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The Holocaust

Published on Nov 18, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

THE HOLOCAUST

BY: KARLA CHAVEZ AND YANELY CORTES
Photo by Great Beyond

WHEN AND WHERE?

  • The Holocaust began in the year 1933 when Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany.
  • It ended in the year 1945 when the nazis were defeated by the allied powers.

WHAT IS "HOLOCAUST"?

  • The term "Holocaust" comes from the Greek word "Holokauston".
  • It means "sacrifice by fire".
  • This is what the nazis persecution was called.

WHAT ARE "NAZIS"?

  • The term "Nazi" is an acronym.
  • It stands for "Nationalsozialistishe Deutsche Arbeiterparter"
  • These "Nazis", led by Adolf Hitler were the perpetrators of the Holocaust.

THEIR TARGETS

  • In addition to Jews, Nazis targeted gypsies, homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses,
  • twins, communists, and the disabled, for persecution.
  • Anyone who resisted the Nazis was sent to forced labor or murdered.

THE BOYCOTT

  • On April 1, 1933 the Nazis instigated their first action against German Jews.
  • They announced a boycott of all Jewish-run businesses.

THE NUREMBERG LAWS

  • On September 15, 1935, the Nuremberg laws were issued.
  • These laws excluded Jews from public places, like parks, and took away their citizenship.
  • They were also fired from civil service jobs and not allowed to marry non-jews.
  • Jewish doctors were not allowed to work on anyone other than Jewish patients.

NAZI CAMPS

  • Hitler's prisoners were kept in what many people refer to nazi camps.
  • There were actually several different types of camps.
  • Theses include:
  • Concentration, extermination, labor, prisoner-of-war, and transit camps.
  • Each of these had differnet purposes.

CAMP'S PURPOSES

  • Concentration camps were ment to work and starve prisoners to death.
  • Extermination/death camps were for killing large groups of people at a time
  • When they took them to these camps, they were told to undress for a shower.
  • Instead of a shower, they were taken into gas chambers and killed.

LIFE IN THE CAMPS

  • Life in the concentration camps was horrible.
  • Prisoners were forced to do hard physical labor.
  • They slept three or more people per bunk without a mattress or pillow.
  • In some camps, Nazi doctors conducted medical experiments on the prisoners.
  • These expirements were done against their will.

THE BIG NUMBERS

  • It is estimated that 11 million people were killed during the holocaust.
  • Approxamately two thirds of all Jews living in Europe, about six million, were killed.
  • About 1.1 million of these 11 million killed were children.

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