoples, such as Roma people, Black people, and descendentsdescendants of these groups. By extending these laws, other minoritiesminority groups were "legally" able to be treated and discriminated against as the Jews were in Germany. Further, these laws led to other anti-Jewish laws and decrees whichthat further dehumanized and discriminated against the Jews. ExamplesThe following are examples of these other laws and decrees include:
The resulting refugee crisis created a political dilemma for many nations, including the United States. President Franklin D. Roosevelt called for the congress to take place in EvianEvian, France in 1938, to have the nations discuss and find a solution to the refugee crisis. The conference included delegates from 32thirty-two nations and were joined by, representatives from dozens of relief organizations and related groups, as well asand hundreds of reporters.
Responding to the Evian Conference, the Nazi German government was able to state how "astounding" it was that foreign countries criticized Germany for their treatment of the Jews, but none of them wanted to open the doors to them. Efforts were made by some Americans to rescue children in the wake of the conference, in the form of the Wagner-Rogers billBill, which sought to admit 20,000 Jewish refugee children; it would not be supported by the Senate in 1939 and again in 1940. Widespread racial prejudices among Americans would play a part in the failure to admit more refugees.
On November 9 to 10, 1938, Nazi leaders and party members unleashed a series of pogroms across Germany against the Jewish population of Germany and recently incorporated territiesterritories, and these whichevents would come to be called Kristallnacht or "the Night of Broken Glass.". This name was given to the event because of the shattered glass that littered the streets after the vandalism of Jewish-owned businesses, synagogues, and homes. The violent events took place throughout Germany, annexed Austria, and in areas of the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia recently occupied by Nazi Germany.
The violence of Kristallnacht was purportedly due to the death of GermanyGerman embassy official Ernst vom Rath, who had been stationed in Paris. Vom Rath was shot by 17-year-oldseventeen-year-old Polish Jew Herschel Grynszpan on November 7, 1938, a few days after German authorities had expelled thousands of Jews of Polish citizenship from living in Germany, causing deportations from Germany, includingGermany—including Grynszpan's parents. This was the apparent motive for revenge whichthat leadled to the shooting of vom Rath on November 7, and his eventual death on November 8th8.
Propaganda minister Joseph GoebbelsJoseph Goebbels, considered the instigator of Kristallnacht, suggested the Nazi "old guard" should be prepared to demonstrate against the violence. And, despiteDespite the look of spontaneous eruption of violence, which sawincluding mobs of Nazi SA men roaming the streets in cities such as Berlin orand Vienna, attacking Jews in their houses, and forcing them to perform acts of humiliation, orders were given to the different police services across Germany that those participants of the pogrom should be left alone, while the Jews should be jailed, Jewish property should be destroyed, and no one should endanger non-Jewish German life or property.
The 48forty-eight hours of violence saw hundreds of synagogues destroyed or burned, Jewish religious artifacts destroyed, Jewish businesses destroyed, and Jewish people beaten, humiliated, jailed, and killed. Approximately 7,500 Jewish-owned businesses, homes, and schools were plundered, and around 91 Jews were murdered, while a furtherand 30,000 were arrested and sent to concentration camps. Nazi officials would claim the Jews themselves were to blame for the riots and would fine the German Jewish community one billion reichsmarks, the equivalent of $400 USD at 1938 rates.
For many, the violence of Kristallnacht, while horrifying in itself, was a message that Nazi antisemitism was not a temporary predicament and would only intensify. From this point forward, measures against German Jews, and Jews in captured territories, would be treated more repressivelyviolent and moreaggressive violentlyin nature by the Nazis and their collaborators. By the end of 1938, Jews were prohibited from schools and most public places in Germany, and conditions would continue to worsen as the war progressed.
When Hitler began his march of conquest in 1939, with the conquering of Poland and the declaration of war, Nazi Germany began to grow and more European Jews fell under the heel of the facistfascist regime. The expansion of Nazi Germany into new territories further exacerbated the Jewish persecution, signallingsignaling the launch of the ghettos East of Germany, and where many Jews further west would later be transported to with the later development of the Nazi camp systems.
With the expansion of Nazi Germany into neighboring territories, including Poland, Austria, Czechoslovakia, and France, officials began to order the creation of ghettos to further isolate the Jews in cities including Frankfurt, Rome, and Prague, and other cities. The ghettos isolated the Jews from the non-Jewish population, and often theythere were enclosed districts further isolating the Jews. The Germans established at least 1,143 ghettos in the occupied eastern territories. There were three types of ghettos:
German authorities established the first ghetto in occupied Poland in Piortrkow Trybunalski in October 1939, although the largest ghetto in occupied Poland was the Warsaw ghetto. The Germans ordered Jews in the ghettos to wear identifying badges or armbands, and they required Jews to carry out forced labor for the German Reich. Nazi-appointed Jewish councils, called "Judenraete," administered daily life in the ghettos, and a ghetto police force enforced orders from German authorities and the ordinances of the Jewish councils. This included facilitating deportations to killing centers.
In many places, ghettoization lasted a short time. Some ghettos existed for only a few days, while others lasted for months or years. They were often seen as a provisional measure to control and segregate Jews while the Nazi leadership in Berlin deliberated upon options for the removal of the Jewish population. Jews responded in many cases with a variety of resistance efforts, smuggling food, medicine, weapons, or intelligence across the ghetto walls, with or without the involvement or sanction of the Jewish councils. These included violent revolts in Vilna, Bialystok, Czetochowa, and several smaller ghettos.
Part of daily life in the ghettos was dailyrelated to anxiety around deportation to concentration camps as well asand the struggle to find food. In many of the ghettos, the population was isolated from the surrounding city, and the rations supplied by the Germans were subpar, starting the long campaign of starvation whichthat would come to be identified with the holocaustHolocaust.
It has generally been accepted that the Nazis attempted to disguise the deportations of the Jews, often referring to them as resettlements to the East. In this process, inhabitants of the ghettos would be rounded up and made to prepare for their "resettlement," taking only a few valuable possessions. Freight and passenger trains were used for deportations, and in the trains, the prisoners would be sealed inside with little to no room to sit or laylie down. No water or food was provided on the trains, whcihwhich would be intensely hot during the summer and freezing cold during the winter, and the only sanitary facilities were often a single bucket. These journeys could last for days up to weeks. Many packed into the trains would die during the journey, through starvation or overcrowding.
A part of the ghetto experience was the use of insignia, introduced by the German authorities at the end of 1939, to distinguish Jews toby wearwearing identifying badges. The suggestion started with the Kristallnacht pogrom, when it was suggested Jews should begin to wear identifying badges. This was another part of Nazi Germany's policy aimed at dehumanizing and isolating European Jews. It also allowed for the easier facilitation of their separation from society and subsequent ghettoization. ThosThose who refused or failed to wear the badge would risk severe punishment, including death.
In June 1941, Germany launched Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of once-ally Soviet Union, which Hitler considered Nazi Germany's ideological enemy. As the army moved to invade, commanders were notified that war crimes would not be punished. Behind the German military lines, the Einsatzgruppen moved. These were units designed and charged with the task of killing communist officialofficials, partisans, and Jewish men between the ages of 15fifteen and 60sixty. Their actions were oficiallyofficially intended to prevent resistance, but the Einsatzgruppen frequently also killed old people, women, and children.
These special action groups were often referred to as "mobile killing squads" and were best known for their role in the systematic murder of Jews in mass shooting operations as the German army pushed deep into the Soviet territyterritory. The Einsatzgruppen would march behind the German army, and they would seize important sites and prevent sabotage,; they would work to recruit collaborators, establish intelligence networks, and identify and neutralizedneutralize potential enemies. But, moreMore than anything, they were in charge of rounding up Jewish community members. These community members would be marched to either a previously dug mass grave, buytor (more often they would) march to a remote location where the Jews would be forced to undress, hand over all foof their belongings, dig a mass grave, and then they werebe shot.
The Einsatzgruppen did not act alone, and in many territories, they were helped by the German Army and local collaborators. Depending on the area, these collaborators would either participate in the murder, but more often they would help identify Jews or other enemies and assist in security roles. The Einsatzgruppen and their collaborators were able, in the first week of July 1941, in the capture of the cities of Riga and Daugavpils, were able to identify, detain, and murder 5000 Jews. At other points, such as the occupation of Vilnius on June 30, 1941, Einsatzgruppe B were shooting 500 Jews a day.
The mass shootings would prove resource intensive. They required many shooters, escort guards, guns, ammunition, and transport. There were concerns aroundabout the inefficiency of the shootings, and the psychologiclapsychological impact on the shooters. The shooting of women and small children would prove to be a great psychological hardship for some SS (Schutzstaffel) men and German policemen. This would lead to the Nazis to begin using mobile gas chambers in the form of modified trucks. However, the trucks proved difficult, as the Jews would be packed into the gvansvans whichthat would be run until the victims were asphyxiated while they were brought to a mass grave where Einsatzgruppen personnel were required to remove bodies and clean the compartments. This would lead to further developments. But at thetimethe time, somewhere between 1.5 to more than 2 million victims died in mass shootings or gas vans in soviet territories.
A mobile "gas van" for killing, being insepctedinspected by officers.
Historians disagree about the moment when Hitler decided all European Jews should be killed. Although violence had occurred, and there had been plenty of murder in the East, until the second half of 1941, the policy had been as much to make life unbearable for European Jews in athe hope toof forceforcing them to emigrate as much, as it had been to kill them. A signed order for the change in policy does not exist, unlike almost any other decision of Nazi Germany. But it is believed the policy began to change in the second half of 1941. And, on January 20, 1942, during the Wannsee Conference, Nazi officials discussed the planned murder of European Jews.
Termed as the "final solution to theEndlosung Jewishder question"Judenfrage (EndlosungThe Final derSolution Judenfrageto the Jewish Question) was a euphemism used by Nazi leaders to refer to the change in policies from onethat of encouraging or forcing Jews to leave the German Reich to a mass murder of European Jews. This period is often considered the last stage of the Holocaust, taking place from 1941 to 1945, and is the period in which the vast majority of Jewish victims were killed during this period. The "Final Solution" has since been used as a synonym for Nazi Germany's genocidal campaign.
Previous to the Wannsee conference, Hermann Göring, writing under instructions from Hitler, had ordered Reinhard Heydrich, SS general, and Heinrich Himmler's number-two, to submit a general plan of the administrative, material, and financial measures necessary to carry out the genocidal campaign. Heydrich met with Adolf Eichmann, chief of the Central Office of Jewish Emigration, and 15fifteen other officials from Nazi ministries at the suburb of Berlin, Wannsee. Here, theThe meeting agenda was focused on devising a plan that would render a "final solution to the Jewish question," with various proposals discussed. These included mass sterilization, and deportation to the island of Madagascar, and Heydrich would proposeproposed transporting Jews from across Europe to concentration camps in Poland, where they could be worked to death.
