Race In The Holocaust

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The Holocaust was a time in the world’s history filled with pain, sorrow, and hate. This time period was when Germany began trying to create a “perfect race”, by killing off all those thought to be “not pure”, the number of people thought to be killed is around sixty million people all around the world. It is impossible to know the exact number, for Germany built mass graves to put the bodies of their dead prisoners in to dispose of any evidence of them, Germany may have committed many horrid acts against the Jews, gypsies, and homosexuals; however, these types of actions were not restricted to Germany alone as many people might imagine. The Soviets, Japanese, and the Allies, primarily Britain and the United States also caused unnecessary …show more content…
The gas used in the chambers was a type of rat poison called Zyklon B, “a cyanide compound tried on mental patients and handicapped children as early as 1939” (BRINKLEY 403), and even went as far as to put a special type of window in some of the chambers to watch the people suffer. Germany also practiced medical experiments on their prisoners, sometimes on twins, to help find the most efficient way to make a “perfect” civilization. One of those practices, done by Doctor Josef Mengele, was sewing a pair of twins together to see how their bodies would react. The Germans were also known to exploit their POWs and the Jewish prisoners by making them work in labor camps before killing them, some of these camps included five large death camps in Poland: …show more content…
A list where some of these crimes took place is as follows: Nanking, Bataan, at the Kinsu and Chekiang Provinces, and the prison ships. The town of Nanking, China was the place of “the worst single massacre of the war” (BRINKELY, 418). The Japanese army killed about two hundred fifty thousand Chinese people that were even close to this unfortunate city. Soldiers went throughout the town, killing any men who were of could have been soldiers. This affair was so ugly that even to this day Japan will deny most actions taken by their soldiers and that the death toll was ever that high and won’t apologize sincerely. The second dealing happened was at Bataan, some U.S. and Filipino POWs marched 65 miles to their own prison camps. The death count estimated for the POWs was around six hundred U.S. soldiers and five thousand Filipino soldiers, most of them killed when they could not continue marching, still others died later when they were put into railcars and died of the heat of the sun. After arriving at the Camp O’Donnell many more prisoners of war died. The Doolittle raid on Japan cause the Japanese to send troops out to find the pillagers, while looking for them the troops came across these two provinces called the Kinsu and Chekiang Provinces. The Japanese killed many innocent civilians and destroying entire villages in their search for the