User:Buidhe/fork

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Holocaust
Part of World War II
From the Auschwitz Album: Hungarian Jews arriving at Auschwitz II in German-occupied Poland, May 1944. Most were "selected" to go to the gas chambers. Camp prisoners are visible in their striped uniforms.[1]
LocationGerman Reich, German-occupied Europe and allies of Nazi Germany
DescriptionGenocide of the European Jews
Date1941–1945[2]
Attack type
DeathsAround 6 million Jews
PerpetratorsAdolf Hitler
Nazi Germany plus its collaborators
Germany's allies
List of major perpetrators of the Holocaust
Motive
TrialsNuremberg trials, Subsequent Nuremberg trials, Trial of Adolf Eichmann, and others

The Holocaust, also known as the Shoah,[a] was the genocide of European Jews during World War II.[b] Between 1941 and 1945, Nazi Germany and its collaborators systematically murdered some six million Jews across German-occupied Europe;[c] around two-thirds of Europe's Jewish population.[d] The murders were carried out in pogroms and mass shootings; by a policy of extermination through labor in concentration camps; and in gas chambers and gas vans in German extermination camps, chiefly Auschwitz-Birkenau, Bełżec, Chełmno, Majdanek, Sobibór, and Treblinka in occupied Poland.[4]

Germany implemented the persecution in stages. Following Adolf Hitler's appointment as chancellor on 30 January 1933, the regime built a network of concentration camps in Germany for political opponents and those deemed "undesirable", starting with Dachau on 22 March 1933.[5] After the passing of the Enabling Act on 24 March,[6] which gave Hitler dictatorial plenary powers, the government began isolating Jews from civil society; this included boycotting Jewish businesses in April 1933 and enacting the Nuremberg Laws in September 1935. On 9–10 November 1938, eight months after Germany annexed Austria, Jewish businesses and other buildings were ransacked or set on fire throughout Germany and Austria on what became known as Kristallnacht (the "Night of Broken Glass"). After Germany invaded Poland in September 1939, triggering World War II, the regime set up ghettos to segregate Jews. Eventually, thousands of camps and other detention sites were established across German-occupied Europe.

The segregation of Jews in ghettos culminated in the policy of extermination the Nazis called the Final Solution to the Jewish Question, discussed by senior government officials at the Wannsee Conference in Berlin in January 1942. As German forces captured territories in the East, all anti-Jewish measures were radicalized. Under the coordination of the SS, with directions from the highest leadership of the Nazi Party, killings were committed within Germany itself, throughout occupied Europe, and within territories controlled by Germany's allies. Paramilitary death squads called Einsatzgruppen, in cooperation with the German Army and local collaborators, murdered around 1.3 million Jews in mass shootings and pogroms from the summer of 1941. By mid-1942, victims were being deported from ghettos across Europe in sealed freight trains to extermination camps where, if they survived the journey, they were gassed, worked or beaten to death, or killed by disease, starvation, cold, medical experiments, or during death marches. The killing continued until the end of World War II in Europe in May 1945.

The European Jews were targeted for extermination as part of a larger event during the Holocaust era (1933–1945),[7] in which Germany and its collaborators persecuted and murdered millions of others, including ethnic Poles, Soviet civilians and prisoners of war, the Roma, the disabled, political and religious dissidents, and gay men.[8]

Terminology and scope[edit]

Terminology[edit]

The first recorded use of the term holocaust in its modern sense was made in 1895 by The New York Times to describe the massacre of Armenian Christians by Ottoman forces.[9] The term comes from the Greek: ὁλόκαυστος, romanizedholókaustos; ὅλος hólos, "whole" + καυστός kaustós, "burnt offering".[e] The biblical term shoah (Hebrew: שואה), meaning "calamity" (and also used to refer to "destruction" since the Middle Ages), became the standard Hebrew term for the murder of the European Jews. According to Haaretz, the writer Yehuda Erez may have been the first to describe events in Germany as the shoah. Davar and later Haaretz both used the term in September 1939.[11][f]

On 3 October 1941 the American Hebrew used the phrase "before the Holocaust", apparently to refer to the situation in France,[13] and in May 1943 the New York Times, discussing the Bermuda Conference, referred to the "hundreds of thousands of European Jews still surviving the Nazi Holocaust".[14] In 1968 the Library of Congress created a new category, "Holocaust, Jewish (1939–1945)".[15]

The term was popularised in the United States by the NBC mini-series Holocaust (1978) about a fictional family of German Jews,[16] and in November that year the President's Commission on the Holocaust was established.[17] As non-Jewish groups began to include themselves as Holocaust victims, many Jews chose to use the Hebrew terms Shoah or Churban.[18][g] The Nazis used the phrase "Final Solution to the Jewish Question" (German: die Endlösung der Judenfrage).[20]

Definition[edit]

Holocaust historians commonly define the Holocaust as the genocide of the European Jews by Nazi Germany and its collaborators between 1941 and 1945.[b] Donald Niewyk and Francis Nicosia, in The Columbia Guide to the Holocaust (2000), favor a definition that includes the Jews, Roma, and disabled people: "the systematic, state-sponsored murder of entire groups determined by heredity".[27][h]

Other groups targeted after Hitler became Chancellor of Germany in January 1933[30] include those whom the Nazis viewed as inherently inferior (some Slavic people, particularly Poles and Russians,[31] the Roma, and the disabled), and those targeted because of their beliefs or behavior (such as Jehovah's Witnesses, communists, and homosexuals).[32] Peter Hayes writes that the persecution of these groups was less uniform than that of the Jews. For example, the Nazis' treatment of the Slavs consisted of "enslavement and gradual attrition", while some Slavs were favored; Hayes lists Bulgarians, Croats, Slovaks, and some Ukrainians.[33] In contrast, according to historian Dan Stone, Hitler regarded the Jews as "a Gegenrasse: a 'counter-race' ... not really human at all".[8]

Distinctive features[edit]

Medical experiments[edit]

The 23 defendants during the Doctors' trial, Nuremberg, 9 December 1946 – 20 August 1947

At least 7,000 camp inmates were subjected to medical experiments; most died during them or as a result.[34] The experiments, which took place at Auschwitz, Buchenwald, Dachau, Natzweiler-Struthof, Neuengamme, Ravensbrück, and Sachsenhausen, sought to uncover strategies to counteract chemical weapons, survive harsh environments, develop new vaccines and drugs and treat wounds. Many men and women were also involuntarily sterilized.[34]

After the war, 23 senior physicians and other medical personnel were charged at Nuremberg with crimes against humanity. They included the head of the German Red Cross, tenured professors, clinic directors, and biomedical researchers.[35] The most notorious physician was Josef Mengele, an SS officer who became the Auschwitz camp doctor on 30 May 1943.[36] Interested in genetics,[36] and keen to experiment on twins, he would pick out subjects on the ramp from the new arrivals during "selection" (to decide who would be gassed immediately and who would be used as slave labor), shouting "Zwillinge heraus!" (twins step forward!).[37] The twins would be measured, killed, and dissected. One of Mengele's assistants said in 1946 that he was told to send organs of interest to the directors of the "Anthropological Institute in Berlin-Dahlem". This is thought to refer to Mengele's academic supervisor, Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer, director from October 1942 of the Kaiser Wilhelm Institute of Anthropology, Human Heredity, and Eugenics in Berlin-Dahlem.[38][i]

Origins[edit]

Antisemitism and the völkisch movement[edit]

Antisemitic Christian Social Party placard from the 1920 Austrian legislative election: "Vote Social Christian. German Christians Save Austria!"[40]

Throughout the Middle Ages in Europe, Jews were subjected to antisemitism based on Christian theology, which blamed them for killing Jesus. Even after the Reformation, Catholicism and Lutheranism continued to persecute Jews, accusing them of blood libels and subjecting them to pogroms and expulsions.[41] The second half of the 19th century saw the emergence, in the German empire and Austria-Hungary, of the völkisch movement, developed by such thinkers as Houston Stewart Chamberlain and Paul de Lagarde. The movement embraced a pseudo-scientific racism that viewed Jews as a race whose members were locked in mortal combat with the Aryan race for world domination.[42] These ideas became commonplace throughout Germany; the professional classes adopted an ideology that did not see humans as racial equals with equal hereditary value.[43] The Nazi Party (the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or National Socialist German Workers' Party) originated as an offshoot of the völkisch movement, and it adopted that movement's antisemitism.[44]

Germany after World War I, Hitler's world view[edit]

After World War I (1914–1918), many Germans did not accept that their country had been defeated. A stab-in-the-back myth developed, insinuating that disloyal politicians, chiefly Jews and communists, had orchestrated Germany's surrender. Inflaming the anti-Jewish sentiment was the apparent over-representation of Jews in the leadership of communist revolutionary governments in Europe, such as Ernst Toller, head of a short-lived revolutionary government in Bavaria. This perception contributed to the canard of Jewish Bolshevism.[45]

Early antisemites in the Nazi Party included Dietrich Eckart, publisher of the Völkischer Beobachter, the party's newspaper, and Alfred Rosenberg, who wrote antisemitic articles for it in the 1920s. Rosenberg's vision of a secretive Jewish conspiracy ruling the world would influence Hitler's views of Jews by making them the driving force behind communism.[46] Central to Hitler's world view was the idea of expansion and Lebensraum (living space) in Eastern Europe for German Aryans, a policy of what Doris Bergen called "race and space". Open about his hatred of Jews, he subscribed to common antisemitic stereotypes.[47] From the early 1920s onwards, he compared the Jews to germs and said they should be dealt with in the same way. He viewed Marxism as a Jewish doctrine, said he was fighting against "Jewish Marxism", and believed that Jews had created communism as part of a conspiracy to destroy Germany.[48]

Rise of Nazi Germany[edit]

Dictatorship and repression (January 1933)[edit]

Nazi boycott of Jewish businesses: SA troopers urge a boycott outside Israel's Department Store, Berlin, 1 April 1933. All signs read: "Germans! Defend yourselves! Don't buy from Jews!"[49]

With the appointment in January 1933 of Adolf Hitler as Chancellor of Germany and the Nazi's seizure of power, German leaders proclaimed the rebirth of the Volksgemeinschaft ("people's community").[50] Nazi policies divided the population into two groups: the Volksgenossen ("national comrades") who belonged to the Volksgemeinschaft, and the Gemeinschaftsfremde ("community aliens") who did not. Enemies were divided into three groups: the "racial" or "blood" enemies, such as the Jews and Roma; political opponents of Nazism, such as Marxists, liberals, Christians, and the "reactionaries" viewed as wayward "national comrades"; and moral opponents, such as gay men, the work-shy, and habitual criminals. The latter two groups were to be sent to concentration camps for "re-education", with the aim of eventual absorption into the Volksgemeinschaft. "Racial" enemies could never belong to the Volksgemeinschaft; they were to be removed from society.[51]

Before and after the March 1933 Reichstag elections, the Nazis intensified their campaign of violence against opponents,[52] setting up concentration camps for extrajudicial imprisonment.[53] One of the first, at Dachau, opened on 22 March 1933.[54] Initially the camp contained mostly Communists and Social Democrats.[55] Other early prisons were consolidated by mid-1934 into purpose-built camps outside the cities, run exclusively by the SS.[56] The camps served as a deterrent by terrorizing Germans who did not support the regime.[57]

Throughout the 1930s, the legal, economic, and social rights of Jews were steadily restricted.[58] On 1 April 1933, there was a boycott of Jewish businesses.[59] On 7 April 1933, the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service was passed, which excluded Jews and other "non-Aryans" from the civil service.[60] Jews were disbarred from practicing law, being editors or proprietors of newspapers, joining the Journalists' Association, or owning farms.[61] In Silesia, in March 1933, a group of men entered the courthouse and beat up Jewish lawyers; Friedländer writes that, in Dresden, Jewish lawyers and judges were dragged out of courtrooms during trials.[62] Jewish students were restricted by quotas from attending schools and universities.[60] Jewish businesses were targeted for closure or "Aryanization", the forcible sale to Germans; of the approximately 50,000 Jewish-owned businesses in Germany in 1933, about 7,000 were still Jewish-owned in April 1939. Works by Jewish composers,[63] authors, and artists were excluded from publications, performances, and exhibitions.[64] Jewish doctors were dismissed or urged to resign. The Deutsches Ärzteblatt (a medical journal) reported on 6 April 1933: "Germans are to be treated by Germans only."[65]

Nuremberg Laws, Jewish emigration[edit]

Czechoslovakian Jews at Croydon airport, England, 31 March 1939, before deportation[66]

On 15 September 1935, the Reichstag passed the Reich Citizenship Law and the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor, known as the Nuremberg Laws. The former said that only those of "German or kindred blood" could be citizens. Anyone with three or more Jewish grandparents was classified as a Jew.[67] The second law said: "Marriages between Jews and subjects of the state of German or related blood are forbidden." Sexual relationships between them were also criminalized; Jews were not allowed to employ German women under the age of 45 in their homes.[68][67] The laws referred to Jews but applied equally to the Roma and black Germans. Although other European countries—Bulgaria, Independent State of Croatia, Hungary, Italy, Romania, Slovakia, and Vichy France—passed similar legislation,[67] Gerlach notes that "Nazi Germany adopted more nationwide anti-Jewish laws and regulations (about 1,500) than any other state."[69] By the end of 1934, 50,000 German Jews had left Germany,[70] and by the end of 1938, approximately half the German Jewish population had left.[71]

German annexation of Austria (12 March 1938)[edit]

March or April 1938: Jews are forced to scrub the pavement in Vienna, Austria.

