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The Development of Nazi Jewish
Policy and Practice
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Which groups are targeted by the Nazis when they come to power?
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Social Darwinism
The Nazis thought some people were inferior, including:
Jews Gypsies Poles African-Germans Jehovah’s Witnesses Communists People who were mentally or physically handicapped Homosexuals
The Nazis made laws forbidding them from getting married or having children.
Many people tried to leave Germany, but could find no refuge in other countries.
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What do you think this chart was used for?
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Jewish people were treated harshly Citizenship was revoked
Kicked out of schools
Doctors, lawyers, or people who owned businesses were forbidden to do their work.
Park benches and the beaches had signs saying, “No Jews Allowed.”
Jews even had to give away their pets!
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November, 1938:“Kristallnacht” In November 1938, things worsened as the Nazi
government began to openly endorse violence against Jewish people.
For two days all over the country, they destroyed Jewish businesses, and burnt down synagogues.
Homes were broken into. People were beaten. About 30,000 people were arrested, and many were never seen again.
Every Jewish person was in danger: children and old people, women and men, rich people and poor.
These two days are now called Kristallnacht, or the “Night of Broken Glass.”
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1939 – 1941 – 1942
WWII – invasion of Poland The invasion of the Soviet Union The Final Solution
War provides the Nazis with an opportunity to embark on large-scale killings of Jews
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Reading: Ordinary Men: Reserve Police Battalion 101
and the Final Solution in Poland, Christopher Browning, 1998
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Auschwitz photographs
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Jews from the Lodz ghetto board deportation trains
for the Chelmno death camp.
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German soldiers guarding a train carrying prisoners en route to Chelmno.There was no station at Chelmno. Prisoners were transferred from train to trucks.
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http://www1.yadvashem.org/about_yad/magazine/magazine_43/data_43/news_Chelmno.htmlhttp://www1.yadvashem.org/yv/en/remembrance/multimedia.asp