The word "extermination" was never uttered during the meeting, but the implication of these plans werewas clear. And, despiteDespite objections to Heydrich's planplan—which which—includedincluded the belief it would be time-consuming, with how long it would take for Jews to die, and the question of what would be done to the millions of Jews already in Poland—a few months later, the Einsatzgruppen were marching through eastern Europe, and gas vans in Chelmno, Poland were being used to kill 1,000 people a day. And, followingFollowing that, the killing centers in Poland were established. At first, Belzec, Sobibor, and Treblinka, before the Majdanek camp would be included, and one of the most famous, the Auschwitz-Birkenau (Auschwitz II) camp, would be established with the sole purpose of murdering Jews.
Between 1933 and 1945, if the ghettos are included, Nazi Germany and its allies established more than 44,000 camps and other incarceration camps. These sites were used for a range of purposes, including forced labor, detention of people, and mass muddermurder. These camps are often known as concentration camps, but generally took a few different forms:
The concentration camps (konzentrationslagerkonzentrationslager) of Nazi Germany were considered an integral feature of the regime, with the first opening in March of 1933, a few months after their rise to power, and. manyMany of the camps never closed, but were liberated later by the Soviet Union, United States, and United Kingdom as they raced through Germany to reach Berlin and end the European war. These camps were used to detain or confine people, usually under harsh conditions and without regard to legal norms of arrest and imprisonment found in constitutional democracies.
The German authorities established camps across Germany on a near ad hoc basis to handle the masses of people arrested as alleged subversives or "enemies of the Reich." These included camps in Oranienburg, north of Berlin; Esterwegen, near Hamburg; Dachau, northwest of Munich,; and Lichtenburg, in Saxony. In July 1934, following the Rohm purge, Hitler authorized SS leader Heinrich Himmler to centralize the administration of the concentration camps and formalizedformalize them into a system. To achieve this, Himmler appointed SS lieutenantLieutenant General Theodor Eicke as Inspector of Concentration Camps. And, byBy the end of 1934, the SS werewas nominated as the only agency authorized to establish and manage facilities called concentration camps.
ConcetrationConcentration camps are often compared towith prisons in modern society, but, unlike prisons, concentration camps were independent of any judicial reviews. Nazi concentration camps, instead, were used to serve three main purposes:
After Nazi Germany began its expansion east, sparking the beginning of the Second World War, which led to larger groups of potential prisoners and a rapid expansion of the concentration camp system to the east. The central function of the concentration camps did not change, but, with the change of Nazi's goals in the east, these camps also permitted the SS to expand the functions of the camps. These camps increasingly became sites where the SS could kill targeted groups of real or perceived enemies of Nazi Germany;, and they came to serve as holding centers for pools of forced laborers. However, despite the need for labor, the SS authorities deliberately undernourished and mistreated prisoners in the camps, which resulted in high mortality rates.
One of the specialized types of concentration camps was the extermination campscamp (vernichtungslagervernichtungslager). These camps were, asAs their name implied, these camps were used for a singular purpose: the mass annihilation of unwanted persons in the Third Reich and conquered territories. The vast majority of the victims of these camps were Jews, but also included Roma, Slavs, homosexuals, and alleged mental defectives, and others. The major camps of this type were located in German-occupied Poland, and included Auschwitz, Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, and Treblinka. Prisoners who were deemed able-bodied were used in forced-labor battalions or in tasks of the camps until they were worked virtually to death and then exterminated. These camps were developed due to the difficulties the Einsatzgruppen encountered during their campaign of mass murder, and the disquiet these units created in the local populations. They represented a reverse in the process, where the victims were transported to stationary killing centers, rather than bring the killing centers to the prisoners.
These camps also offered anthe efficiency the Nazi Regime werewas looking for. For example, the staff of Treblinka was only 120, with 20 to 30 personnel belonging to the SS, and the other extermination camps were similar in number. And killing at the centers was done with poison gas. Chelmno, the first of the extermination camps, began gassing prisoners on December 8, 1941. The camp employed gas vans whosewith carbon-monoxide exhaust asphyxiatedto asphyxiate prisoners. Auschwitz, the largest and most lethal of the camps, used Zyklon-B.
Majdanek and Auschwitz were also slave labor camps, while other extermination camps, such as Treblinka, Belzec, and Sobibor, were devoted to killing. At Auschwitz, the Nazis murdered between 1.1 and 1.3 million people and at Treblinka around 750,000 to 900,000 were murdered. Meanwhile, the killing-specific Belzec murdered at least 500,000 people during a ten monthten-month operation period. Most of the extermination camps were closed beginning in 1943 as the ghettos of Poland were emptied of Jews and as the war turned against Nazi Germany. However, Auschwitz continued to receive victims from throughout Europe until Soviet troops approached in January 1945.
Prisoners arriving at Auschwitz for the selection process.
Prisoners arriving at Auschwitz for the selection process.
Those considered in good physical health were put to work. Those deemed fit to work, typically over the age of 14fourteen or 16sixteen, they would be sent for registration where they were stripped of their clothes and valuables, completely shaved of all of their hair, disinfected and showered, before beingand tattooed with a registration number. They would then receive a striped uniform, hat, and clogs and be forced to work.
Those deemed unfit to work would often include children under the age of 16sixteen (later brought down to 14fourteen years in 1944), pregnant women, the handicapped (physically or mentally), the elderly, and the sick. These prisoners would be sent to the gas chambers; though they were, at the time, told they were being sent to showers to clean themselves of grimgrime and lice. Before the gas chamber, the victims were forced to remove all items of clothing and valuables before the shower.
During the Holocaust, concentration camp prisoners received tattoos for registration at Auschwitz. The Auschwitz concentration camp complex consisted of Auschwitz I, Auschwitz II (Auchswitz-Birkenau), and Auschwitz III (Monowitz and subcamps). Incoming prisoners were assigned a camp serial number which, initially, was sewn onto their prisoners uniformsuniform. Only prisoners selected for work were tattooed. Those sent directly to the gas chambers were never registered.
However, theThe first people to be tattooed were Soviet prisoners. These prisoners were in initially stamped by a special metal stamp made of interchangeable numbers made of needles approximately one centimeter in length. This allowed a serial number to be punched in a prisoner's chest, and ink was rubbed into the bleeding wound. TheseThis was an impractical method, and a single needle method was introduced. The tattoo location was also changed, moving to the inner side of the left upper forearm. Separate series of numbers were introduced based on prisoner categories (Soviet POWs, Hungarian Jews, Polish Jews, reeducation prisoners, and more), and German prisoners in the camp were never tattooed.
Between 1939 and 1945, there were at least 70seventy medical research projects undertaken by Nazi Germany, which often involved cruel and lethal experimentation on human subjects. Many of these experiments were undertaken at the concentration and extermination camps, werewhere the constant supply of new victims gave researchers a near constantnear-constant supply of research subjects. At least seven thousand victims of such medical experiments have been documentsdocumented, with victims including Jews, Poles, Roma, political prisoners, Soviet prisoners of war, homosexuals, and Catholic priests. These experiments tended to fall into three general areas:
Many experiments in the camps intended to facilitate the survival of military personnel in the field. For example, at Dachau, physicians conducted high-altitude experiments on prisoners to determine the maximum altitude from which crews of damaged aircraft could parachute to safety. Other experiments at Dachau included so-called freezing experiments on prisoners to find treatments for hypothermia, and for various experiments and tests to make seawater drinkable.
Experiments were undertaken to develop and test drugs and treatment methods for injuries and illnesses whichthat German military and occupation personnel encountered. At the German concentration camps of Sachsenhausen, Dachau, Natzweiler, Buchenwald, and Neuengamme, where scientists tested immunizations for compounds and antibodies for theto preventionprevent and treatment oftreat contagious diseases, such as malaria, typhus, tuberculosis, typhoid fever, yellow fever, and infectious hepatitis. Other experiments included those into bone-grafting, amputations, and possible antidotes to phosgene and mustard gas.
The third major category of experimentation undertaken at the camps by Nazi scientists sought to advance the racial and ideological tenets of the Nazi worldview. The most infamous of these were the experiments of SS physician Josef MengeleJosef Mengele, who conducted inhumane medical experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz. Some of his most well-known studies of Mengle were on twins, and most of his experiments atcaused great harm or death to Auschwitzthe prisoners. Other of Mengele's experiments were on the Roma people, similar to experiments undertaken by Werner Fischer at Sachsenhausen, which aimed to understand how different "races" withstood various diseases. Research undertaken by August Hirt at Strasbourg University joined this, as he intended to establish "Jewish racial inferiority" with a scientific basis. Other experiments included a series of sterilization, and experiments into methods of efficient and inexpensive procedures for mass sterilization for those considered to be racially or genetically undesirable.
Research undertaken by August Hirt at Strasbourg University joined this, as he intended to establish "Jewish racial inferiority" with a scientific basis. Other experiments included investigating methods of efficient and inexpensive procedures for mass sterilization for those considered to be racially or genetically undesirable.
The most notorious of the camp physicians, SS physician Josef Mengele conducted inhumane medical experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz. Some of his most well-known studies were into twins. And most of his experiments caused great harm or death to the prisoners. Josef Mengele, born on March 16, 1911, earned a PhD in physical anthropology from the University of Munich and held a doctoral degree in genetic medicine. He joined the Nazi PartParty in 1937, and was drafted into the army in June 1940, where he volunteered for the medical service of the Waffen-SS. While little is known about his time between his drafting in 1940 and 1943, what is known is that he received a promotion to the rank of SS captain in 1943 and transferedtransferred to Auschwitz on May 30, 1943.
At Auschwitz, Mengele took a position at Chief Camp Physician, and worked with approximately 30thirty other physicians. During the selection process, these physicians would pick possible subjects for their experimentation. He was known, for his behavior during the selection process, as the "Angel of Death" or sometimes the "White Angel" and would be closely associated with the selection duty.
He was often at the selection process even during his off time while searching for twins. His interest in twins was based, in part, on twin research whichthat had been popular during the 1930s as an ideal tool in weighing the factors of human hereditary and environment. And, whileWhile during the 1930s Mengele and his mentor had performed legitimate research using twins as test subjects, at Auschwitz he had full license to maim and kill his subjects, and he performed a wide range of agonizing and often lethal experiments with Jewish and Roma twins.
He had other research interests, including a fascination with heterchromiaheterochromia, a condition in which the irises of an individual differ in coloration. Mengele collected the eyes of many of his murdered victims at Auschwitz, in part to furnish what he would call research materials to colleagues interested in eye pigmentation. And he conducted experiments into attempts to artificially changingchange eye color. He also documented in camp inmates the progression of the disease Noma, a type of gangre whichthat destorydestroys sthe mucous membrane of the mouth and related tissues.
