Holocaust Essay

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    The Holocaust was the biggest mass murdered in the human history that left traumatic memories to them who were part of that genocide. The Holocaust started on the World War II from Nazis during 1939-1945. “The term Holocaust is commonly used to refer to the systematic murder by Nazi Germany of approximately six million Jews and the destruction of their communities, representing one-third of world Jewry at the time. In this use, it is analogous to the Hebrew word Shoah, also used to refer to the…

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    consider what actions and inactions are complicit ‘enough’ to be held responsible for the Holocaust. However, the word ‘bystanders’ is a complicated term, with a rich and varied composition. It has developed into a central part of the Holocaust consciousness as a perjorative term. The actions and inactions of various actors before and during World War II can almost all be linked in some way to the Holocaust. Yet, it is important to illuminate the complexity of the ‘bystander’, which I will…

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    Many people refer to the Holocaust as a dreadful event that has taken place in the history of time, while others thought of it as an act against humanity. In my opinion, I think it was nonsense that people all around the world had to feel heartache, as this devastating event against the Jews took place. I certainly feel grossed by the Nazis for deciding to kill another human race. At the end of the day, we are all humans of various races, religions and cultures. So why kill one another when each…

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    oppression? Oppression is defined as a prolonged cruel or unjust treatment or control(Oppression). Concentration camps have become the prototypical symbol of oppression (Concentration Camps). Jews were greatly oppressed in concentration camps during the Holocaust. The treatment they received, the labor they were forced into, and the ways they were executed are just a few examples of how the Jews were oppressed. t1 As previously stated, one of the ways that Jews faced oppression was by the…

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    similarities between the systematic killing of Jews during the Holocaust and the routine violence toward Native Americans during the colonial period. Historians estimate that approximately 11 million people were killed during the Holocaust, including about two-thirds of the Jewish population in Europe; whereas in America, it is estimated that 80 to 95% of the Native population died after the Europeans arrived. Yet, while the Holocaust is arguably the most talked-about war atrocity in history,…

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    the Holocaust Nurses during the Holocaust made history with the crimes they have done which they were forced to commit or be punished. Nurses and physicians have taken millions of innocent Jews lives away from them too soon. “In 1939, only nine percent of the nurses were members of the Nazi sisterhood,” (“Euthanasia Nurses”). Someone, anyone could have stopped Hitler from doing these crimes; Hitler knew he could not be stopped. Unfortunately, during the Holocaust,…

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    The word “Holocaust,” from the Greek words “holos” (whole) and “kaustos” (burned), was traditionally describe a killing providing burned on an altar. Since 1945, the word has taken on a replacement and horrifying meaning: the murder of some half dozen million European Jews by the Nazi regime throughout the Second warfare. To the anti-Semitic Nazi leader Adolf Hitler, Jews were an inferior race, an alien threat to German racial purity and community. To the once years of Nazi rule Germany,…

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    history individuals that make certain decisions have come to mold history. The sequence of choices that certain people make, can be a factor that brings events to fruition or put a movement to a stop. Although almost all of the people during the Holocaust had a part to play, there were people that significantly shaped history through the choices they made. Magda and Andre Trocme, Nicholas Winton, Stefa Dworek, and Elie Weisel. Magda and Andre Trocme were a French couple of Le Chambon. Le…

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    During the Holocaust, Jews were persecuted and tormented in a way that had never really been seen before. The Jews were tormented to the point of not considering themselves human, rather as property that is not worth existing and that should be exterminated. The Holocaust was a long period of time that shocked not only the Jewish nation, but the entire world, and gave the whole world perspective on the horrors that humanity is capable of. The Holocaust had a large effect on the Jewish people as…

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    and ideologies comprise a war, meaning that no single definition of resistance should qualify as a standard. Resistance through the Holocaust manifested itself in different ways, spiritually, nonviolently, armed and unarmed. The danger of narrowly defining resistance which was circulated by post-cold war scholars and painted with prejudice. The bulk of Holocaust research being post-cold war, it is easy to see why many historians would prefer to view the term ‘resistance’ broadly when…

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