Information about Phases Of The Holocaust

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The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 employed a pseudo-scientific basis for racial discrimination against Jews.
Raul Hilberg, a well-known historian of the Holocaust, identified four distinct Phases of the Holocaust.

Identification and definition

The Holocaust
Early elements
Racial policy Nazi eugenics Nuremberg Laws Forced euthanasia Concentration camps (list)
Jews
Jews in Nazi Germany, 1933 to 1939
Pogroms: Kristallnacht Bucharest Dorohoi Iaşi Kaunas Jedwabne Lww
Ghettos: Warsaw Łdź Lww Krakw Budapest Theresienstadt Kovno Wilno Łachwa
Einsatzgruppen: Babi Yar Rumbula Ponary Odessa
Final Solution: Wannsee Aktion Reinhard
Extermination camps: Auschwitz Bełżec Chełmno Majdanek Sobibr Treblinka Jasenovac
Resistance: Jewish partisans Ghetto uprisings (Warsaw)
End of World War II: Death marches Berihah Displaced persons
Other victims
Polish and Soviet Slavs (Poles) Serbs Roma Homosexuals
Responsible parties
Nazi Germany: Hitler Eichmann Heydrich Himmler SS Gestapo SA Collaborators Aftermath: Nuremberg TrialsReparations Agreement between Israel and West Germany Denazification
Lists
Survivors Victims Rescuers
Resources
The Destruction of the European Jews
Phases of the Holocaust
Functionalism vs. intentionalism
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People with four German grandparents (white circles) were of "German blood," while people were classified as Jews if they were descended from three or more Jewish grandparents (black circles in top row right). Having one or more Jewish grandparents made someone "mixed blood." In the absence of discernible external differences, the Nazis used the religious observance of a person's grandparents to determine their "race". Before the Nazis could actually make laws that discriminated against Jews, the law needed to identify the range of persons to be targeted by those measures. This was especially hard, since the Nazi ideology and related scientific racism theories, considered the Jews as a "race", and not as a nation or a religious or ethnic community.

The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 identified someone with three or more Jewish grandparents as a 'full Jew', some with two Jewish grandparents as a '1st degree hybrid', and someone with one Jewish grandparent as a '2nd degree hybrid'. The actual religious practice of the person was irrelevant, and so many converted Jews were now declared to be Jews by the state. However, Aryans who had converted to Judaism were classified by the Nazis as Jews despite their non-Jewish racial background. '2nd degree hybrids' and Jews married to Aryans were sometimes exempted from extermination.

After defining the term Jew in law, the Jews were discriminated by such measures as requiring them to add "Israel" (for Jewish males) or "Sarah" (for Jewish females) to their names, and a large letter "J" was imprinted on their passports, among others.

Economic discrimination and separation

After defining who was a Jew, economic discrimination and separation from the rest of society continued the process of the Holocaust. Jewish doctors, lawyers, and even housemaids were no more allowed to work for Germans, and Jews no longer were allowed to employ Germans. Neither were they allowed to be on the boards of firms or to hold shares of a firm. Firms, houses, etc. in Jewish possession were 'aryanized', sold to "Aryan" Germans. Usually there was blackmail involved, and the German state and the involved Aryans made huge profits in these transactions, while Jewish business people were forced to agree to the transactions.

Concentration

After the Jews were segregated by definition from the rest of the people, and their economic ties with the rest of the society were mostly cut or restricted, the Jews were physically separated from the rest of the society. Either by forcing them to move to special houses or to ghettos, Jews had to live in often desperate conditions.

By concentrating the Jews into ghettos, concentration camps or forced-labor camps, the Jews were completely cut off from the rest of society, completely under the control of the Nazis. The Nazis controlled the amount of food that entered the ghetto and used the population for slave labor.

Isolated from society, without money, and under the control of the Nazis, the Jews were now defenseless.

Extermination

In 1942, after the Wannsee conference, the Nazis began to murder the Jews in large numbers. Extermination squads were already conducting mass shootings of Jews in the areas of the occupied Soviet territories since 1941, and now Jews were either deported to then-empty ghettos like that of Riga to be shot later, or to the death camps of Operation Reinhard: Treblinka, Belzec and Sobibór. Polish Jews living in the formerly Polish territories then integrated into Germany were killed in Chelmno (Kulmhof) in mobile gas chambers. Later on starting 1943 Jews were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, the most well-known death camp.
Raul Hilberg (June 2 1926 - August 4 2007 in Williston, Vermont) was one of the best-known and most distinguished of Holocaust historians. His three-volume, 1,273-page The Destruction of the European Jews is regarded as the seminal study of the Nazi Final Solution.
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The racial policy of Nazi Germany refers to the policies and laws implemented by Nazi Germany, asserting the superiority of the so-called "Aryan race" and based on a specific racist doctrine which claimed scientific legitimacy.
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Nazi eugenics pertains to Nazi Germany's race based social policies that placed the improvement of the race through eugenics at the center of their concerns and targeted those humans they identified as "life unworthy of life" (German Lebensunwertes Leben
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The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 were denaturalization laws passed in Nazi Germany. They used a pseudoscientific basis for racial discrimination against Jews. People with 4 German grandparents (white circles on the chart) were of "German blood", while people were classified as Jews if
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Action T4 (German: Aktion T4) was a program in Nazi Germany officially between 1939 and 1941, during which the regime of Adolf Hitler systematically killed between 75,000 to 250,000 people with intellectual or physical disabilities.
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concentration camps (Konzentrationslager, abbreviated KZ or KL) throughout the territories it controlled. In these camps, millions of prisoners were killed through mistreatment, disease, starvation, and overwork, or were executed as unfit for labor.
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Extermination camps are marked with pink, while major concentration camps of other types are marked with blue.

