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Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews Nazi Persecution Holocaust Memorial Day Trust Singling out Jews for complete annihilation in the Holocaust was not the full extent of Nazi persecution. Anyone they believed threatened their ideal of a pure ... The Holocaust - Crimes Heroes and Villains The haunting words of George Santayana reminds us that the lessons of history are invaluable in determining the course of the future: "Those who ... Nazi Holocaust - The History Place The Nazi Holocaust: 1938-1945 6000000 Deaths ... Code named "Aktion Reinhard" in honor of Heydrich the Final Solution began in the spring as over two million Jews ... 33 Facts You Should Know About the Holocaust How many people were killed in the Holocaust What does the word Shoah mean What was the largest Nazi concentration camp Learn the answers to these ... Part I - Holocaust Introductory Background Information Holocaust timeline with introductory background information and history The Holocaust - Wikipedia The Holocaust (from the Greek holkaustos: hlos "whole" and kausts "burnt") also referred to as the Shoah (Hebrew: HaShoah ... Holocaust World news The Guardian The historian a key player in the libel case involving Holocaust denier David Irving talks about Trump Goebbels and why he agrees with John Bercow An Introductory History of the Holocaust Sources: Holocaust Memorial Center 6602 West Maple Road West Bloomfield MI 48322 Tel. (248)6610840 Fax. (248)6614204 [email protected]; www ... Holocaust Remembrance and Tribute to Survivors of Nazi's ... Holocaust Remembrance Sanctuary and Beyond A Tribute to Survivors of the Nazi's ... The Holocaust: 36 Questions Answers About the Holocaust The Holocaust: 36 Questions Answers About the Holocaust by The Simon Wiesenthal Center Rank: #799933 in eBooksPublished on: 2010-04-15Released on: 2010-04-15Format: Kindle eBook 9 of 9 people found the following review helpful.Exceptional academic accountBy PaulThis book is a detailed, scholarly synthesis of the evolutionary process by which the Nazis progressed from persecution to mass murder to complete genocide. It is not meant to be an introduction to the Holocaust or an overview of the topic -- and if some have read or rated this book expecting a more "accessible" overview of the Holocaust have probably chosen the wrong book. I can say, however, that to get a more detailed and compelling account of how the Nazis actually created and implemented the Holocaust, one probably has to look at very topic-specific scholarly articles or at primary source material. For the topics and themes covered in the book this is probably the best (and most balanced) single volume accounting in existence.The book shows quite convincingly a few main themes: 1) The Nazis did not finally decide upon complete extermination, without any sort of caveats or pretexts, until at least the Spring of 1942. By this point there were gas chambers in operation at Auschwitz, Belzec, and Sobibor, and more than half a million had been killed by shooting in the Soviet Union. In other words, the practical fact of genocide actually came into being before the Nazis actually decided that genocide was their "final" solution. Longerich even makes a case that the Wannsee Conference cannot be definitively argued as a fundamental decision to exterminate 100% of the Jews, because there was still argument and pretext at the time about extermination as a way to select out those fit for forced labor. 2) Hitler was without question the driver of the Holocaust, as many fundamental changes in policy happened after key meetings between him and Himmler (or other functionaries). 3) Goering was much more complicit in the Holocaust, at least up through 1941-1942, than is widely recognized.My only critiques of this book are the following: 1) For all the effort (and evidence) that refutes there having been a single "decision" or "order" that initiated the genocide, Longerich does not address in historiographic terms whether this is even an important question or not. Whether Hitler envisioned a complete extermination program in 1919, 1933, 1939, or not until 1942 is sort of moot. Given enough time, enough power, and an ideology-driven regime that rewarded "audacity" and radicalization, it's sort of inevitable that the butchery and mass murder of 1941 would coalesce with the ideal of a "final solution". In other words, even if in 1941 a complete genocide wasn't envisioned, it was certainly predictable. 