The Holocaust: The Persecution Of The Jews

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In the years of 1938-1945, one of the most liberal and malignant genocides of the world occurred, the Holocaust. The Holocaust was the bureaucratic state-sponsored persecution of over six million Jews, by Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Germans. “The Nazis, who came to power in Germany in January 1933, believed that Germans were ‘racially superior’ and that the Jews, deemed ‘inferior,’ were an alien threat to the so-called German racial community.”(Ushmm “Intro. To The Holocaust”).The Nazi would keep thousands of Jews in filthy sites called the Ghettos: an “enclosed district that isolated Jews by separating Jewish communities from the non Jewish communities”(Ushmm “Ghettos”). The term “Ghetto” first originated from the name of the Jewish Quarter …show more content…
Closed Ghettos were most common and occupied the most Jews. The living conditions were miserable with an extremely overcrowded population, and a single apartment held several families at a time. Streets were overflowed with garbage and human waste. Contagious diseases spread rapidly due to these immense unsanitary conditions. In the winter, Jews were provided with no heating fuel and were strongly impacted by the harsh conditions. Tens of thousands of Jews died from illness, starvation, and cold, while some committed suicide. Germans would purposely try to starve the Jews by putting a limit on how much food they could buy. Some would trade valuables, beg, and even steal to get food. Not only this, but the Jews risked getting killed or taken away when going outside. The Germans would often shoot the Jews that went outside, or take them and their families away to concentration camp. The overall conditions and treatment of the ghettos left the Jews with no sign of hope, and gave no reason to fight back against the …show more content…
This was the first step in the Nazi’s overall plan to separate, persecute, then ultimately eliminate all Jews. The German’s had a plan in which tortured only the Jews. The ghettos were meant to be temporary, but many Jews would be in their for their lives.and if the occupying Jews were not already dead from illness or starvation, they were either shot or sent to killing centers. From there, non-Jews would shoot all the Jews they can, whether it was shooting them straight into the ground, or making them march till they slowly die. Overall, the Ghettos segregated the Jews by slowly removing them from society, then eliminating their