Anti-Semitism In The Holocaust

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Anti-semitism has been a problem for as long as the Jewish people have been around. Jews considered themselves a separate group of people who did not conform to other religions. As Christianity grew, anti-semitism also grew. Christians saw Jews as less than humans as they rejected and crucified Jesus. This hate continued into the 18th, 19th, and 20th centuries, where Jews were still seen as an inferior race due inpart to social darwinism. They were accused of every bad occurrence and were persecuted. The Holocaust was a genocide based on anti-semitic ideologies; and was the systematic extermination of the Jewish people resulting in millions of dead Jews.
The Holocaust occurred before and during WW2. It began with the Nazi political group gaining power. Hitler was the leader of the Nazis and he believed Jews were the cause of Germany’s hardships. The Nazis gradually released more and more propaganda stating that Jews caused Germany to lose WW1 and that they were inferior to the
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In the Warsaw Ghetto where 750 Jews battled 2000 Germans, another rebellion occurred at a concentration camp were 300 Jews and Soviet prisoners of war escaped the death camp. While not many Europeans risked their lives to help minorities countries such as Denmark moved its population of Jews by sea, and Italy and Bulgaria did not allow Germany to take any Jews. Unfortunately not many others helped. Even as the Allies were turning the tide of the war minorities continued to be killed if not at a faster rate. Soviet and US armies were mostly responsible for the annexation of many death camps. To hide the evidence of the genocide, German soldiers were ordered to burn the bodies of those killed and destroy the death camps. Eventually Germany was defeated, and with it the Genocide ended, and Hitler committed suicide. The Nuremberg trials followed with the prosecution and death sentence of some high ranking Nazi