On 12 March 1938, Germany annexed Austria. Ninety percent of Austria's 176,000 Jews lived in Vienna.[72] The SS and SA smashed shops and stole cars belonging to Jews; Austrian police stood by, some already wearing swastika armbands.[73] Jews were forced to perform humiliating acts such as scrubbing the streets or cleaning toilets while wearing tefillin.[74] Around 7,000 Jewish businesses were "Aryanized", and all the legal restrictions on Jews in Germany were imposed in Austria.[75] The Évian Conference was held in France in July 1938 by 32 countries, to help German and Austrian Jewish refugees, but little was accomplished and most countries did not increase the number of refugees they would accept.[76]

Kristallnacht (9–10 November 1938)[edit]

Potsdamer Straße 26, Berlin, the day after Kristallnacht, November 1938

On 7 November 1938, Herschel Grynszpan, a Polish Jew, shot the German diplomat Ernst vom Rath in the German Embassy in Paris, in retaliation for the expulsion of his parents and siblings from Germany.[77][j] When vom Rath died on 9 November, the synagogue and Jewish shops in Dessau were attacked. According to Joseph Goebbels' diary, Hitler decided that the police should be withdrawn: "For once the Jews should feel the rage of the people," Goebbels reported him as saying.[79] The result, David Cesarani writes, was "murder, rape, looting, destruction of property, and terror on an unprecedented scale".[80]

Known as Kristallnacht ("Night of Broken Glass"), the pogrom on 9–10 November 1938 saw over 7,500 Jewish shops (out of 9,000) looted and attacked, and over 1,000 synagogues damaged or destroyed. Groups of Jews were forced by the crowd to watch their synagogues burn; in Bensheim they were made to dance around it and in Laupheim to kneel before it.[81] At least 90 Jews were murdered. The damage was estimated at 39 million Reichsmark.[82] Contrary to Goebbel's statements in his diary, the police were not withdrawn; the regular police, Gestapo, SS and SA all took part, although Heinrich Himmler was angry that the SS had joined in.[83] Attacks took place in Austria too.[84] The extent of the violence shocked the rest of the world.

Between 9 and 16 November, 30,000 Jews were sent to the Buchenwald, Dachau, and Sachsenhausen concentration camps.[85] Many were released within weeks; by early 1939, 2,000 remained in the camps.[86] German Jewry was held collectively responsible for restitution of the damage; they also had to pay an "atonement tax" of over a billion Reichsmark. Insurance payments for damage to their property were confiscated by the government. A decree on 12 November 1938 barred Jews from most remaining occupations.[87] Kristallnacht marked the end of any sort of public Jewish activity and culture, and Jews stepped up their efforts to leave the country.[88]

Resettlement[edit]

Before World War II, Germany considered mass deportation from Europe of German, and later European, Jewry.[89] Among the areas considered for possible resettlement were British Palestine and, after the war began, French Madagascar,[90] Siberia, and two reservations in Poland.[91][k] Palestine was the only location to which any German resettlement plan produced results, via the Haavara Agreement between the Zionist Federation of Germany and the German government. Between November 1933 and December 1939, the agreement resulted in the emigration of about 53,000 German Jews, who were allowed to transfer RM 100 million of their assets to Palestine by buying German goods, in violation of the Jewish-led anti-Nazi boycott of 1933.[93]

Outbreak of World War II[edit]

Invasion of Poland (1 September 1939)[edit]

Ghettos[edit]

Between 2.7 and 3 million Polish Jews were murdered during the Holocaust, out of a population of 3.3 – 3.5 million.[94] More Jews lived in Poland in 1939 than anywhere else in Europe;[3] another 3 million lived in the Soviet Union. When the German Wehrmacht (armed forces) invaded Poland on 1 September 1939, triggering declarations of war from the UK and France, Germany gained control of about two million Jews in the territory it occupied. The rest of Poland was occupied by the Soviet Union, which invaded Poland from the east on 17 September 1939.[95]

photograph
Wall of the Warsaw Ghetto dividing Iron-Gate Square, 24 May 1941; Lubomirski Palace (left) is outside the ghetto.
photograph
Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto march to the Umschlagplatz before being sent to a camp, April or May 1943.

The Wehrmacht in Poland was accompanied by seven SS Einsatzgruppen der Sicherheitspolitizei ("special task forces of the Security Police") and an Einsatzkommando, numbering 3,000 men in all, whose role was to deal with "all anti-German elements in hostile country behind the troops in combat".[96] German plans for Poland included expelling non-Jewish Poles from large areas, settling Germans on the emptied lands,[97] sending the Polish leadership to camps, denying the lower classes an education, and confining Jews.[98] The Germans sent Jews from all territories they had annexed (Austria, the Czech lands, and western Poland) to the central section of Poland, which was termed the General Government.[99] Jews were eventually to be expelled to areas of Poland not annexed by Germany. Still, in the meantime, they would be concentrated in major cities ghettos to achieve, according to an order from Reinhard Heydrich dated 21 September 1939, "a better possibility of control and later deportation".[100][l] From 1 December, Jews were required to wear Star of David armbands.[99]

The Germans stipulated that each ghetto be led by a Judenrat of 24 male Jews, who would be responsible for carrying out German orders.[102] These orders included, from 1942, facilitating deportations to extermination camps.[103] The Warsaw Ghetto was established in November 1940, and by early 1941 it contained 445,000 people;[104] the second largest, the Łódź Ghetto, held 160,000 as of May 1940.[105] The inhabitants had to pay for food and other supplies by selling whatever goods they could produce.[104] In the ghettos and forced-labor camps, at least half a million died of starvation, disease, and poor living conditions.[106] Although the Warsaw Ghetto contained 30 percent of the city's population, it occupied only 2.4 percent of its area,[107] averaging over nine people per room.[108] Over 43,000 residents died there in 1941.[109]

Jewish women were stripped, beaten and raped in Lwów, occupied eastern Poland (later Lviv, Ukraine), during the Lviv pogroms, July 1941.[110][m]

During the German invasion, a wave of pogroms targeted Jews in the areas that had been annexed by the Soviet Union in 1939 and 1940.[111] In eastern Poland and what is now western Ukraine, the pogroms were carried out by civilians and police; thousands of Jews were killed in at least 219 locations. In Lithuania, by contrast, the pogroms were carried out by organized Lithuanian paramilitaries.[112] Pogroms also occurred in the Romanian borderlands.[113] The pogroms were extremely violent with many Jews beaten, raped, stolen from, and brutally murdered.[114] Although German soldiers and paramilitary units were present in the vicinity of many of the pogroms—although not all of them—their role in instigating violence is controversial.[115]

Invasion of Norway and Denmark[edit]

Germany invaded Norway and Denmark on 9 April 1940, during Operation Weserübung. Denmark was overrun so quickly that there was no time for a resistance to form. Consequently, the Danish government stayed in power and the Germans found it easier to work through it. Because of this, few measures were taken against the Danish Jews before 1942.[116] By June 1940 Norway was completely occupied.[117] In late 1940, the country's 1,800 Jews were banned from certain occupations, and in 1941 all Jews had to register their property with the government.[118] On 26 November 1942, 532 Jews were taken by police officers, at four o'clock in the morning, to Oslo harbor, where they boarded a German ship. From Germany they were sent by freight train to Auschwitz. According to Dan Stone, only nine survived the war.[119]

Invasion of France and the Low Countries[edit]

Jewish women wearing yellow badges in occupied Paris, June 1942

In May 1940, Germany invaded the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Belgium, and France. After Belgium's surrender, the country was ruled by a German military governor, Alexander von Falkenhausen, who enacted anti-Jewish measures against its 90,000 Jews, many of them refugees from Germany or Eastern Europe.[120] In the Netherlands, the Germans installed Arthur Seyss-Inquart as Reichskommissar, who began to persecute the country's 140,000 Jews. Jews were forced out of their jobs and had to register with the government. In February 1941, non-Jewish Dutch citizens staged a strike in protest that was quickly crushed.[121] From July 1942, over 107,000 Dutch Jews were deported; only 5,000 survived the war. Most were sent to Auschwitz; the first transport of 1,135 Jews left Holland for Auschwitz on 15 July 1942. Between 2 March and 20 July 1943, 34,313 Jews were sent in 19 transports to the Sobibór extermination camp, where all but 18 are thought to have been gassed on arrival.[122]

France had approximately 330,000 Jews, divided between the German-occupied north and the unoccupied collaborationist southern areas in Vichy France (named after the town Vichy), more than half this Jewish population were not French citizens, but refugees who had fled Nazi persecution in other countries. The occupied regions were under the control of a military governor, and there, anti-Jewish measures were not enacted as quickly as they were in the Vichy-controlled areas.[123] In July 1940, the Jews in the parts of Alsace-Lorraine that had been annexed to Germany were expelled into Vichy France.[124] Vichy France's government implemented anti-Jewish measures in Metropolitan France, in French Algeria and in the two French Protectorates of Tunisia and Morocco.[125] Tunisia had 85,000 Jews when the Germans and Italians arrived in November 1942; an estimated 5,000 Jews were subjected to forced labor.[126] The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum estimates that between 72,900 and 74,000 Jews were murdered during the Holocaust in France.[127]

Madagascar Plan[edit]

The fall of France gave rise to the Madagascar Plan in the summer of 1940, when French Madagascar in Southeast Africa became the focus of discussions about deporting all European Jews there; it was thought that the area's harsh living conditions would hasten deaths.[128] Several Polish, French and British leaders had discussed the idea in the 1930s, as did German leaders from 1938.[129] Adolf Eichmann's office was ordered to investigate the option, but no evidence of planning exists until after the defeat of France in June 1940.[130] Germany's inability to defeat Britain, something that was obvious to the Germans by September 1940, prevented the movement of Jews across the seas,[131] and the Foreign Ministry abandoned the plan in February 1942.[132]

Invasion of Yugoslavia and Greece[edit]

Greek Jews from Saloniki are forced to exercise or dance, July 1942.