Following the medical experimentation, mass sterilization, and the subsequent trials whichthat discovered more about these camp experiments, the Nurmeberg Code was developed to address abuses committed by medical professionals during the Holocaust. The Nuremberg Code included the principle of informed consent and created standards for scientific experimentation and research. The Code served as a blueprint for the principles that ensure the rights of subjects in medical research and to lay out a basis for medical ethics. However, due to where the Codes originated (the horrors of the Holocaust), their applicability to modern medical research has been debated, in part due to the lack of a democratic framework to the development of the Codes. However, the 10ten principles of thethem have in many places informed the rights of patients and medical subjects in law. These ten principles include:
In early 1945, Nazi Germany was on the verge of military defeat. Allied forces approached the Nazi camps, and the SS, attempting to finish the job they started and to hide their crimes, organized forced evacuations whichthat came to be called "death marches" of concentration camp inmates. This was in partpartially in response to the Soviety offensive of the year prior, in which they had discovered the first major Nazi concentration camps, Majdanek. Following this, Himmler ordered that prisoners from all concentration camps and subcamps be forcibly evacuated toward the interior of Germany. The evacuation has been suggested to have had three major purposes:
In the early parts of 1944, most evacuations were undertaken by train, or, in some positions, by ship. But, as winter approached, and the Allies encroached on the German territory, SS authorities increasingly resorted to evacuations on foot. The SS guards had orders to kill prisoners no longer capable of walking or traveling, and as the evacuations took place on foot during the winter of 1944-1945, the number who died of exhaustion and exposure during the routes further increased. Further, during the marches, SS guards would mistreat prisoners, and any prisoner who collapsed or could not keep pace would be shot. One survivor of the marches recalled:
The prisoner evacuations were chaotic. Once they left a camp, the columns of prisoners were under control of the German guards, but the guards were often disorganized and gave confusing prisoners, and brought with them little food or supplies. Often, faced with the chaos at the end of the war, they murdered their prisoners. Other times, the Allies would come across the columns and rescue the prisoners, while local Germans also came face-to-face with the prisoner being marched through their towns.
One of the most unexpected discoveries for the Allies as they marched towards Berlin werewas the discovery of the concentration camps. There, they would confrontconfronted the worst crimes of the Nazi regime and the horrible conditions of the prisoners. The first camp to be liberated was Majdanek, located in Lublin, Poland, liberated by the Soviet army as they advanced westward. From this liberation came the first images and news of the camps presented to the Western media. Here, the Soviet army found prisoners who had been left at Majdanek, mostly Soviet prisoners of war, and encountered the first pieces of evidence of the mass murder committed at the camp. Six months later, the Soviets would liberate Auschwitz, where they found more than six thousand emaciated prisoners alive.
As the allies continued to liberate concentration camps, they continued to find apalling scenes. For example, Bergen-Belsen, liberated by British forces in April 1945, it had become exceptionally overcrowded and thousands of unburied bodies were strewn about the camps, while the barracks were overfull of around 60,000 starving and mortally ill prisoners, around 60 percent of whom suffered from typhus. In many cases, when coming upon the camps, the troops, physicians, and relief workers would try to provide nourishment to the prisoners, but many were too weak to digest food and could not be saved. And, in some cases, the prisoners would eat themselves to death. Half of the prisoners discovered at Auschwitz would die within days of being freed. And the prisoners themselves often struggled with guilt for having survived, while also looking forward to being free, and some felt overwhelmed. As survivor and psychiatrist Viktor Frankl expressed:,
The 42nd "Rainbow" Division rolled into the Bavarian twon of Dachau in their march to Berlin, where they expected to discover either an SS training facility or a prisoner-of-war camp. Instead, they discvereddiscovered piles of emaciated corpses, dozens of train cars filled with decomposed human remains, and thousands of "walking skeletons" who had survived Dachau. The concentration camp in the Dachau complex was composed of 32 squalid barracks surrounded by an electrified barbed-wire fence, a ditch, and seven guard towers. Prisoners here were subject to medical experiments, including injections of malaria and tuberculosis, untold thousands that died from hard labor or torture, and the on-site crematorium which routinely burned the corpses. Forged into the gates separating the concentration camp from the rest of Dachau were the words Arbreit Macht Frei or "Work sets you free."
What the soldiers found at Dachau, and what the 45th "Thunderbird" Division discovered on the death train, was scarring for these soldiers. The 45th division had been in combat for 500 days and thought they had witnessed every atrocity of war, but the train filled with innocent decaying bodies was more than many coudlcould take. Soldiers broke down in sobs. And others tried to find those responsible, including murdering German officers whichthat had surrendered to them.
American soldiers inspecting an overstuffed oven of a crematoriacrematorium at an extermination camp.
Inside Dachau, it got worse. The American GIs liberating the camp reportedly rounded up the staff and SS officers inside the camp and lined them up to gun them down out of anger and revulsion. The American GIs stayed for days before moving on. The care of the prisoners was entrusted to combat medical units, while word of what happened at places like Dachau and Buchenwald spread through the Allied ranks. Despite previous camps liberated on the eastern front in 1944, there was distrust of the Soviet discoveries on the western front, as there was a general distrust for the Soviet'sSoviets themselves.
Often the end of the Holocaust is suggested as May 1945. By this time, the majority of the Nazi camps were either liquidated or liberated. The Nazi Regime in Germany had fallen. And the world was learning about the horrors of the Holocaust. The "death marches" had been a terrible final chapter of the Holocaust where many more Jews died and were left at the side of the road.
And while, withWith the liberation and the fall of Nazi Germany, any policy of extermination to the European Jews was ended; however, that did not mark the end of the suffering for many of the survivors. Hundreds of thousands of Jews who had survived, either in the camps, in hiding, or in other countries, returned to their homes. But there theyThey were often met with anger and animosity, found their homes occupied by others, and in some cases would flee further westwardswestward. Antisemitic gangs in places such as Poland further killed Jewish survivors on their return home, with some estimated atestimating around 1,500 Jewish survivors dying in Poland alone in the months after liberation.
Many survivors of the Holocaust tried to reach Eretz Israel, but the British authorities deported them to detention camps in Cyprus until the State of Israel was established, when there was a mass immigration of survivors of the Holocaust. Approximately a further 100,000 Jewish displaced persons immigrated to the United States, Canada, Australia, and Latin American countries.
InThe Nuremberg Trials took place from 1945 to 1946, as an attempt to seek justice for the crimes of the Nazi regime,. formerFormer Nazi members were indicted and tried as war criminals by the International Military Tribunal. These trials were for more than the crimes of the Holocaust, and included the following:
The authority of the International Military Tribunal to conduct these trials came from the London Agreement of August 8, 1945, wherewhen representatives from the United States, Great Britain, and Soviet Union, along with the provisional government of France, agreed to a charter for an international military tribunal to conduct trials of major Axis war criminals whose offenses had no particular location.
As a result of the trials there were, 199 defendants were tried. Of those, 161 were convicted, and 37 were sentenced to death. Crimes of the Holocaust were included in a few of the trials, and defendants generally acknowledged the crimes they were accussedaccused of but denied their responsibility. Trials into the crimes of the Holocaust would continue, with many further trials, and investigations would be launched to find many of the Nazi leaders and individuals who had escaped Justicejustice, such as Adolf Eichmann orand Josef Mengele.
Preceding trials, many of which were held at Nuremberg and are often included in the title of the Nuremberg Trials, included the Doctors Trial, which accused 23twenty-three defendants of crimes agaimstagainst humanity, including medical experiments on prisoners of war. The Judges Trial, which charged 16sixteen lawyers and judges with furthering the Nazi plan for racial purity through eugenics laws. And further Other trials whichincluded dealtthose dealing with German industrialists benefitting from the use of slave labor and plundering of occupied countries, and a trial for SS officers accused of violence against concentration camp inmates.
The findings at Nuremberg led to the United Nations Genocide Convention of 1948, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948, and the Geneva Convention on the Laws and Customs of War of 1949. ItThe Trials also served as a precedent for the trials of Japanese war criminals in Tokyo, and a precedent for later tribunals for war crimes committed in the former Yugoslavia and in Rwanda.
But the claim of many of the German citizens after the fall of Berlin in 1945 was that they did not know about the camps and their atrocities. However, German newspaper and magazine archives show that there were phases of public "desensitization" that exposed citizens to the horrors that would come. But there were no reports of the "final solution," and it is generally accepted that, as much as the German populace may have known something was going on, and that it was not good, they may not have known the specific or precise crimes, in part because they did not ask questions.
The Nazis themselves would go to great lengths to hide their crimes. One such fabrication involved Theresienstadt, a transit camp in the former Czechoslovakia, that the Nazis pretended was a resttlement camp. The International Red Cross demanded to investigate the camp in 1944, based on some reports whichthat had leaked out through the world media. Before they could arrive, the Nazis forced prisoners to plant flowers and decorate the baracks, and the Nazis would produceproduced a promotionlapromotional film of Theresienstadt, in which prisoners were coerced to be cheerful for the camera in exchanggeexchange for food.
As early as 1941, information regarding the NazisNazi crimes began to leak out to the international media. This included early sources including German police reports intercepted by British intelligence; local eyewitnesses; escaped Jews reporting to the underground, Soviet, or neutral sources; and Hungarian soldiers on home leave. And in 1942, reports of a Nazi plan to murder all Jews, including details on methods, numbers, and locations, reached Allied and neutral leaders from various sources.
This information resulted in broadcasts by the British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1941 summarizing the findings. And thisThis was supported by confirmation fromin spring 1942, when American journalists stranded in Germany were exchanged for Axis nationalists stranded in the United States. In 1942, after a report from occupied Poland confirming the murdering of the Jews, resulted in headlines in The London Times, the Montreal Daily Star, the Los Angeles Times, and the New York Journal American, which remarked on the killing of Jews by Nazi Germany, estimated at the time to be around 1 million. And, during this period, TimeTime magazine carried news about the Holocaust as early as 1933, wherewhen the magazine commented on Hitler's antismemitic theories.
One difficulty with the reporting was the skepticism on the part of the journalists receiving the secret reports and intelligence reports about the Holocaust, and the public reception of this news. American journalists tended to be caustion about claims of mass murder because of related stories whichthat had been reported during World War I that would prove to be false. This often resulted in editors rarely featuring the stories on the front page, and careful not to emphasize claims of atrocities.
Meanwhile, public opinion polls from 1943 showed Americans were skeptical, and tended to think the fact that 2 million European Jews had been murderd was a rumor. By 1944, about three-quarters of respondents to these polls helievedbelieved concentration camps were a part of the Nazi plan, but the polls still showed that the respondents did not understand the number of victims involved. A Gallup poll of 1944 showed that most people who guessed thought the number of victims would be in the hundreds of thousands or less.
It would not be until 1944 that many in the world not directly exposed to the crimes of the Holocaust would begin to accept the truth of what had happened. By 1945, a Gallup poll showed 84% percent of Americans believed the reports of the Holocaust. However, there remained skepticism, and the numbersnumber of dead continued to be underreported. This led to the decision to distribute photographs that provided the brutal and shocking evidence of the atrocities. These pictures were shown around the world, including to German people, and helped the world's public understand the depth of the horror of the crimes of Nazi Germany.
