Being told you don’t have to go to school anymore, and now you’re going to Hitler Youth Camp, is probably the best thing to happen to you as a kid. Hitler Youth Camp started during 1922 and end in 1945, it forced boys to leave their families at the age 10 and by the time they were ready to leave was at the age of 18. Girls were also mandatory to participate at Hitler Girls Camp ( The Third Reich DVD). While daughters are being away at camp, it’s increasing the rate of teen pregnancy. From the beginning these girls are told to have many children as they can, which they are. Its creating a major problem to many parents, even being sentenced to death for not allowing their daughters getting pregnant. Some parents are allowing this happen and
85 years ago, over a 12 year period, nearly six million Jews were killed in a genocide called The Holocaust. The Holocaust was led by the Nazi Party and Adolf Hitler was their leader. The mass murders took place at concentration camps throughout Europe. The majority of concentration camps resided in Poland and Germany. Many people believe there were only a few concentration camps. “However, researchers found that the Nazis had actually established 20,000 camps between 1933 and 1945” (“How Many Camps,” n.d.). In this paper I will be discussing the largest concentration camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau.
Adolf Hitler often proclaimed, “Whoever has the youth has the future.” This future would entail the most destructive war in history and the systematic murder of millions of people. This research will study how the Hitler Youth, a youth organization affiliated with the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei (Nazi Party), affected the German population, particularly its members, from 1922 to 1945. Specifically, this research will examine how formal and informal Hitler Youth training influenced its experiencers’ decisions to acquiesce to and perpetrate the Holocaust. This research about the Hitler Youth’s effects on people’s behavior during the Holocaust will analyze the role of Nazism versus preexisting societal trends in cultivating genocidal mindset.
My camp is Auschwitz - Birkenau one of the largest concentration camps where Jews were held captured. Inside the camp were four gas chambers. Each gas chamber used Zyklon B gas. Most people brought to this camp were Jews. Before entering the chamber they were ordered to undress. Once they finished the Nazis locked the doors and dropped in the gas. Also, when they died they burned the Jews. The bones were disintegrated and their ashes were spread out on the fields.
Concentration Camps were an imfamous event in WWII. But, not in a good way. Concentration Camps were not only the place where millions of innocent people were brutally murdered. They were so much more. During WWII, there were over 1,200 camps that were run by Nazi Germany. They were placed all over Europe and held many people of different beliefs, races, abilty, age, and religion. Hitler, the “ruler” over the Nazis, sent millions of people to their death to these camps. There were a few different types of camps that held different ways of handling the prisioners.
Buchenwald Concentration Camp Buchenwald concentration camp was a Nazi concentration camp that was located in a forest on the slopes of the Ettersberg, approximately five miles northwest of Weimar in east central Germany. It was given its name by Heinrich Himmler on July 28, 1937. Along with its satellite camps, Buchenwald was one of the biggest concentration camps found within the German borders in 1937. Buchenwald was divided into three parts which included the large camp, the small camp and the tent camp (Buchenwald Concentration Camp). The barracks were described as “tar paper shacks” by Fred Mercer, a liberator with the 20th Corps (Buchenwald).
Never in history has there been such a brutal, infamous camp. A camp that killed a vast majority of the Jewish religion. Auschwitz-Birkenau, one of the deadliest camps in history ran by a German leader and his troops. The memory of Auschwitz is the most horrific in history. This death camp started in 1940 and operated until 1945, just until the end of WWII.
The Japanese internment camps are not the same compared to Jewish concentration camps one is for protection another is for prison.The Jews were useless to the Nazis and the Japanese just wanted protection from the war.The Americans never helped the Jews until the Japanese attacked pearl harbor.The Jews were held up in the concentration camps to them it was like prison.Japanese internment camps and Jewish concentration camps are not the same because the purpose of the camps are different,the way people were treated,and the outcome of the camps.
During World War II, millions of people were forcefully taken and placed into Nazi concentration camps. In the time between 1933 and 1945, Nazi Germany established thousands of concentration camps all across Europe. These camps were used for many cruel purposes such as forced-labor camps, transit camps which served as temporary way stations, and extermination camps built primarily or exclusively for mass murder. When the Holocaust finally came to an end, a total of over 11 million people were estimated to have been murdered in concentration camps, leaving only a small fraction of those imprisoned to survive. All in all, Nazi concentration camps left a stain of fear on the hearts of millions of innocent people.
The Auschwitz-Birkneau concentration camp was established I 1940 by the Germans. It's located just outside Oswiecim, Poland. The original reason of establishment was that the mass arrests of Poles were too much for the capacity of local prisons. Eventually, it became the largest death camp of the Holocaust.
There used to be places that were known for torture, forced labor, and murder. People were dragged out of their own homes to be brought there. These places were called concentration camps. They were the largest Nazi killing centers and they took the lives of over a million Jews. The camps are an important part of history that we will never forget.
Imagine if instead of going to school you went to the Hitler Youth. The Hitler Youth was as important as regular school was. The Hitler Youth was Hitler's belief of what people should be: “The weak must be chiselled away. I want young men and women who can suffer pain. A young German must be as swift as a greyhound, as tough as leather, and as hard as Krupp’s steel.” Hitler was teaching the youth what he thought was right.
Through the Hitler Youth, Hitler was successfully able to corrupt the minds of children and spread propaganda across the country. Hitler Youth played an important role in the spread of Nazisim across Germany. Hitler Youth also proved Germany with a common goal: The Aryan Race. The Hitler Youth also added to the Nazi school system and made the kids more devoted. The Hitler Youth had a big impact on the people of Germany and its future.
“The future of the German nation depends on its youth and the German youth shall have to be prepared for its future duties”
From the time Adolf Hitler came into office in 1933, up to the time when Germany surrendered to the Allied forces and Hitler committed suicide in 1945; the future for Germany became strongly invested in the hands of the younger generations. The Hitler Youth was a paramilitary organization formed in 1926. It gave kids excitement, adventure and new heroes to idolize. Hitler admired young kids drive, energy and strong love for Germany. He recognized these qualities and made it part of his plan to control the future world but the real question is why did Adolf Hitler pick children for his future? The education and the lack of schooling in independent thinking that instilled the ideology that brainwashed the Hitler- Jugend and eventually led
Things like physical and mental exhaustion, and families being torn apart and executed were common. Parents were told that failing to comply with the Nazi’s orders would result in imprisonment, execution, or having their children taken away and put in a Nazi runned orphanage. “This brainwashing was highly effective because a young boy or a girl was removed from the influence of the parental home at an early age, and if the father or mother objected, the SS would interpret that as a sign of disloyalty toward the Reich, which had life-threatening consequences. The parents were told: ‘Your son is not your personal property, solely at your disposal. He is on loan to you but he is the property of the German Volk.