Anti-Semitism In The Holocaust Essay

723 Words3 Pages

Anti-Semitism is hostility and prejudice against Jewish people. Anti-Semitism started to grow more and more during the end of World war one, and the start of World War two. Anti-Semitism has been a thing long before the Holocaust. The hatred the people of Europe had for the Jews started when they considered them a race instead of a religion. Europeans believed that the Jews thought they were better than everyone and that they would take all the jobs. The Europeans would put them in Ghettos and not give them citizenship because they were considered less. The hatred of Jews grew more and more in Germany. Germany, especially the Nazis, Germany they thought the only way to fix the Jewish problem was the final solution, extermination. Although the …show more content…

For example, “Combating Holocaust Denial: Origins of Holocaust Denial,” talks about how the Nazis of Nazi Germany kept the Holocaust a secret from the rest of Germany and the world. The text states, “ The Holocaust was a state secret in Nazi Germany. The Germans wrote down as little as possible. Most of the killing orders were verbal, particularly at the highest levels”…”The Nazi leaders generally avoided detailed planning of killing operations, preferring to proceed in a systematic but often improvised manner. The Germans destroyed most documentation that did exist before the end of the war.” This quote illustrates that the German citizens couldn’t have known much, since it was kept very secret. The text, “ 75 years later, why did Germans follow the Nazis into Holocaust?” also talks about how most Germans didn’t like the Jews but were not okay with mass murder. The text states, “Germans constantly deliberated questions of race, authority, and loyalty. Only a minority became full-fledged Nazis, but most accepted the basic premises of the regime, including the isolation of German Jews. While most Germans had at least a vague idea of the Holocaust, they almost certainly did not endorse mass murder, which is not to say they were not complicit in the persecution of their neighbors along the way to the "final solution." This quote shows how much of Germany was not involved with the Holocaust, but they also didn’t do anything to stop it after knowing what the Nazis were doing. Clearly, during the rise of Anti-Semitism in the Holocaust ordinary German citizens didn’t know