The question of who was responsible, ultimately a question of justice, also gets at an uncomfortable truth about the Holocaust: many of those who perpetrated the crimes and atrocities would receive little to no punishment. Some would go undiscovered until their death. Many would commit suicide before they could be captured, or shortly after incarceration. And, when attempting to metemeter out justice for these crimes, can any just punishment truly do justice to the horrors committed?
One undoubtable truth about the responsibility for the Holocaust lies at the feet of the Nazi leadership. The genocide was inspired, ordered, approved, and supported by Adolf Hitler, but he did not act alone, nor did he lay out an exact plan. RartherRather, other Nazi leaders coordinated, planned, and implemented the mass murder, including Hermann Göring, Heinrich Himmler, Reinhard Heydrich, and Adolf Eichmann.
OneHeinrich Himmler was one of the main architects of the Holocaust, theHolocaust—the man who set up the system of concentration camps, inspected those camps, and inspired competition amongst the camps to see who could could kill more Jews, leading to the use of novel killing methods such as the use of Zyklon-B at Auschwitz, was Heinrich. Himmler. Hiimmler, like many in the inner circle of the Nazi party, was power-hungry and wanted to rise to be Hitler's second, to inherit the power of the government once Hitler died. To prove his worth, he set up the Einsatzgruppen to help Hitler's plan for German resettlement of Poland, or to "cleanse" the area for those Germans.
In 1933, Himmler had established the first Nazi's concentration camp at Dachau. And in 1941, he would assign General Odilo Globocnik with the implementation of Operation Reinhard, which was the plan for the systematic murder of Jews, and included the establishment of the extermination camps.
Nothing can occur just because leadership decides it should. But, it requires and relies on the institutions and organizations established to help them reach their decision. In the case of the Holocaust, the Nazi regime relied on many of the organizations they had previously established across Germany. These included the SA, also known as "Brownshirts," and were the early Nazi militia; the SS, or Schutzstaffel; the SD, or Sicherheitsdienst, also known as the Gestapo; and the Order Police. All of these organizations played active and deadly roles in the Holocaust.
Hitler, surrounded by the SA or "Brownshirts".
Other organiztationsorganizations whichthat helped included the German military, the German national railway, the German healthcare system, the German civil service, and the German criminal justice system. Besides these systems, many German businesses, insurance companies, and banks, were either were involved in the Holocaust, or they benefitted, in some cases from the slave labor, from the results of the Holocaust.
Nazi Germany was also not alone in perpetrating theirits crimes. They relied on help from countries allied towith Nazi Germany and collaborators. Collaborators are often thought of as the regimes and organizations that cooperated with German authorities in an official or semi-official capacity. The allies and collaborators included the following:
The term "allies" and "collaborators" also refer to individuals affiliated with these governments and organizations. Some of the deadliest of these were neighbors, acquaintances, colleagues, and even friends who denounced Jews to Nazi German authorities. How many chose to do this is largely unknown, but often they could reveal Jews' hiding places, unmask false Christian identities, and otherwise identifiedidentify Jews to Nazi officials. The motivations of these people could be far rangingfar-ranging, including fear, self-interest, greed, revenge, antisemitism, and political or ideological beliefs.
Some of these individuals directly profited from the Holocaust. They would move into newly vacated homes, take over newly-vacated businesses, and even stolesteal the possessions and valuables of Jews. There was widespread theft and plunder that accompanied the genocide. And, forFor some, the inaction and indifference to the crimes of the Nazi government was enough to be considered a collaborator to the Holocaust.
Arguably, the first to deny the Holocaust were the Nazis. Often they used veiled language, and secret operations, and covered up the murders by destroying any evidence, working to keep the world in the dark of what they were doing, which could have impeded or stopped their goals for the annihilation of European Jews. However, since the event, there have been various attempts by individuals, organizations, and countries to deny that the events of the Holocaust occurred. And, someSome of the worst, have suggested that the events of the Holocaust were a myth invented to advance Jewish interests. Often, in this way, Holocaust denial is another form of antisemitism, and has been called a second genocide, as it denies the death of the murdered, and seeks in a way to erase those victims from history, often called a double-dying.
Often, and unsurprisingly, Holocaust deniers wish to wash away the stain of Nazism in order to make the Nazi ideology an acceptable political alternative. Many organizations that have denied the Holocaust have done it for this reason, such as Harold Covington, leader otof the National Socialist White People's Party, who inon July 24, 1996, called the Holocaust a Jewish conspiracy, used to give the Jews an advantage over everyone else.
One thing Holocaust deniers tend to have to deal with is the mountain of evidence, despite the NazisNazi's attempts to destroy the evidence, including the Jews themselves. Often, to do this, Holocaust deniers claim the survivors of the Holocaust lied about their experiences, the soldiers liberating the camps exaggerated their experiences, and the films and photos of the atrocities, including those captured from the Nazis, were themselves made up or forged and confessions were coerced. They furtheralso tend to deny the existence of the gas chambers, and further claim these chambers were built by the Allies to make Nazi Germany look bad. And someSome have gone far enough to argue that the Allied countries should be healdheld responsible for the deaths in the camps. Arguing, in some cases, that their bombing attacks prevented the delivery of supplies and medicines from reaching the camps.
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Programme of systematic state-sponsored murder by naziNazi germanyGermany
The Holocaust, also known as the Shoah,[b] was the genocide of European Jews during World War II.[3] Between 1941 and 1945, Nazi Germany and its collaborators systematically murdered some six million Jews across German-occupied Europe,[a] around two-thirds of Europe's Jewish population.[c] The murders were carried out in pogroms and mass shootings; by a policy of extermination through labor in concentration camps; and in gas chambers and gas vans in German extermination camps, chiefly Auschwitz-Birkenau, Bełżec, Chełmno, Majdanek, Sobibór, and Treblinka in occupied Poland.
Germany implemented the persecution in stages. Following Adolf Hitler's appointment as chancellor on 30 January 1933, the regime built a network of concentration camps in Germany for political opponents and those deemed "undesirable", starting with Dachau on 22 March 1933.[6] After the passing of the Enabling Act on 24 March,[7] which gave Hitler dictatorial plenary powers, the government began isolating Jews from civil society; this included boycotting Jewish businesses in April 1933 and enacting the Nuremberg Laws in September 1935. On 9–10 November 1938, eight months after Germany annexed Austria, Jewish businesses and other buildings were ransacked or set on fire throughout Germany and Austria on what became known as Kristallnacht (the "Night of Broken Glass"). After Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, triggering World War II, the regime set up ghettos to segregate Jews. Eventually, thousands of camps and other detention sites were established across German-occupied Europe.
The segregation of Jews in ghettos culminated in the policy of extermination the Nazis called the Final Solution to the Jewish Question, discussed by senior government officials at the Wannsee Conference in Berlin in January 1942. As German forces captured territories in the East, all anti-Jewish measures were radicalized.
The European Jews were targeted for extermination as part of a larger event during the Holocaust era (1933–1945),[8] in which Germany and its collaborators persecuted and murdered millions of others, including ethnic Poles, Soviet civilians and prisoners of war, the Roma, the disabled, political and religious dissidents, and gay men.
Jewish women wearing yellow badges in occupied France.
The Holocaust was a systematic, and state-sponsored campaign of persecution and murder of six million Jewish men, women, and children by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. Nazi German authorities also targeted other groups based on perceived racial and biological inferiority, including the Roma, Germans with disabilities, certain groups of Slavic peoples; and groups persecuted based on political, ideological, and behavioral grounds included Communists, Socialists, Jehovah's Witnesses, and homosexuals. The number of victims killed during the Holocuast is uncertain, as many documents of the period were destroyed by Nazi officials to hide their crimes. But estimates range from 5.4 to 6 million European Jews were murdered, while total deaths including the murder of Jews have ranged from 9 to 11 million, meaning, on top of the estimated 6 million Jews, another 3 to 5 million people were murdered during the Holocaust.
Nazi anti-Jewish propaganda.
Between 1933 and 1945, Nazi Germany and its allies and collaborators implemented a wide range of anti-Jewish policies and measures, which varied from place to place. Not all Jews would experience the Holocaust in the same way, but millions of people were persecuted because they identified as Jewish. This persecution took a variety of forms, including:
The Holocaust is also referred to as the Sho'ah for "Catastrophe" is a term preferred by Israelies and the French, and preferred by Hebrew speakers and those who want to be more particular about the Jewish experience during the Holocaust, and also the term preferred by those who are uncomfortable with the religious connotations of the word Holocaust.
Jewish children behind barbed wire fences at a concentration camp.
The word "Holocaust" comes from the Greek words holos or "whole" and kaustos or "burned", and was historically used to refer to a sacrificial offering burned on an altar, and came from the Hebrew 'olah used to refer to a burnt offering to God. Since 1945, the word has been used to refer to the ideological and systematic state-sponsored persecution and murder of European Jews, among the millions of others, by the Nazi German regime between 1933 and 1945.
Considered one of the more horrific terms used by Nazi Germany, Lebensunwertes Leben, or "life unworthy of life" was used to designate human beings whose lives were unimportant according to the regime, and therefore should be killed outright. This term was used to describe the mentally impaired, the "sexually deviant," "enemies of the state" both internal and external , and later to the "racially inferior." The thinking encapsulated in this term, used early on by the Nazi regime, would eventually culminate the in the construction of the extermination camps.
Medieval painting depicting a Jewish person as a devil.
Nazis did not invent antisemitism. It is an old and widespread prejudice that has taken many forms thoughout history, with antisemitism dating back to ancient times in Europe. Prejudices, especially from the Middle Ages on, was largely based on Christian belief and thought from the belief that Jews were responsible for the death of Jesus. This resulted in suspicion and discrimination that continued into early modern Europe.
However, as Europe became more secular, and the enlightenment period took hold in the 18th and 19th centuries, many in Europe tried to move away from religious prejudice and persecution. But the same period resulted in new types of antisemitism, including economic, nationalist, and racial antisemitism. Theories of race, eugenics, and Social Darwinism would be used to justify antisemitism and would largely inform the later version of antisemitism of Nazi Germany.
In 1918, Germany lost the First World War, and right-wing extremists in the country blamed teh Jews. They accused the Jews of being capitalist exploiters who profited at the expense of others, and Jews were accused of being followers of communism bent on world domination through revolution. And these feelings were influential on the antisemitism which Adolf Hitler laid out in his book Mein Kampf, and in his later speeches, where he made no secret of his hatred of the Jews.
Adolf Hitler, with Heinrich Himmler, watching marching columns of soldiers.
The twin goals of racial purity and spatial expansion were at the core of Hitler's worldview. Once the Nazis legally elevated to power over Germany in January 1933, these views would push Nazi domestic and foreign policy. The first official concentration camp opened at Dachau in March 1933, where many of the first residents were for political opponents of the Nazi regime, before it would become a killing ground of the Holocaust. In 1933, Jews in Germany were numbered at around 525,000, or around 1 percent of the total German population. But over the next six years, Nazis would undertake an "Aryanization" of Germany, dismissing non-Aryans from civil service, liquidating Jewish-owned businesses, and stripping Jewish lawyers and doctors of their clients.