Yugoslavia and Greece were invaded in April 1941 and surrendered before the end of the month. Germany, Italy and Bulgaria divided Greece into occupation zones but did not eliminate it as a country. The pre-war Greek Jewish population had been between 72,000 and 77,000. By the end of the war, some 10,000 remained, representing the lowest survival rate in the Balkans and among the lowest in Europe.[133]

Yugoslavia, home to 80,000 Jews, was dismembered; regions in the north were annexed by Germany and Hungary, regions along the coast were made part of Italy, Kosovo and western Macedonia were given to Albania, while Bulgaria received eastern Macedonia. The rest of the country was divided into the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), an Italian-German puppet state whose territory comprised Croatia and Bosnia-Herzegovina, with the Croatian fascist Ustaše party placed in power; and German occupied Serbia, governed by German military and police administrators[134] who appointed the Serbian collaborationist puppet government, Government of National Salvation, headed by Milan Nedić.[135][136][137] In August 1942 Serbia was declared free of Jews,[138] after the Wehrmacht and German police, assisted by collaborators of the Nedić government and others such as Zbor, a pro-Nazi and pan-Serbian fascist party, had murdered nearly the entire population of 17,000 Jews.[135][136][137]

In the Independent State of Croatia (NDH), the Nazi regime demanded that its rulers, the Ustaše, adopt antisemitic racial policies, persecute Jews and set up several concentration camps. NDH leader Ante Pavelić and the Ustaše accepted Nazi demands. By the end of April 1941 the Ustaše required all Jews to wear insignia, typically a yellow Star of David[139] and started confiscating Jewish property in October 1941.[140] During the same time as their persecution of Serbs and Roma, the Ustaše took part in the Holocaust, and killed the majority of the country's Jews;[141] the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum estimates that 30,148 Jews were murdered.[127] According to Jozo Tomasevich, the Jewish community in Zagreb was the only one to survive out of 115 Jewish religious communities in Yugoslavia in 1939–1940.[142]

The state broke away from Nazi antisemitic policy by promising honorary Aryan citizenship, and thus freedom from persecution, to Jews who were willing to contribute to the "Croat cause". Marcus Tanner states that the "SS complained that at least 5,000 Jews were still alive in the NDH and that thousands of others had emigrated, by buying 'honorary Aryan' status".[143] Nevenko Bartulin, however posits that of the total Jewish population of the NDH, only 100 Jews attained the legal status of Aryan citizens, 500 including their families. In both cases a relatively small portion out of a Jewish population of 37,000.[144]

In the Bulgarian annexed zones of Macedonia and Thrace, upon demand of the German authorities, the Bulgarians handed over the entire Jewish population, about 12,000 Jews to the military authorities, all were deported.[145]

Invasion of the Soviet Union (22 June 1941)[edit]

Reasons[edit]

Germany invaded the Soviet Union on 22 June 1941, a day Timothy Snyder called "one of the most significant days in the history of Europe ... the beginning of a calamity that defies description".[146] German propaganda portrayed the conflict as an ideological war between German National Socialism and Jewish Bolshevism, and as a racial war between the Germans and the Jewish, Romani, and Slavic Untermenschen ("sub-humans").[147] The war was driven by the need for resources, including, according to David Cesarani, agricultural land to feed Germany, natural resources for German industry, and control over Europe's largest oil fields.[148]

Between early fall 1941 and late spring 1942, Jürgen Matthäus writes, 2 million of the 3.5 million Soviet POWs captured by the Wehrmacht had been executed or had died of neglect and abuse. By 1944 the Soviet death toll was at least 20 million.[149]

Mass shootings[edit]

SS-Gruppenführer Otto Ohlendorf, commander of Einsatzgruppe D, pleads not guilty during the Einsatzgruppen trial, Nuremberg, 15 September 1947. He was executed in 1951.

As the method of widespread execution was shooting rather than gas chamber, the Holocaust in the Soviet Union is sometimes referred to as the Holocaust by bullets.

As German troops advanced, the mass shooting of "anti-German elements" was assigned, as in Poland, to the Einsatzgruppen, this time under the command of Reinhard Heydrich.[150] The point of the attacks was to destroy the local Communist Party leadership and therefore the state, including "Jews in the Party and State employment", and any "radical elements".[n] Cesarani writes that the killing of Jews was at this point a "subset" of these activities.[152]

Typically, victims would undress and give up their valuables before lining up beside a ditch to be shot, or they would be forced to climb into the ditch, lie on a lower layer of corpses, and wait to be killed.[153] The latter was known as Sardinenpackung ("packing sardines"), a method reportedly started by SS officer Friedrich Jeckeln.[154]

The German army took part in these shootings as bystanders, photographers, and active shooters.[155] In Lithuania, Latvia and western Ukraine, locals were deeply involved; Latvian and Lithuanian units participated in the murder of Jews in Belarus, and in the south, Ukrainians killed about 24,000 Jews. Some Ukrainians went to Poland to serve as guards in the camps.[156]

Einsatzgruppe A arrived in the Baltic states (Estonia, Latvia, and Lithuania) with Army Group North; Einsatzgruppe B in Belarus with Army Group Center; Einsatzgruppe C in Ukraine with Army Group South; and Einsatzgruppe D went further south into Ukraine with the 11th Army.[157] Each Einsatzgruppe numbered around 600–1,000 men, with a few women in administrative roles.[158] Traveling with nine German Order Police battalions and three units of the Waffen-SS,[159] the Einsatzgruppen and their local collaborators had murdered almost 500,000 people by the winter of 1941–1942. By the end of the war, they had killed around two million, including about 1.3 million Jews and up to a quarter of a million Roma.[160]

Notable massacres include the July 1941 Ponary massacre near Vilnius (Soviet Lithuania), in which Einsatgruppe B and Lithuanian collaborators shot at least 70,000 Jews, 20,000 Poles and 8,000 Russians.[161] In the Kamianets-Podilskyi massacre (Soviet Ukraine), nearly 24,000 Jews were killed between 27 and 30 August 1941.[149] The largest massacre was at a ravine called Babi Yar outside Kiev (also Soviet Ukraine), where 33,771 Jews were killed on 29–30 September 1941.[162][163] The Germans used the ravine for mass killings throughout the war; up to 100,000 may have been killed there.[164]

Toward the Holocaust[edit]

Ivanhorod Einsatzgruppen photograph: Einsatzgruppe shooting a woman and child, near Ivangorod, Ukraine, 1942[165]

At first the Einsatzgruppen targeted the male Jewish intelligentsia, defined as male Jews aged 15–60 who had worked for the state and in certain professions. The commandos described them as "Bolshevist functionaries" and similar. From August 1941 they began to murder women and children too.[166] Christopher Browning reports that on 1 August 1941, the SS Cavalry Brigade passed an order to its units: "Explicit order by RF-SS [Heinrich Himmler, Reichsführer-SS]. All Jews must be shot. Drive the female Jews into the swamps."[167]

Two years later, in a speech on 6 October 1943 to party leaders, Heinrich Himmler said he had ordered that women and children be shot, but according to Peter Longerich and Christian Gerlach, the murder of women and children began at different times in different areas, suggesting local influence.[168]

Historians agree that there was a "gradual radicalization" between the spring and autumn of 1941 of what Longerich calls Germany's Judenpolitik, but they disagree about whether a decision—Führerentscheidung (Führer's decision)—to murder the European Jews had been made at this point.[169][o] According to Browning, writing in 2004, most historians say there was no order, before the invasion of the Soviet Union, to kill all the Soviet Jews.[171] Longerich wrote in 2010 that the gradual increase in brutality and numbers killed between July and September 1941 suggests there was "no particular order". Instead, it was a question of "a process of increasingly radical interpretations of orders".[172]

Concentration and labor camps[edit]

The "stairs of death" at the Weiner Graben quarry, Mauthausen concentration camp, Austria, 1942[173]

Germany first used concentration camps as places of terror and unlawful incarceration of political opponents.[174] Large numbers of Jews were not sent there until after Kristallnacht in November 1938.[175] After war broke out in 1939, new camps were established, many outside Germany in occupied Europe.[176] Most wartime prisoners of the camps were not Germans but belonged to countries under German occupation.[177]

After 1942, the economic function of the camps, previously secondary to their penal and terror functions, came to the fore. Forced labor of camp prisoners became commonplace.[175] The guards became much more brutal, and the death rate increased as the guards not only beat and starved prisoners but killed them more frequently.[177] Vernichtung durch Arbeit ("extermination through labor") was a policy; camp inmates would literally be worked to death, or to physical exhaustion, at which point they would be gassed or shot.[178] The Germans estimated the average prisoner's lifespan in a concentration camp at three months, as a result of lack of food and clothing, constant epidemics, and frequent punishments for the most minor transgressions.[179] The shifts were long and often involved exposure to dangerous materials.[180]

Transportation to and between camps was often carried out in closed freight cars with little air or water, long delays and prisoners packed tightly.[181] In mid-1942 work camps began requiring newly arrived prisoners to be placed in quarantine for four weeks.[182] Prisoners wore colored triangles on their uniforms, the color denoting the reason for their incarceration. Red signified a political prisoner, Jehovah's Witnesses had purple triangles, "asocials" and criminals wore black and green, and gay men wore pink.[183] Jews wore two yellow triangles, one over another to form a six-pointed star.[184] Prisoners in Auschwitz were tattooed on arrival with an identification number.[185]

Germany's allies[edit]

The allies of Nazi Germany comprise the independent states that aligned themselves with the Reich. These countries were not necessarily signatories of the Tripartite Pact (Finland) and signatories of the Tripartite Pact were not necessarily allies of Germany (Slovakia and Croatia were puppet states). Thus, the 5 German allies in Europe were: Romania, Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy and Finland. All of these countries were under no formal German occupation and maintained complete domestic administrations.[186][187]

Holocaust victims of Germany's allies[188]

Ally of Nazi Germany Jews deported and/or killed
(share of Holocaust total)
 Romania 285,505 (4.6%)
 Hungary 63,000 (1%)[p]
 Bulgaria 11,393 (0.2%)
 Finland 8 (0.0001%)
 Italy None (0.0%)[q]

Romania[edit]

Bodies being pulled out of a train carrying Romanian Jews from the Iași pogrom, July 1941

Romania ranks first among Holocaust perpetrator countries other than Germany.[189] Romanian antisemitic legislation was not an attempt to placate the Germans, but rather entirely home-grown, preceding German hegemony and Nazi Germany itself. The ascendance of Germany enabled Romania to disregard the minorities treaties that were imposed upon the country after the First World War. Antisemitic legislation in Romania was usually aimed at exploiting Jews rather than humiliating them as in Germany.[190]

At the end of 1937, the government of Octavian Goga came to power, Romania thus becoming the second overtly antisemitic state in Europe.[191][192] Romania was the second country in Europe after Germany to enact antisemitic legislation, and the only one besides Germany to do so before the 1938 Anschluss.[193][194] Romania was the only country other than Germany itself that "implemented all the steps of the destruction process, from definitions to killings."[195][196]

According to Dan Stone, the murder of Jews in Romania was "essentially an independent undertaking".[197] Although Jewish persecution was unsystematic within the pre-war borders of Romania, it was systematic in the Romanian occupied territories of the Soviet Union.[198] Romania implemented anti-Jewish measures in May and June 1940 as part of its efforts towards an alliance with Germany. By March 1941 all Jews had lost their jobs and had their property confiscated.[199] In June 1941 Romania joined Germany in its invasion of the Soviet Union and within the first few weeks of the invasion, almost the entire rural Jewish population of Bessarabia and Bukovina were decimated.[198][200]

Thousands of Jews were murdered in January and June 1941 in the Bucharest and Iași pogroms.[201] According to a 2004 report by Tuvia Friling and others, up to 14,850 Jews were murdered during the Iași pogrom.[202] The Romanian military murdered up to 25,000 Jews during the Odessa massacre between 18 October 1941 and March 1942, assisted by gendarmes and the police.[203] Within the city of Odessa, Jews were segregated to ghettos where they were later deported en masse, with the majority dying from disease, hunger and murder.[204] In July 1941, Mihai Antonescu, Romania's deputy prime minister, said it was time for "total ethnic purification, for a revision of national life, and for purging our race of all those elements which are foreign to its soul, which have grown like mistletoes and darken our future."[205] Romania set up concentration camps in Transnistria, reportedly extremely brutal, where 154,000–170,000 Jews were deported from 1941 to 1943.[206] In the Odessa and Pervomaisk regions alone, Romanian authorities were responsible for the death of over 150,000 Jews.[198]

