Transcript Document

The Holocaust
Part I. Anti-Semitism Through
World War I
• The term ‘anti-Semitism’
• Very few dual-racial societies in history
– In those that have existed, one race is almost always
in a subservient role
• Jews in Europe
– Reprisal of their difficult position
•
•
•
•
Diaspora
Apartness (covenant with God)
Education and money lending
Christ-killers
– Kicked out of countries periodically throughout
European history
• Social Darwinism gave a justification for racial
superiority
• Nationalism (Nations rather than kingdoms)
– Who belongs?
• Ironically, many Jewish-Germans felt highly
assimilated- had deep roots in Germany
– Had done relatively well pre-WWI
– Served in WWI in a higher proportion than their
population
Part II. 1919 to 1933
• Why are these dates significant?
• Germans felt duped at the end of World War I and by the
Treaty of Versailles
– Some Jews in Weimar gov’t
– Right wing Germans (Hitler, Ludendorff) wondered ‘Did the Jews
care less about winning because they weren’t real Germans?’
– Similar to what happened to the Armenians in WWI (see pics on
next two slide)
• Hitler’s radicalization
– Moved to Vienna (from a small town) as a young man and
encountered Jews for the first time
• Vienna at the time had an outspokenly anti-Semitic mayor
– Part of the Jewish faith is to remain a people with a special
covenant with God  apartness in diet, traditions, and customs
– Makes them easy targets for bigots
• “Our strength consists in our speed and in our
brutality. Genghis Khan led millions of women and
children to slaughter -- with premeditation and a
happy heart. History sees in him solely the founder of
a state. It’s a matter of indifference to me what a weak
western European civilisation will say about me. I
have issued the command -- and I’ll have anybody
who utters but one word of criticism executed by a
firing squad -- that our war aim does not consist in
reaching certain lines, but in the physical destruction
of the enemy. Accordingly, I have placed my deathhead formation in readiness -- for the present only in
the East -- with orders to them to send to death
mercilessly and without compassion, men, women,
and children of Polish derivation and language. Only
thus shall we gain the living space [Lebensraum]
which we need. Who, after all, speaks to-day of the
annihilation
of the Armenians?“
Who’s quote???
• Hitler’s Racial Aryan Purity
– Liked to reference Sparta as a society that
achieved great strength because it destroyed
‘weaklings’ which gave the strong space to
thrive
Nazi Racial Ideology (from Wikipedia)
• Ideology
• Rosenberg argued that the Nordic race had evolved in a
now-lost landmass, Atlantis, off the coast of North Western
Europe, and had migrated through Scandinavia and
northern Europe, expanding further south, and as far as Iran
and India where it founded the Aryan cultures of
Zoroastrianism and Hinduism. He argued that the
entrepreneurial energy of the Nordics had "degenerated"
when they mixed with "inferior" peoples.
• With the rise of Hitler, Nordic theory became the norm within
German culture. In some cases the "Nordic" concept
became an almost abstract ideal rather than a mere racial
category. Hermann Gauch wrote in 1933 that the fact that
"birds can be taught to talk better than other animals is
explained by the fact that their mouths are Nordic in
structure." He further claimed that in humans, "the shape of
the Nordic gum allows a superior movement of the tongue,
which is the reason why Nordic talking and singing are
richer.
• Bolshevik (Communist) Revolution in
Russia in 1917 ‘confirms’ international
Jewish plot to take over the world
– Marx and Lenin were Jews
• Ironically, Marx and Lenin were secular Jews
• Communism is international, rather than
national
• Bad economic times in Germany that
followed WWI, and then in the Great
Depression, increased a need for
scapegoats
– anger at Jews who were relatively wealthy
(bankers, doctors, lawyers)
• Hitler comes to power
– Had downplayed his anti-Semitism once he
had decided to try to win election, but Mein
Kampf is still out there
Ironies in Hitler’s anti-Semitic Stance
• ‘foreign’ Jews had been in Germany for 1000 years
• His mother’s life had been saved by a Jewish
doctor
– Hitler promised to ‘never forget’
• Hitler’s own family tree is murky… many have
speculated that he is part Jewish
• He was awarded a medal for bravery in WWI by a
Jewish officer
• Jews fought in WWI in numbers that were higher
than their % in the population (why important?)
Part III. Hitler in Power – the Start of WWII
• Hitler’s decided to purify the Aryan
race
• First group killed?
– Handicapped (T4 Program)
– Early experiments with killing
efficiency – gas in showers, gas
vans, (shooting is too messy,
inefficient, and expensive)
– Construction of concentration
camps, originally for political
prisoners
• Hitler’s regime places a blanket of
censorship over Germany
– Allows Jews to become victims
• Nuremberg Laws
– Jews lose citizenship
• Thus, afterwards, all persecution is ‘legal’
– Banned from certain professions
– miscegenation laws
– ghetto-ization
– wearing badges
– kicked out of school
• Efficient, scientific Nazi model of racial
categorization
Kristallnacht
• Response to assassination of a German
diplomat by a Jew in France
• Dual meaning of the name  shattered
glass v night of crystal
• 30,000 Jewish men—a quarter of all
Jewish men in Germany—were taken to
concentration camps
• Around 1,668 synagogues were
ransacked, and 267 set on fire.
• The Times of London wrote at the time:
"No foreign propagandist bent upon
blackening Germany before the world
could outdo the tale of burnings and
beatings, of blackguardly assaults on
defenceless and innocent people, which
disgraced that country yesterday."
IV. The Reaction of the Rest of the
World
• American anti-Semitism
– Immigration of Jews from Eastern Europe
1890s to 1930s
• Up to 3 % of population of U.S.