Part of the Nuremberg identification system.
Also known as the Nürnberg Laws, the Nuremberg Laws of 1935 were new laws to establish the groundwork for a "racial state" announced at a Nazi Party rally in Nuremberg on September 15, 1935. One of the two laws, the Reichsbürgergesetz or Law of the Reich Citizen deprived Jews of German citizenship and designated them as "subjects of the state." The second was the Gesetz zum Schutze des Deutschen Blutes und der Deutschen Ehre or Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor, often called the Blutschutzgesetz or Blood Protection Laws. This second law forbade marriage or sexual relations between Jews and "citizens of German or kindred blood." Although Jewish persecution at the hands of the Nazi state apparatus had begun as early as 1933, these laws were seen as the first step in legalizing or formalizing the Holocaust, putting in law what would be motivating factors to the party.
This law held that Jews, defined as a separate race from Germans, could not be full citizens of Germany and therefore held no political rights, while also defining a citizen as any person who is "of German or related blood."
The first of around 13 ordinances elaborating these laws, the supplementary decree of November 14, 1935 worked to define what a "Jewish" person was. Under this supplement, there were three different cateogires of "Jew":
German passport bearing the red "J" denoting a person of Jewish faith.
This was a law against what the Nazis viewed as race-mixing or "race defilement" which banned future intermarriages and sexual relations between Jews and people "of German or related blood." These type of relations would lead to "mixed race" children which, according to Nazi ideology, would undermine the purity of the German race and therefore were considered dangerous. These laws further outlawed Jews from flying the Reich flag or the national German flag, and went as far as displaying Reich colors. They further defined the jail terms any person breaking these laws would face.
In part due to the lack of definition in the Nuremberg Laws of 1935, the Nazi government spent time further clarifying the laws. As part of the clarification, they also extended the application of these laws to further peoples, such as Roma people, Black people, and descendents of these groups. By extending these laws, other minorities groups were "legally" able to be treated and discriminated against as the Jews were in Germany. Further, these laws led to other anti-Jewish laws and decrees which further dehumanized and discriminated against the Jews. Examples of these other laws and decrees include:
Image of the gathered representatives at the Evian conference.
With reports coming out of Germany around the maltreatment of Jews and the laws being published, there were growing amounts of Jewish refugees fleeing Germany only to find many of the countries they attempted to flee to, such as Belgium, France, Czechoslovakia, the United States, the United Kingdom, Palestine, or Canada, were unable or unwilling to accept these refugees. Hannah Arendt, speaking on the Jewish refugees' predicament, described:
[The refugees] were welcomed nowhere and could be assimilated nowhere. Once they had left their homeland they remained homeless, once they had left their state they remained stateless; once they had been deprived of their human rights they were rightless, the scum of the earth.
The resulting refugee crisis created a political dilemma for many nations, including the United States. President Franklin D. Roosevelt called for the congress to take place in Evian, France in 1938 to have the nations discuss and find a solution to the refugee crisis. The conference included delegates from 32 nations and were joined by representatives from dozens of relief organizations and related groups, as well as hundreds of reporters.
Jewish refugees boarding the St. Louis en route to Cuba. They would be forced to return to Europe in 1939.
At the conference, each delegate was said to formally express sorrow over the growing refugee crisis, would boast of their respective nation's hospitality, and then lamented they would be unable to do more to help the growing crisis. The only country to accept more refugees to help the crisis was the Dominican Republic. And each other country had their nation-specific reasons for being unable to accept more refugees.
Responding to the Evian Conference, the Nazi German government was able to state how "astounding" it was that foreign countries criticized Germany for their treatment of the Jews, but none of them wanted to open the doors to them. Efforts by some Americans to rescue children in the wake of the conference, in the form of the Wagner-Rogers bill, which sought to admit 20,000 Jewish refugee children would not be supported by the Senate in 1939 and again in 1940. Widespread racial prejudices among Americans would play a part in the failure to admit more refugees.
German citizens inspecting a destroyed Jewish business the morning after Kristallnacht.
On November 9 to 10, 1938, Nazi leaders and party members unleashed a series of pogroms across Germany against the Jewish population of Germany and recently incorporated territies which would come to be called Kristallnacht or "the Night of Broken Glass". This name was given to the event because of the shattered glass that littered the streets after the vandalism of Jewish-owned businesses, synagogues, and homes. The violent events took place throughout Germany, annexed Austria, and in areas of the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia recently occupied by Nazi Germany.
People in the act of destroying Jewish businesses.
The violence of Kristallnacht was purportedly due to the death of Germany embassy official Ernst vom Rath who had been stationed in Paris. Vom Rath was shot by 17-year-old Polish Jew Herschel Grynszpan on November 7, 1938, a few days after German authorities had expelled thousands of Jews of Polish citizenship from living in Germany, causing deportations from Germany, including Grynszpan's parents. This was the apparent motive for revenge which lead to the shooting of vom Rath on November 7 and his eventual death on November 8th.
Propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels, considered the instigator of Kristallnacht, suggested the Nazi "old guard" should be prepared to demonstrate against the violence. And, despite the look of spontaneous eruption of violence, which saw mobs of SA men roaming the streets in cities such as Berlin or Vienna, attacking Jews in their houses, and forcing them to perform acts of humiliation, orders were given to the different police services across Germany that those participants of the pogrom should be left alone, while the Jews should be jailed, Jewish property should be destroyed, and no one should endanger non-Jewish German life or property.
A synagogue burning during the night of Kristallnacht.
The 48 hours of violence saw hundreds of synagogues destroyed or burned, Jewish religious artifacts destroyed, Jewish businesses destroyed, Jewish people beaten, humiliated, jailed, and killed. Approximately 7,500 Jewish-owned businesses, homes, and schools were plundered, and around 91 Jews were murdered, while a further 30,000 were arrested and sent to concentration camps. Nazi officials would claim the Jews themselves were to blame for the riots and would fine the German Jewish community one billion reichsmarks, the equivalent of $400 USD at 1938 rates.
Citizens walking by the destruction of Kristallnacht.
For many, the violence of Kristallnacht, while horrifying in itself, was a message that Nazi antisemitism was not a temporary predicament and would only intensify. From this point forward, measures against German Jews, and Jews in captured territories, would be treated more repressively and more violently by the Nazis and their collaborators. By the end of 1938, Jews were prohibited from schools and most public places in Germany, and conditions would continue to worsen as the war progressed.
When Hitler began his march of conquest in 1939, with the conquering of Poland and the declaration of war, Nazi Germany began to grow and more European Jews fell under the heel of the facist regime. The expansion of Nazi Germany into new territories further exacerbated the Jewish persecution, signalling the launch of the ghettos East of Germany, and where many Jews further west would later be transported to with the later development of the Nazi camp systems.
Example of a sign forbidding Jews to go passed a checkpoint.
With the expansion of Nazi Germany into neighboring territories, including Poland, Austria, Czechoslovakia, and France, officials began to order the creation of ghettos to further isolate the Jews in cities including Frankfurt, Rome, Prague, and other cities. The ghettos isolated the Jews from the non-Jewish population, and often they were enclosed districts further isolating the Jews. The Germans established at least 1,143 ghettos in the occupied eastern territories. There were three types of ghettos:
A wall being erected to cut of a Jewish ghetto from the rest of a city.
German authorities established the first ghetto in occupied Poland in Piortrkow Trybunalski in October 1939, although the largest ghetto in occupied Poland was the Warsaw ghetto. The Germans ordered Jews in the ghettos to wear identifying badges or armbands, and required Jews to carry out forced labor for the German Reich. Nazi-appointed Jewish councils, called "Judenraete" administered daily life in the ghettos, and a ghetto police force enforced orders from German authorities and the ordinances of the Jewish councils. This included facilitating deportations to killing centers.
The Warsaw ghetto burning after an uprising of those detained there.
In many places, ghettoization lasted a short time. Some ghettos existed for only a few days, while others lasted for months or years. They were often seen as a provisional measure to control and segregate Jews while the Nazi leadership in Berlin deliberated upon options for the removal of the Jewish population. Jews responded in many cases with a variety of resistance efforts, smuggling food, medicine, weapons, or intelligence across the ghetto walls, with or without the involvement or sanction of the Jewish councils. These included violent revolts in Vilna, Bialystok, Czetochowa, and several smaller ghettos.
Crowds of European Jews being herded towards rail cars.
Part of daily life in the ghettos was daily anxiety around deportation to concentration camps as well as the struggle to find food. In many of the ghettos, the population was isolated from the surrounding city, and the rations supplied by the Germans were subpar, starting the long campaign of starvation which would come to be identified with the holocaust.
People carrying their valuables onto the cramped trains for deportation.
It has generally been accepted that the Nazis attempted to disguise the deportations of the Jews, often referring to them as resettlements to the East. In this process, inhabitants of the ghettos would be rounded up and made to prepare for their "resettlement" taking only a few valuable possessions. Freight and passenger trains were used for deportations, and in the trains the prisoners would be sealed inside with little to no room to sit or lay down. No water or food was provided on the trains, whcih would be intensely hot during the summer and freezing cold during the winter, and the only sanitary facilities were often a single bucket. These journeys could last for days up to weeks. Many packed into the trains would die during the journey through starvation or overcrowding.
Jewish deportees at the Drancy transit camp near Paris, France, in 1942.
Example of the insignia Jewish people were expected to wear to identify themselves through Nazi occupied Europe.
A part of the ghetto experience was the use of insignia, introduced by the German authorities at the end of 1939, to distinguish Jews to wear identifying badges. The suggestion started with the Kristallnacht pogrom when it was suggested Jews should begin to wear identifying badges. This was another part of Nazi Germany's policy aimed at dehumanizing and isolating European Jews. It also allowed for the easier facilitation of their separation from society and subsequent ghettoization. Thos who refused or failed to wear the badge would risk severe punishment, including death.
In June 1941 Germany launched Operation Barbarossa, the invasion of once-ally Soviet Union, which Hitler considered Nazi Germany's ideological enemy. As the army moved to invade, commanders were notified war crimes would not be punished. Behind the German military lines, the Einsatzgruppen moved. These were units designed and charged with the task of killing communist official, partisans, and Jewish men between the ages of 15 and 60. Their actions were oficially intended to prevent resistance, but the Einsatzgruppen frequently also killed old people, women, and children.
Soldiers of an Einsatzgruppen unit shoot victims in a ditch.
These special action groups were often referred to as "mobile killing squads" and were best known for their role in the systematic murder of Jews in mass shooting operations as the German army pushed deep into the Soviet territy. The Einsatzgruppen would march behind the German army, and they would seize important sites and prevent sabotage, they would work to recruit collaborators, establish intelligence networks, and identify and neutralized potential enemies. But, more than anything, they were in charge of rounding up Jewish community members. These community members would be marched to either a previously dug mass grave, buyt more often they would march to a remote location where the Jews would be forced to undress, hand over all fo their belongings, dig a mass grave, and then they were shot.
