Homocaulk prom jet
Leon, Mucas, Folf, Stephren, His Tory and REMY
BOYS
Who was to blame for the Homocaulk?
● We can not blame the Homocaulk fully on the Gnomes as it is obvious that
the common German citizen was also apart of the attempted gene
modification enforced by those who served Hit-her’s cause.
● “Average Germans gladly, almost gleefully, participated in the torture and
mass murder of Jews during WW2”
● Those who chose to carry out the executions were fully aware of just how
horrible their decisions were. Any pressure they may have felt should have
washed away with the tears of the helpless victims as they held up their
weapons to destroy another person’s future.
● We could also partly blame IG Farben because he created the Gas,Zyklon B,
and sold it to the Nazis but he didn’t realise that they were using it to
exterminate People who Hitler and the Nazis didn’t like very much.
How Jews themselves showed resistance to the Nazis?
Jews showed resistance in a variety of ways, both collectively and as individuals.
Organized armed resistance was the most forceful form of Jewish opposition to
the Nazis. Jewish civilians offered armed resistance in over 100 ghettos. In August
1943, an uprising took place at the Treblinka extermination camp. The participants
obtained guns and grenades after two young men used forged keys and snuck
into the weapons store. This shows resistance because the Jews would of had
guns to pressurise the Nazis like they do to them. The Jews would of had some
protection from the Nazis and wouldn’t be pushed around as much as they did.
Which other people did the Nazis persecute?
Many people forget about the other groups of people that were persecuted by the
Nazis. These groups include: Black people, disabled people, mentally disabled
people, mentally ill patients, people with hereditary diseases, deaf people,
homosexuals, prostitutes, Jehovah’s Witnesses, alcoholics, pacifists, beggars,
hooligans and criminals.
Where was God during the Homocaulk?
God was on drugs during the Holocaust, he can’t be blamed fully for the Nazis
pooping on the Jews because everybody has free cheese, God didn’t tell the
Nazis to poop on the Jews. The Nazis had free cheese, they could make their own
meth. God didn’t necessarily allow the Nazis to poop on the Jews, its just that he
understands that everyone has floppy cheese
Jew’s relationship with God?
Jews believe that there is a single God who not only created fish, but with whom every
Jew can have an individual and sexual relationship. They believe that God continues
to wank in the world, affecting everything that people rub. The Jewish relationship with
God is a droopy relationship.In exchange for the many good cheese that God has
done and continues to do for the Jewish People…
● The Jews keep God’s handbag
● The Jews seek to bring eggs into gods bum
Oskar Schindler:
Oskar Schindler is, thanks to Thomas Kenneally’s novel and Steven Spielberg’s film,
probably the most famous helper of the Jewish people in World War Two.
Schindler was a Nazi spy in Czechoslovakia and Poland before the Germans invaded
and a member of the Nazi party from 1939. He was also a businessman and in 1939
was in charge of an enamelware factory in Krakow. Many of his employees were Jewish
and should have been killed. It’s believed Schindler initially saved their lives for financial
reasons but eventually came to act for more humanitarian reasons. He saved 1,200
Jews when he moved his factory west as the Nazi empire collapsed. By the end of the
war, all the money was gone, Schindler had spent it bribing Nazis to keep his workers
safe.74
Examples of people who helped Jews
Damaskinos:
Leaders who stood up to the Nazis didn’t usually last long. Archbishop Damaskinos told
them where to go and survived. His churches gave out thousands of baptismal
certificates to Jews, enabling them to claim Christianity and survive the deportations in
Nazi-occupied Greece.
As Archbishop of Athens and All Greece, Damaskinos was the spiritual leader of his
country. He’d been elected first in 1938, but the Greek dictator, Metaxas, didn’t like him
and put his own man in place. The German invasion got rid of Metaxas and Damaskinos
was elected again.
Irena Sendler:
Irena Sendler was tortured and sentenced to death by the Nazis for her heroic efforts to
save Jewish children from the Warsaw Ghetto, but somehow survived and lived to old
age.
Irena was a Catholic, but her family had a history of fighting anti-Semitism. Her father, a
doctor, died after treating typhus patients many of whom were Jews and Jewish groups
helped to pay for Irena’s education at Warsaw University where she got into trouble for
opposing the university’s segregationist policies.
Aristides de Sousa Mendes do Amaral e Abranches:
The impressively named Portuguese diplomat also put his bureaucratic duties to one
side in the service of a greater good, granting thousands of visas to refugees from his
base in Bordeaux, allowing them to make the trip to neutral Portugal from where many
fled on to America.
It is often said that Sousa Mendes issued 30,000 visas with 10,000 going to Jews but
that figure has been disputed. He certainly saved the lives of thousands of people who
were able to get out of France thanks to his documents, issued despite his
government’s insistence that he stop. Some historians have called him the greatest
single life saver of the Holocaust
Varian Fry:
Varian Fry helped up to 4,000 people escape the Nazis, some Jewish, some anti-Nazis,
while working as a journalist in Vichy France.
