Thursday, December 12, 2019

WWII And The Holocaust assignment help

Question: The following statement was taken from a contemporary account of Germany in 1939: "Though the Fuhrer's anti-Semitic program furnished the National Socialist party in the first instances with a nucleus and a rallying-cry, it was swept into office by two things with which the "Jewish Problem" did not have the slightest connection. On the one side was economic distress and the revulsion against Versailles: on the other, chicanery and intrigue...Hitler and his party promised the unhappy Germans a new heaven and a new earth, coupled with the persecution of the Jews. Unfortunately a new heaven and earth cannot be manufactured to order. But a persecution of the Jews can..." How do you interpret this contemporary account of the persecution of people who are Jewish? Elaborate. Answer: With Hitler coming into power in1933, the atrocities and violence against the Jews reached its height. Under the Nuremberg laws, the Jews were forced out of jobs from the Civil Service and the newspapers. Jews were compelled to take menial jobs as a result of this expulsion. They were rated second-class citizens and were characterized according to their grandparents religious affiliation. Jewish shops were boycotted, and they were banned from the society. Further, the Jews were banned from public places, schools, cinema, theater, and certain cities. They were forced to flee away from Germany. The Jews became the subject of Nazi hatred and were deemed an inferior race. The Jews were blamed for the economic depression that Germany faced as a result of the political turmoil at the time. Moreover, they were blamed for Germanys defeat in World War I. The boycott of Jews by Adolf Hitler, the then Chancellor, and Fuhrer affected the Jewish community both socially and economically (Brower S anders, 2013). The Jews were marginalized and subjected to atrocities and violent attacks. The Jews were stripped off all their rights and were even murdered. The Jews were forbidden from marrying Germans. Jews violating laws were arrested, sent to Nazi concentration camps and even executed. In 1935, vandalism, assaults, and boycotts against Jews rose to its pinnacle. The Jews were ceased to participate freely from social events and in the economy. Tough anti-Semitic laws were brought in by the Germans who were not active politically. This period saw a development of racist ideology. The goal was to remove Jews entirely from Nazi Germany (Friedlander, 2014). References Brower, D. R., Sanders, T. (2013).World in the Twentieth Century: From Empires to Nations, The. Pearson Higher Ed. Friedlander, S. (2014). Nazi Germany And The Jews: The Years Of Persecution: 1933-1939. Hachette UK.

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