Over the course of many decades, genocides have taken place all over the world. One of the most famous massacres is known as the Holocaust. The Holocaust was a time in the 1900s when millions of people died under the name of Adolf Hitler. As a consequence of Adolf Hitler’s actions, the Holocaust shows the effects of social hate and continues to serve as a lesson in the world today.
The Holocaust was a dreadful time that occurred in the years 1933-1945 where people called Nazis unjustly captured groups such as Jews, homosexuals, handicapped Germans, gypsies, etc. During this time, a man named Adolf Hitler took the lead role in this massacre and continued creating laws to punish those below him. Hitler created ghettos, concentration camps, and
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He blamed the loss of the recent war on the Jews and would go to great lengths to punish them. On January 30, 1933, Adolf Hitler became prime minister and started creating laws to exclude Jews. According to Jackob Blankitny, “The invasion of Poland brought with it the creation of forced labor camps and ghettos; with tremendous persecution against Jews.” Jackob Blankitny was a Holocaust survivor who lived near Warsaw, and while reading other biographies, it’s inferred that depending on where they lived can also determine how the Holocaust happened. However, the prime reasoning for the Holocaust is after the loss of WWI and when Adolph Hitlerbegan to take the …show more content…
Which then could turn into the emotions of pride and compliance. In an interview with Holocaust survivor Irene Weiss, she expresses, “It was very dangerous for anyone to show any kind of consideration to Jews… because anyone who can point out another person that helped the Jew, or he hid a Jew, or he gave him some meal or something was immediately interrogated and threatened. And their own families were in danger.” This indicates that the people who saw this as wrong were also in extreme danger. The Nazis ruled out of fear. Soon after, laws came out causing harm to Jews. If someone abused or found a hidden Jew, they got praised and rewarded for this behavior. The human brain loves praise because it creates positive feelings, which relates to the idea of influencing the suffering of Jews. People are more likely to do whatever they can to feel good about themselves. The laws could also give the citizens a sense of reassurance, informing them that when they inflicted harm on this person, they were following the