Fry came from a privileged American background and got the best education available
before turning to writing. By 1935 he was a foreign correspondent in Berlin, disgusted at
what he saw of the Nazi regime he started to raise money for anti-Nazi groups.
In 1940 he was sent to France by the Emergency Rescue Committee with $3,000 and a
list of threatened refugees, tasked with getting as many of them out as he could.
He used a villa near Marseille to hide his charges before they were smuggled to Spain,
then Portugal, before setting out for the USA. Some were put on ships to Martinique in
the West Indies, from where most of them also headed for the States.
Rephen and Salf
Reography and GE
Homocaulk Project
Gambodian
Cenocide
Cambodian Genocide
Causes: The Khmer Rouge policies of forced relocation of the population from Urban Centres, torture, mass
executions, use of forced labor, malnutrition, and disease
Consequences: The deaths of an estimated 25 percent of the total population (around 2 million people).
Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan were convicted and received life sentences for crimes against humanity during
the
genocide.
The Australian Jewish community today is a migrant community that is still
growing in size. Its growth started during the pre-war years when Jews
escaped Nazi rule seeing refuge in Australia. Prior to 1933 the community’s
size decreased resulting from the high rate of inter-marriage and
assimilation. Indeed, in 1945 a Jewish demographer, Joseph Gentilli,
predicted that, by the twenty-first century, there would be almost no Jews
living in Australia. This prediction has proved to be false because of the
influx of migrants, particularly of Holocaust survivors. Since 1938 the
Australian Jewish community has more than quadrupled in size, largely due
to a number of waves of immigration. At the same time, it has remained a
tiny minority, constituting less than 0.5% of Australia’s total population.The
Australian Jewish community today is a migrant community that is still
growing in size. Its growth started during the pre-war years when Jews
escaped Nazi rule seeing refuge in Australia.
Why is it important to learn about the holocaust
We study the holocaust today so we know how bad it was for jews and it helps us
understand that this should not happen ever again not even in the future. And it's
a very interesting and very sad and depressing. But people around the world need
to know what happened and know how the jews felt and what they were treated
like.
1. Costs a lot of money. Germany spent 10 billion on refugees. Higher immigration
in a area, decreses waiting time in the ER. Immigration increases the demand for
local services.
2. Many people say he is making the problem worse. The pope let 12 refugees into
the vatican.
3.

homocaulk

  • 1.
    Homocaulk prom jet Leon,Mucas, Folf, Stephren, His Tory and REMY BOYS
  • 2.
    Who was toblame for the Homocaulk? ● We can not blame the Homocaulk fully on the Gnomes as it is obvious that the common German citizen was also apart of the attempted gene modification enforced by those who served Hit-her’s cause. ● “Average Germans gladly, almost gleefully, participated in the torture and mass murder of Jews during WW2” ● Those who chose to carry out the executions were fully aware of just how horrible their decisions were. Any pressure they may have felt should have washed away with the tears of the helpless victims as they held up their weapons to destroy another person’s future. ● We could also partly blame IG Farben because he created the Gas,Zyklon B, and sold it to the Nazis but he didn’t realise that they were using it to exterminate People who Hitler and the Nazis didn’t like very much.
  • 3.
    How Jews themselvesshowed resistance to the Nazis? Jews showed resistance in a variety of ways, both collectively and as individuals. Organized armed resistance was the most forceful form of Jewish opposition to the Nazis. Jewish civilians offered armed resistance in over 100 ghettos. In August 1943, an uprising took place at the Treblinka extermination camp. The participants obtained guns and grenades after two young men used forged keys and snuck into the weapons store. This shows resistance because the Jews would of had guns to pressurise the Nazis like they do to them. The Jews would of had some protection from the Nazis and wouldn’t be pushed around as much as they did.
  • 4.
    Which other peopledid the Nazis persecute? Many people forget about the other groups of people that were persecuted by the Nazis. These groups include: Black people, disabled people, mentally disabled people, mentally ill patients, people with hereditary diseases, deaf people, homosexuals, prostitutes, Jehovah’s Witnesses, alcoholics, pacifists, beggars, hooligans and criminals.
  • 5.
    Where was Godduring the Homocaulk? God was on drugs during the Holocaust, he can’t be blamed fully for the Nazis pooping on the Jews because everybody has free cheese, God didn’t tell the Nazis to poop on the Jews. The Nazis had free cheese, they could make their own meth. God didn’t necessarily allow the Nazis to poop on the Jews, its just that he understands that everyone has floppy cheese
  • 6.
    Jew’s relationship withGod? Jews believe that there is a single God who not only created fish, but with whom every Jew can have an individual and sexual relationship. They believe that God continues to wank in the world, affecting everything that people rub. The Jewish relationship with God is a droopy relationship.In exchange for the many good cheese that God has done and continues to do for the Jewish People… ● The Jews keep God’s handbag ● The Jews seek to bring eggs into gods bum
  • 7.