Bulgaria, Hungary, Italy and Finland[edit]

Ľudové noviny, Slovakian propaganda office newspaper, 21 September 1941: "We've dealt with the Jews! The strictest anti-Jewish laws are Slovakian"[r]
Budapest, Hungary, October 1944

Bulgaria introduced anti-Jewish measures between 1940 and 1943 (requirement to wear a yellow star, restrictions on owning telephones or radios, and so on).[207] It annexed Thrace and Macedonia, and in February 1943 agreed to a demand from Germany that it deport 20,000 Jews to the Treblinka extermination camp. All 11,000 Jews from the annexed territories were sent to be murdered, and plans were made to deport 6,000–8,000 Bulgarian Jews from Sofia to meet the quota.[208] When this became public, the Orthodox Church and many Bulgarians protested, and King Boris III canceled the plans.[209] Instead, Jews native to Bulgaria were sent to the provinces.[208]

Although Hungary expelled Jews who were not citizens from its newly annexed lands in 1941, it did not deport most of its Jews[210] until the German invasion of Hungary in March 1944. Between 15 May and early July 1944, 437,000 Jews were deported, mostly to Auschwitz, where most of them were murdered by gas; there were four transports a day, each carrying 3,000 people.[211] In Budapest in October and November 1944, the Hungarian Arrow Cross forced 50,000 Jews to march to the Austrian border as part of a deal with Germany to supply forced labor. So many died that the marches were stopped.[212]

Italy introduced antisemitic measures, but there was less antisemitism there than in Germany, and Italian-occupied countries were generally safer for Jews than those occupied by Germany.[213] Most Italian Jews, over 40,000, survived the Holocaust.[214] In September 1943, Germany occupied the northern and central areas of Italy and established a fascist puppet state, the Italian Social Republic or Salò Republic.[215] Officers from RSHA IV B4, a Gestapo unit, began deporting Jews to Auschwitz-Birkenau.[216] The first group of 1,034 Jews arrived from Rome on 23 October 1943; 839 were murdered by gas.[217] Around 8,500 Jews were deported in all.[214] Several forced labor camps for Jews were established in Italian-controlled Libya; almost 2,600 Libyan Jews were sent to camps, where 562 were murdered.[218]

In Finland, the government was pressured in 1942 to hand over its 150–200 non-Finnish Jews to Germany. After opposition from both the government and public, eight non-Finnish Jews were deported in late 1942; only one survived the war.[219]

Other[edit]

Slovakia (German client[220])[edit]

Stone writes that Slovakia, led by Roman Catholic priest Jozef Tiso (president of the Slovak State, 1939–1945), was "one of the most loyal of the collaborationist regimes". It deported 7,500 Jews in 1938 on its own initiative; introduced anti-Jewish measures in 1940; and by the autumn of 1942 had deported around 60,000 Jews to Poland. Another 2,396 were deported and 2,257 killed that autumn during an uprising, and 13,500 were deported between October 1944 and March 1945.[221] According to Stone, "the Holocaust in Slovakia was far more than a German project, even if it was carried out in the context of a 'puppet' state."[222]

Final Solution[edit]

Pearl Harbor, Germany declares war on the United States[edit]

11 December 1941: Adolf Hitler speaking at the Kroll Opera House to Reichstag members about war in the Pacific.[s]

On 7 December 1941, Japanese aircraft attacked Pearl Harbor, an American naval base in Honolulu, Hawaii, killing 2,403 Americans. The following day, the United States declared war on Japan, and on 11 December, Germany declared war on the United States.[223] According to Deborah Dwork and Robert Jan van Pelt, Hitler had trusted American Jews, whom he assumed were all-powerful, to keep the United States out of the war in the interests of German Jews. When America declared war, he blamed the Jews.[224]

Nearly three years earlier, on 30 January 1939, Hitler had told the Reichstag: "if the international Jewish financiers in and outside Europe should succeed in plunging the nations once more into a world war, then the result will be not the Bolshevising of the earth, and thus a victory of Jewry, but the annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe!"[225] In the view of Christian Gerlach, Hitler "announced his decision in principle" to annihilate the Jews on or around 12 December 1941, one day after his declaration of war. On that day, Hitler gave a speech in his apartment at the Reich Chancellery to senior Nazi Party leaders: the Reichsleiter and the Gauleiter.[226] The following day, Joseph Goebbels, the Reich Minister of Propaganda, noted in his diary:

Regarding the Jewish question, the Führer is determined to clear the table. He warned the Jews that if they were to cause another world war, it would lead to their destruction. Those were not empty words. Now the world war has come. The destruction of the Jews must be its necessary consequence. We cannot be sentimental about it.[t]

Christopher Browning argues that Hitler gave no order during the Reich Chancellery meeting but made clear that he had intended his 1939 warning to the Jews to be taken literally, and he signaled to party leaders that they could give appropriate orders to others.[228] According to Gerlach, an unidentified former German Sicherheitsdienst officer wrote in a report in 1944, after defecting to Switzerland: "After America entered the war, the annihilation (Ausrottung) of all European Jews was initiated on the Führer's order."[229]

Four days after Hitler's meeting with party leaders, Hans Frank, Governor-General of the General Government area of occupied Poland, who was at the meeting, spoke to district governors: "We must put an end to the Jews ... I will in principle proceed only on the assumption that they will disappear. They must go."[230][u] On 18 December 1941, Hitler and Himmler held a meeting to which Himmler referred in his appointment book as "Juden frage | als Partisanen auszurotten" ("Jewish question / to be exterminated as partisans"). Browning interprets this as a meeting to discuss how to justify and speak about the killing.[232]

Wannsee Conference (20 January 1942)[edit]

Am Großen Wannsee 56–58, Berlin

SS-Obergruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich, head of the Reich Security Head Office (RSHA), convened what became known as the Wannsee Conference on 20 January 1942 at Am Großen Wannsee 56–58, a villa in Berlin's Wannsee suburb.[233] The meeting had been scheduled for 9 December 1941, and invitations had been sent between 29 November and 1 December,[234] but on 8 December it had been postponed indefinitely, probably because of Pearl Harbor.[235] On 8 January, Heydrich sent out notes again, this time suggesting 20 January.[236]

The 15 men present at Wannsee included Heydrich, SS Lieutenant Colonel Adolf Eichmann, head of Reich Security Head Office Referat IV B4 ("Jewish affairs"); SS Major General Heinrich Müller, head of RSHA Department IV (the Gestapo); and other SS and party leaders.[v] According to Browning, eight of the 15 had doctorates: "Thus it was not a dimwitted crowd unable to grasp what was going to be said to them."[238] Thirty copies of the minutes, the Wannsee Protocol, were made. Copy no. 16 was found by American prosecutors in March 1947 in a German Foreign Office folder.[239] Written by Eichmann and stamped "Top Secret", the minutes were written in "euphemistic language" on Heydrich's instructions, according to Eichmann's later testimony.[240]

Dining room in which the conference took place
Pages from the Wannsee Protocol listing the number of Jews in every European country[241][w]

Discussing plans for a "final solution to the Jewish question" ("Endlösung der Judenfrage"), and a "final solution to the Jewish question in Europe" ("Endlösung der europäischen Judenfrage"),[241] the conference was held to coordinate efforts and policies ("Parallelisierung der Linienführung"), and to ensure that authority rested with Heydrich. There was discussion about whether to include the German Mischlinge (half-Jews).[242] Heydrich told the meeting: "Another possible solution of the problem has now taken the place of emigration, i.e. the evacuation of the Jews to the East, provided that the Fuehrer gives the appropriate approval in advance."[241] He continued:

Under proper guidance, in the course of the Final Solution, the Jews are to be allocated for appropriate labor in the East. Able-bodied Jews, separated according to sex, will be taken in large work columns to these areas for work on roads, in the course of which action doubtless a large portion will be eliminated by natural causes.

The possible final remnant will, since it will undoubtedly consist of the most resistant portion, have to be treated accordingly because it is the product of natural selection and would, if released, act as the seed of a new Jewish revival. (See the experience of history.)

In the course of the practical execution of the Final Solution, Europe will be combed through from west to east. Germany proper, including the Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia, will have to be handled first due to the housing problem and additional social and political necessities.

The evacuated Jews will first be sent, group by group, to so-called transit ghettos, from which they will be transported to the East.[241]

The evacuations were regarded as provisional ("Ausweichmöglichkeiten").[243][x] The final solution would encompass the 11 million Jews living in territories controlled by Germany and elsewhere in Europe, including Britain, Ireland, Switzerland, Turkey, Sweden, Portugal, Spain, and Hungary, "dependent on military developments".[243] According to Longerich, "the Jews were to be annihilated by a combination of forced labour and mass murder."[245]

Extermination camps[edit]

At the end of 1941 in occupied Poland, the Germans began building additional camps or expanding existing ones. Auschwitz, for example, was expanded in October 1941 by building Auschwitz II-Birkenau a few kilometers away.[4] By the spring or summer of 1942, gas chambers had been installed in these new facilities, except for Chełmno, which used gas vans.

Overview of the Nazi concentration camps in Poland
Camp Location
(occupied Poland)
Deaths Gas
chambers
Gas
vans
Construction
began
Mass gassing
began
Source
Auschwitz II[246] Brzezinka 1,082,000
(all Auschwitz camps;
includes 960,000 Jews)
[y]
4[z] Oct 1941
(built as POW camp)[250]
c. 20 Mar 1942[251][aa]
Bełżec[252] Bełżec 600,000[252] NoN 1 November 1941[253] 17 March 1942[253]
Chełmno[254] Chełmno nad Nerem 320,000[254] NoN 8 December 1941[255]
Majdanek[256] Lublin 78,000[257] NoN 7 October 1941
(built as POW camp)
[258]
Oct 1942[259]
Sobibór[260] Sobibór 250,000[260] NoN Feb 1942[261] May 1942[261]
Treblinka[262] Treblinka 870,000[262] NoN May 1942[263] 23 July 1942[263]
Total 3,218,000

Other camps sometimes described as extermination camps include Maly Trostinets near Minsk in the occupied Soviet Union, where 65,000 are thought to have been murdered, mostly by shooting but also in gas vans;[264] Mauthausen in Austria;[265] Stutthof, near Gdańsk, Poland;[266] and Sachsenhausen and Ravensbrück in Germany.[267]

Gas vans[edit]

German extermination and concentration camps built in occupied Poland.
Auschwitz II gatehouse, shot from inside the camp; the trains delivered victims very close to the gas chambers.
Women on their way to the gas chamber, near Crematorium V, Auschwitz II, August 1944. The Polish resistance reportedly smuggled the film, known as the Sonderkommando photographs, out of the camp in a toothpaste tube.[268]

Chełmno, with gas vans only, had its roots in the Aktion T4 euthanasia program.[269] In December 1939 and January 1940, gas vans equipped with gas cylinders and a sealed compartment had been used to kill disabled people in occupied Poland.[270] As the mass shootings continued in Russia, Himmler and his subordinates in the field feared that the murders were causing psychological problems for the SS,[271] and began searching for more efficient methods. In December 1941, similar vans, using exhaust fumes rather than bottled gas, were introduced into the camp at Chełmno,[253] Victims were asphyxiated while being driven to prepared burial pits in the nearby forests.[272] The vans were also used in the occupied Soviet Union, for example in smaller clearing actions in the Minsk ghetto,[273] and in Yugoslavia.[274] Apparently, as with the mass shootings, the vans caused emotional problems for the operators, and the small number of victims the vans could handle made them ineffective.[275]

