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The Holocaust

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The Holocaust. Never Again. What do you know?. In groups of three discuss what you learned about the Holocaust in high school or before. If you don’t know much, why do you think that is? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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THE HOLOCAUST Never Again
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Page 1: The Holocaust

THE HOLOCAUSTNever Again

Page 2: The Holocaust

What do you know?

In groups of three discuss what you learned about the Holocaust in high school or before.

If you don’t know much, why do you think that is?

Each group should have at least 4-5 items to share with the class in detail (you can include facts, field trips, novels, projects, and films you studied).

Page 3: The Holocaust

The Nazi

Page 4: The Holocaust

Ideaology

Page 5: The Holocaust

Nazi Philosophy The individual did not matter The Volk was everything. The Volk (the people)was a key component to

Hitler's ideal of Germany. It recalled a simple, pastoral life.

Productivity determined your worth as a person. Aryans had the potential to be most productive. Jews, Blacks, Gypsies, the disabled, and the feeble

were burdens on society. Hitler did not invent any of this. He simply

expanded on ideas that were developing as a result of WWI and the Depression.

Page 6: The Holocaust

Main Players Hitler- leader and founder Goebbels- Director of propaganda, press and

film departments in Nazi Germany. Dr. Eichmann- Director of medical

experimentation on Jews and Gypsies. Dr. Mengele- Director of Eugenics (medical

experiments on twins and pregnant women) Himmler- military strategy The SS- secret police (highest level and honor) Gestapo- local police

Page 7: The Holocaust

Role of German people Had been Anti-Semetic for centuries. Believed in Social Darwinism. Were eager to claim their status among

European countries. Eventually many Germans felt the Third

Reich went too far, but no one spoke up. Other countries were eager to prove their

status as Aryans and so were often more brutal than the original Nazis.

Page 8: The Holocaust

The Righteous Some people in Europe, like Raohl and

Schindler and many others risked their lives to save Jewish people from the Nazis.

Israel honors these people’s commitment to Tikkun Olam (the Jewish belief that to save a life is to save the world) by calling them The Righteous.

They have a special room in Yad Vashem (the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Israel) and are allowed to be buried in Israel regardless of citizenship.

Page 9: The Holocaust

Myths Hitler was Jewish Jews could save themselves if they

converted or immigrated There were no children in concentration

camps The Holocaust was the result of a crazy

man’s dream. The Holocaust happened because of

anger and fear due to the Great Depression.

Page 10: The Holocaust

Holocaust Art Hitler's ideas concerning music and art shaped

the cultural atmosphere and political policies for all of Germany.

He decried the "degenerate" influence on German culture from Jews and Blacks, particularly through Jazz music, and stated his repugnance repeatedly.

Any artist who did not fit into the ideal of Volk was excluded. This meant that only German composers, Operas, artists, etc were acceptable forms of entertainment and culture.

True art as defined by Hitler was linked with the country life, with health, and with the Aryan race.

Page 11: The Holocaust

ExamplesWagner’s Opera: Tristan Jews could not play German music as it

would taint the purity of the sound.Most German art and film at the time was

more propaganda than art form.

Page 12: The Holocaust

Hitler. Nuremberg speech, Sept. 11, 1935

"Art is a noble mission. Those who have been chosen by destiny [Vorsehung] to reveal the soul of a people, to let it speak in stone or ring in sounds, live under a powerful, almighty, and all-pervading force. They will speak a language, regardless of whether others understand them. They will suffer hardship rather than become unfaithful to the star which guides them from within." --Hitler. Nuremberg speech, Sept. 11, 1935

Page 13: The Holocaust

Adolf Hitler's words are strangely prophetic. Professional and amateur artists of all genres recorded what they saw and experienced during the reign of the Third Reich. They went beyond simple protest against the hardships, misery and inhumanity to leave an eloquent account of their sufferings. The record left by ghetto dwellers, camp internees, and displaced persons create snapshots of life and death under Hitler. Inmate drawings and paintings speak eloquently of man's inhumanity and cruelty. The Nazis labeled this art "horror propaganda"; Holocaust writer Lawrence Langer calls it the "horror truth."

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Art of the Camps and Ghettos

Moshe Rynecki was a painter whose work often directed attention to the persecution of the Jews. He lived in the Warsaw ghetto and died at Majdanek.

http://www.rynecki.org/ Some inmate art was actually sanctioned

by the camp or ghetto authorities. Preserved remnants of barracks decoration can still be viewed in Auschwitz and Birkenau.

