Concentration Camps And Adolf Hitler example essay topic
During World War II, millions of innocent human beings were killed, all because of one man who had an obsession for power and supremacy. This man that I speak of is an anti-Semitism, meaning someone who is prejudiced against Jews or another race. This man along with his many other followers thought Jews were an alien race. Throughout this paper you will find out who this man is, what he did, why he did it. Also, you will learn about what life was like for the Jews during this time. After reading this I hope that you will have a better idea of what anti-Semitism is and how one man's obsession turned to millions of lost lives.
The man I mentioned in the first paragraph obviously had a name. His name was Adolf Hitler. Let me give you some background information on him. He was born on April 20, 1889 in Braunau am Inn, Austria. His father was a minor customs official and his mother was a peasant girl.
He never completed high school and was a poor student. He twice applied to the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna, but was not accepted for lack of talent. He read large amounts of books which helped him develop an anti-Jewish and anti-democratic attitude. Hitler fought in World War I for the Bavarian army.
Although a courageous soldier he was never promoted above private first class because he was lacking in leadership qualities. In September 1919 he joined the nationalist German Workers' Party. In April of 1920 he went to work full time for the newly renamed National Socialist German Workers' (Nazi) Party. In 1921 he was elected party chairman and given powers. By this time he had developed extreme racist qualities and an extreme hate for Jews. In 1923 he tried to seize Bavaria but had no success.
There was an increase in the number of Nazi's between the years of 1929 and 1930. Hitler was then appointed Chancellor of Germany. Hitler started a campaign to destroy world Jewry. He met with high ranking officials and created the final solution to the Jewish problem, and in 1933 the first of many German concentration camps was built. This one was at Osthofen. A concentration camp is a place where the Jews were tortured intensely, and by 1939 there were many of these camps in places across Europe, mainly Germany.
There were camps in Buchenwald, Flossenburg, Mauthausen, Ravensbruck, and Sakenhausen. There were many other camps such as Natzweiler, Gross-Rosen, Stutthof, Hinz ert, Vight, Dora, andBeranen-Belsen. In Poland there were camps called Auschwitz. Majdonek, Birkenau, Natzweiler, Plaszow, Gross-Rosen, Kulmhof, Belzec, Sobidor, and Treblinka. Auschwitz was the largest camp where Jews were routinely gassed, shot, starved, and died of disease. Over 1,000,000 people died here.
Kulmhofmajored in gassing killing over 150,000. In Majdonek 50,000 people died either being shot or gassed. Ravensbruck was the largest concentration camp for women in Nazi Germany. 92,000 women and children died here.
My Grandfather is Polish and was in a concentration camp. I don't remember which one but I do remember him saying that it was horrible. He said that they were given one loaf of bread every week and his family had to split it among themselves. He said that everyone was weak because they were being starved to death. My Grandpa said, ' A Gestapo (Hitler's Secret police) threatened to shoot me.
I begged him not to so he didn't. He beat me instead. ' ; (My Grandpa) He said that they also used to kick him. My Grandpa has had bad memories of World War II, concentration camps, and Adolf Hitler. Jews weren't the only people put in concentration camps. Slavs, Roma (gypsies), Jehovah's Witnesses, communists, and the Polish were put in these camps.
They were not put through as much as the Jews were. The Jews were tortured and taunted outside of the concentration camps. One thing was that the Jews had to wear six-pointed stars to let everyone know that they were Jewish. Jewish passports and other forms of identification were stamped with a'J'; meaning Jude which was German for Jew. Jews were required to turn overall precious metals to the government.
There was a suspension of Jewish drivers licenses. There was a confiscation of Jewish owned radios. There was also a curfew to keep Jews off the streets between 9: 00 p.m. and 5: 00 a.m. in the summer and between 8: 00 p.m. and 6: 00 a.m. in the winter. Jews were forbidden to attend plays, movies, concerts, and German schools. Jewish children were not allowed in class. Try to imagine yourself in their place... pretty bad huh?
And on top of all of what I just listed they had one other thing called Kristallnacht. It was the night of broken glass. On this night, Nazis came and ravished Jewish shops and burned synagogues in Germany. Then the Jews were left responsible for the destruction. I think that the anti-Semitism during World War II was terrible. You should not be able to treat people that way just because you don't like them.
Hitler's evil ways killed over 5 million Jews. About 3 million died in concentration camps or other death centers, 1.4 million shooting operations and over 600,000 in ghettos. That is allot of people. These people could have made a difference in this world. There are allot of people who hate Hitler now because of what he did.
Howard Ehrlich, a Jewish friend at my school, says, ' I hate Hitler for what he did to the Jews. He had a very anti-Semitic type of thinking that he developed on his own. ' ; I hope by reading this you have developed a better idea of what exactly went on during World War II and the Holocaust. I also hope that you will go and find out more about the anti-Semitic acts of World War II. I would like to leave you with a statement that I want you to think about, ' The question is not how or why people who were so evil could inflict acts so inhumane upon others, but to ask how ordinary people such as you and I could take place in or allow such act to happen. ' ;.