How Is Adolf Hitler Responsible For The Holocaust

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The Holocaust The Holocaust was a horrible event in human history where millions of Jews were systematically slaughtered under the order of Nazi leader, Adolf Hitler. The Nazi leader rose to power with promises to help the economy and keep out communism. However, he needed someone to blame, someone to be held accountable, and someone be responsible for the problems that Germany was facing. Mixed with the anti-Semitic culture and traditions of post WWI Germany, the Jews were thought to be an ideal scapegoat. Therefore, Hitler conceived an inconceivably horrific plan to exterminate the Jews, bringing forth the Holocaust. The history of the Holocaust dates back before Adolf Hitler and the problems that Germany had to face coming out of the Great …show more content…

He began his journey to the top upon visiting the German Workers’ Party while working as an army informer. He enjoyed the party’s mixture of “nationalism, anti-Semitism, and populist quasi-socialist politics”, joining the party in “September 1919” (Hitler, Adolf). Soon after, he left his job as an army informer and became devoted to politics. A year after joining, he convinced the party to change its name to the “National Socialist German Workers' Party (the NSDAP, or the Nazi Party)” (Hitler, Adolf). The year following that Hitler became the party’s undisputed leader, setting out to transform the party into a “mass movement committed to the revolutionary transformation of Germany and the reassertion of German national power” (Hitler, Adolf). In the years following, Hitler continued his rise to power till eventually becoming German chancellor on January 30th, …show more content…

In these concentration camps, millions of Jews were slaughtered as part of Hitler’s master plan. The men would be kept to work as slaves in the camps for Germany, while the women and children would usually be killed off. “During the summer and fall of 1941, the Einsatzgruppen, or mobile killing units, machine-gunned men, women, and children en masse. Later, the Nazis used mobile gassing trucks and gas chambers. Forced ghettoization and executions were carried out by region” (Auschwitz-Birkenau). Then to dispose of the Jews they would be cremated. Elie Wiesel illustrates these images from his own experiences in his memoir Night, “Not far from us, flames, huge flames, were rising from a ditch. Something was being burned there. A truck drew close and unloaded its hold: small children. Babies!” (Wiesel 32). The Jews that were not killed by Nazis in these camps were often killed by starvation or sickness. The conditions in these camps were horrid, as Elie Wiesel writes, “tangle of human shapes, heads sunk deeply between the shoulders, crouching, piled one on top of the other, like a cemetery covered with snow” (Wiesel 98). The Jews here were treated inhumane, they were treated like animals, and the world didn’t do anything to stop it until it was too

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