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1933 - 1945

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Chronology of the Holocaust. 1933 - 1945. January 30, 1933. Adolf Hitler is appointed the Chancellor. He is the supreme leader of the NSDAP( National Socialist German Workers Party) and the SA (Storm Troopers). March 5, 1933. Rechstagwahl (parliamentary elections) Nazis receive 43.9% o vote. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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1933 - 1945 Chronology of the Holocaust
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Page 1: 1933 - 1945

1933 - 1945Chronology of the Holocaust

Page 2: 1933 - 1945

January 30, 1933

•Adolf Hitler is appointed the Chancellor. He is the supreme leader of the NSDAP( National Socialist German Workers Party) and the SA (Storm Troopers)

Page 3: 1933 - 1945

March 5, 1933

• Rechstagwahl (parliamentary elections) Nazis receive 43.9% o vote

Page 4: 1933 - 1945

March 20, 1933

• Himmler, head of the SS, announces establishment of the first Concenration Camp at Dachau

Page 5: 1933 - 1945

March 24, 1933

The Reichstag(German parliament) gives Nazis comprehensive legislative power.

Page 6: 1933 - 1945

Nuremberg Laws

Page 7: 1933 - 1945

April 1,1933

• Adolf Hitler proclaims one-day boycott of all Jewish shops. Numerous acts of violence occur against individuals.

Page 8: 1933 - 1945

April 7, 1933

• First anti-Jewish law passed. All non-Aryan civil servants, with the exception of soldiers, are forcibly retired.

Page 9: 1933 - 1945

April 21, 1933

• Kosher butchering is forbidden by law.

Page 10: 1933 - 1945

May 10, 1933

Public burning of books

Page 11: 1933 - 1945

July 14, 1933

• German nationality can be revoked- for those considered “undesirable” by the government

Page 12: 1933 - 1945

August 2,1934

• Death of Reich President Paul Von Hindenberg.

Page 13: 1933 - 1945

August 3, 1934

• Adolf Hitler declares himself both president and Chancellor of the THIRD REICH. Army swears personal oath of allegiance to Hitler.

Page 14: 1933 - 1945

March 16,1935

Compulsory military service is reinstituted in Germany in open defiance of the TREATY OF VERSAILLES

Page 15: 1933 - 1945

September 6, 1935

• Jewish newspapers can no longer be sold in Germany.

Page 16: 1933 - 1945

September 15, 1935

• Nuremberg Laws deprive Jews of German citizenship and reduce them to the status of “subjects”; forbid marriage or any sexual relations between Jews and Aryans. Laws lay basis for sweeping discriminatory measures in coming years.

Page 17: 1933 - 1945

March 7,1936

• Jews no longer have the right to participate in parliamentary elections. The German army re-occupies the Rhineland.

Page 18: 1933 - 1945

August 1,1936

• The Olympic Games are opened in Berlin. Signs reading “Jews Not Welcome” are temporarily removed from most public places by order of the Fuhrer to present a favorable and misleading picture to foreign tourists.

Page 19: 1933 - 1945

December 1936

• Number of refuges from Nazi Germany exceeds 50,000.

Page 20: 1933 - 1945

July 2, 1937

• More Jewish students are removed from German schools and universities

Page 21: 1933 - 1945

July 24, 1937

• Jews are to be separated from other guests in German public baths and health resorts.

Page 22: 1933 - 1945

March 11, 1938

• German troops march into Austria. They are welcomed without resistance.

Page 23: 1933 - 1945

July 6, 1938.

• Jews may no longer follow certain occupations such as broker, tourists guide, and real estate agent.

Page 24: 1933 - 1945

July 23, 1938.

• Announcements that as of January 1, 1939, all Jews must carry identification cards.

Page 25: 1933 - 1945

July 25, 1938

• Announcements that as of September 30, 1938, all Jews must have only Jewish first name. If a Jew has a German first name, ”Israel” or “Sarah” must be added to it.

Page 26: 1933 - 1945

September 27, 1938

• Jewish lawyers removed from bar and reduced to “consultants”

Page 27: 1933 - 1945

October 5, 1938

• Jewish passports are marked with a “J”

Page 28: 1933 - 1945

November 7, 1938.

• Ernst Vom Rath, German embassy official in Paris, shot by young Jew, Hershel Grynszpan, whose parents had been deported.

Page 29: 1933 - 1945

November 9, 1938• Ernst Vom Rath dies.

“KRTISTALLNACHT” ( Night of Broken Glass) POGROM launched against Jews throughout the Reich.

• Nearly 200 synagogues destroyed, thousands of Jewish shops looted, 30,000 males sent to concentration camps. Nazis claim pogroms was in retaliation to the murder of Ernst Vom Rath although it had been planned prior to the murder. This is a significant step on the road to the Holocaust.

Page 30: 1933 - 1945

November 12, 1938

• Following the Nazi-organized pogrom, “reparations” (forced payment to pay for damages) of one billion Reichmarks are imposed on the German Jews, and must further repair all damages at their own cost. Jewish firms forced to close. Jews may no longer attend theaters, cinemas, concerts or exhibitions.

