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Hitler Mass Extinction

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When Adolf Hitler was appointed to office in Germany in January of 1933, the citizens of the country had no idea what was in store for them. “The Holocaust” was a mass extinction of several minority groups by the Nazi regime who believed they were the superior race (Introduction, n.d. par 1). The races and groups of people that were targeted during The Holocaust were Jewish people, Roma (gypsies), Polish people, Russian people, disabled people, homosexuals, and many other races and groups of people (Introduction, n.d. par 2). Over nine million people died during the Holocaust, causing it to be known as a mass extinction (Introduction, n.d., par 3). Those who were not killed were tortured in horrendous and inhumane ways. The memory of those …show more content…

The goal of this concentration camp was to stop communism, so there were about 200 communist prisoners (Dunn, 1995). The Nazi party was slowly starting to take control by burning books that they felt would be threatening to their power (Dunn, 1995). Over the next several years Hitler began to show who his real targets were, Jews. He started by taking away basic aspects like a Jewish newspaper. Eventually, he and the Nazi party deprived them of their citizenship and other basic rights (Dunn, 1995). He did this by convincing his followers that Jews were the inferior race, and they did not deserve basic rights. Jews eventually became the enemy of Nazis and were treated like animals. They were only allowed to go certain places at certain times, they no longer had the right to own businesses, and they were required to hand over their car registrations and ID cards (Dunn, 1995). Shortly after World War II began in 1939, Jews were starting to be placed in concentration camps and deported to Poland. The Jews that were allowed to stay in Germany had no rights; they could not “subscribe to newspapers; keep dogs, cats, birds, etc.; keep electrical equipment including typewriters; own bicycles; buy meat, or egg,; use public transportation; attend school” (Dunn, 1995). By February of 1943, hundreds of thousands of Jews have been murdered, 80-85% of Jews that died during the Holocaust died before this …show more content…

Germany as a whole is still trying to find their identity and move on from the Holocaust as much as they can (Evans, 2018). There are still people in Germany who refuse to accept the fact that the Holocaust was inhumane, and refuse to move on from the Nazi ideology (Evans, 2018). There are still several monuments and statues that remain intact and are frequently protested. Eventually, Germany will have no choice but to accept the past and move on from it completely. The people who still believe in Nazism may always exist, but they are the minority and will continue to

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