Wednesday, February 1, 2017

33 facts you should know about the Holocaust

Naruto 107 facts you should know! - ToonedUp @CartoonHangover



Below you find a list of 33 important facts about the Holocaust.
The Holocaust began in 1933 when Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany and ended in 1945 when the Nazis were defeated by the Allied powers.
The term Holocaust, originally from the Greek word meaning holokauston sacrifice by fire, refers to the Nazi persecution and slaughter of the Jewish people expected the Hebrew word Shoah, which means devastation, destruction, or waste is also used for this genocide.
In addition to Jews, Gypsies targeted Nazi homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, and people with disabilities to the persecution Anyone who resisted the Nazis were sent to forced labor or murdered.
The Nazi term is an acronym for the Party Nationalsozialistishe Deutsche National Socialist German Workers Arbeiterpartei.


The Nazis used the term of the final solution to refer to their plan to murder the Jews.
An estimated 11 million people were killed during the Holocaust Six million of them were Jews.
The Nazis killed about two-thirds of all Jews living in Europe.
It is estimated that 1 1 million children were murdered in the Holocaust.



On 1 April 1933, the Nazis instigated their first action against German Jews by announcing a boycott of all Jewish-term businesses.
The Nuremberg laws issued Sept. 15, 1935, began to exclude Jews from public life Nuremberg Laws included a law depriving German Jews of their citizenship and a law that prohibited marriages and sexual relations outside marriage between Jews and Germans the Nuremberg laws created a legal precedent strengthen the anti-Jewish legislation.
Nazis then sent other anti-Jewish laws in the coming years, for example, some of these laws exclude Jews in places like parks, from jobs in public ie government jobs function, were Sign Jews of their property, and prevented Jewish doctors working on someone else that Jewish patients.
During the night, 9-10 November 1938, the Nazis instigated a pogrom against Jews in Germany and Austria in what was called Kristallnacht glass Night This night of violence included looting and burning of synagogues, breaking the windows of Jewish-owned the business, looting those shops, and many Jews were physically attacked too, about 30,000 Jews were arrested and sent to concentration camps.
After World War II began in 1939, the Nazis began ordering the Jews to wear a yellow Star of David on their clothing so that the Jews could be easily identified and targeted.



After the start of World War II, the Nazis began to order all Jews to live in certain, very specific areas of major cities, called ghettos.
Jews were driven from their homes and moved to smaller apartments, often shared with other families.
Some ghettos began as open, meaning that Jews could leave the area during the day, but often had to be back in the ghetto by a curfew later, all ghettos are closed, which means that Jews were trapped within the confines of the ghetto not allowed to leave.
Some of the large ghettos were located in the towns of Bialystok, Kovno, Lodz Minsk, Riga, Vilnius and Warsaw.



The biggest Warsaw ghetto with its highest population reaching 445,000 in March 1941.
In most ghettos, the Nazis ordered the Jews to establish a Jewish Judenrat council both administer the Nazi demands and regulate the internal life of the ghetto.
Nazis then order the deportations from the ghettos in some major ghettos, 1,000 people a day were loaded into trains and sent either to a concentration camp or a death camp.
To get them to cooperate, the Nazis said to the Jews that they were transported to another workplace.
When the Nazis decided to kill the remaining Jews in the ghetto, they liquidate the ghetto by embedding the last Jews in the ghetto on the trains.
When the Nazis tried to liquidate the Warsaw ghetto, April 13, 1943, the remaining Jews defended themselves in what became known as the uprising in the Warsaw ghetto fighters held the Jewish resistance against the entire Nazi regime 28 days - more than many European countries have been able to resist the Nazi conquest.



Although many people refer to all the Nazi camps as concentration camps, there were actually a number of different types of camps, including concentration camps, extermination camps, work camps, POW camps and transit camps card.
One of the first concentration camps were Dachau, which opened March 20, 1933.
From 1933 to 1938, most of the prisoners in the concentration camps were political prisoners ith people who spoke or acted in a way against Hitler or the Nazis and the Nazis labeled as antisocial.
After Kristallnacht in 1938, the persecution of Jews became more organized This led to the exponential increase in the number of Jews sent to concentration camps.



Life in Nazi concentration camps was horrible prisoners were forced to do hard physical work and even given small rations of prisoners slept three or more stacked in crowded wooden no mattress or pillow torture in concentration camps was common and death were common.
A number of Nazi concentration camps, Nazi doctors conducted medical experiments on prisoners against their will.
While the concentration camps were intended to work and starving prisoners to death, extermination camps also known as the death camps were built for the sole purpose of killing large groups of people quickly and effectively.
The Nazis built six extermination camps of Chelmno, Belzec, Sobibor and Treblinka Auschwitz Auschwitz and Majdanek Majdanek were the concentration camps and extermination.



The prisoners transported to the extermination camps were told to undress for a shower instead of a shower, prisoners were herded into gas chambers and killed at Chelmno, prisoners were herded into the gas trucks instead of the gas chambers.
Auschwitz was the largest concentration and extermination camp built is estimated that 1 in 1 million people were killed in Auschwitz.








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