holocost

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The holocaust was a time in history when Hitler persuaded everybody to agree to his opinion that the Jews were useless people and that they deserved to die, thus leading the Nazi’s to kidnapping the Jews and sending them to concentration camps. The Nazi’s helped Hitler make the “perfect race” by killing everyone who had brown hair and brown eyes. The holocaust initially began in January 1933, but officially ended when Hitler killed both himself and his wife in May 1945. The word holocaust comes from the Greek words “holos” (whole) and “kaustos” (burned). During the Holocaust the Nazi’s murdered about six million Jews. Over 1.1 million of them were children. They hunted down any Jewish person to take to the various places where the concentration camps were located.
The concentration camps are where the Jews were taken to. The camps were practically torture camps. The Jews would be transported to these camps in a small train-like vehicle where they would be so close together half of them died of suffocation when they arrived to their destination. The people, who were still alive by the time they got there, were separated into two groups, left and right. They would choose either the left group or right group and either shoot them or take them to the gas chamber where they would suffocate. For the other group, they were separated by boy and girl. The boys would go to one side of the camp while the girls went to the other. For many children, when they got to the concentration camps they were automatically targeted by the Nazi’s, that was because the Nazi’s thought that if the children were to survive this then they would parent another generation of Jews. If the people did not follow instructions or disobeyed them, the Germans would...

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...before the whole event even started. The many people who survived the holocaust was mainly because they were liberated by the Russian army or they got by, by doing the hard life of labor and stayed there until it was all over. The survivors were to scared to go back to their former homes because of the hatred of Jews. The very few who returned home did fear for their lives. Some Jewish agencies worked to facilitate the Jewish displaced persons. The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee supplied the survivors with food and clothing items. The largest survivor organization, Sh’erit ha-Pletah (Hebrew for “surviving remnant”), urged for better emigration opportunities. With all of that help, though, it was still a struggle for them to get their lives back on track. Many people had no nationality, they traveled with a false pass port, they had no name, no home

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