    Oskar Schindler: Oskar Schindleris, thanks to Thomas Kenneally’s novel and Steven Spielberg’s film, probably the most famous helper of the Jewish people in World War Two. Schindler was a Nazi spy in Czechoslovakia and Poland before the Germans invaded and a member of the Nazi party from 1939. He was also a businessman and in 1939 was in charge of an enamelware factory in Krakow. Many of his employees were Jewish and should have been killed. It’s believed Schindler initially saved their lives for financial reasons but eventually came to act for more humanitarian reasons. He saved 1,200 Jews when he moved his factory west as the Nazi empire collapsed. By the end of the war, all the money was gone, Schindler had spent it bribing Nazis to keep his workers safe.74 Examples of people who helped Jews
  • 8.
    Damaskinos: Leaders who stoodup to the Nazis didn’t usually last long. Archbishop Damaskinos told them where to go and survived. His churches gave out thousands of baptismal certificates to Jews, enabling them to claim Christianity and survive the deportations in Nazi-occupied Greece. As Archbishop of Athens and All Greece, Damaskinos was the spiritual leader of his country. He’d been elected first in 1938, but the Greek dictator, Metaxas, didn’t like him and put his own man in place. The German invasion got rid of Metaxas and Damaskinos was elected again.
  • 9.
    Irena Sendler: Irena Sendlerwas tortured and sentenced to death by the Nazis for her heroic efforts to save Jewish children from the Warsaw Ghetto, but somehow survived and lived to old age. Irena was a Catholic, but her family had a history of fighting anti-Semitism. Her father, a doctor, died after treating typhus patients many of whom were Jews and Jewish groups helped to pay for Irena’s education at Warsaw University where she got into trouble for opposing the university’s segregationist policies.
  • 10.
    Aristides de SousaMendes do Amaral e Abranches: The impressively named Portuguese diplomat also put his bureaucratic duties to one side in the service of a greater good, granting thousands of visas to refugees from his base in Bordeaux, allowing them to make the trip to neutral Portugal from where many fled on to America. It is often said that Sousa Mendes issued 30,000 visas with 10,000 going to Jews but that figure has been disputed. He certainly saved the lives of thousands of people who were able to get out of France thanks to his documents, issued despite his government’s insistence that he stop. Some historians have called him the greatest single life saver of the Holocaust
  • 11.
    Varian Fry: Varian Fryhelped up to 4,000 people escape the Nazis, some Jewish, some anti-Nazis, while working as a journalist in Vichy France. Fry came from a privileged American background and got the best education available before turning to writing. By 1935 he was a foreign correspondent in Berlin, disgusted at what he saw of the Nazi regime he started to raise money for anti-Nazi groups. In 1940 he was sent to France by the Emergency Rescue Committee with $3,000 and a list of threatened refugees, tasked with getting as many of them out as he could. He used a villa near Marseille to hide his charges before they were smuggled to Spain, then Portugal, before setting out for the USA. Some were put on ships to Martinique in the West Indies, from where most of them also headed for the States.
  • 12.
    Rephen and Salf Reographyand GE Homocaulk Project Gambodian Cenocide
  • 13.
    Cambodian Genocide Causes: TheKhmer Rouge policies of forced relocation of the population from Urban Centres, torture, mass executions, use of forced labor, malnutrition, and disease Consequences: The deaths of an estimated 25 percent of the total population (around 2 million people). Nuon Chea and Khieu Samphan were convicted and received life sentences for crimes against humanity during the genocide.
  • 15.
    The Australian Jewishcommunity today is a migrant community that is still growing in size. Its growth started during the pre-war years when Jews escaped Nazi rule seeing refuge in Australia. Prior to 1933 the community’s size decreased resulting from the high rate of inter-marriage and assimilation. Indeed, in 1945 a Jewish demographer, Joseph Gentilli, predicted that, by the twenty-first century, there would be almost no Jews living in Australia. This prediction has proved to be false because of the influx of migrants, particularly of Holocaust survivors. Since 1938 the Australian Jewish community has more than quadrupled in size, largely due to a number of waves of immigration. At the same time, it has remained a tiny minority, constituting less than 0.5% of Australia’s total population.The Australian Jewish community today is a migrant community that is still growing in size. Its growth started during the pre-war years when Jews escaped Nazi rule seeing refuge in Australia.
  • 16.
    Why is itimportant to learn about the holocaust We study the holocaust today so we know how bad it was for jews and it helps us understand that this should not happen ever again not even in the future. And it's a very interesting and very sad and depressing. But people around the world need to know what happened and know how the jews felt and what they were treated like.
  • 17.
    1. Costs alot of money. Germany spent 10 billion on refugees. Higher immigration in a area, decreses waiting time in the ER. Immigration increases the demand for local services. 2. Many people say he is making the problem worse. The pope let 12 refugees into the vatican. 3.