Why did the Nazis persecute many groups in German society?

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Holocaust. Basic Definitions to know Holocaust: attempted genocide resulting in the murder of approximately 12 million people Holocaust: attempted genocide.
Advertisements

Nazi Policy To Outsiders. Aims of Nazi Policy Creation of the Volksgemeinschaft. Healthy, vigorous Aryans working for the nation. Elimination of the Gemeinschaftsunfahig.
LO: To understand and explain how Hitler’s ideas of the ‘master race’ affected his treatment of minority groups in Nazi Germany Nazi ideas of Race: Social.
Eugenics – “Racial Hygiene”
Aryan Selective Breeding BY Ramandeep Sandhu and Joey Nario -(The Sun wheel is used as the symbol of the Aryan race)
How did the Nazis treat ‘outsiders’?
16.3 The Holocaust How did Hitler’s plan for Aryan domination become reality?
How Did the Nazis Persecute the Jews? Lesson Objective: To describe how the Nazis persecuted Jews in Germany between
Deaf People and the Holocaust. Transition Services Preparation & Training Spring 2008 "It's a great misunderstanding to think that the Holocaust was only.
Nazi Racial Ideology.
What would have been the Nazi attitude to this girl? Why?  starter activity.
Life in Nazi Germany
Hitler Comes to Power.
The Development of Nazi Jewish Policy and Practice.
The Holocaust. What is the Holocaust? Holocaust Holocaust- The Systemic Murder of 11 Million people across Europe, more than half of whom were Jews.
HOW WERE JEWS TREATED IN NAZI GERMANY?
The Deaf Holocaust Deaf People in Nazi Germany Week 3: Day 3.
Chapter 16 Section 3 The Holocaust.
GCSE History Revision Life in Nazi Germany. The Purpose of Dictatorship Hitler had 3 main purposes: To rebuild Germany’s ruined economy To make Germany.
Holocaust and Final Solution Numbers before the war Germany: ½ million Jews or < 1% of the population Fascist Italy: less than 50,000, 0.1%
The Holocaust By: Ryan, Brittany, and Trisha. What is the holocaust? The holocaust was a systematic,bureaucratic,state sponsored persecution and murder.
How Did Nazi Rule Affect The Germans?
What was it like to be a Jew living in Nazi Germany…. ? …. Presentation by Mr Griffiths
19-3 The Holocaust Learning Targets: 1. Describe Nazi prejudices against Jews and early persecution of German Jews 2. Explain the methods Hitler used to.
. I spent an hour with the principal, a very friendly, neat lady of fifty. She explained that every class in school was built around a course called Frauenschaffen,
The Other 6 Million. Key Terms Jehovah’s Witnesses Sinti Roma “Law for the Prevention of Progeny with Hereditary Diseases” Eugenics.
Question Kershaw’s view on the success of Hitler’s aim in creating the Volksgemeinschaft in Germany Explain why you agree or disagree with his.
 starter activity You are going to play a board game similar to snakes and ladders. Record which square you land on and what happens to you. The first.
BY: GAVIN AND SEAN MINORITIES IN NAZI GERMANY. THE BEGINNING Germany and the east: Wanted lebensraum for his Aryan super race Forced Darwinism To remove.
Religion in Nazi Germany
Treatment of Jews Lesson starter: ‘’Nobody knows why Hitler hated the Jews so much.’’ Write down some of the reasons historians have given for Hitler’s.
Treatment of Minorities. Parts of the Treatment of Minorities Jews and gypsies Nuremberg laws Eugenics and euthenasia Aryan Race.
How did the Nazis treat German Jews before the war?
Concentration camps and Extermination centres/camps Who did the Nazis target? A teacher’s guide from.
The Holocaust.
The Holocaust. Facts During the Holocaust 11 million men, women, and children were murdered. Approximately six million of those were Jews. Two thirds.
The word Holocaust refers to Hitler’s orders to murder 11 million people throughout Europe, mostly Jews. Hitler’s hate of Jews was nothing new though.
The Granger Collection!From World Book © 2002 World Book, Inc., 233 N. Michigan Avenue, Suite 2000, Chicago, IL All rights reserved. It brought.
Task / Homework due this lesson: 1) Complete worksheet from last lesson 2) Answer the question below using an essay format: Explain how the Nazis affected.
Can you tell what a person is like from their appearance?
PHOTOGRAPH – 1936 The text on the blackboard reads: "The Jews are our greatest enemy! Beware of Jews."
WAR AND THE FINAL SOLUTION Pages WAR AND THE FINAL SOLUTION 1 September 1939 – Germany invade Poland End 1941 – Germany control most of Europe.
The Holocaust 1938 – million lives lost. Essential Question How did WWII change Europe?
WHO WAS TAKEN INTO CONCENTRATION CAMPS? holocaustmemorial.xyz.
A.
Non-Jewish Prisoners in the Holocaust
Did he fulfil his promises?
Starter: How effective was the persecution of the Jews?
Nazi Policies towards the Minorities
Great Depression and World War II Unit
Religion in Nazi Germany
The Holocaust:Who Did it Involve? Not just Jewish people! Jews, gypsies, mentally & physically handicapped people, Soviet POWs, communists,
The Jews in Nazi Germany
The Jews in Nazi Germany
Write down what you think this picture shows.
The Promise of Never Again: The Holocaust
Euthanasia Program Lebensunwertes Leben “Life unworthy of life” The Nazis believed certain segments of the population had no right to live and were a drain.
Treatment of minority groups in Nazi Germany
Flip Learning – Create a mind map that explores how and why the Nazi’s changed the lives of Germany’s young people In for Monday!
Treatment of the Jews Lesson starter:
Mr. Marston Arcadia High School/
Ideology & Consequences
The Jews in Nazi Germany
Friday, April 17th Announcements: Holocaust Holocaust Vids Battles?
Mr. Marston Arcadia High School/
How were minority groups treated in Nazi Germany?
The Jews in Nazi Germany
Presentation transcript:

Why did the Nazis persecute many groups in German society? By the end of the lesson you will: Know other groups besides the Jews who were persecuted Started to analyse how and why different groups were persecuted Have applied your thinking in order to have formulated an answer to the question of why the Nazis persecuted different groups

Task Use Walsh pages 294 – 297 and the slides that follow to make notes on who and why the Nazis persecuted groups in Germany Then answer the title question

Who was persecuted by the Nazi regime? The Nazis believed that only “Germans” could be citizens and that non-Germans did not have any right to the rights of citizenship. The Nazis racial philosophy taught that some races were untermensch (sub-human). Many scientists at this time believed that people with disabilities or social problems were genetic degenerates whose genes needed to be eliminated from the human bloodline.

The Nazis, therefore: Tried to eliminate the Jews. Killed 85 per cent of Germany's Gypsies. Sterilised black people. Killed mentally disabled babies. Killed mentally ill patients. Sterilised physically disabled people and people with hereditary diseases. Sterilised deaf people. Put homosexuals, prostitutes, Jehovah's Witnesses, alcoholics, pacifists, beggars, hooligans and criminals- who they regarded as anti-social - into concentration camps.

Source about Henny – were the Nazis right in their actions? Henny was examined by a doctor who diagnosed a slight feeble-mindedness - in my opinion it was only a slight feeble-mindedness, and they decided that she should be sterilized. I thought about it a great deal at the time, and I felt sorry for the girl, but it was the law, and the doctors had decided. I personally took her to the maternity ward in the hospital where it took place. But I never got rid of the doubt in my mind that the decision was too harsh. I formed the impression when dealing with this young girl that she was perfectly capable of leading a normal life. The tragedy was that she was released very soon after this, then got a job and met a nice young man, and was now not allowed to marry him because of her sterilization.

Hashude The city of Bremen decided to conduct an experiment to send the worst families to a special camp where they could be re-educated. Here there were 84 houses and conditions were strict Men were made to work whilst the women were taught how to be good housewives and how to look after children Children were made to go to school Alcohol was banned Punishments were harsh – could be locked up in cells without food for three days. A family would usually stay for a year – they were allowed no contact with other families for the first six months. The families were under constant surveillance. Anyone could be sent to Hashude and families could be released if they showed major signs of improvement. If they did not improve they could be sent to concentration camps. The camp had to be closed in 1940 due to the war – out of 84 families who passed through it only 18 showed no signs of improvement. But in the end it was a failure – it cost a lot of money to run and others argued that these people should be sent to concentration camps straight away and not given a second chance.

Images from the Hashude

http://www. theholocaustexplained http://www.theholocaustexplained.org/ks3/life-in-nazi-occupied-europe/non-jewish-minorities/disabled/#.VABVOsVdVAo The Nazis began a huge propaganda campaign against mentally and physically disabled Germans. They did not fit into the Nazi stereotype of the pure Aryan, that is physically fit with an obedient mind to serve the Reich. In addition, they were viewed as a burden on society, as they were unable to work and drained resources from the state. As early as July 1933, the Nazis passed a law that allowed forced sterilisation of 350,000 men and women, who were deemed likely to produce 'inferior' children. Between 1939 and 1941 a programme of euthanasia (so called ‘mercy killing’), ordered by the state, led to the murder, by doctors and medical staff, of at least 70,000 people. Both the Protestant and Catholic Churches in Germany protested against the euthanasia programme. In July 1941 a letter from the Catholic bishops was read out in all churches, declaring that it was wrong to kill. Opposition to the programme increased amongst the Catholic population of Germany. During July and August 1941, Bishop Clemens August Graf von Gale, a Catholic Bishop issued three sermons condemning this practice; he sent a telegram of the third sermon to Hitler calling on him to “defend the people against the Getsapo”. This third sermon was also reproduced and sent all over Germany to families, and even to German soldiers on the Western and Eastern Fronts. Fearing a public uprising across Germany, Hitler ordered a stop to the killings.  However, the policy continued in one way or another through to 1945. For instance, after the Nazi invasion of Poland they murdered thousands of seriously ill Poles in hospitals. The experience gained as a result of the euthanasia programme was also put to use from 1941 onwards as the Nazis sought to murder the Jews of Europe.

Helene Lebel was a young Austrian who loved to swim and go to the opera. In her teens she developed mental illness and had a break down. At 29 years old she became another statistic in the Nazis T4 Euthanasia programme.

The Jews http://www.theholocaustexplained.org/ks3/what-was-the-holocaust/#.VABXD8VdVAo Use the folder called “Life in Nazi controlled Europe / Controlling every day life / Impact on Jewish Communities” Read the 8 extracts and files then complete the activities on the 9th file to answer the question “How did the Nazis policies affect the Jews in Germany?”

Why did the Nazis persecute many groups in German society? Now check that you: Know other groups besides the Jews who were persecuted Have started to analyse how and why different groups were persecuted Have applied your thinking in order to have formulated an answer to the question of why the Nazis persecuted different groups