Page 31: 1933 - 1945

November 15, 1938

• All Jewish children remaining in German schools are expelled.

Page 32: 1933 - 1945

December 3, 1938

• In Germany local authorities allowed to bar Jews from the streets on Nazi holidays. German Jews must hand in their driver’s licenses and car registrations as well as surrender their bonds and other securities and jewelry.

Page 33: 1933 - 1945

December 8, 1938

• Final exclusion of all Jews from institutions of higher education.

Page 34: 1933 - 1945

January 30, 1939

• Hitler proposes to the Reichstag “annihilation of Jewish race” in Europe in event of war.

Page 35: 1933 - 1945

March 15, 1939

• German troops march into Czechoslovakia.

Page 36: 1933 - 1945

August 23, 1939

Germany and Soviet Union sign non-aggression pact with secret provision on division of Poland.

Page 37: 1933 - 1945

September 1, 1939

• Germany declares war on Poland.

Page 38: 1933 - 1945

September 8,1939

–WORLD WAR II BEGINS

(Curfew for Jews instituted: 9 p.m. in summer, 8 p.m. in winter)

Page 39: 1933 - 1945

September 21,1939

• Vicious pogroms against Jews in Poland.

Page 40: 1933 - 1945

September 23,1939

• All Jews must hand in their radios to the police.

Page 41: 1933 - 1945

October 19,1939

• “Reparations” levied in the wake of Kristallnacht are increased for German Jews to 1.25 billion Reichmarks, and are now payable by November 15, 1939.

Page 42: 1933 - 1945

November 23,1939

• Polish Jews must now wear yellow stars of David.

Page 43: 1933 - 1945

November 28,1939

• First GHETTO in Poland established in Protrokw.

Page 44: 1933 - 1945

December 1,1939

• Jewish food rations are reduced, Further reductions ordered for 1941 and 1942.

Page 45: 1933 - 1945

January 1940

• First experimental gassing of mental patients- Jewish and others- in German hospitals, as a result of “Aktion 74” (EUTHANASIA PROGRAM which was ordered by Hitler in October 1939).

Page 46: 1933 - 1945

February 6,1940

• Unlike the rest of the German people, Jews do not receive food coupons.

Page 47: 1933 - 1945

April 27,1940

• Heinrich Himmler, head of the SS, orders establishment of concentration camp at Auschwitz.

Page 48: 1933 - 1945

June 22,1940

• France surrenders to Nazi Germany.

Page 49: 1933 - 1945

July 29,1940

• German Jews may no longer have telephones.

Page 50: 1933 - 1945

November 15,1940

• WARSAW GHETTO sealed off. It is largest of all Polish ghettos with some 500,000 inhabitants.

Page 51: 1933 - 1945

December 24,1940

• Germany Jews to pay special income tax.

Page 52: 1933 - 1945

March 1941.

• Hitler declares upcoming Russian campaign ( a surprise invasion on Russia with whom Germany had signed a non- aggression pact in August, 1939) to be a war of annihilation.

Page 53: 1933 - 1945

June 22,1941.

• Germany invades USSR

Page 54: 1933 - 1945

July 31,1941.

• First written order for the “Final Solution”. Reinhard Heydrich, head of RHSA (Reich Security Main Office) is ordered to make the necessary preparations for overall solution to “Jewish question” in Germany’s sphere of influence in Europe.

Page 55: 1933 - 1945

September 1,1941.

• Every Jew in Germany must wear a star of David. Jews may no longer leave their places of residence without permission of the police.

Page 56: 1933 - 1945

September 3,1941

• First experimental gassing with Zyklon B of Jews in Auschwitz.

Page 57: 1933 - 1945

September 29-30,1941

• 33,771 Jews murdered by Einsatzgruppen outside Kiev at Babiyar, Ukraine.

Page 58: 1933 - 1945

October 14,1941

• First deportation order of German Jews to the East. Thousands are shot or die of starvation.

Page 59: 1933 - 1945

October 23,1941

• Jews no longer allowed to freely leave Germany.

Page 60: 1933 - 1945

December 8,1941

• Chelmo Death Camp begins operation in Poland.

Page 61: 1933 - 1945

December 11, 1941

• Germany declares war on USA following Japanese attack (December 7) on Pearl Harbor.

Page 62: 1933 - 1945

December 26 1941

• German Jews may no longer use public telephones.

Page 63: 1933 - 1945

January 20 1942

• Wansee Conference: The “Final Solution” the plan to murder all European Jews, is revealed to and coordinated with the Nazi Government Bureaucracy.

Page 64: 1933 - 1945

March 1, 1942

• Extermination begins in Sobibor death camp.

Page 65: 1933 - 1945

March 17 1942

• Mass murder begins at Belzec death camp. 600,000 Jews will be destroyed there.

Page 66: 1933 - 1945

April 17 1942

• A Jewish apartment must be identified as such with a star of David beside the name plate.

Page 67: 1933 - 1945

April 24 1942

• German Jews are forbidden the use of public transportation.

Page 68: 1933 - 1945

May 15 1942

• German Jews are forbidden to keep dogs, cats, birds, etc…

Page 69: 1933 - 1945

May 29

• German Jews are no longer permitted to visit barber shops.