Einsatzgruppen member prepares to shoot Jewish man. Below is a pit of the previously murdered.
The Einsatzgruppen did not act alone, and in many territories they were helped by the German Army and local collaborators. Depending on the area, these collaborators would either participate in the murder, but more often they would help identify Jews or other enemies and assist in security roles. The Einsatzgruppen and their collaborators were able, in the first week of July 1941 in the capture of the cities of Riga and Daugavpils, were able to identify, detain, and murder 5000 Jews. At other points, such as the occupation of Vilnius on June 30, 1941, Einsatzgruppe B were shooting 500 Jews a day.
The mass shootings would prove resource intensive. They required many shooters, escort guards, guns, ammunition, and transport. There were concerns around the inefficiency of the shootings, and the psychologicla impact on the shooters. The shooting of women and small children would prove to be a great psychological hardship for some SS (Schutzstaffel) men and German policemen. This would lead to the Nazis to begin using mobile gas chambers in the form of modified trucks. However, the trucks proved difficult, as the Jews would be packed into the gvans which would be run until the victims were asphyxiated while they were brought to a mass grave where Einsatzgruppen personnel were required to remove bodies and clean the compartments. This would lead to further developments. But at thetime, somewhere between 1.5 to more than 2 million victims died in mass shootings or gas vans in soviet territories.
A mobile "gas van" for killing being insepcted by officers.
A German in military uniform shoots a Jewish woman in a mass execution in October 1942.
Historians disagree about the moment when Hitler decided all European Jews should be killed. Although violence had occurred, and there had been plenty of murder in the East, until the second half of 1941 the policy had been as much to make life unbearable for European Jews in a hope to force them to emigrate as much as it had been to kill them. A signed order for the change in policy does not exist, unlike almost any other decision of Nazi Germany. But it is believed the policy began to change in the second half of 1941. And, on January 20, 1942, during the Wannsee Conference, Nazi officials discussed the planned murder of European Jews.
Heinrich Himmler, one of the architects of the "final solution"
Termed as the "final solution to the Jewish question" (Endlosung der Judenfrage) was a euphemism used by Nazi leaders to refer to the change in policies from one of encouraging or forcing Jews to leave the German Reich to a mass murder of European Jews. This is often considered the last stage of the Holocaust, taking place from 1941 to 1945, in which the vast majority of Jewish victims were killed during this period. The "Final Solution" has since been used as a synonym for Nazi Germany's genocidal campaign.
Previous to the Wannsee conference, Hermann Göring, writing under instructions from Hitler, had ordered Reinhard Heydrich, SS general, and Heinrich Himmler's number-two, to submit a general plan of the administrative, material, and financial measures necessary to carry out the genocidal campaign. Heydrich met with Adolf Eichmann, chief of the Central Office of Jewish Emigration, and 15 other officials from Nazi ministries at the suburb of Berlin, Wannsee. Here, the meeting agenda was focused on devising a plan that would render a "final solution to the Jewish question," with various proposals discussed. These included mass sterilization, deportation to the island of Madagascar, and Heydrich would propose transporting Jews from across Europe to concentration camps in Poland where they could be worked to death.
Jewish people arrive at the Chelmno extermination camp.
The word "extermination" was never uttered during the meeting, but the implication of these plans were clear. And, despite objections to Heydrich's plan which—included the belief it would be time-consuming, how long it would take for Jews to die, and what would be done to the millions of Jews already in Poland—a few months later the Einsatzgruppen were marching through eastern Europe and gas vans in Chelmno, Poland were being used to kill 1,000 people a day. And, following that, the killing centers in Poland were established. At first, Belzec, Sobibor, and Treblinka, before the Majdanek camp would be included, and one of the most famous, the Auschwitz-Birkenau (Auschwitz II) camp would be established with the sole purpose of murdering Jews.
Between 1933 and 1945, if the ghettos are included, Nazi Germany its allies established more than 44,000 camps and other incarceration camps. These sites were used for a range of purposes, including forced labor, detention of people, and mass mudder. These camps are often known as concentration camps, but generally took a few different forms:
Prisoners performing slave labor at a concentration camp.
The concentration camps (konzentrationslager) of Nazi Germany were considered an integral feature of the regime, with the first opening in March of 1933, a few months after their rise to power, and many of the camps never closed, but liberated later by the Soviet Union, United States, and United Kingdom as they raced through Germany to reach Berlin and end the European war. These camps were used to detain or confine people, usually under harsh conditions and without regard to legal norms of arrest and imprisonment found in constitutional democracies.
Prisoners performing the Nazi German salute at a concentration camp.
The German authorities established camps across Germany on a near ad hoc basis to handle the masses of people arrested as alleged subversives or "enemies of the Reich." These included camps in Oranienburg, north of Berlin; Esterwegen, near Hamburg; Dachau, northwest of Munich, and Lichtenburg, in Saxony. In July 1934, following the Rohm purge, Hitler authorized SS leader Heinrich Himmler to centralize the administration of the concentration camps and formalized them into a system. To achieve this, Himmler appointed SS lieutenant General Theodor Eicke as Inspector of Concentration Camps. And, by the end of 1934, the SS were nominated as the only agency authorized to establish and manage facilities called concentration camps.
Concetration camps are often compared to prisons in modern society, but, unlike prisons, concentration camps were independent of any judicial reviews. Nazi concentration camps, instead, were used to serve three main purposes:
Fences and guard towers at a concentration camp.
After Nazi Germany began its expansion east, sparking the beginning of the Second World War, which led to larger groups of potential prisoners and a rapid expansion of the concentration camp system to the east. The central function of the concentration camps did not change, but, with the change of Nazi's goals in the east, these camps also permitted the SS to expand the functions of the camps. These camps increasingly became sites where the SS could kill targeted groups of real or perceived enemies of Nazi Germany; and they came to serve as holding centers for pools of forced laborers. However, despite the need for labor, the SS authorities deliberately undernourished and mistreated prisoners in the camps, which resulted in high mortality rates.
The gates at Auschwitz.
One of the specialized types of concentration camps was the extermination camps (vernichtungslager). These camps were, as their name implied, used for a singular purpose: the mass annihilation of unwanted persons in the Third Reich and conquered territories. The vast majority of the victims of these camps were Jews, but also included Roma, Slavs, homosexuals, alleged mental defectives, and others. The major camps of this type were located in German-occupied Poland, and included Auschwitz, Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, and Treblinka. Prisoners who were deemed able-bodied were used in forced-labor battalions or in tasks of the camps until they were worked virtually to death and then exterminated. These camps were developed due to the difficulties the Einsatzgruppen encountered during their campaign of mass murder, and the disquiet these units created in the local populations. They represented a reverse in the process, where the victims were transported to stationary killing centers, rather than bring the killing centers to the prisoners.
Luggage from Jewish victims piled up at an extermination camp.
These camps also offered an efficiency the Nazi Regime were looking for. For example, the staff of Treblinka was only 120, with 20 to 30 personnel belonging to the SS, and the other extermination camps were similar in number. And killing at the centers was done with poison gas. Chelmno, the first of the extermination camps, began gassing prisoners on December 8, 1941. The camp employed gas vans whose carbon-monoxide exhaust asphyxiated prisoners. Auschwitz, the largest and most lethal of the camps, used Zyklon-B.
A pile of bones and debris from a single day's killing at Buchenwald.
Majdanek and Auschwitz were also slave labor camps, while other extermination camps such as Treblinka, Belzec, and Sobibor were devoted to killing. At Auschwitz, the Nazis murdered between 1.1 and 1.3 million people and at Treblinka around 750,000 to 900,000 were murdered. Meanwhile, the killing-specific Belzec murdered at least 500,000 people during a ten month operation period. Most of the extermination camps were closed beginning in 1943 as the ghettos of Poland were emptied of Jews and as the war turned against Nazi Germany. However, Auschwitz continued to receive victims from throughout Europe until Soviet troops approached in January 1945.
Prisoners arriving at Auschwitz for the selection process.
At the extermination camps, a selection process would occur, as Nazi guards would use prisoners to generally maintain the camps, including the emptying of the gas chambers and burning of the bodies. Once the trains arrived at an extermination center, the guards would order prisoners out, in a process in which men were separated from women and children, and an SS physician would examine the deportees to determine their general health.
Women prisoners with heads shaved wearing camp uniforms.
Those considered in good physical health were put to work. Those deemed fit to work, typically over the age of 14 or 16, they would be sent for registration where they were stripped of their clothes and valuables, completely shaved of all of their hair, disinfected and showered, before being tattooed with a registration number. They would then receive a striped uniform, hat, and clogs and forced to work.
Those deemed unfit to work would often include children under the age of 16 (later brought down to 14 years in 1944), pregnant women, the handicapped (physically or mentally), the elderly, and the sick. These prisoners would be sent to the gas chambers; though they were, at the time, told they were being sent to showers to clean themselves of grim and lice. Before the gas chamber, the victims were forced to remove all items of clothing and valuables before the shower.
Examples of prisoners' tattoos at Auschwitz.
During the Holocaust, concentration camp prisoners received tattoos for registration at Auschwitz. The Auschwitz concentration camp complex consisted of Auschwitz I, Auschwitz II (Auchswitz-Birkenau), and Auschwitz III (Monowitz and subcamps). Incoming prisoners were assigned a camp serial number which, initially, was sewn onto their prisoners uniforms. Only prisoners selected for work were tattooed. Those sent directly to the gas chambers were never registered.
However, the first people to be tattooed were Soviet prisoners. These prisoners were in initially stamped by a special metal stamp made of interchangeable numbers made of needles approximately one centimeter in length. This allowed a serial number to be punched in a prisoner's chest, and ink was rubbed into the bleeding wound. These was an impractical method, and a single needle method was introduced. The tattoo location was also changed, moving to the inner side of the left upper forearm. Separate series of numbers were introduced based on prisoner categories (Soviet POWs, Hungarian Jews, Polish Jews, reeducation prisoners, and more) and German prisoners in the camp were never tattooed.
Between 1939 and 1945, there were at least 70 medical research projects undertaken by Nazi Germany which often involved cruel and lethal experimentation on human subjects. Many of these experiments were undertaken at the concentration and extermination camps, were the constant supply of new victims gave researchers a near constant supply of research subjects. At least seven thousand victims of such medical experiments have been documents, with victims including Jews, Poles, Roma, political prisoners, Soviet prisoners of war, homosexuals, and Catholic priests. These experiments tended to fall into three general areas:
A picture of a victim of Nazi medical experimentation showing a phosphorus burn.
Many experiments in the camps intended to facilitate the survival of military personnel in the field. For example, at Dachau, physicians conducted high-altitude experiments on prisoners to determine the maximum altitude from which crews of damaged aircraft could parachute to safety. Other experiments at Dachau included so-called freezing experiments on prisoners to find treatments for hypothermia, and for various experiments and tests to make seawater drinkable.
