The Wannsee Conference

Words: 769
Pages: 4

Before the peak years of killing, the German armies had already starved, wounded, and exiled the jews but this was not enough, the Germans were not fully contempt with this form of expansion, so they resorted to the mass killings of millions. The Germans had called this the “final solution” to their problems, resulting in the destruction of homes and the separation of families all for the goal of political and economic success. This essay will discuss the decisions made by the Nazi army and its allies in terms of worsening the situations for the Jews. In the Wannsee conference of 1942 had proved to be one of the most important events throughout the Holocaust. The reasoning behind this was due to the fact this was were the “final decision” was made, the decision to eradicate the Jews. But not only was this a conference for annihilation but also a conference that arranged several procedures. This conference was arguably one of the best ways of portraying the act of dehumanization, I say this because while the Nazi Germans were discussing on the different ways to progress in their expansions, they …show more content…
The Germans had set the goal of “Germanization,” as an act of creating an only German nation in the vast territories of the East. However, the Germans had ran into some complications with the plan they had created, they had ran into the issues of creating enough of the population they had estimated. As as result of this, the Germans had concluded that they needed to abduct “racially valuable” children away from their homes in Czech and some parts of Western Belorussia in hopes of transforming them to the “Aryan race” they had wished for. This method of “Germanization” had proven to be pointless in my eyes, if the Germans were so focused on creating this Eutopia for Germans, the act of converting a completely different race into their owns seems to show