Page 70: 1933 - 1945

June 9 1942

• German Jews must hand over all “spare” clothing.

Page 71: 1933 - 1945

June 20 1942

• All German Jews schools are closed.

Page 72: 1933 - 1945

July-September 1942

• Beginning of mass deportations of Western European Jews to Auschwitz. 1.5 million Jews will die in Auschwitz.

Page 73: 1933 - 1945

July 17, 1942

• Blind or deaf Jews in Germany may no longer wear armbands to identify their condition in traffic.

Page 74: 1933 - 1945

July 22, 1942

• Start of deportation of Jews from Warsaw Ghetto to Treblinka death camp. 900,000 Jews will be murdered there.

Page 75: 1933 - 1945

September 18,1942

• German Jews can no longer buy meat, eggs, or milk.

Page 76: 1933 - 1945

October 4, 1942

• All Jews in concentration camps in Germany are to be transferred to (death camp) Auschwitz.

Page 77: 1933 - 1945

February 2, 1943

• German advance in Russia stopped at Stalingrad by Red army.

Page 78: 1933 - 1945

April 1943

• By now 340,000 Jews, 20,000 Poles and Czechs liquidated in Chelmno death camp.

Page 79: 1933 - 1945

April 19, 1943• Warsaw ghetto uprising; Jewish

underground fights Nazis for more than a month. Jews kill over 300 Nazis.

As a result, Nazis liquidate the ghetto, killing thousands of Jews.

Page 80: 1933 - 1945

April 21, 1943

• German Jews found guilty of crimes are to be deported to death camps in Auschwitz or Lublin after serving their sentence.

Page 81: 1933 - 1945

Summer 1943

• Armed resistance by Jews in Czerstochowa, Luvov, Bedzin and Bialystok ghettos (all in Poland).

Page 82: 1933 - 1945

August 2, 1943

• Armed revolt in Treblinka. “workers Jews” rebel, 100 escape camp, 12 survive to liberation.

Page 83: 1933 - 1945

July 1, 1943

• All property of German Jews to be confiscated after death.

Page 84: 1933 - 1945

October 1943

• By now 250,000 Jews liquidated in Sobibor death camp.

Page 85: 1933 - 1945

Fall 1943

• Nazis destroy large ghettos at Minsk, Vina, and Riga due to the approach of Allied forces. Danes begin rescue of Danish Jewry.

Page 86: 1933 - 1945

May 15, 1944.

• Nazis begin deportation of Hungarian Jews; within two months 7,437,000(70%) sent Auschwitz.

Page 87: 1933 - 1945

June 6, 1944• Allied invasion of Normandy (France) led by America

• Supreme Commander of Allied Forces, Dwight D. Eisenhower, orders soldiers to videotape the liberation of the camps

Page 88: 1933 - 1945

July 24, 1944

• Majdanek concentration camp liberation by Russians.

Page 89: 1933 - 1945

Summer 1944.

• Nazis Liquidate ghettos in Kovno, Shavli, Lodz.

Page 90: 1933 - 1945

October 7, 1944

• Auschwitz inmate rebellion; crematorium blown up.

Page 91: 1933 - 1945

September 1, 1944

• Approximately 1,500 Jews now live in the Reich.

Page 92: 1933 - 1945

November 27, 1944

• Himmler orders end to gassings in Auschwitz and demolition of all gas chambers and crematoria to destroy evidence as the end of the war approaches.

Page 93: 1933 - 1945

January 17, 1945

• Evacuation of Auschwitz ; beginning of death march of camp inmates.

Page 94: 1933 - 1945

Febuary 4-11, 1945

• YALTA CONFERENCE in the Crimea.

Page 95: 1933 - 1945

April 11, 1945

• American troops liberate Buchenwald death camp.

56,000 have been murdered there.

Page 96: 1933 - 1945

April 15, 1945

• British troops liberate Buchenwald death camp. Even after liberation 500 die each day from disease and malnutrition.

Page 97: 1933 - 1945

April 29, 1945

• American forces enter Dachau where 40,000 have died since its establishment in 1933.

Page 98: 1933 - 1945

April 30, 1945

• Hitler commits suicide.

Page 99: 1933 - 1945

May 7-9, 1945

• Germany surrenders unconditionally. End of war in Europe (V.E. Day)

Page 100: 1933 - 1945

August 15, 1945

• Japan surrenders unconditionally. End of World War II. (V.J. Day)

Page 101: 1933 - 1945

November 22, 1945

• Nuremberg War Crimes Tribunal commences. The Nuremberg Trials were an international tribunal which brought high ranking Nazis to trial.

Page 102: 1933 - 1945

Nuremberg Trials (continued)

• Over 6,000,000 Jews were killed during the Holocaust…

• There were over 5,900,000 others killed during the Holocaust…

• 22 High Ranking Nazi Officers were charged with Crimes Against Humanity…

Page 103: 1933 - 1945

Nuremberg Trials (continued)

• Twelve high ranking Nazis were sentenced to death.

• Three were sentenced to life imprisonment.

• Four were given various prison sentences.

• Three were acquitted.


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