A victim of Nazi medical experiments.
Experiments were undertaken to develop and test drugs and treatment methods for injuries and illnesses which German military and occupation personnel encountered. At the German concentration camps of Sachsenhausen, Dachau, Natzweiler, Buchenwald, and Neuengamme, where scientists tested immunizations for compounds and antibodies for the prevention and treatment of contagious diseases such as malaria, typhus, tuberculosis, typhoid fever, yellow fever, and infectious hepatitis. Other experiments included those into bone-grafting, amputations, and possible antidotes to phosgene and mustard gas.
Photographs of twins used in Nazi medical experiments.
The third major category of experimentation undertaken at the camps by Nazi scientists sought to advance the racial and ideological tenets of the Nazi worldview. The most infamous of these were the experiments of Josef Mengele on twins at Auschwitz. Other of Mengele's experiments were on the Roma people, similar to experiments undertaken by Werner Fischer at Sachsenhausen, which aimed to understand how different "races" withstood various diseases. Research undertaken by August Hirt at Strasbourg University joined this, as he intended to establish "Jewish racial inferiority" with a scientific basis. Other experiments included a series of sterilization, and experiments into methods of efficient and inexpensive procedures for mass sterilization for those considered to be racially or genetically undesirable.
Portrait of Joseph Mengele.
The most notorious of the camp physicians, SS physician Josef Mengele conducted inhumane medical experiments on prisoners at Auschwitz. Some of his most well-known studies were into twins. And most of his experiments caused great harm or death to the prisoners. Josef Mengele, born on March 16, 1911, earned a PhD in physical anthropology from the University of Munich and held a doctoral degree in genetic medicine. He joined the Nazi Part in 1937, and was drafted into the army in June 1940 where he volunteered for medical service of the Waffen-SS. While little is known about his time between his drafting in 1940 and 1943, what is known is that he received a promotion to the rank of SS captain in 1943 and transfered to Auschwitz on May 30, 1943.
At Auschwitz, Mengele took a position at Chief Camp Physician, and worked with approximately 30 other physicians. During the selection process, these physicians would pick possible subjects for their experimentation. He was known, for his behavior during the selection process, as the "Angel of Death" or sometimes the "White Angel" and would be closely associated with the selection duty.
Twin subjects of Mengele's experimentation at Auschwitz.
He was often at the selection process even during his off time while searching for twins. His interest in twins was based, in part, on twin research which had been popular during the 1930s as an ideal tool in weighing the factors of human hereditary and environment. And, while during the 1930s Mengele and his mentor had performed legitimate research using twins as test subjects, at Auschwitz he had full license to maim and kill his subjects, and he performed a wide range of agonizing and often lethal experiments with Jewish and Roma twins.
He had other research interests, including a fascination with heterchromia, a condition in which the irises of an individual differ in coloration. Mengele collected the eyes of many of his murdered victims at Auschwitz, in part to furnish what he would call research materials to colleagues interested in eye pigmentation. And he conducted experiments into attempts to artificially changing eye color. He also documented in camp inmates the progression of the disease Noma, a type of gangre which destory s mucous membrane of the mouth and related tissues.
Mengele would escape the Allies and persecution for his crimes. He would later be discovered in Brazil, after it had been determined he had moved to South America, first to Paraguay. In Brazil, he had met up with another Nazi party member, Wolfgang Gerhard, and in 1985 it was determined a man named Gerhard who had died of a stroke in 1979 was actually Mengele, who had assumed Gerhard's identity.
Following the medical experimentation, mass sterilization, and the subsequent trials which discovered more about these camp experiments, the Nurmeberg Code was developed to address abuses committed by medical professionals during the Holocaust. The Nuremberg Code included the principle of informed consent and created standards for scientific experimentation and research. The Code served as a blueprint for the principles that ensure the rights of subjects in medical research and to lay out a basis for medical ethics. However, due to where the Codes originated (the horrors of the Holocaust), their applicability to modern medical research has been debated, in part due to the lack of a democratic framework to the development of the Codes. However, the 10 principles of the have in many places informed rights of patients and medical subjects in law. These ten principles include:
A photograph taken of a forced march of Jewish prisoners through a small town.
In early 1945, Nazi Germany was on the verge of military defeat. Allied forces approached the Nazi camps, and the SS, attempting to finish the job they started and to hide their crimes, organized forced evacuations which came to be called "death marches" of concentration camp inmates. This was in part in response to the Soviety offensive of the year prior in which they had discovered the first major Nazi concentration camps, Majdanek. Following this, Himmler ordered that prisoners from all concentration camps and subcamps be forcibly evacuated toward the interior of Germany. The evacuation has been suggested to have had three major purposes:
Prisoners seen on a "death march"
In the early parts of 1944, most evacuations were undertaken by train, or, in some positions, by ship. But, as winter approached, and the Allies encroached on the German territory, SS authorities increasingly resorted to evacuations on foot. The SS guards had orders to kill prisoners no longer capable of walking or traveling, and as the evacuations took place on foot during the winter of 1944-1945, the number who died of exhaustion and exposure during the routes further increased. Further, during the marches, SS guards would mistreat prisoners, and any prisoner who collapsed or could not keep pace would be shot. One survivor of the marches recalled:
No food had touched my lips all day before. Others "snatched" whatever they could - grass, snails, potatoes left in the fields - but my throat was blocked, although my stomach was growling with hunger. I had nothing else, so I ate snow. My whole body shook with cold... The march went on for days and nights and nobody knew where we were being taken. If they want to mow us down somewhere with machine guns, why don't they do it immediately? Or, perhaps there are special installations for that? Perhaps they are taking us again to some new installations for killing by gas? But it seemed that there was no need for any of that; at least two-thirds of the prisoners were already lying lifeless by the roadside. In a few days all of us would suffer the same fate.
The prisoner evacuations were chaotic. Once they left a camp the columns of prisoners were under control of the German guards, but the guards were often disorganized and gave confusing prisoners, and brought with them little food or supplies. Often, faced with the chaos at the end of the war, they murdered their prisoners. Other times, the Allies would come across the columns and rescue the prisoners, while local Germans also came face-to-face with the prisoner being marched through their towns.
Soviet soldiers and emaciated prisoners at the liberation of Auschwitz.
One of the most unexpected discoveries for the Allies as they marched towards Berlin were the discovery of the concentration camps. There they would confront the worst crimes of the Nazi regime and the horrible conditions of the prisoners. The first camp to be liberated was Majdanek, located in Lublin, Poland, liberated by the Soviet army as they advanced westward. From this liberation came the first images and news of the camps presented to the Western media. Here, the Soviet army found prisoners who had been left at Majdanek, mostly Soviet prisoners of war, and encountered the first pieces of evidence of the mass murder committed at the camp. Six months later the Soviets would liberate Auschwitz, where they found more than six thousand emaciated prisoners alive.
The crematoria at the liberation of the Majdanek camp.
As the allies continued to liberate concentration camps, they continued to find apalling scenes. For example, Bergen-Belsen, liberated by British forces in April 1945, it had become exceptionally overcrowded and thousands of unburied bodies were strewn about the camps, while the barracks were overfull of around 60,000 starving and mortally ill prisoners, around 60 percent of whom suffered from typhus. In many cases, when coming upon the camps, the troops, physicians, and relief workers would try to provide nourishment to the prisoners, but many were too weak to digest food and could not be saved. And, in some cases, the prisoners would eat themselves to death. Half of the prisoners discovered at Auschwitz would die within days of being freed. And the prisoners themselves often struggled with guilt for having survived, while also looking forward to being free, and some felt overwhelmed. As survivor and psychiatrist Viktor Frankl expressed:
Timidly, we looked around and glanced at each other questioningly. Then we ventured a few steps out of the camp. This time no orders were shouted at us, nor was there any need to duck quickly to avoid a blow or a kick. 'Freedom,' we repated to ourselves, and yet we could not grasp it.
American soldiers reacting to the discovery of a railcar loaded with dead found near Dachau concentration camp.
The 42nd "Rainbow" Division rolled into the Bavarian twon of Dachau in their march to Berlin where they expected to discover either an SS training facility or a prisoner-of-war camp. Instead, they discvered piles of emaciated corpses, dozens of train cars filled with decomposed human remains, and thousands of "walking skeletons" who had survived Dachau. The concentration camp in the Dachau complex was composed of 32 squalid barracks surrounded by an electrified barbed-wire fence, a ditch, and seven guard towers. Prisoners here were subject to medical experiments, including injections of malaria and tuberculosis, untold thousands that died from hard labor or torture, and the on-site crematorium which routinely burned the corpses. Forged into the gates separating the concentration camp from the rest of Dachau were the words Arbreit Macht Frei or "Work sets you free."
Bodies piled up outside of the Dachau crematoria.
What the soldiers found at Dachau, and what the 45th "Thunderbird" Division discovered on the death train, was scarring for these soldiers. The 45th division had been in combat for 500 days and thought they had witnessed every atrocity of war, but the train filled with innocent decaying bodies was more than many coudl take. Soldiers broke down in sobs. And others tried to find those responsible, including murdering German officers which had surrendered to them.
American soldiers inspecting an overstuffed oven of a crematoria at an extermination camp.
Inside Dachau it got worse. The American GIs liberating the camp reportedly rounded up the staff and SS officers inside the camp and lined them up to gun them down out of anger and revulsion. The American GIs stayed for days before moving on. The care of the prisoners was entrusted to combat medical units, while word of what happened at places like Dachau and Buchenwald spread through the Allied ranks. Despite previous camps liberated on the eastern front in 1944, there was distrust of the Soviet discoveries on the western front, as there was a general distrust for the Soviet's themselves.
German citizens and SS women remove bodies of victims from concentration camp at Belsen, supervised by British soldiers.
Prisoners at the Dachau concentration camp cheer American soldiers.
Often the end of the Holocaust is suggested as May 1945. By this time the majority of the Nazi camps were either liquidated or liberated. The Nazi Regime in Germany had fallen. And the world was learning about the horrors of the Holocaust. The "death marches" had been a terrible final chapter of the Holocaust where many more Jews died and were left at the side of the road.
And while, with the liberation and the fall of Nazi Germany, any policy of extermination to the European Jews was ended, that did not mark the end of the suffering for many of the survivors. Hundreds of thousands of Jews who had survived, either in the camps, in hiding, or in other countries, returned to their homes. But there they were often met with anger and animosity, found their homes occupied by others, and in some cases would flee further westwards. Antisemitic gangs in places such as Poland further killed Jewish survivors on their return home, with some estimated at around 1,500 Jewish survivors dying in Poland alone in the months after liberation.
American soldiers speak to German civilians amid a pile of Holocaust victims, ensuring the civilians were aware of the crimes.
Many survivors of the Holocaust tried to reach Eretz Israel, but the British authorities deported them to detention camps in Cyprus until the State of Israel was established, when there was a mass immigration of survivors of the Holocaust. Approximately a further 100,000 Jewish displaced persons immigrated to the United States, Canada, Australia, and Latin American countries.
