Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Explain the nazis" final solution to the jewish question" and how they justified the policy?

think about:


the benifits held by nazis


the feelings of many germans after world war 1


what happend to jewa in concentration camps
Explain the nazis%26quot; final solution to the jewish question%26quot; and how they justified the policy?
The Final Solution was to kill them all. They justified this by claiming superiority of genetics.
Explain the nazis%26quot; final solution to the jewish question%26quot; and how they justified the policy?
its really a sad thing. many died of starvation, sickness, gas chambers. Hitler used his propaganda techniques to shift the blame. he wanted a perfect race of pure German, blond haired, blue eyed. By convincing his followers, Hitler made them think that the blame was on the Jews.
Reply:The final solution was designed to rid Europe of Jews.





The Nazis believed Jews to be an inferior race: %26quot;Untermenschen%26quot;, literally sub-humans. They claimed that Germany was laid low at the end of WWI due to a global Jewish conspiracy, and historically Jews were the natural nemesis of Aryan peoples.





The Nazis established an industrial network of factories, concentration camps, and extermination centers, linked primarily by rail.





First, the Jews were herded into ghettos, where they were relieved of their property.





Next, they were transported to concentration camps. The healthy %26amp; skilled were enslaved, contracted to industry or put to work in support of the German war effort. The weak, elderly, and infirm were executed at the death camps.
Reply:The Jewish Question was what to do with this enormous population of Jews that had been shunned by various nations around Europe for centuries, emboldening them while degrading them, stiffening their resolve to survive and their attempts to dominate the superior Aryan race.





The solution was a systemitized semi-industrial mechanism of state that separated them gathering them into clusters where they then would be collected used and selectively exterminated. It was a paragon of effeciency, and ran rather smoothly in relative secrecy to the extent that many Germans accepted it as the way things had to be. The morality and justification was that the world was thus eliminating a real menace to society.





The Jews didn%26#039;t think so nor did many other people.

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