Facts About the Holocaust
The Holocaust began with Hitler's rise to power in January of 1933 and ended
on VE Day (May 8, 1945). During this time, more than 6 million Jews and millions
of other groups that caught the negative attention of Nazi Germany. While all
the murders were devastating to native populations, none were so devastating
than that of the Jews. During this period, 5,000 Jewish communities were wiped
out and the total that died represented 1/3 of all Jewish people alive at that
time.
Due to a series of events, Hitler assumed dictatorial powers in March 23, 1933
when the Enabling Act was passed. With total power available to him, he quickly
developed a sophisticated police and military force and used them to squelch
anyone who criticized his authority. From this authority stemmed the first
concentation camp, Dachau, just outside of Munich which started as a political
prison camp but evolved over time into a full scale Nazi concentration camp to
exterminate Jews and others.
By the end of 1934, Hiter's campaign against the Jews was in full force. The
Nazis weere claiming them to be mongrels who were corrupting the pure German
race and persecutions of the Jewish grew in strength. Those who could, fled
Germany to other European countries which gave them safety for a while.
The next major event that led towards the widescale destruction of the Jews was
the Meeting in July of 1938 where representatives of 32 countries met in the
French town of Evian to discuss the refugee problems created by the Nazis - but
since no conclusive action was taken, Hitler took that as defacto notice that no
one would act against him while he worked to purge the Jews from his
territories.
Germany started World War II with the invasion of Poland in September of 1939
and in 1940 established Jewish ghettos in Poland where they could be isolated
from the rest of society and kept an eye on. Conditions in the ghettos were
deplorable - not enough food, water, space, sanitation facilities, etc., and
many died from the horrid conditions.
In June 1941, Germany attacked the Soviet Union and began the implementation of
the Final Solution - the beginnings of the systemized destruction of the
undesirables. At first they were just gathered up, shot and thrown into mass
open graves. It is estimated that over 1 million people died in this manner. But
it wasn't efficient enough so more and more death camps sprang up.
From this point, the Germans worked on more and more efficient ways to liquidate
the undesirables by bringing them to death camps to systematically kill them and
recycle any valuables for the war effort. And in this instance, a valuable was a
healthy person - so the Germans would work the prisoners until they had no more
energy to produce and then kill them. In effect, that had millions of slaves
being forced to work to death to help the Germans in their war efforts.
This atrocity continued to the end of the war - with liberation not happening
until July 1944 and later. In July 1944, the Soviet Union liberatated Maidanek
concentration camp and then in January 1945 - Auschwitz concentration camp and
so on until Nazi Germany was totally defeated and all peoples were freed.
All told, there were only about 200,000 Jewish survivors by the end of the
liberation and the death counts from the holocaust were estimated to be around 6
million Jews and millions of other people who did not fit the Aryan mold.