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The Holocaust: The Night Of Broken Glass

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Since Adolf Hitler ruled Germany in 1933, he was a racist against those who he thought that they were undesirables like Jews. Thus, he put certain rules called the Nuremberg Laws. These laws were to deprive Jews from their rights in Germany as going to schools, having jobs, enrolling in the military or even sharing non-Jews society. In addition to that, he directed to propaganda by making films to smear Jewish picture. The only thing they had to do was cleaning the Nazi crowds. In the view of the harsh treatment the Nazis practiced against Jews, Jews finally lost their temper and started to break glass at night so that it was called the Night of Broken Glass. Also, a German was killed by a Jew. Because of this incident, the Nazis changed their treatment with Jews to harder than before. Jews attempted to flee, but there was strict rules for immigration. At that time the Second World War started. The Nazis stormed Poland where three million people lived. After Poland defeat, Poland Jews struggled from bad conditions like hunger and diseases so that thousands died. …show more content…

Then, this way was considered inconvenient, thus, they innovated a new method to settle Jews which constructing chambers. In the chambers, the Nazis deceived the Jews by persuading them to have shower and no more than that. However, they forced an enormous number to get in the chamber and then released poisonous gas in order to kill the Jews. This method was preferable because it could kill a lot of Jews in one time with less effort. As a result, it was used in Poland as well. Not only the adults were killed by this way but also children and even babies in their mothers' chests. After the gas chambers, the corpses were burned in

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