2) The Nazi ambitions for deporting all the Jews to Siberia or Madagascar or whatever was fundamentally a genocidal strategy. Longerich softly alludes to this, but the fact is the Nazis had a goal of extermination (albeit more "passive") anyway, even before they invaded the Soviet Union. They had already, especially with the institution of ghettos and even earlier the deprivation of social services, essentially doomed the Jews to attrition by disease and starvation anyway. The plan to deport them in millions to hostile environments, guard them against escape by the SS, and deprive them of any sort of sustenance or livelihood, has to be seen as an exterminatory policy. So the moral committment to genocide had existed among the Nazis for years. 3) Longerich emphasizes early in the book that the Nazis were never able to really have a positive "pro-Aryan" programme -- so they substituted a negative antisemitic program instead, and this was the cornerstone of their purportedly pro-Aryan policies. But this is no surprise -- the Nazis were antisemites and xenophobes (dating back to pre-WWI in Hitler's case) long before they had articulated a pro-Aryan vision. So it seems to me that pro-Aryan rhetoric was a ruse to effect an antisemitic campaign, not the other way around.22 of 23 people found the following review helpful.Illuminating scholarly account of the HolocaustBy Christopher GrantThis book is not for everyone interested in understanding the Holocaust. There are no pictures and no maps. The author makes no attempt to convey the horror of Nazi actions through vivid descriptions or language (beyond using the word "murder" a thousand times or so). He assumes a lot of background knowledge in the reader about the basic story of the Holocaust: the primary methods, locales, and perpetrators. The translation from the original German is pretty good but a little stilted. The text was originally the author's "Habilitation" thesis in Germany. It has lots of footnotes and a big bibliography.There are pop history books, history textbooks, and scholarly historical works. This book is clearly in the latter category. If you don't like scholarly historical works, this book is not for you. That doesn't make you bad or the book bad; there's just going to be a mismatch between what you want and what this book provides.What this book provides is a remarkably detailed and insightful look at the evolution of Nazi policy towards the Jews from the time the Nazis took over Germany to the time that the Third Reich collapsed. The author provides ample evidence that the policy evolved substantially throughout this time period, and he gives well-reasoned explanations of why it changed the way it did. Maybe this book ought to have seemed very dry, with the myriad Polish place names and the body counts eventually just becoming a blur in the mind of the reader. Yet I had trouble putting it down, and I feel much better informed for having read it.3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.An essential look at the institutionalization and industrialization of murder.By hans castorpPhenomenal. A meticulous, succinct analysis of the origins of the Holocaust and its development. It's a solidly academic book, and its catalogue of murders is all the more horrifying for that.See all 17 customer reviews... The Holocaust - Wikipedia The Holocaust (from the Greek holkaustos: hlos "whole" and kausts "burnt") also referred to as the Shoah (Hebrew: HaShoah ... An Introductory History of the Holocaust Sources: Holocaust Memorial Center 6602 West Maple Road West Bloomfield MI 48322 Tel. (248)6610840 Fax. (248)6614204 [email protected]; www ... Holocaust Remembrance and Tribute to Survivors of Nazi's ... Holocaust Remembrance Sanctuary and Beyond A Tribute to Survivors of the Nazi's ... Holocaust World news The Guardian The historian a key player in the libel case involving Holocaust denier David Irving talks about Trump Goebbels and why he agrees with John Bercow The Holocaust - Crimes Heroes and Villains The haunting words of George Santayana reminds us that the lessons of history are invaluable in determining the course of the future: "Those who ... Nazi Holocaust - The History Place The Nazi Holocaust: 1938-1945 6000000 Deaths ... Code named "Aktion Reinhard" in honor of Heydrich the Final Solution began in the spring as over two million Jews ... The Holocaust: 36 Questions & Answers About the Holocaust The Holocaust: 36 Questions & Answers About the Holocaust by The Simon Wiesenthal Center 33 Facts You Should Know About the Holocaust How many people were killed in the Holocaust? What does the word Shoah mean? What was the largest Nazi concentration camp? Learn the answers to these ... Part I - Holocaust Introductory Background Information Holocaust timeline with introductory background information and history Nazi Persecution Holocaust Memorial Day Trust Singling out Jews for complete annihilation in the Holocaust was not the full extent of Nazi persecution. Anyone they believed threatened their ideal of a pure ...
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