To Zoe, Aliza, Liat, Andrew, Morgan:
I created this presentation with custom animation, which does not work with this website. HOWEVER, if you look near the top, above the presentation box, there is a link to download the powerpoint. Please download it and view the slideshow on Microsoft Powerpoint -- then you can actually read the text!
Thanks, and sorry for the inconvenience.
-Justine
Holocaust in Poland. During the II World War, jewish and non-jewish residents of Poland have suffered from Hitler Germany's ruthless policy. In particular, Hitler was aiming to kill every single jew in the world. Jews predominantly were living in Poland, Germany constructed extremination and concentration camps, as well as ghettos within the territory of Poland, in order to ruin them very quickly.
This Presentation was for Holocaust in Central and Eastern Europe Course.
Warsaw, the capital of Poland and its largest city. Warsaw has gone under this name since the 13th century, and became the capital in 1596. The city sits on the banks of the Vistula River, which divides the city so that two thirds of the city are on the west bank, and the rest on the east. In 1935, Warsaw's size was approx. 55 square miles, with some 1.3 million inhabitants.
After World War I, Warsaw was a major center, not only for European Jewish community for world Jewry as well. The city boasted major Jewish political parties, aid groups, trade unions, and cultural and religious institutions. In contrast to the harsh financial condition, and in fact widespread poverty of most Jews of the city, the Warsaw Jewish community featured a vibrant cultural life, in the fields of art and literature, in the publishing world, and in theaters and clubs. In the months leading up the war, tensions arose between Jews and the Polish population, with a degree of discomfort and uncertainty.
This is a presentation I created for a class that I just took on the Holocaust. In addition to the 6 million Jewish victims of the Holocaust, my presentation includes information about the 3.3 million Soviet POW's; about 300,000 Gypsies or Roma; 2 million non Jewish Poles; 250,000 mentally and physically disabled; 15,000 homosexuals; 5,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses, and an untold number of Roman Catholics. (The Nazi authorities in the concentration camps usually did not record the religious affiliation of a prisoner, with the exception of the Jehovah Witnesses; therefore, it is difficult to reliably estimate the total number of Catholic victims who were persecuted or killed because of some action or position connected to their Catholic faith).
Holocaust in Poland. During the II World War, jewish and non-jewish residents of Poland have suffered from Hitler Germany's ruthless policy. In particular, Hitler was aiming to kill every single jew in the world. Jews predominantly were living in Poland, Germany constructed extremination and concentration camps, as well as ghettos within the territory of Poland, in order to ruin them very quickly.
This Presentation was for Holocaust in Central and Eastern Europe Course.
Warsaw, the capital of Poland and its largest city. Warsaw has gone under this name since the 13th century, and became the capital in 1596. The city sits on the banks of the Vistula River, which divides the city so that two thirds of the city are on the west bank, and the rest on the east. In 1935, Warsaw's size was approx. 55 square miles, with some 1.3 million inhabitants.
After World War I, Warsaw was a major center, not only for European Jewish community for world Jewry as well. The city boasted major Jewish political parties, aid groups, trade unions, and cultural and religious institutions. In contrast to the harsh financial condition, and in fact widespread poverty of most Jews of the city, the Warsaw Jewish community featured a vibrant cultural life, in the fields of art and literature, in the publishing world, and in theaters and clubs. In the months leading up the war, tensions arose between Jews and the Polish population, with a degree of discomfort and uncertainty.
This is a presentation I created for a class that I just took on the Holocaust. In addition to the 6 million Jewish victims of the Holocaust, my presentation includes information about the 3.3 million Soviet POW's; about 300,000 Gypsies or Roma; 2 million non Jewish Poles; 250,000 mentally and physically disabled; 15,000 homosexuals; 5,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses, and an untold number of Roman Catholics. (The Nazi authorities in the concentration camps usually did not record the religious affiliation of a prisoner, with the exception of the Jehovah Witnesses; therefore, it is difficult to reliably estimate the total number of Catholic victims who were persecuted or killed because of some action or position connected to their Catholic faith).
One of the most frequently asked questions about the Holocaust is: How was it humanly possible?
In order to approach this question, a few things must be taken in consideration:
One of the most frequently asked questions about the Holocaust is: How was it humanly possible?