Gas chambers[edit]

Christian Gerlach writes that over three million Jews were murdered in 1942, the year that "marked the peak" of the mass murder.[276] At least 1.4 million of these were in the General Government area of Poland.[277] Victims usually arrived at the extermination camps by freight train.[278] Almost all arrivals at Bełżec, Sobibór and Treblinka were sent directly to the gas chambers,[279] with individuals occasionally selected to replace dead workers.[280] At Auschwitz, about 20 percent of Jews were selected to work.[281] Those selected for death at all camps were told to undress and hand their valuables to camp workers.[282] They were then herded naked into the gas chambers. To prevent panic, they were told the gas chambers were showers or delousing chambers.[283]

At Auschwitz, after the chambers were filled, the doors were shut and pellets of Zyklon-B were dropped into the chambers through vents,[284] releasing toxic prussic acid.[285] Those inside were murdered within 20 minutes; the speed of death depended on how close the inmate was standing to a gas vent, according to the commandant Rudolf Höss, who estimated that about one-third of the victims were killed immediately.[286] Johann Kremer, an SS doctor who oversaw the gassings, testified that: "Shouting and screaming of the victims could be heard through the opening and it was clear that they fought for their lives."[287] The gas was then pumped out, and the Sonderkommando—work groups of mostly Jewish prisoners—carried out the bodies, extracted gold fillings, cut off women's hair, and removed jewelry, artificial limbs and glasses.[288] At Auschwitz, the bodies were at first buried in deep pits and covered with lime, but between September and November 1942, on the orders of Himmler, 100,000 bodies were dug up and burned. In early 1943, new gas chambers and crematoria were built to accommodate the numbers.[289]

Bełżec, Sobibór and Treblinka became known as the Operation Reinhard camps, named after the German plan to murder the Jews in the General Government area of occupied Poland.[290] Between March 1942 and November 1943, around 1,526,500 Jews were murdered in these three camps in gas chambers using carbon monoxide from the exhaust fumes of stationary diesel engines.[4] Gold fillings were pulled from the corpses before burial, but unlike in Auschwitz the women's hair was cut before death. At Treblinka, to calm the victims, the arrival platform was made to look like a train station, complete with a fake clock.[291] Most of the victims at these three camps were buried in pits at first. From mid-1942, as part of Sonderaktion 1005, prisoners at Auschwitz, Chelmno, Bełżec, Sobibór, and Treblinka were forced to exhume and burn bodies that had been buried, in part to hide the evidence, and in part because of the terrible smell pervading the camps and a fear that the drinking water would become polluted.[292] The corpses—700,000 in Treblinka—were burned on wood in open fire pits and the remaining bones crushed into powder.[293]

Collaboration[edit]

Although the Holocaust was planned and directed by Germans, the Nazi regime found willing collaborators in other countries (e.g. the Ustashe of Croatia), or forced others into participation.[294] This included individual collaboration as well as state collaboration. According to Dan Stone the Holocaust was a pan-European phenomenon, a series of "Holocausts" impossible to conduct without local collaborators and Germany's allies.[295] Stone writes that "many European states, under the extreme circumstances of World War II, took upon themselves the task of solving the 'Jewish question' in their own way."[296]

End of the war[edit]

The Holocaust in Hungary[edit]

Jews from Carpathian Ruthenia on the selection ramp at Auschwitz II, c. May 1944. Women and children are lined up on one side, men on the other, waiting for the SS to determine who was fit for work. About 20 percent at Auschwitz were selected for work and the rest gassed.[297]

By 1943 it was evident to the leadership of the armed forces that Germany was losing the war.[298] Rail shipments of Jews were still arriving regularly from western and southern Europe at the extermination camps.[299] Shipments of Jews had priority on the German railways over anything but the army's needs, and continued even in the face of the increasingly dire military situation at the end of 1942.[300] Army leaders and economic managers complained about this diversion of resources and the killing of skilled Jewish workers,[301] but Nazi leaders rated ideological imperatives above economic considerations.[302]

The mass murder reached a "frenetic" pace in 1944[303] when Auschwitz gassed nearly 500,000 people.[304] On 19 March 1944, Hitler ordered the military occupation of Hungary and dispatched Adolf Eichmann to supervise the deportation of its Jews.[305] Between 15 May and 9 July, 440,000 Jews were deported from Hungary to Auschwitz II-Birkenau, almost all sent directly to the gas chambers.[306] Publication of the Vrba–Wetzler report halted Hungarian government cooperation with Jewish deportations for several months and sparked international interventions that saved tens of thousands of lives.[citation needed]

Death marches[edit]

As the Soviet armed forces advanced, the SS closed down the camps in eastern Poland and tried to conceal what had happened. The gas chambers were dismantled, the crematoria dynamited, and the mass graves dug up and corpses cremated.[307] From January to April 1945, the SS sent inmates westward on death marches to camps in Germany and Austria.[308][309] In January 1945, the Germans held records of 714,000 inmates in concentration camps; by May, 250,000 (35 percent) had died during these marches.[310] Already sick after exposure to violence and starvation, they were marched to train stations and transported for days without food or shelter in open freight cars, then forced to march again at the other end to the new camp. Some went by truck or wagons; others were marched the entire distance. Those who lagged behind or fell were shot.[311]

Liberation[edit]

A mass grave at Bergen-Belsen after the camp's liberation, April 1945

The first major camp encountered by Allied troops, Majdanek, was discovered by the advancing Soviets, along with its gas chambers, on 25 July 1944.[312] Treblinka, Sobibór, and Bełżec were never liberated, but were destroyed by the Germans in 1943.[313] On 17 January 1945, 58,000 Auschwitz inmates were sent on a death march westwards;[314] when the camp was liberated by the Soviets on 27 January, they found just 7,000 inmates in the three main camps and 500 in subcamps.[315] Buchenwald was liberated by the Americans on 11 April;[316] Bergen-Belsen by the British on 15 April;[317] Dachau by the Americans on 29 April;[318] Ravensbrück by the Soviets on 30 April;[319] and Mauthausen by the Americans on 5 May.[320] The Red Cross took control of Theresienstadt on 3 May, days before the Soviets arrived.[321] The British 11th Armoured Division found around 60,000 prisoners (90 percent Jews) when they liberated Bergen-Belsen,[317][322] as well as 13,000 unburied corpses; another 10,000 people died from typhus or malnutrition over the following weeks.[323]

Death toll[edit]

Holocaust death tolls from David M. Crowe[324]
Country Jews
(pre-war)
Holocaust
deaths
Albania 200–591
Austria 185,000–192,000 48,767–65,000
Belgium 55,000–70,000 24,000–29,902
Bohemia
and Moravia
92,000–118,310 78,150–80,000
Bulgaria 50,000 7,335
Denmark 7,500–7,800 60–116
Estonia 4,500 1,500–2,000
France 330,000–350,000 73,320–90,000
Germany (1933) 523,000–525,000 130,000–160,000
Greece 77,380 58,443–67,000
Hungary 725,000–825,000 200,000–569,000
Italy 42,500–44,500 5,596–9,000
Latvia 91,500–95,000 60,000–85,000
Lithuania 168,000 130,000–200,000
Luxembourg 3,800 720–2,000
Netherlands 140,000 98,800–120,000
Norway 1,700–1,800 758–1,000
Poland 3,300,000–3,500,000 2,700,000–3,000,000
Romania (1930) 756,000 270,000–287,000
Slovakia 136,000 68,000–100,000
Soviet Union 3,020,000 700,000–2,500,000
Yugoslavia 78,000–82,242 51,400–67,438

The Jews killed represented around one third of world Jewry[325] and about two-thirds of European Jewry, based on a pre-war figure of 9.7 million Jews in Europe.[326] Most heavily concentrated in the east, the pre-war Jewish population in Europe was 3.5 million in Poland; 3 million in the Soviet Union; nearly 800,000 in Romania, and 700,000 in Hungary. Germany had over 500,000.[324] The death camps in occupied Poland accounted for half the Jews murdered. At Auschwitz, the number of Jewish victims was 960,000;[327] Treblinka 870,000;[262] Bełżec 600,000;[252] Chełmno 320,000;[254] Sobibór 250,000;[260] and Majdanek 79,000.[256] The most commonly cited death toll is the six million given by Adolf Eichmann to SS member Wilhelm Höttl, who signed an affidavit mentioning this figure in 1945.[328] Historians' estimates range from 4,204,000 to 7,000,000.[329] According to Yad Vashem, "[a]ll the serious research" confirms that between five and six million Jews were murdered.[c]

Aftermath and legacy[edit]

Trials[edit]

Defendants in the dock at the Nuremberg trials, 1945–1946

During the International Military Tribunal, 21 Nazi leaders were tried, primarily for waging wars of aggression, but the trial also exposed the systematic murder of European Jews.[331] Twelve additional trials before American courts from 1946 to 1949 tried another 177 defendants; in these trials, the Holocaust took center stage.[332] These trials were ineffective in their goal of re-educating Germans; by 1948, only 30 percent of Germans believed Nazism was a bad idea.[333] A consensus in West German society demanded amnesty and release of the convicted prisoners.[334] West Germany initially tried few ex-Nazis, but after the 1958 Ulm Einsatzkommando trial, the government set up a dedicated agency.[335] Other trials of Nazis and collaborators took place in Western and Eastern Europe. In 1960 Mossad agents captured Adolf Eichmann in Argentina and brought him to Israel to stand trial on 15 charges of war crimes, crimes against humanity, and crimes against the Jewish people. He was convicted in December 1961 and executed in June 1962. Eichmann's trial revived interest in war criminals and the Holocaust in general.[336]

Reparations[edit]

The government of Israel requested $1.5 billion from the Federal Republic of Germany in March 1951 to finance the rehabilitation of 500,000 Jewish survivors, arguing that Germany had stolen $6 billion from the European Jews. Israelis were divided about the idea of taking money from Germany. The Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany (known as the Claims Conference) was opened in New York, and after negotiations the claim was reduced to $845 million.[337][338]

West Germany allocated another $125 million for reparations in 1988. Companies such as BMW, Deutsche Bank, Ford, Opel, Siemens, and Volkswagen faced lawsuits for their use of forced labor during the war.[337] In response, Germany set up the "Remembrance, Responsibility and Future" Foundation in 2000, which paid €4.45 billion to former slave laborers (up to €7,670 each).[339] In 2013 Germany agreed to provide €772 million to fund nursing care, social services, and medication for 56,000 Holocaust survivors around the world.[340] The French state-owned railway company, the SNCF, agreed in 2014 to pay $60 million to Jewish-American survivors, around $100,000 each, for its role in the transport of 76,000 Jews from France to extermination camps between 1942 and 1944.[341][342]

Remembrance and historiography[edit]

The tendency to see the Holocaust as a unique event was influential in early Holocaust scholarship, but came under contestation,[343] and eventually mainstream Holocaust scholarship came to reject explicit claims of uniqueness, while recognizing differences between the Holocaust and other genocides.[344] In popular culture, Hitler is a hegemonic historical analogy for evil[345] and Nazi comparisons are common.[346] Yom HaShoah became Israel's Holocaust Remembrance Day in 1951.[347] At least 37 countries and the United Nations have similar observances.

