United Nations
Definition of Genocide

The Transatlantic
Slave Trade

Genocide of the
Native Americans

The Herero
Genocide

The Armenian
Genocide

The Ukrainian Genocide/
The Great Famine

Rape
of Nanking

The
Holocaust

Mao Tse-tung's
Cultural Revolution

The Killing Fields: The
Cambodian Genocide

Genocide in Bosnia
and Herzegovina

The Rwandan
Genocide

The Genocide
in Darfur

 

 

 
     
 
 

 
 

The Holocaust
1938-1945

 
 

:: More ::

 

                                                                    It began with a simple boycott of Jewish shops and ended in the gas chambers of Auschwitz as Hitler and his Nazi followers attempted to exterminate the entire Jewish population of Europe.  The Holocaust took the lives of close to six million Jews during the World War II era. Anti-semitism was the central component of Nazi ideology.  While the Nazis also murdered many millions of Poles, Russians, Roma, Sinti, Serbs, Czechs, homosexuals, and political opponents, only the Jews were slated for total annihilation. The "final solution" was partially successful through the process of genocide.  The Nazi Party who first targeted the Jews, then isolated them into ghettos, then deported their victims to concentration camps where most perished. Others became Nazi victims not because of who they were but because of what they did - Jehovah's Witnesses, the dissenting clergy, Communists, Socialists, and other political enemies.

 
     
 

Picture: Teresa Swiebocka Auschwitz: A History in
Photographs
(Indiana University Press, 1993)

 
 
 
 

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