In order to approach this question, a few things must be taken in consideration:
1. Created by Justine Yan, 2009 Polish Victims of the Holocaust P www.holocaustforgotten.com
2. P “ The destruction of Poland is our primary task. The aim is not the arrival at a certain line but the annihilation of living forces. Be merciless. Be brutal. It is necessary to proceed with maximum severity. The war is to be a war of annihilation.” Hitler: “ Kill without pity or mercy all men, women, and children of Polish descent or language. Only in this way can we obtain the living space we need.” www.guardian.co.uk
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7. GERMANIZATION: Expulsion P From October 1939 to the end of 1940, SS expelled 325,000 people and plundered their property and belongings. In 1941, 45,000 more people were expelled. Many children and the elderly died while being transported to the General Government or in makeshift transit camps. In late 1942 and 1943, the SS uprooted 110,000 Poles from 300 villages in the Zamosc-Lublin region in the Central Government. Able-bodied adults were taken to labor camps, while those deemed unfit to work were moved elsewhere. Tens of thousands were sent to be imprisoned in Auschwitz or Majdanek concentration camps. (Picture from USHMM)
8. P GERMANIZATION: Children "I saw children being taken from their mothers; some were even torn from the breast. It was a terrible sight: the agony of the mothers and fathers, the beating by the Germans, and the crying of the children." - An eyewitness In the SS Lebensborn (“Fount of Life”) program, children were taken from their parents to be racially screened for “Aryan ancestry” for possible adoption by German parents. More than 50,000 were kidnapped, mostly from orphanages and foster homes in the annexed lands. As many as 4,454 children were selected. Selected children were given German names, re-educated under poor conditions, and forbidden to speak Polish. Many more were later rejected and then killed or left in children’s homes. A form of eugenics was practiced, as an abortion was compulsory for any couple who was deemed unfit to produce a “racially valuable” child. (From USHMM) (From USHMM)
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10. P DEATH IN THE CAMPS In Stutthof , an estimated 20,000 Poles died Auschwitz became the main concentration camp for Poles… … an estimated 140,000 to 150,000 were imprisoned there from 1940 to 1945, and 70,000 to 75,000 were killed. Approximately 100,000 Poles were deported to Majdanek , where tens of thousands died. Estimated 20,000 died at Sachsenhausen . 20,000 at Gross-Rosen 30,000 at Mauthausen 17,000 at Neuengamme 10,000 at Dachau 17,000 in Ravensbrueck
11. P DEATH CAMPS (cont.) Poles were the first ethnic group that suffered through executions, hard labor, and harsh conditions within the death camps. Jews and other “enemies of the state” weren’t deported until around 1942. The first trial of death by poison gas at Auschwitz included 300 Poles and 700 Russian POWs.
12. P ARMED RESISTANCE The Poles organized a large underground movement to combat Nazi aggression and undermine the German occupying forces. There were more than 300 political and military groups and subgroups. The Polish government-in-exile was based in London. Underground courts were established to try Nazi collaborators, while the universities of Warsaw, Krakow, and Lvov operated secretly. An underground armed force, “Home Army” ( Armia Krajowa ) was headed by officers of the regular Polish army. The AK trained fighters and gathered weapons to activate many partisan units all around Poland in 1943. The Warsaw Uprising was launched by the AK against the German army on August 1, 1944. There were 63 days of fighting and nearly 250,000 Polish deaths before the Germans were able to quash it. The Nazis proceeded to completely destroy the city. http://blog.wired.com/photos/uncategorized/2008/04/15/warsaw_uprising.jpg , http://www.polishgreatness.com/WarsawUprisingScouts.jpg , http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/97/Warsaw_Uprising_Batalion_Zośka_(1944).jpg, http://www.poloniatoday.com/images/Uprising10-3.jpg
13. P CONCLUSION Though reliable statistics of the total number of Polish deaths do no exist, Poland is believed to have been most targeted by Nazi policies and aggression. Poles were also killed during the Soviet invasion of eastern Europe, as allowed for by the Non-Aggression Pact. Changing borders as well as mass migrations out of Poland before and after World War II make it difficult for historians to determine exactly how many were killed. 50 years of Soviet control after the war also hindered further investigations. Today, it is belived that 1.8 to 1.9 million Polish deaths were caused by Nazi policies during occupation and the war.