See also[edit]

Explanatory notes[edit]

  1. ^ Hebrew: השואה, lit.'the catastrophe'
  2. ^ a b Matt Brosnan (Imperial War Museum, 2018): "The Holocaust was the systematic murder of Europe's Jews by the Nazis and their collaborators during the Second World War."[21]
    Jack R. Fischel (Historical Dictionary of the Holocaust, 2020): "The Holocaust refers to the Nazi objective of annihilating every Jewish man, woman, and child who fell under their control. By the end of World War II, approximately six million Jews had been murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators."[13]
    Raul Hilberg (The Destruction of the European Jews, 2003 [1961]): "Little by little, some documents were gathered and books were written, and after about two decades the annihilation of the Jews was given a name: Holocaust."[22]
    Ronnie S. Landau (The Nazi Holocaust: Its History and Meaning, 1992): "The Holocaust involved the deliberate, systematic murder of approximately 6 million Jews in Nazi-dominated Europe between 1941 and 1945."[2]
    Timothy D. Snyder (Bloodlands: Europe Between Hitler and Stalin, 2010): "In this book, Holocaust means the murder of the Jews in Europe, as carried out by the Germans by guns and gas between 1941 and 1945."[23]
    Dan Stone (Histories of the Holocaust, 2010): "'Holocaust' ... refers to the genocide of the Jews, which by no means excludes an understanding that other groups—notably Romanies and Slavs—were victims of genocide."[24]
    United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (Holocaust Encyclopedia, 2017): "The Holocaust was the systematic, bureaucratic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators."[25]

    Yad Vashem (undated): "The Holocaust was the murder of approximately six million Jews by the Nazis and their collaborators. Between the German invasion of the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941 and the end of the war in Europe in May 1945, Nazi Germany and its accomplices strove to murder every Jew under their domination."[26]

  3. ^ a b Yad Vashem: "There is no precise figure for the number of Jews killed in the Holocaust. The figure commonly used is the six million quoted by Adolf Eichmann, a senior SS official. All the serious research confirms that the number of victims was between five and six million. Early calculations range from 5.1 million (Professor Raul Hilberg) to 5.95 million (Jacob Leschinsky). More recent research, by Professor Yisrael Gutman and Dr. Robert Rozett in the Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, estimates the Jewish losses at 5.59–5.86 million, and a study headed by Dr. Wolfgang Benz presents a range from 5.29 million to 6.2 million.
    "The main sources for these statistics are comparisons of prewar censuses with postwar censuses and population estimates. Nazi documentation containing partial data on various deportations and murders is also used."[330]
  4. ^ United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: "According to the American Jewish Yearbook, the Jewish population of Europe was about 9.5 million in 1933. ... By 1945, most European Jews—two out of every three—had been killed."[3]
  5. ^ Oxford Dictionaries (2017): "from Old French holocauste, via late Latin from Greek holokauston, from holos 'whole' + kaustos 'burnt' (from kaiein 'burn')".[10]
  6. ^ The term shoah was used in a pamphlet in 1940, Sho'at Yehudei Polin ("Sho'ah of Polish Jews"), published by the United Aid Committee for the Jews in Poland.[12]
  7. ^ The Hebrew word churban is mostly used by Orthodox Jews to refer to the Holocaust.[19]
  8. ^ Michael Gray, a specialist in Holocaust education,[28] offers three definitions of the Holocaust: (a) "the persecution and murder of Jews by the Nazis and their collaborators between 1933 and 1945", which includes Kristallnacht in 1938; (b) "the systematic mass murder of the Jews by the Nazi regime and its collaborators between 1941 and 1945," which recognizes the German policy shift in 1941 toward extermination; and (c) "the persecution and murder of various groups by the Nazi regime and its collaborators between 1933 and 1945," which fails to recognize that the European Jews were targeted for annihilation.[29]
  9. ^ The full extent of Mengele's work is unknown because records he sent to Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer are assumed to have been destroyed.[39]
  10. ^ The French had planned to try Grynszpan for murder, but the German invasion in 1940 interrupted the proceedings. Grynszpan was handed over to the Germans and his fate is unknown.[78]
  11. ^ David Cesarani (2016): "The absence of consistency with regards to ghettos can be traced back to a fundamental confusion over means and ends. Were Jews to be expelled, placed in ghettos, or put to death? Until October 1941, the hope was that Jews would be expelled into Siberia after the end of hostilities."[92]
  12. ^ Jeremy Black writes that the ghettos were not intended, in 1939, as a step towards the extermination of the Jews. Instead, they were viewed as part of a policy of creating a territorial reservation to contain them.[101]
  13. ^ Cite error: The named reference Lviv was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  14. ^ In a memorandum ten days after the invasion, Reinhard Heydrich laid out the guidelines he had issued to the Einsatzgruppen: "All the following are to be executed: Officials of the Comintern (together with professional Communist politicians in general; top and medium-level officials and radical lower-level officials of the Party, Central Committee and district and sub-district committees; People's Commissars; Jews in the Party and State employment, and other radical elements (saboteurs, propagandists, snipers, assassins, inciters etc.) ... No steps will be taken to interfere with any purges that may be initiated by anti-Communist or anti-Jewish elements ... On the contrary, these are to be secretly encouraged." Cesarani writes that it is "noteworthy that Heyrich did not want the SS to be held responsible".[151]
  15. ^ Nikolaus Wachsmann (2015): "The genesis of the Holocaust was lengthy and complex. The days are long gone when historians believed that it could be reduced to a single decision taken on a single day by Hitler. Instead, the Holocaust was the culmination of a dynamic murderous process, propelled by increasingly radical initiatives from above and below. During World War II, the Nazi pursuit of a Final Solution moved from increasingly lethal plans for Jewish 'reservations' to immediate extermination. There were several key periods of radicalization. The invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 marked one such moment, as mass shootings of Jewish men of military age soon grew into widespread ethnic cleansing, with daily bloodbaths of women, children, and the elderly."[170]
  16. ^ Until being occupied by Germany on 19 March 1944. Almost 10 times more Hungarian Jews were deported and/or killed during the ensuing German occupation.
  17. ^ Until being occupied by Germany during September 1943. Nearly one fifth of Italian Jews (7,800) were deported and/or killed during the ensuing puppet regime.
  18. ^ "Už odbilo Židom! Najprísnejšie rasové zákony na Židov sú slovenské"
  19. ^ Those present included (annotated, left to right): Joseph Goebbels, Wilhelm Frick, Wilhelm Keitel, Walter von Brauchitsch, Erich Raeder, Joachim von Ribbentrop, Alfred Rosenberg, Adolf Hitler, and Hermann Göring.
  20. ^ Joseph Goebbels (13 December 1941): "Regarding the Jewish question, the Fuhrer is determined to clear the table. He warned the Jews that if they were to cause another world war, it would lead to their own destruction. Those were not empty words. Now the world war has come. The destruction of the Jews must be its necessary consequence. We cannot be sentimental about it. It is not for us to feel sympathy for the Jews. We should have sympathy rather with our own German people. If the German people have to sacrifice 160,000 victims in yet another campaign in the east, then those responsible for this bloody conflict will have to pay for it with their lives."[227]
  21. ^ Frank continued by discussing their deportation, then asked: "But what is to happen to the Jews? ... In Berlin we were told "Why all this trouble? We cannot use them in the Ostland or the Reichskommissariat either; liquidate them yourselves!" Gentlemen, I must ask you, arm yourselves against any thoughts of compassion. We must destroy the Jews, wherever we encounter them and whenever it is possible, in order to preserve the entire structure of the Reich. ... We have an estimated 2.5 million Jews in the General Government, perhaps with the half-Jews and all that that entails some 3.5 million. We cannot shoot these 3.5 million Jews, we cannot poison them, but nonetheless we will take some kind of action that will lead to a successful destruction ... The General Government must become just as free of Jews as the Reich."[231]
  22. ^ United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, "Participants at the Wannsee Conference":

    For the SS:

    SS General Reinhard Heydrich (chief of the Reich Security Main Office); SS Major General Heinrich Müller (Gestapo); SS Lieutenant Colonel Adolf Eichmann (Referat IV B4); SS Colonel Eberhard Schöngarth (commander of the RSHA field office for the Government General in Krakow, Poland); SS Major Rudolf Lange (commander of RSHA Einsatzkommando 2); and SS Major General Otto Hofmann (chief of SS Race and Settlement Main Office).

    For the State:

    Roland Freisler (Ministry of Justice); Friedrich Wilhelm Kritzinger (Reich Cabinet); Alfred Meyer (Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories-German-occupied USSR); Georg Leibrandt (Reich Ministry for the Occupied Eastern Territories); Martin Luther (Foreign Office); Wilhelm Stuckart (Ministry of the Interior); Erich Neumann (Office of Plenipotentiary for the Four-Year Plan), Josef Bühler (Office of the Government of the Governor General-German-occupied Poland); Gerhard Klopfer (Nazi Party Chancellery).[237]

  23. ^ Altreich refers to territories that were part of Nazi Germany before 1938.
  24. ^ Wannsee-Protokoll: "Diese Aktionen sind jedoch lediglich als Ausweichmöglichkeiten anzusprechen, doch werden hier bereits jene praktischen Erfahrungen gesammelt, die im Hinblick auf die kommende Endlösung der Judenfrage von wichtiger Bedeutung sind."[244]

    Translation, Avalon Project: "These actions are, however, only to be considered provisional, but practical experience is already being collected which is of the greatest importance in relation to the future final solution of the Jewish question."[241]

  25. ^ Franciszek Piper used timetables of train arrivals combined with deportation records to calculate that, of the 1.3 million deported to Auschwitz, 1,082,000 were murdered there between 1940 and 1945, a figure (rounded up to 1.1 million) that he regarded as a minimum.[247]
  26. ^ Auschwitz I contained crematorium I, which stopped operating in July 1943.[248] Auschwitz II contained crematoria II–V.[249]
  27. ^ Auschwitz I also had a gas chamber; the murder of non-Jewish Poles and Soviet POWs began there in August 1941.

References[edit]

Citations[edit]

  1. ^ "Deportation of Hungarian Jews". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 25 November 2017. Retrieved 6 October 2017.
  2. ^ a b Landau 2016, p. 3.
  3. ^ a b "Remaining Jewish Population of Europe in 1945". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 13 June 2018.
  4. ^ a b c "Killing Centers: An Overview". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 14 September 2017.
  5. ^ For the date, see Marcuse 2001, p. 21.
  6. ^ Stackelberg & Winkle 2002, pp. 141–143.
  7. ^ Gray 2015, p. 5.
  8. ^ a b Stone 2010, pp. 2–3.
  9. ^ Crowe 2008, p. 1.
  10. ^ "Holocaust". Oxford Dictionaries. Oxford University Press. Archived from the original on 5 October 2017. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
  11. ^ Gilad, Elon (1 May 2019). "Shoah: How a Biblical Term Became the Hebrew Word for Holocaust". Haaretz. Archived from the original on 1 December 2019.
  12. ^ Crowe 2008, p. 1; "Holocaust" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Archived (PDF) from the original on 5 February 2018.

    "The Holocaust: Definition and Preliminary Discussion". Yad Vashem. Archived from the original on 26 June 2015.