• Limits on immigration from Eastern Europe,
religiously biased acceptance to university
programs, and barriers to entry in certain
professions were examples of anti-Semitism in
America at the time
– Henry Ford
– KKK
• American attitudes towards Jews (from Wikipedia)
• United States national public opinion polls taken from the mid
nineteen thirties to the late nineteen fortiesshowed that over half
the American population saw Jews as greedy and dishonest.
Americans believed that Jews were too powerful in the United
States … 35-40 percent of the population was prepared to
accept an anti-Jewish campaign.
• In one 1938 poll, 41 percent of respondents agreed that Jews
had "too much power in the United States," and this figure rose
to 58 percent by 1945. In 1939 a poll found that only thirty-nine
percent of Americans felt that Jews should be treated like other
people. Fifty-three percent believed that "Jews are different and
should be restricted" and ten percent believed that Jews should
be deported. Several surveys taken from 1940 to 1946 found
that Jews were seen as a greater threat to the welfare of the
United States than any other national, religious, or racial group.
• Although only 0.6 percent of the nation's 93,000 commercial
bankers in 1939 were Jewish, the idea that Jews controlled the
banking system remained a popular myth.
• Thus, anti-Semitism was fairly widespread in the U.S, a
sentiment which reduced the inclination of Americans to help the
Jews in Europe.
Hansen
WWII
Name _______________
Period _____
The Holocaust- Lecture Part I
Part I. Anti-Semitism Through World War I
•
The term ‘anti-Semitism’ _____________________
_________________________________________
•
Very few ______________________ in history
– In those that have existed, _______________
_____________________________________
•
Jews in Europe
– Reprisal of their difficult position
• Diaspora _________________________
_________________________________
• Apartness (covenant with God) _______
_________________________________
• Education and money lending ________
_________________________________
• Christ-killers ______________________
_________________________________
– ______________________________
periodically throughout European history
•
______________________ gave a justification for
racial superiority
•
Nationalism (Nations rather than kingdoms)
– Who belongs? __________________________
______________________________________
•
Ironically, many Jewish-Germans felt highly
____________________ - _________________
________________ in Germany
– Had done relatively well _________________
– Served in WWI in a ___________________ than
their population
Part II. 1919 to 1933
•
Why are these dates significant? _____________
________________________________________
•
Germans felt _______________ at the end of World
War I and by the _____________________
–
–
–
•
Some Jews in ____________ Gov’t
Right wing Germans (Hitler, Ludendorff) wondered ‘Did
the Jews care less about ______________ because
________________________________________?’
Similar to what happened to the Armenians in WWI
(see pics on next two slide) ____________________
__________________________________________
__________________________________________
Hitler’s radicalization
–
Moved to ___________ (from a small town) as a young
man and encountered Jews for the first time
•
–
Part of the Jewish faith is to remain a people with a
special covenant with God  apartness in ______
_________________________________________
_________________________________________
•
•
Liked to reference _________ as a society that
achieved great strength because it _____________
_________________________________’ which gave
the strong space to thrive
___________________ (Communist) Revolution in
Russia in __________ ‘confirms’ international
Jewish plot to take over the world
–
__________ and ________ were Jews
•
•
Makes them easy targets for ____________
Hitler’s Racial Aryan Purity
–
•
Vienna at the time had an _________________
_______________________mayor
Ironically, Marx and Lenin were ___________Jews
Communism is _____________, rather than
________________
•
Part II (Continued)
• Bad economic times in Germany that
followed WWI, and then in the Great
Depression, increased a need for
__________________________
–
•
anger at Jews who were relatively
____________(bankers, doctors, lawyers)
Hitler came to power
–
•
•
________________________ his anti-Semitism once
he had decided to try to win election, but
______________________ is still out there
______________in Hitler’s anti-Semitic
Stance
–
–
–
–
•
‘foreign’ Jews had been in Germany _______
_______________________
_____________________had been saved by a Jewish
doctor
•
–
•
Hitler promised to ‘never forget’
Hitler’s own _________________ is murky… many have
speculated that he is part Jewish
He was awarded ________________
_____________________in WWI by a Jewish officer
Jews fought in WWI in numbers that were higher than
their % in the population (why important?)
________________________
__________________________________
Part III. Hitler in Power – the Start of WWII
•
Hitler’s decided to______________ the Aryan race
•
First group killed?
– ________________(T4 Program)
– Early experiments with killing efficiency –
_____________________________,
_________________, (shooting is too messy,
inefficient, and expensive)
– Construction of concentration camps, originally
for ________________________
•
Hitler’s regime places a blanket of ________________
over Germany
– Allowed Jews to become victims
________________________________
– Jews lose ______________________
• Thus, afterwards, all persecution is ‘legal’
– Banned from certain _________________
– miscegenation laws - _________________
__________________________________
– ghetto-ization
– _____________________________
– kicked out of school
Efficient, scientific Nazi model of racial categorization
___________________________________________
Kristallnacht
– Response to ____________________________
_______________________________________
– Dual meaning of the name  ______________
___________ v __________________________
– ____________________ men—a quarter of all
Jewish men in Germany—taken to __________
__________________________________
– Around 1,668 _______________were ransacked,
and 267 set on fire.
The Times of London wrote at the time: "No foreign propagandist
_____________________________________________________
____________________________________________________
could outdo the tale of burnings and beatings, of blackguardly
assaults on defenceless and innocent people, which disgraced that
country yesterday.“
IV. The Reaction of the Rest of the World
•
American anti-Semitism
– _____________ of Jews from Eastern Europe
1890s to 1930s
• Up to _______ of population of U.S.
• Limits on immigration from Eastern Europe,
religiously biased acceptance _________
___________________, and barriers
______________________
________________were examples of antiSemitism in America at the time
– Henry Ford, KKK