In an attempt to seek justice for the crimes of the Nazi regime, former Nazi members were indicted and tried as war criminals by the International Military Tribunal. These trials were for more than the crimes of the Holocaust, and included:
Defendants at the Nuremberg trial.
The authority of the International Military Tribunal to conduct these trials came from the London Agreement of August 8, 1945, where representatives from the United States, Great Britain, and Soviet Union, along with the provisional government of France, agreed to a charter for an international military tribunal to conduct trials of major Axis war criminals whose offenses had no particular location.
Defendant on trial at the Nuremberg trial.
As a result of the trials there were 199 defendants tried. Of those, 161 were convicted, and 37 were sentenced to death. Crimes of the Holocaust were included in a few of the trials, and defendants generally acknowledged the crimes they were accussed of but denied their responsibility. Trials into the crimes of the Holocaust would continue, with many further trials, and investigations would be launched to find many of the Nazi leaders and individuals who had escaped Justice, such as Adolf Eichmann or Josef Mengele.
Preceding trials, many of which were held at Nuremberg and are often included in the title of the Nuremberg Trials included the Doctors Trial, which accused 23 defendants of crimes agaimst humanity including medical experiments on prisoners of war. The Judges Trial, which charged 16 lawyers and judges with furthering the Nazi plan for racial purity through eugenics laws. And further trials which dealt with German industrialists benefitting from the use of slave labor and plundering of occupied countries, and a trial for SS officers accused of violence against concentration camp inmates.
Image from the Doctors Trial.
The findings at Nuremberg led to the United Nations Genocide Convention of 1948, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948, and the Geneva Convention on the Laws and Customs of War of 1949. It also served as a precedent for the trials of Japanese war criminals in Tokyo, and a precedent for later tribunals for war crimes committed in the former Yugoslavia and in Rwanda.
American soldiers force civilians to walk past rows of Holocaust victims.
One of the enduring questions of the Holocaust is centered around if the world knew of the crimes of the Nazi regime or if they were done in complete secret. The denial of the events of the Holocaust occured as early as the Holocaust, with many citizens near the concentration and extermination camps ignoring the thick smoke pouring into the sky day and night. Or believing the lies of quarantining, resettlement, and evacuation, and the overall use of bureaucratic language to cover up the mass murder.
But the claim of many of the German citizens after the fall of Berlin in 1945 was that they did not know about the camps and their atrocities. However, German newspaper and magazine archives show that there were phases of public "desensitization" that exposed citizens to the horrors that would come. But there were no reports of the "final solution" and it is generally accepted that, as much as the German populace may have known something was going on, and that it was not good, they may not have known the specific or precise crimes, in part because they did not ask questions.
The Nazis themselves would go to great lengths to hide their crimes. One such fabrication involved Theresienstadt, a transit camp in the former Czechoslovakia, that the Nazis pretended was a resttlement camp. The International Red Cross demanded to investigate the camp in 1944, based on some reports which had leaked out through the world media. Before they could arrive, the Nazis forced prisoners to plant flowers and decorate the baracks, and the Nazis would produce a promotionla film of Theresienstadt, in which prisoners were coerced to be cheerful for the camera in exchangge for food.
Goebbels on the cover of Time magazine in 1933.
As early as 1941 information regarding the Nazis crimes began to leak out to the international media. This included early sources including German police reports intercepted by British intelligence; local eyewitnesses; escaped Jews reporting to the underground, Soviet, or neutral sources; and Hungarian soldiers on home leave. And in 1942, reports of a Nazi plan to murder all Jews, including details on methods, numbers, and locations, reached Allied and neutral leaders from various sources.
This information resulted in broadcasts by the British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in 1941 summarizing the findings. And this was supported by confirmation from spring 1942, when American journalists stranded in Germany were exchanged for Axis nationalists stranded in the United States. In 1942, after a report from occupied Poland confirming the murdering of the Jews, resulted in headlines in The London Times, the Montreal Daily Star, the Los Angeles Times, and the New York Journal American which remarked on the killing of Jews by Nazi Germany, estimated at the time to be around 1 million. And, during this period, Time magazine carried news about the Holocaust as early as 1933, where the magazine commented on Hitler's antismemitic theories.
American's reading papers at a declaration of war.
One difficulty with the reporting was the skepticism on the part of the journalists receiving the secret reports and intelligence reports about the Holocaust, and the public reception of this news. American journalists tended to be caustion about claims of mass murder because of related stories which had been reported during World War I that would prove to be false. This often resulted in editors rarely featuring the stories on the front page, and careful not to emphasize claims of atrocities.
Meanwhile, public opinion polls from 1943 showed Americans were skeptical, and tended to think the fact that 2 million European Jews had been murderd was a rumor. By 1944, about three-quarters of respondents to these polls helieved concentration camps were a part of the Nazi plan, but the polls still showed that the respondents did not understand the number of victims involved. A Gallup poll of 1944 showed that most people who guessed thought the number of victims would be in the hundreds of thousands or less.
It would not be until 1944 that many in the world not directly exposed to the crimes of the Holocaust would begin to accept the truth of what had happened. By 1945, a Gallup poll showed 84% of Americans believed the reports of the Holocaust. However, there remained skepticism and the numbers of dead continued to be underreported. This led the decision to distribute photographs that provided the brutal and shocking evidence of the atrocities. These pictures were shown around the world, including to German people, and helped the world's public understand the depth of the horror of the crimes of Nazi Germany.
The question of who was responsible, ultimately a question of justice, also gets at an uncomfortable truth about the Holocaust: many of those who perpetrated the crimes and atrocities would receive little to no punishment. Some would go undiscovered until their death. Many would commit suicide before they could be captured, or shortly after incarceration. And, when attempting to mete out justice for these crimes, can any just punishment truly do justice to the horrors committed?
Adolf Hitler surrounded by party leaders.
One undoubtable truth about the responsibility for the Holocaust lies at the feet of the Nazi leadership. The genocide was inspired, ordered, approved, and supported by Adolf Hitler, but he did not act alone, nor did he lay out an exact plan. Rarther, other Nazi leaders coordinated, planned, and implemented the mass murder, including Hermann Göring, Heinrich Himmler, Reinhard Heydrich, and Adolf Eichmann.
Heinrich Himmler with Adolf Hitler.
One of the main architects of the Holocaust, the man who set up the system of concentration camps, inspected those camps, and inspired competition amongst the camps to see who could could kill more Jews, leading to the use of novel killing methods such as the use of Zyklon-B at Auschwitz, was Heinrich Himmler. Hiimmler, like many in the inner circle of the Nazi party was power-hungry and wanted to rise to be Hitler's second, to inherit the power of the government once Hitler died. To prove his worth, he set up the Einsatzgruppen to help Hitler's plan for German resettlement of Poland, or to "cleanse" the area for those Germans.
In 1933, Himmler had established the first Nazi's concentration camp at Dachau. And in 1941, he would assign General Odilo Globocnik with the implementation of Operation Reinhard, which was the plan for the systematic murder of Jews, and included the establishment of the extermination camps.
Heinrich Himmler surrounded by SS members.
Nothing can occur just because leadership decides it should. But, it requires and relies on the institutions and organizations established to help them reach their decision. In the case of the Holocaust, the Nazi regime relied on many of the organizations they had previously established across Germany. These included the SA, also known as "Brownshirts" and were the early Nazi militia; the SS, or Schutzstaffel; the SD, or Sicherheitsdienst, also known as the Gestapo; and the Order Police. All of these organizations played active and deadly roles in the Holocaust.
Hitler surrounded by the SA or "Brownshirts".
Other organiztations which helped included the German military, the German national railway, the German healthcare system, the German civil service, and the German criminal justice system. Besides these systems, many German businesses, insurance companies, and banks, either were involved in the Holocaust, or they benefitted, in some cases from the slave labor, from the results of the Holocaust.
Other participants in the Holocaust across Germany included ordinary Germans. They participated in a variety of ways, with some cheering as Jews were beaten or humiliated, some denouncing Jews for disobeying racist laws and regulations; while others bought, took, or looted their Jewish neighbors' belongings and properties. Many of these individuals had their own motivations, such as enthusiasm, careerism, fear, greed, self-interest, antisemitism, and political ideals.
Leaders of Vichy France.
Nazi Germany was also not alone in perpetrating their crimes. They relied on help from countries allied to Nazi Germany and collaborators. Collaborators are often thought of as the regimes and organizations that cooperated with German authorities in an official or semi-official capacity. The allies and collaborators included:
Benito Mussolini riding with Hitler.
The term "allies" and "collaborators" also refer to individuals affiliated with these governments and organizations. Some of the deadliest of these were neighbors, acquaintances, colleagues, and even friends who denounced Jews to Nazi German authorities. How many chose to do this is largely unknown, but often they could reveal Jews' hiding places, unmask false Christian identities, and otherwise identified Jews to Nazi officials. The motivations of these people could be far ranging, including fear, self-interest, greed, revenge, antisemitism, and political or ideological beliefs.
Some of these individuals directly profited from the Holocaust. They would move into newly vacated homes, take over newly-vacated businesses, and even stole the possessions and valuables of Jews. There was widespread theft and plunder that accompanied the genocide. And, for some, the inaction and indifference to the crimes of the Nazi government was enough to be considered a collaborator to the Holocaust.
Arguably the first to deny the Holocaust were the Nazis. Often they used veiled language, secret operations, and covered up the murders by destroying any evidence, working to keep the world in the dark of what they were doing, which could have impeded or stopped their goals for the annihilation of European Jews. However, since the event, there have been various attempts by individuals, organizations, and countries to deny that the events of the Holocaust occurred. And, some of the worst, have suggested that the events of the Holocaust were a myth invented to advance Jewish interests. Often, in this way, Holocaust denial is another form of antisemitism, and has been called a second genocide, as it denies the death of the murdered, and seeks in a way to erase those victims from history, often called a double-dying.
Often, and unsurprisingly, Holocaust deniers wish to wash away the stain of Nazism in order to make the Nazi ideology an acceptable political alternative. Many organizations that have denied the Holocaust have done it for this reason, such as Harold Covington, leader ot the National Socialist White People's Party, who in July 24, 1996, called the Holocaust a Jewish conspiracy, used to give the Jews advantage over everyone else.
One thing Holocaust deniers tend to have to deal with is the mountain of evidence, despite the Nazis attempts to destroy the evidence, including the Jews themselves. Often, to do this, Holocaust deniers claim the survivors of Holocaust lied about their experiences, the soldiers liberating the camps exaggerated their experiences, and the films and photos of the atrocities, including those captured from the Nazis, were themselves made up or forged and confessions were coerced. They further tend to deny the existence of the gas chambers, and further claim these chambers were built by the Allies to make Nazi Germany look bad. And some have gone far enough to argue that the Allied countries should be heald responsible for the deaths in the camps. Arguing, in some cases, that their bombing attacks prevented the delivery of supplies and medicines from reaching the camps.
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