Page 15: The Holocaust

Inmates who produced clandestine art did so at great risk to their lives. These artists used their talents to create works of art as an expression of their own humanity- something the Holocaust sought to destroy and or ignore.

When the liberation forces were examining the ghettos and camps, thousands of pictures drawn by children and adults were discovered. These images bear silent testimony to man's eternal need to create, and portray for future generations a way of living and dying that the Third Reich tried to hide.

Page 16: The Holocaust
Page 17: The Holocaust

Nazi Approved Art "Divine destiny has given the German people

everything in the person of one man. Not only does he possess strong and ingenious statesmanship, not only is he ingenious as a soldier, not only is he the first worker and the first economist among his people but, and this is perhaps his greatest strength, he is an artist. He came from art, he devoted himself to art, especially the art of architecture, this powerful creator of great buildings. And now he has also become the Reich's builder."

--Hakenkreuzbanner (The Swastika Flag), June 10, 1938

Page 18: The Holocaust

Art was considered to be one of the most important elements to strengthening the Third Reich and purifying the nation.

Political aims and artistic expression became one. The task of art in the Third Reich was to shape the

population's attitudes by carrying political messages with stereotyped concepts and art forms.

True art as defined by Hitler was linked with the country life, with health, and with the Aryan race.

Modern art, therefore, had no place in the Third Reich.

Page 19: The Holocaust

"We shall discover and encourage the artists who are able to impress upon the State of the German people the cultural stamp of the Germanic race . . . in their origin and in the picture which they present they are the expressions of the soul and the ideals of the community." (Hitler, Party Day speech, 1935; in Adam, 1992)

Page 20: The Holocaust
Page 21: The Holocaust

Holocaust Architecture: the camps

Architecture was Hitler's favorite art form. He viewed himself as the "master builder of the Third Reich." Among the surviving examples of Nazi architecture is the Olympic stadium complex in Berlin.

The Olympic games had been scheduled before Hitler came to power in 1933. He saw this event as a unique opportunity to play host to the world and to show Germany as a force to be reckoned with. He wanted Germany to be portrayed in the best possible light and removed all antisemitic slogans that had defaced the walls of public buildings. The stadium was built as a huge assembly place for hundreds of thousands of people to celebrate Nazi rituals. The art that accompanied this colossal building was no less magnificent.

Page 22: The Holocaust

Although all Nazi architecture was meant to show Nazi power, not all Nazi Architecture was beautiful.

Page 23: The Holocaust

The Olympic Stadium

Page 24: The Holocaust

http://www.auschwitz.org.pl/

Concentration and Death camps were among the Nazi’s most amazing and gruesome buildings. They show a precision to detail and systematic, emotionally devoid, sense of hatred never before seen among peoples.

Page 25: The Holocaust

Holocaust Language Words changed in meaning as a result of

the Holocaust. Degenerate art referred to art made by

Jews and Blacks Camps, Survivor, witness, testimony,

tattoo and many others have been altered in meaning forever.

Page 26: The Holocaust

The Post-Holocaust World Next power point will deal with: Existentialism- (philosophy /art/etc) Modernism- (in everyday art) Post-Modernism –(literature and art) America 1950-1990 –(socio-political

developments) America and Israel- (allies)

Page 27: The Holocaust

Holocaust Denial The greatest form of Anti-Semitism today is in the form

of Holocaust denial. It can be seen in outright denial of it ever happening to

believing it was a Jewish creation to blame the world for its destruction.

Most countries have no laws against such hate speech. Anyone can be a Holocaust denier, including college professors.

Iran’s president hosts a yearly “academic” conference on the topic. Academic is an oxymoronic term since all Holocaust deniers are basing their opinions on hate and myth and not on any historical or scientific evidence.

England and Germany are among the few nations that have made it illegal to deny the Holocaust.

Page 28: The Holocaust

Facts 6 million Jews were murdered by German Nazis or neighboring fascist

governments working with German Nazis. 11 million people were killed in total as a result of Nazi laws, labor and

death camps. Gypsies, Gay men and Lesbian women were the next greatest target

for the Nazi party. Often tortured and currently seldom recognized as valid victims of the Holocaust.

Blacks, the invalid, and political dissidents were also victims of the Holocaust.

Everyone had their own color triangle they had to wear on their chests. Jews were given two yellow triangles that formed a star of David.

Hitler was elected by regular people, who allowed their fears and their dislike of others to overpower their sense of morality. They allowed themselves to believe that not everyone is human on an equal playing field and that some “people” don’t deserve to live.

These people were essentially bullies who gained control of a country and created a social nightmare.


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