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World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically...

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World War II 1939-1945
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Page 1: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

World War II1939-1945

Page 2: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

How it All Began…At the end of World War I,

Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all the blame for the war on Germany, gave away a lot of German land, and demanded heavy payments.

The treaty humiliated the German people and blocked the nation’s efforts to rebuild itself and move forward economically and technologically. In the late 1920’s and early 1930’s, the worldwide Great Depression made things even more difficult.

The Palace of Versailles, outside Paris, where the Treaty of Versailles was signed.

Page 3: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Rise of the Nazi PartyAs resentment and desperation

grew in Germany, radical political parties became more popular.

Among the more extreme activists was Adolf Hitler, who had joined the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (more commonly known as the Nazi Party) in 1920, and had increased membership in large part through the power of his public speaking.

By the time of the depression in Germany, Hitler’s party had more than 100,000 members and was growing rapidly, and it began participating in elections with growing success.

Page 4: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Hitler Gains PowerIn 1933, Hitler pressured the

German president, Paul von Hindenburg, into appointing him chancellor (head of the government.) As chancellor he was able to gain even more power.

By 1935, Germany no longer recognized the Treaty of Versailles or its restrictions. Hitler announced his intention to totally rebuild Germany’s military, which broke the rules set by the treaty.

Page 5: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Anti-SemitismGermans felt humiliated and angry

after World War I, and many blamed the Jews for what had happened.

Hatred or dislike of Jews is known as anti-Semitism, and it was a large part of the Nazi party. Hitler and the Nazis blamed the Jews for Germany’s problems, and said that if they could get rid of the Jews, Germany would be a better place.

So Jews were discriminated against; they were denied freedoms and rights given to non-Jewish Germans, their shops were boycotted, and they were forced to wear the Star of David to identify themselves.

German soldiers blocking entrance into a Jewish store

Page 6: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

“Germans! Defend yourselves against Jewish propaganda! Buy only at German shops!”

Segregated streetcar in Krakow telling which rows are “Fur Juden” and which are “Fur nicht Juden”

Page 7: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Burning a synagogue in Germany

Page 8: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Burned synagogue in Poland

Page 9: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Jews were forced out of their homes, and moved into ghettos. Ghettos were usually established in the poor sections of a

city, where most of the Jews from the city and surrounding areas were forced to reside. Often surrounded by barbed wire or walls, the ghettos were sealed. The ghettos were characterized by overcrowding, malnutrition, and heavy labor. All were eventually dissolved, and the Jews murdered.

Chopping up furniture to use as fuel in the Krakow Ghetto.

Page 10: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

A child working in a ghetto workshop (and wearing the

Star of David)

Forced to relocate to the Krakow Ghetto, Jews move their

belongings.

Page 11: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

It Begins…

In 1938, Germany began invading its neighboring countries.

When Germany attacked Poland on September 1st 1939, Britain and France joined forces to fight against Germany, and World War II began.

Page 12: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

The US Enters the War

In 1940, Japan signed an agreement to join Germany and Italy.

The United States disapproved of this, and placed a heavy trade embargo on Japan. This means that the U.S. severely restricted Japan’s ability to import oil, scrap metal, and other resources necessary to its war effort.

Japan was facing a crisis, and needed to take action. The action Japan chose was a surprise attack on the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor, Hawaii, on December 7, 1941.

With this, the U.S. entered the war.

Page 13: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Franklin Delano RooseveltPresident of the United States during

World War II. He died one month before the war ended.

Page 14: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

The swastika, the symbol of Nazi Germany. The Nazi Party took the swastika, an ancient symbol, and turned it up on a “leg” so that it looked like it was rolling. It was supposed to symbolize progress, and movement forward

to a better world.

Page 15: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

To control a country completely, you have to control what people

think. The Nazis found books to be dangerous—they encourage

thinking.

Page 16: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Burning books in Nazi Germany

Page 17: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

The Holocaustho·lo·caust \'hO-l&-"kost, 'hä- also

-"kästor'ho-l&-kost\ noun

1 : a sacrifice consumed by fire

2 : a thorough destruction especially by fire. (i.e. a nuclear

holocaust)

3 a often cap. : the mass slaughter of European civilians and

especially Jews by the Nazis during World War II -- usually

used with the b : a mass slaughter of people; especially

genocide.