Camp Name Country (today) Camp Type In use Est. prisoners Est.
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World War II in known as one of the most tragic periods in the Jewish history.

In Nazi-occupied Europe

Main article: The Holocaust

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Kristallnacht, also known as Reichskristallnacht, Pogromnacht, Crystal Night and the Night of Broken Glass, was a pogrom[1] against Jews throughout Germany and parts of Austria on November 9–November 10, 1938.
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The Legionnaires' rebellion and the Bucharest pogrom occurred in Bucharest, Romania, between the 21 January and 23 January, 1941.

As the privileges of the Iron Guard were being cut off by Conducător (The Great Leader)
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On 1 July 1940, in the town of Dorohoi in Romania, Romanian military units carried out a pogrom against the local Jews, during which, according to an official Romanian report, 53 Jews were murdered, and dozens injured.
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The Kaunas pogrom was a massacre of Jewish people living in Kaunas, Lithuania that took place in June 1941.

Algirdas Klimaitis formed a military unit of roughly 600 members and engaged in the battles with Soviet army for the control of Kaunas.
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The Jedwabne pogrom (or Jedwabne massacre) (pronounced /jɛdvabnɛ/) was a massacre of Jewish people living in and near the town of Jedwabne in Poland that took place in July 1941 during World War II.
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During World War II ghettos were established by the Nazis to confine Jews and sometimes Gypsies into tightly packed areas of the cities of Eastern Europe turning them into de-facto concentration camps.
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Warsaw Ghetto was the largest of the Jewish ghettos established by Nazi Germany in the General Government during the Holocaust in World War II.

Between 1940 and 1943, starvation, disease and deportations to concentration camps and extermination camps dropped the population
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Budapest ghetto was a ghetto where Jews were forced to live in Budapest, Hungary during the Second World War. The area consisted of several blocks of the old Jewish quarter of the city surrounding the main synagogue, and was surrounded by a high fence and stone wall that was
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Concentration camp Theresienstadt (often referred to as Terezín) was a Nazi concentration camp during World War II. It was established by the Gestapo in the fortress and garrison city of Terezín (German name Theresienstadt), located in what is now the Czech Republic.
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The Kaunas Ghetto (also called the Kovno Ghetto) was a ghetto established by Nazi Germany to hold the Jews of the Lithuanian city of Kaunas during the Holocaust. At its peak, the Ghetto held 30,000 people, most of whom were later sent to concentration and extermination
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The Vilna Ghetto or Vilnius Ghetto was one of the Jewish ghettos established by Nazi Germany in the city of Vilnius during the Holocaust in World War II. During roughly 2 years of its existence, starvation, disease, street executions, maltreatment and deportations to
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Лахва
Lakhva

Location of Lakhva, within the Brest voblast
Coordinates:
Country
Subdivision Belarus
Lakhva

First settled 1500s
Elevation 108 m (0 ft)
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Einsatzgruppen (German for "task forces" or "intervention groups") were paramilitary groups formed by Heinrich Himmler and operated by the SS before and during World War II.
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Babi Yar (Ukrainian: Бабин яр, Babyn yar; Russian: Бабий яр, Babiy yar) is a ravine in Kiev, the capital of Ukraine.
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For the air base at Rumbula, see Rumbula (air base)


Rumbula Forest is a pine forest enclave in Riga, Latvia, in which Jews were massacred during the Holocaust.
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The Ponary massacre (or Paneriai massacre) was the mass-murder of about 100,000 people performed by German SD and SS and their subordinate Lithuanian[][][][]
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The Odessa massacre was the extermination of Jews in Odessa and surrounding towns in Transnistria during the autumn of 1941 and the winter of 1942 in a series of massacres and killings during the Holocaust by German and Romanian forces.
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Final Solution to the Jewish Question (German: Die Endlösung der Judenfrage) refers to the German Nazis' plan to engage in systematic genocide against the European Jewish population during World War II.
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The Wannsee Conference was a meeting of senior officials of the Nazi German regime, held in the Berlin suburb of Wannsee on 20 January 1942. The purpose of the conference was to inform senior Nazis and senior Governmental administrators of plans for the "Final
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Operation Reinhard (Aktion Reinhard or Einsatz Reinhard in German) was the code name given to the Nazi plan to murder Polish Jews in the General Government, and marked the beginning of the most deadly phase of the Holocaust, the use of extermination camps.
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