How Did Germany Respond To Conflict During Ww2

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During World War II, Germans responded to conflict negatively, which only resulted in destruction and death. Adolf Hitler encouraged the Germans to respond to their troubled times in negative ways. The Germans learned to point their fingers at Jews and blamed them for their problems. They began to treat them in inhumane ways. The result of Germany’s actions was severe but well deserved. Those who were responsible for the brutal war crimes were sentenced to death.
One of the most horrible things that the Germans did to the Jews of Germany and Poland was locking them up in concentration camps. These camps weren’t built for the purpose of fun, but with the purpose to kill what the Germans called, “traitors,” but really were the innocent. In the StudySync passage, “Parallel Journeys,” Helen Waterford expresses the fear she feels for all the Jews when the Germans were dragging the Jews to concentration camps on Kristallnacht, or The Night of Broken Glass. She says, “According to reports from high Nazi officials, some 20,000 Jews were arrested, 36 killed, …show more content…

German citizens were told that just for one night they would be allowed to hurt the Jews and destroy their possessions and not get punished for it. In the passage named DESTRUCTION OF SYNAGOGUES AND BUILDINGS the author says, “The rioters destroyed 267 synagogues throughout Germany, Austria, and the Sudetenland. Many synagogues burned throughout the night in full view of the public and of local firefighters, who had received orders to intervene only to prevent flames from spreading to nearby buildings,” () This quote supports the fact that all the German citizens (not including the Jews) had the right to burn and destroy the religious and sacred places of Jewish worship. They did not only destroy the shops and businesses that the Jews owned and ran, but where they built up their beliefs on

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