Page 18: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

The Killing BeginsAs more and more of eastern

Europe was taken over by Germany, it became a sort of backyard for the Nazis, where the ugliest parts of their plan could be carried out.

By late 1941, the first Jews from Germany and western Europe were gathered and moved, along with many other minorities, to concentration camps in Poland, Czechoslovakia, Lithuania, Latvia, Ukraine, and western Russia, where they were first used as slaves and then murdered.

Locked in a building

and burned alive

Page 19: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Modes of KillingIn the first years of the

war, the gas chambers of the later Nazi concentration camps were not yet common.

Most victims were taken in groups to secluded areas where they were stripped of clothing, pushed into open pits, machine-gunned, and then quickly covered over, in many cases even before all of them were dead.

Page 20: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Shooting women who remained alive

Page 21: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Executing a man kneeling before a mass

grave

Forced labor

Digging their own graves before

execution

Page 22: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Awaiting execution

Page 23: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Mass execution

Page 24: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

The Final SolutionOn January 20, 1942, a group of

Nazi officials met in a villa outside Berlin to settle the details for solving the so-called “Jewish question.”

The meeting set a secret goal to remove 11 million Jews from Europe by whatever means.

The Final Solution would end in the deaths of over six million Jews, Gypsies, homosexuals, and people with handicaps.

Site of the conference

Page 25: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Extermination CampsBy 1942, the murder of Jews became

more and more organized and Hitler encouraged his officers to speed up the process. S.S. commanders had experimented with different methods, and gas chambers proved to be the favorite.

The first extermination camps began in 1942. Although prisoners died by the thousands from disease, overwork, or starvation in German labor camps throughout Europe, there were only seven official extermination camps, also known as death camps.

These camps existed purely for the purpose of killing, and most of the prisoners taken there were dead within hours of arrival. A small number of prisoners considered healthy were temporarily forced to work, but they were underfed and overworked until they were no longer able to work, and then killed.

Page 26: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Children in Auschwitz

Barracks at Auschwitz

Bags of human hair cut from

prisoners

Page 27: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Registration of new prisoners

Page 28: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Newly arrived prisoners at roll call

Page 29: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Prisoners walking by pile of shoes taken from

murdered Jews

Prisoners in barracks

Page 30: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Clothing and rings taken from prisoners.

Page 31: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Mass grave

Page 32: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Human bones inside crematorium ovens (after being murdered in a gas chamber, bodies were oftentimes burned instead of

buried).

Page 33: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Prisoners placing bodies

in the crematoriums

Human remains in a crematorium

Page 34: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

As the Russians took over Berlin on May 2, 1945, it was reported

that Hitler had committed suicide

rather than be captured. The

German government surrendered May 7, 1945. Finally, the

camps were liberated.

Nazi Germany and Italy had taken over much of Europe, but eventually the Allied

Forces (Britain, France, the US and

Russia) began to experience some

victories.

Page 35: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.
Page 36: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

After the liberation, a funeral for those

unsaved or killed.

American congressman

viewing a camp.

Page 37: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.
Page 38: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

What the Allied soldiers saw at the camps, they would

never forget.

Page 39: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Austrian citizens assisting in the

removal of corpses.

Page 40: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

German civilians forced to assist in burial

Page 41: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

German civilians forced to walk through the camps, to witness what they had earlier chosen

to ignore.

Page 42: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.
Page 43: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Survivors drinking broth provided by the

U.S. Army

Page 44: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

Survivors

Page 45: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

The war cost more than 36 million lives.

Page 46: World War II 1939-1945. How it All Began… At the end of World War I, Germany was economically devastated. The Treaty of Versailles unfairly placed all.

First they came for the socialists,and I did not speak out because I was not a socialist.

Then they came for the trade unionists,and I did not speak out because I was not a trade unionist.

Then they came for the Jews,and I did not speak out because I was not a Jew.

Then they came for me,and there was no one left to speak for me.

Pastor Martin Niemoller, Nazi Germany, circa 1945.


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