Nuremberg

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    Amid World War II, Adolf Hitler and his Nazi party individuals attempted to execute each Jew in Europe. This happened all over Europe yet started in Germany. Hitler and the Nazis figured out how to murder 11 million - 14 million individuals. Among those individuals were 6 million Jews, this included 1.5 million kids also. In Germany, while the warriors were out battling wars, individuals in Germany encountered an alternate sort of danger. The principle lesson to be learnt from the Holocaust is…

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    begin a national boycott of Jewish businesses in Germany that, in the end was unsuccessful. However, while this was happening, and throughout Hitler’s chancellorship the Nazi passed laws denying rights and citizenship to the Jewish people called the Nuremberg Laws. These laws were meant to strip the Jewish people of not only their citizenship, but their humanity, as well. And by accomplishing this the Nazis were able to ensure that others and the Jews themselves viewed them as subhuman in the…

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    Towards the end of 1943, Leaders of the Allies began to think about the fate of the Nazi leaders after the war was over. Leaders were torn between trials for Nazi leaders or just going straight to execution. By 1945, Great Britain, the United States, and the Soviet Union came to the decision that they would hold trials for the major criminals. The charges were categorized into four different categories: common conspiracy, crimes against peace, war crimes, and crimes against humanity. Common…

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    A) The main point Mr. Sand is trying to get across was how important the Nuremberg trails were ad how they needed to be a success. He states, “The Nuremberg trials were an experiment. There was a clear international consensus among the victor powers that the perpetrators of aggression should this time be treated differently by the international community,” (28). Through out Mr. Sand’s book he is trying to get the reader to understand how this trial lead to many other internationals laws. It…

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    Many people who live in democracies often take their rights and freedom for granted, thinking that it is a reality for all people, even in the past. However, this was not a social norm for some people. During WW2 Nazi Germany lived in a state of dystopia for its citizens under the rule of Adolf Hitler. Dystopia is a type of society in which the government 's choices affect the imbalance within the population of the given nation; Adolf Hitler made different decisions that altered the dystopian…

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    react to this horrific tragedy. As a reaction to the Holocaust, the allied forces sought a way to receive justice for the innocent millions who had lost their lives in a tragic way. In order to achieve this, the allied forces created the Nuremberg trials. The Nuremberg trials…

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    Nuremberg Laws In Germany

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    This was the time when German Jews were stripped of their citizenship once again launching another major cultural attack. The Nuremberg laws were laws designed to be the protection of German Blood and the Reich citizenship law. These law 's purpose was to restrict Jews from certain things and to define who was allowed citizenship in Germany. The ones who were allowed citizenship…

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    The Cruel Final Solution There was a conference that was known as Wannsee, that was held in Berlin, 1942. At the Wannsee conference, the SS, subdivisions, handled what was known as the Final Solution that targeted the Jews. The conference was brought up to light in the film Conspiracy, where the Final Solution was agreed upon Hitler’s fifteen men who debated the pros and cons of what was to be done to the Jews. In addition, the Final Solution determined what was going to happen to the Jews,…

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    The Nuremberg Race Laws

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    “Aryans” these laws were called the Aryan law. They would separate these races and take away political, legal, and civil rights from the Jews. This new law, excluded the Jews from organizations, professions, and other things in public life. The Nuremberg Race laws of 1935 had defined Jews by ancestral lineage that formalized their segregation from the Aryan Race. The Nazis went along with discrimination, obedience, and opportunism. Hitler made an image in his mind of the ideal Aryan they were to…

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    over six million deaths among the Jewish community. After World War ll, Jewish people wanted justice for what had happened to their deceased family members, and the Nuremberg Trials gave that to them. Many people want to know what the Nuremberg Trials were, who was guilty of war crimes, and what happened afterwards. The Nuremberg Trials were held to bring Nazi criminals to justice. It was a series of thirteen trials, the most famous being the trial for war criminals. The defendants were…

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