Hitler's Final Solution

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The final solution was a plan to kill all the jews it was Introduced by Heinrich Himmler and administered by Adolf Eichmann it resulted in the murder of 6 million Jews in concentration camps between 1941 and 1945. The Nazis frequently used euphemistic language to disguise the true nature of their crimes. They used the term Final Solution refer to their plan to annihilate the Jewish people. It is not known when the leaders of Nazi Germany definitively decided to implement the "Final Solution." The genocide, or mass destruction, of the Jews was the culmination of a decade of increasingly severe discriminatory measures.
So the Germans embarked on a policy called the “Final Solution” which was decided upon at a conference held in Wannsee, near …show more content…

Forced Emigration was the initial stages of the Final Solution involved the mass deportation of the Jews from Germany. Hitler's main purpose was to insure racial purity and to give back to the German people their living space. Concentration camps, as World War II began, the Nazi war machine accomplished many victories and within the early years, already had succeeded in establishing control over most of the Jews in Europe. As the process of conquering and corralling the Jews took place, Hitler began to feel a sense that the world would stand by and watch as he achieved his goals. Every country that he gained control over had its Jews forced into camps and ghettos. The Jews lost their property, their homes, and soon began to lose their identities. Einsatzgruppen was mobile Killing Units. They moved around and sought to kill anyone who protested or otherwise threatened the regime. They were primarily charged with the reduction of all political enemies. Their activities were not limited though, to the political dissidents-they also killed Jews from village to village. Death Camps were the most common component of the process. An industrialized approach to murder and chaos is what the death camps were about. Fortunately, after the discovery of these camps and the telling of witnesses' accounts, the world became involved. The conclusion to the steps of the

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