The Holocaust: A Solution To The Holocaust

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Holocaust The Holocaust was a sad period in our history where the corrupt moral code of a nation took the lives of Six million people. Germany under rule of Hitler’s Nazi party killed and incapacitated anyone who didn’t fit into the Nazi’s idea of an ideal society. Hitler inherited a decrepit nation; in the 1920s Germany was plunged into a depression, which left many citizens unemployed, hungry and homeless. Living in conditions of hopeless poverty the country was overwhelmingly starving for economical and social reform. Just as they thought their prayers for a new leader weren’t heard; Hitler emerged inspiring and charming the beaten down people of Germany with nationalism, giving them a new found since of unity. The nation of Germany so …show more content…

But this wasn’t enough the Nazi party they wanted them gone from the world a complete genocide. At the Wannsee Conference in 1942, the Germans came up with a solution to their “Jew Problem” (The History Place holocaust timeline). They planned to wipe 11 million people from the face of the earth, at a faster rate than their camps natural causes (starvation and over working), and treatment accordingly policy (gas chambers) (The History Place holocaust timeline). This is horrific to think of a governing body having a convention to map out the genocide of a whole race and regarding said plan as a solution. The Nazis started to carry out complete genocide against the socially undesired and with every inch the Allies made closer to stopping the harder they relentlessly pushed to finish the extermination. The Nazis began to feel the tables of war turning against their favor and started to try to finish the final solution. Seeing the end near the Nazi party started to kill the problem quicker using mass graves with firing squads, and pushing more people to the gas chamber. Hitler surrounded by Allies soldiers sees no way out and takes his own life instead taking the embarrassment of loss and being charged with crimes of war. The war was over but Hitler’s death camps claimed the lives of approximately six million

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