  13. ^ a b Fischel 2020, p. 151.
  14. ^ Meltzer, Julian (23 May 1943). "Palestine Zionists Find Outlook Dark". The New York Times. Archived from the original on 10 August 2018.
  15. ^ Lustigman & Lustigman 1994, p. 111.
  16. ^ Black 2016, p. 201.
  17. ^ Hilberg 2003, p. 1133 (vol. III).
  18. ^ Fischel 2020, p. 152.
  19. ^ Fischel 1998, p. 46.
  20. ^ Berenbaum 2006, p. xix.
  21. ^ Brosnan, Matt (12 June 2018). "What Was The Holocaust?". Imperial War Museum. Archived from the original on 2 March 2019. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  22. ^ Hilberg 2003, p. 1133.
  23. ^ Snyder 2010, p. 412.
  24. ^ Stone 2010, pp. 1–3.
  25. ^ "Introduction to the Holocaust". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 1 October 2017. Retrieved 4 October 2017.
  26. ^ "What was the Holocaust?". Yad Vashem. Archived from the original on 11 January 2016.
  27. ^ Niewyk & Nicosia 2000, p. 52.
  28. ^ "Senior Management Team: Dr. Michael Gray, Academic and Universities Director". Harrow School. Archived from the original on 27 March 2018.
  29. ^ Gray 2015, p. 8.
  30. ^ Gray 2015, pp. 4–5; "What was the Holocaust?". Yad Vashem; "Documenting Numbers of Victims of the Holocaust and Nazi Persecution". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.
  31. ^ "Documenting Numbers of Victims of the Holocaust and Nazi Persecution". encyclopedia.ushmm.org. Retrieved 29 June 2021. During the era of the Holocaust, German authorities also targeted and killed other groups, including at times their children, because of their perceived racial and biological inferiority: Roma (Gypsies), Germans with disabilities, and some of the Slavic peoples (especially Poles and Russians).
  32. ^ Gray 2015, p. 4.
  33. ^ Hayes 2015, pp. xiii–xiv.
  34. ^ a b Fisher 2001, pp. 410–414.
  35. ^ Hanauske-Abel 1996, p. 1453; Fisher 2001, pp. 410–414.
  36. ^ a b Müller-Hill 1999, p. 338.
  37. ^ Friedländer 2007, p. 505.
  38. ^ Müller-Hill 1999, pp. 340–342; Friedländer 2007, p. 505.
  39. ^ Müller-Hill 1999, p. 348; Lifton 2000, p. 358.
  40. ^ "Antisemitic Austrian election poster by Bernd Steiner". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 11 June 2019.
  41. ^ Jones 2006, p. 148; Bergen 2016, pp. 14–17.
  42. ^ Fischer 2002, pp. 47–49.
  43. ^ Friedlander 1994, pp. 495–496.
  44. ^ Fischer 2002, p. 47.
  45. ^ "Antisemitism in History: World War I". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 9 September 2015. Retrieved 1 September 2015.
  46. ^ Yahil 1990, pp. 41–43.
  47. ^ Bergen 2016, pp. 52–54.
  48. ^ Bergen 2016, p. 56.
  49. ^ "Boycotts". Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, University of Minnesota. Archived from the original on 11 June 2007.
  50. ^ Fritzsche 2009, pp. 38–39.
  51. ^ Noakes & Pridham 1983, p. 499.
  52. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 28–30.
  53. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 32–38.
  54. ^ Marcuse 2001, p. 21.
  55. ^ Longerich 2012, p. 155.
  56. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 84–86.
  57. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 5.
  58. ^ Friedländer 1997, p. 33.
  59. ^ Friedländer 1997, pp. 19–20.
  60. ^ a b Burleigh & Wippermann 2003, p. 78.
  61. ^ Friedländer 1997, pp. 32–33.
  62. ^ Friedländer 1997, p. 29.
  63. ^ Friedländer 1997, p. 134.
  64. ^ Evans 2005, pp. 158–159, 169.
  65. ^ Hanauske-Abel 1996, p. 1459.
  66. ^ London 2000, p. 161.
  67. ^ a b c "Nuremberg Race Laws". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 10 May 2019.
  68. ^ Arad, Gutman & Margaliot 2014, p. 78.
  69. ^ Gerlach 2016, p. 41.
  70. ^ Fischel 1998, p. 20.
  71. ^ Gilbert 2001, p. 285.
  72. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 152.
  73. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 153.
  74. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 154–156.
  75. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 157–158.
  76. ^ Niewyk & Nicosia 2000, p. 200.
  77. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 181.
  78. ^ Friedländer 1997, pp. 301–302.
  79. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 187.
  80. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 187–188.
  81. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 184–185.
  82. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 184, 187.
  83. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 188–189.
  84. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 194–195.
  85. ^ Evans 2005, p. 591.
  86. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 200.
  87. ^ Evans 2005, pp. 595–596.
  88. ^ Ben-Rafael, Glöckner & Sternberg 2011, pp. 25–26.
  89. ^ Friedländer 1997, pp. 224–225.
  90. ^ Friedländer 1997, pp. 62–63, 219, 283, 310.
  91. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 382; Cesarani, David (17 February 2011). "From Persecution to Genocide". History: World Wars. BBC. Archived from the original on 22 October 2012. Retrieved 25 September 2012.
  92. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 414.
  93. ^ Nicosia 2008, pp. 88–89.
  94. ^ Crowe 2008, p. 447; also see Polonsky 2001, p. 488.
  95. ^ Crowe 2008, pp. 158–159.
  96. ^ Browning 2004, p. 16.
  97. ^ Bergen 2016, pp. 136–137.
  98. ^ Browning 2004, pp. 25–26.
  99. ^ a b Black 2016, p. 29.
  100. ^ Browning 2004, p. 26, 111.
  101. ^ Black 2016, p. 31.
  102. ^ Browning 2004, p. 111.
  103. ^ Hilberg 1993, p. 106.
  104. ^ a b Browning 2004, p. 124.
  105. ^ Yahil 1990, p. 165.
  106. ^ Bergen 2016, p. 146.
  107. ^ Yahil 1990, p. 169; Browning 2004, p. 124.
  108. ^ Dwork & van Pelt 2003, p. 239.
  109. ^ "Deportations to and from the Warsaw Ghetto". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 21 September 2012.
  110. ^ Himka 2011, pp. 213–214, for the image, see p. 233.
  111. ^ Kopstein 2023, pp. 107–108.
  112. ^ Mishkin 2023, p. 124.
  113. ^ Kopstein 2023, p. 105.
  114. ^ Kopstein 2023, p. 104.
  115. ^ Kopstein 2023, p. 107.
  116. ^ McKale 2002, p. 161.
  117. ^ Bergen 2016, p. 169.
  118. ^ McKale 2002, p. 162.
  119. ^ Stone 2010, p. 14.
  120. ^ McKale 2002, p. 164.
  121. ^ McKale 2002, pp. 162–163.
  122. ^ Schelvis 2014, pp. xv, 198.
  123. ^ McKale 2002, pp. 165–166.
  124. ^ Zuccotti 1993, p. 52.
  125. ^ Bauer 2001, pp. 256–257.
  126. ^ "Tunisia" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Archived (PDF) from the original on 25 March 2009. Retrieved 20 June 2017.
  127. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference USHMMJewishLosses was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  128. ^ Longerich 2010, pp. 161–164; for hastening deaths, also see Browning 2004, pp. 88–89.
  129. ^ Browning 2004, pp. 81–82.
  130. ^ Browning 2004, pp. 82–85.
  131. ^ Browning 2004, p. 88.
  132. ^ Longerich 2010, p. 164.
  133. ^ Antoniou & Moses 2018, pp. 1–5.
  134. ^ McKale 2002, pp. 192–193.
  135. ^ a b Skutsch, Carl (2005). Encyclopedia of the world's minorities, Volume 3. Routledge. p. 1083.
  136. ^ a b Megargee, Geoffrey P. (2018). The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos, 1933–1945, Volume III. Indiana University Press. p. 839.
  137. ^ a b Newman, John (2015). Yugoslavia in the Shadow of War: Veterans and the Limits of State Building, 1903–1945. Cambridge University Press. p. 248.
  138. ^ Black 2016, p. 134.
  139. ^ Goldstein & Goldstein 2016, p. 121.
  140. ^ Goldstein & Goldstein 2016, p. 170.
  141. ^ Longerich 2010, p. 365.
  142. ^ Tomasevich 2002, p. 582.
  143. ^ Tanner & Press 2001, p. 149.
  144. ^ Bartulin 2013, p. 74.
  145. ^ Gilbert 2012, p. 102.
  146. ^ Snyder 2010, p. 155.
  147. ^ Burleigh 2001, pp. 512, 526–527.
  148. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 360.
  149. ^ a b Matthäus 2007, p. 219.
  150. ^ Browning 2004, pp. 16, 224–225.
  151. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 365–366.
  152. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 367.
  153. ^ McKale 2002, p. 204.
  154. ^ Schneider 2015, p. 183.
  155. ^ Wette 2006, pp. 130–131.
  156. ^ Matthäus 2004, p. 268.
  157. ^ Snyder 2010, p. 182.
  158. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 364–365.
  159. ^ McKale 2002, p. 198.
  160. ^ Bergen 2016, p. 200.
  161. ^ Bartrop, Paul R.; Dickerman, Michael (15 September 2017). The Holocaust: An Encyclopedia and Document Collection [4 volumes]. ABC-CLIO. p. 509. ISBN 978-1-4408-4084-5. The murder took place near the Ponary train station...at least 70,000 Jews were murdered in Ponary together with estimated 20,000 Poles and 8,000 Russians.
  162. ^ Matthäus 2007, p. 219; Bergen 2016, pp. 199–200.
  163. ^ Fritz 2011, pp. 102–104.
  164. ^ Bergen 2016, p. 199.
  165. ^ "Einsatzgruppe member kills a Jewish woman and her child near Ivangorod, Ukraine, 1942". United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 11 May 2019.
  166. ^ Longerich 2010, p. 207; Gerlach 2016, p. 70.
  167. ^ Browning 2004, p. 281.
  168. ^ Longerich 2010, p. 206; Gerlach 2016, pp. 71–72.
  169. ^ Longerich 2010, pp. 304–305.
  170. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 300.
  171. ^ Browning 2004, p. 214.
  172. ^ Longerich 2010, p. 206.
  173. ^ Orth 2009, p. 181.
  174. ^ Fischel 2020, p. 77.
  175. ^ a b Baumel 2001, p. 135.
  176. ^ "Nazi Camps". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 19 June 2018. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  177. ^ a b Wachsmann 2015, pp. 287–288.
  178. ^ Longerich 2010, pp. 314–320.
  179. ^ Black 2016, p. 76.
  180. ^ Black 2016, p. 104.
  181. ^ Friedländer 2007, p. 492–494.
  182. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 347.
  183. ^ Wachsmann 2015, pp. 125–127, 623.
  184. ^ Yahil 1990, p. 134; Wachsmann 2015, p. 119.
  185. ^ "Tattoos and Numbers: The System of Identifying Prisoners at Auschwitz". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 13 June 2018. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  186. ^ Ethan J. Hollander, Springer, Oct 25, 2016, Hegemony and the Holocaust: State Power and Jewish Survival in Occupied Europe, pp. 260-261
  187. ^ Vesna Drapac, Gareth Pritchard, Palgrave Publishing, Sep 16, 2017, Resistance and Collaboration in Hitler's Empire, p. 3
  188. ^ Ethan J. Hollander, Springer, Oct 25, 2016, Hegemony and the Holocaust: State Power and Jewish Survival in Occupied Europe, pp. 20 and 260
  189. ^ Midlarsky, Manus I. (17 March 2011). Origins of Political Extremism: Mass Violence in the Twentieth Century and Beyond. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781139500777 – via Google Books.
  190. ^ Hollander, Ethan J. (25 October 2016). Hegemony and the Holocaust: State Power and Jewish Survival in Occupied Europe. Springer. ISBN 9783319398020 – via Google Books.
  191. ^ Brustein, William (13 October 2003). Roots of Hate: Anti-Semitism in Europe Before the Holocaust. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780521774789 – via Google Books.
  192. ^ Ioanid, Radu (20 April 2022). The Holocaust in Romania: The Destruction of Jews and Roma Under the Antonescu Regime, 1940–1944. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 9781538138090 – via Google Books.
  193. ^ Weinbaum, Laurence (31 January 2004). "Where Memory is a Curse and Amnesia a Blessing: A Journey Through Romania's Holocaust Narrative". Institute of the World Jewish Congress – via Google Books.
  194. ^ Kar dy, Viktor (1 January 2004). The Jews of Europe in the Modern Era: A Socio-historical Outline. Central European University Press. ISBN 9789639241527 – via Google Books.
  195. ^ Sorkin, David; Sorkin, Professor David (Professor) (14 September 2021). Jewish Emancipation: A History Across Five Centuries. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691205250 – via Google Books.
  196. ^ Stenberg, Peter (31 January 1991). Journey to Oblivion: The End of the East European Yiddish and German Worlds in the Mirror of Literature. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9780802058614 – via Google Books.
  197. ^ Stone 2010, p. 36.
  198. ^ a b c Wyman & Rosenzveig 1996, p. 233.
  199. ^ Black 2016, pp. 131–133.
  200. ^ Pohl 2018, p. 246.
  201. ^ Dwork & van Pelt 2003, pp. 267–272.
  202. ^ Friling, Ioanid & Ionescu 2004, p. 126.
  203. ^ Friling, Ioanid & Ionescu 2004, p. 150.
  204. ^ Arad 2009.
  205. ^ Dwork & van Pelt 2003, p. 269.
  206. ^ Black 2016, pp. 131–133; for extreme bruality, see Stone 2010, p. 36.
  207. ^ Fischel 2020, p. 61.
  208. ^ a b Longerich 2010, p. 392.
  209. ^ Black 2016, pp. 136–137.
  210. ^ Black 2016, p. 135.
  211. ^ Longerich 2010, p. 408.
  212. ^ Longerich 2010, pp. 409–410.
  213. ^ Black 2016, pp. 137–139.
  214. ^ a b "Italy". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  215. ^ Friedländer 2007, p. 470; Sarfatti 2006, p. 180.
  216. ^ Sarfatti 2006, pp. 180–181.
  217. ^ Kubica 1998, p. 416; Czech 2000, pp. 187–188.
  218. ^ Ochayon, Sheryl. "The Jews of Libya". The International School for Holocaust Studies. Yad Vashem. Archived from the original on 25 September 2013.
  219. ^ Black 2016, p. 140.
  220. ^ Vesna Drapac, Gareth Pritchard, Palgrave Publishing, Sep 16, 2017, Resistance and Collaboration in Hitler's Empire, p. 3
  221. ^ Stone 2010, pp. 33–34.
  222. ^ Stone 2010, pp. 34–35.
  223. ^ Gerlach 2016, p. 80.
  224. ^ Dwork & van Pelt 2003, p. 279; also see Kershaw 2008, p. 263.
  225. ^ Burleigh & Wippermann 2003, p. 99; "Reichstag Speech". Timeline of Events. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 22 May 2019.
  226. ^ Gerlach 2016, p. 80, Browning 2004, p. 407
  227. ^ Gerlach 1998, p. 122; Browning 2004, p. 407, citing Die Tagebücher von Joseph Goebbels, II, 2:498–499, entry of 13 December 1941.
  228. ^ Browning 2004, p. 408.
  229. ^ Gerlach 2016, p. 82.
  230. ^ Browning 2004, pp. 408–409.
  231. ^ Browning 2004, p. 409; Arad, Gutman & Margaliot 2014, document no. 116.
  232. ^ Browning 2004, p. 410.
  233. ^ Gerlach 1998, p. 759; Roseman 2003, p. 56.
  234. ^ Roseman 2003, p. 57.
  235. ^ Roseman 2003, p. 60.
  236. ^ Roseman 2003, p. 64.
  237. ^ "Wannsee Conference and the 'Final Solution'". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 28 September 2017.
  238. ^ Browning 2004, p. 411.
  239. ^ Roseman 2003, p. 8.
  240. ^ Longerich 2010, p. 306.
  241. ^ a b c d e Original (German): "Besprechungsprotokoll" (PDF). Haus der Wannsee-Konferenz. pp. 7–8. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2 February 2019.
    English: "Wannsee Protocol, January 20, 1942". The Avalon Project. Yale Law School. Archived from the original on 16 August 2018.

