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The Holocaust and Night

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... teeth and fillings from the Jews before the bodies were burned in the crematoria or buried in mass graves. Persecution Gypsies (Sinti and Roma) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Holocaust and Night


1
The Holocaust and Night
2
  • The story of Night
  • The novel begins in Sighet, Transylvania.
  • During the early years of World War II, Sighet
    remained relatively unaffected by the war.
  • The Jews in Sighet believed that they would be
    safe from the persecution that Jews in Germany
    and Poland suffered.

3
Before the War
  • Jews were living in every country in Europe
    before the Nazis came into power in 1933
  • Approximately 9 million Jews
  • Poland and the Soviet Union had the largest
    populations
  • Jews could be found in all walks of life
    farmers, factory workers, business people,
    doctors, teachers, and craftsmen

Group portrait of members of the Jewish community
of Sighet in front of a wooden synagogue.
1930-1939.
4
Anti-Semitism
  • Nazi teachers began to apply the principles of
    racial science by measuring skull size and nose
    length and recording students eye color and hair
    to determine whether students belonged the the
    Aryan race.
  • Basically means the hate of Jews.
  • Jews have faced prejudice and discrimination for
    over 2,000 years.
  • Jews were scapegoats for many problems. For
    example, people blamed Jews for the Black Death
    that killed thousands in Europe during the Middle
    Ages.

5
  • In 1944, however, Elie and all the other Jews in
    town were rounded up in cattle cars and deported
    to concentration camps in Poland. 
  • They were sent to Auschwitz

6
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7
Former prisoners of the "little camp" in
Buchenwald stare out from the wooden bunks in
which they slept three to a "bed." Elie Wiesel is
pictured in the second row of bunks, seventh from
the left, next to the vertical beam
8
  • After surviving the Nazi concentration camps,
    Wiesel vowed never to write about his horrific
    experiences.
  • He eventually changed his mind and wrote Night
    in 1955. Wiesel won the Nobel Prize in 1986 

9
The Nazi Plan
1. Expulsion Get all Jews out of Germany 2.
Containment Put them all together in one place
namely ghettos 3. Final Solution
annihilation
10
Persecution
  • Most of the gas chambers used carbon monoxide
    from diesel engines.
  • In Auschwitz and Majdanek Zyklon B pellets,
    which were a highly poisonous insecticide,
    supplied the gas.
  • After the gassings, prisoners removed hair, gold
    teeth and fillings from the Jews before the
    bodies were burned in the crematoria or buried in
    mass graves.

11
Nazis targeted other individuals and groups in
addition to the Jews
  • Gypsies (Sinti and Roma)
  • Homosexual men
  • Jehovahs Witness
  • Handicapped Germans
  • Polish
  • Political dissidents

12
 A German police officer examines the
identification papers of Jews in the Krakow
ghetto, circa 1941.
13
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16
Jewish people were identified by the triangle and
their ID .
17
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18
Kristallnacht
  • The Night of Broken Glass on November 9-10,
    1938
  • Germans attacked synagogues and Jewish homes and
    businesses

19
Jews, like all other German citizens, were
required to carry identity cards, but their cards
were stamped with a red J. This allowed police
to easily identify them.
20
  • The Nazis used propaganda to promote their
    anti-semitic ideas.
  • One such book was the childrens book, The
    Poisonous Mushroom.

21
After the War
  • Soviet soldiers were the first to liberate camp
    prisoners on July 23, 1944, at Maidanek in
    Poland.
  • British, Canadian, American, and French troops
    also liberated camp prisoners.
  • Troops were shocked at what they saw.

22
  • Most prisoners were emaciated to the point of
    being skeletal
  • Many camps had dead bodies lying in piles like
    cordwood.
  • Many prisoners died even after liberation.

23
http//www.oprah.com/omagazine/200011/omag_200011_
elie.jhtml
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