    German: "Wannsee-Protokoll". EuroDocs. Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University. Archived from the original on 22 June 2006.

  242. ^ Gerlach 2016, pp. 84–85.
  243. ^ a b Longerich 2010, p. 307.
  244. ^ "Wannsee-Protokoll". EuroDocs. Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University. Archived from the original on 22 June 2006.
  245. ^ Longerich 2010, p. 308.
  246. ^ "Auschwitz-Birkenau Extermination Camp". Yad Vashem. Archived from the original on 5 October 2017. Retrieved 2 October 2017.
  247. ^ Piper 2000, pp. 226–227, 230–231.
  248. ^ Piper 2000, p. 133.
  249. ^ Piper 2000, pp. 144, 155–156.
  250. ^ Strzelecka & Setkiewicz 2000, pp. 81–82.
  251. ^ Czech 2000, p. 143; also see Piper 2000, p. 134, footnote 422, citing Danuta Czech, The Auschwitz Chronicle, p. 146.
  252. ^ a b c "Belzec" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Archived (PDF) from the original on 6 October 2014. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  253. ^ a b c Gerlach 2016, p. 74.
  254. ^ a b c "Chelmno" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Archived (PDF) from the original on 1 February 2017.
  255. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 301; Gerlach 2016, p. 74.
  256. ^ a b "Majdanek" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Archived (PDF) from the original on 27 November 2007.
  257. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 637.
  258. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 286.
  259. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 330.
  260. ^ a b c "Sobibor" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Archived (PDF) from the original on 23 January 2014.
  261. ^ a b Gerlach 2016, pp. 93–94.
  262. ^ a b c "Treblinka" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  263. ^ a b Gerlach 2016, p. 94; also see Cesarani 2016, p. 504.
  264. ^ "Maly Trostinets" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Archived (PDF) from the original on 21 September 2013. Retrieved 29 May 2017.; Heberer 2008, p. 131; Lehnstaedt 2016, p. 30.
  265. ^ Fischel 2020, pp. 84, 210.
  266. ^ Fischel 1998, p. 81.
  267. ^ "Gassing operations". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 8 February 2015.
  268. ^ Didi-Huberman 2008, pp. 16–17.
  269. ^ Montague 2012, pp. 14–16, 64–65.
  270. ^ Bergen 2016, p. 160.
  271. ^ Fischel 1998, pp. 42–43.
  272. ^ Montague 2012, pp. 76–85.
  273. ^ Cesarani 2016, p. 513.
  274. ^ Arad 2009, p. 138.
  275. ^ "Gas vans" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 November 2003.
  276. ^ Gerlach 2016, p. 99.
  277. ^ Gerlach 2016, p. 99, note 165.
  278. ^ Fischel 1998, pp. 81–85.
  279. ^ Black 2016, pp. 69–70.
  280. ^ Crowe 2008, p. 243.
  281. ^ Piper 2000, pp. 219–220.
  282. ^ Dwork & van Pelt 2003, pp. 287–288.
  283. ^ Piper 1998b, p. 173.
  284. ^ Piper 1998b, p. 162.
  285. ^ Piper 1998b, p. 157.
  286. ^ Piper 1998b, p. 170.
  287. ^ Piper 1998b, p. 163.
  288. ^ Piper 1998b, pp. 170–172.
  289. ^ Piper 1998b, pp. 163–164.
  290. ^ Cesarani 2016, pp. 479–480; for size compared to Auschwitz, Longerich 2010, p. 330.
  291. ^ Fischel 1998, pp. 83–85.
  292. ^ Arad 1999, pp. 170–171; also see Arad 2018, pp. 212–219.
  293. ^ Arad 1999, p. 171; for 700,000, Arad 1999, p. 177 and Arad 2018, p. 219.
  294. ^ Laqueur, Walter; Baumel, Judith Tydor (2001). The Holocaust Encyclopedia. p. 281. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-30008-432-0.
  295. ^ Stone 2010, pp. 15–18.
  296. ^ Stone 2010, p. 18.
  297. ^ Piper 2000, photographs between pp. 112 and 113.
  298. ^ Fischer 1998, pp. 536–538.
  299. ^ Longerich 2010, pp. 360–365.
  300. ^ Yahil 1990, pp. 376–378.
  301. ^ Kwiet 2004, pp. 61, 69–71, 76–77.
  302. ^ Kwiet 2004, pp. 77–78.
  303. ^ Black 2016, p. 108.
  304. ^ Piper 2000, p. 11; also see "Killing Centers". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 6 May 2017. Retrieved 29 May 2017.
  305. ^ Braham 2000, pp. 62, 64–65.
  306. ^ Braham 2011, p. 45.
  307. ^ Longerich 2010, pp. 410–412.
  308. ^ Longerich 2010, pp. 415–418.
  309. ^ "Major death marches and evacuations, 1944–1945". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 16 August 2012.
  310. ^ Blatman 2011, pp. 1–2.
  311. ^ Friedländer 2007, pp. 648–650; for trucks or wagons, Blatman 2011, p. 11.
  312. ^ Niewyk & Nicosia 2000, p. 165; for gas chambers, see Friedländer 2007, p. 627 and Longerich 2010, p. 411.
  313. ^ Longerich 2010, p. 411.
  314. ^ Strzelecki 2000, p. 27.
  315. ^ Stone 2015, p. 41.
  316. ^ Stone 2015, pp. 72–73.
  317. ^ a b Longerich 2010, p. 417.
  318. ^ Marcuse 2001, p. 50.
  319. ^ Wachsmann 2015, p. 577.
  320. ^ Gilbert 1985, pp. 808–809.
  321. ^ Niewyk & Nicosia 2000, p. 167.
  322. ^ "The 11th Armoured Division (Great Britain)". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 16 August 2012.
  323. ^ "Bergen-Belsen". Holocaust Encyclopedia. United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Archived from the original on 15 August 2012.
  324. ^ a b Crowe 2008, p. 447.
  325. ^ Gilbert 2001, p. 291.
  326. ^ Fischel 1998, p. 87; Bauer & Rozett 1990, p. 1799.
  327. ^ Piper 2000, pp. 230–231; Piper 1998a, p. 62.
  328. ^ Hilberg 2003, p. 1201.
  329. ^ Fischel 2020, p. 10.
  330. ^ "FAQ: How many Jews were murdered in the Holocaust?". Yad Vashem. Archived from the original on 11 January 2016.
  331. ^ Priemel 2016, pp. 119, 133.
  332. ^ Heller 2011, pp. 1–2, 4.
  333. ^ Heller 2011, pp. 372–373.
  334. ^ Heller 2011, p. 360.
  335. ^ Crowe 2008, p. 412.
  336. ^ Crowe 2008, pp. 430–433.
  337. ^ a b "Reparations and Restitutions" (PDF). Yad Vashem. Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 May 2017. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  338. ^ Zweig 2001, pp. 531–532.
  339. ^ "Payment Programme of the Foundation EVZ". Bundesarchiv. Archived from the original on 5 October 2018. Retrieved 5 July 2018.
  340. ^ Staff (29 May 2013). "Holocaust Reparations: Germany to Pay 772 Million Euros to Survivors". Spiegel Online International. Archived from the original on 13 December 2014.
  341. ^ Bazyler 2005, p. 173; Staff (5 December 2014). "Pour le rôle de la SNCF dans la Shoah, Paris va verser 100 000 euros à chaque déporté américain". Le Monde/Agence France-Presse. Archived from the original on 5 December 2014.
  342. ^ Davies, Lizzie (17 February 2009). "France responsible for sending Jews to concentration camps, says court". The Guardian. Archived from the original on 10 October 2017.
  343. ^ Stone 2010, pp. 206–207.
  344. ^ Rosenfeld 2015, p. 119.
  345. ^ Rosenfeld, Gavriel (9 October 2018). "How Americans Described Evil Before Hitler". The Atlantic. Retrieved 28 April 2020.
  346. ^ Rosenfeld 2015, pp. 340–341.
  347. ^ Cohen 2010, p. 580.

Works cited[edit]

Books
Book chapters
  • Kopstein, Jeffrey S. (2023). "A Common History of Violence?: The Pogroms of Summer 1941 in Comparative Perspective". Politics, Violence, Memory: The New Social Science of the Holocaust. Cornell University Press. pp. 104–123. ISBN 978-1-5017-6676-3.
  • Mishkin, Benjamin (2023). "Mass Violence without Mass Politics: Political Culture and the Holocaust in Lithuania". Politics, Violence, Memory: The New Social Science of the Holocaust. Cornell University Press. pp. 124–136. ISBN 978-1-5017-6676-3.