How did the German army dehumanize the Jews? All of the Jews in Elies hometown are taken to labor camps to work. All of the Jews were fed little and were tightly packed houses. They wanted to extinguish all of the Jews. They only wanted to keep the strong Jews to do the hard work. In Elie Wiesel's book the Night, the German Army dehumanizes Elie Wiesel and the Jewish prisoners by depriving them of love, safety, and physiological needs.…
Many factors contributed to the reason that the Germans tried to dehumanize the Jews in the concentration camps, partly so that they would lose the will to live. I feel like the German soldiers, ruthless as they were to the Jews, needed to dehumanize the Inmates because they didn’t have enough immortality to kill. But since the Jews were viewed, treated, and forced to live like animals, the German soldiers didn’t feel as wrong killing them.…
To be human is to have personality, unique characteristics, and freedom. The Nazis stripped Eliezer, his father, and other Jews of all these qualities. These people had families, owned businesses, and had values. Dehumanization is the process by which the Nazis turned Jews from people to piles of ashes. The Nazis physically, mentally, and spiritually reduced the Jews to nothing. Two of the things the Nazis did to dehumanize the Jews was cut their hair and take away their names.…
In its racial categorization, Nazism viewed what it called the Aryan race as the master race of the world—a race that was superior to all other races. It viewed Aryans as being in racial conflict with a mixed race people, the Jews, whom Nazis identified as a dangerous enemy of the Aryans. It also viewed a number of other peoples as dangerous to the well-being of the Aryan race, particularly Slavs and Romani. To maintain the "purity and strength" of the Aryan race, the Nazis sought to exterminate Jews, Romani, and the physically and mentally disabled.[13] Other groups deemed "degenerate" and "asocial" who were not targeted for extermination, but received exclusionary treatment by the Nazi state, included homosexuals, blacks, Jehovah's Witnesses and political opponents.[13] One of Hitler's ambitions at the start of the war was to exterminate, expel, or enslave most or all Slavs from central and eastern Europe so as to make living space for German settlers.[103]…
Dehumanization is the process of making a person less human by taking away the important things in their life and what makes them who they are; not only the material things but their ideas and morals as well. The Nazi’s dehumanized millions and millions of Jews during the Holocaust. In Elie Wiesel’s recollection of his experience in the German’s concentration camps, he explained how brutal the Nazi’s could be, how they could take a person’s life away in the matter of seconds, and how they change a person’s outlook on life entirely.…
According to them, Jews were not Aryans, and they thought that Jews belonged to a separate race that was inferior to all other races. The Nazis believed that Jews in Germany threatened the German citizens. The…
society’. The Nazi Party’s anti-semitic beliefs also led to the holocaust and the attempted extermination of…
The word Nazi is an acronym for a much longer term. Nazi is a German, abbreviation representing the pronunciation of Nati- in Nationalsozialist ‘national socialist.’ The goal of Nazi Germany, or The Third Reich, was to create a master race of people to rule the world. For Hitler, the ideal "Aryan" was blond, blue-eyed, and tall. Adolf Hitler himself did not fit the description of the “Aryan” race. He was short (5’9”) with dark eyes and hair. In order to create their "master race," the Nazis intended to totally destroy whole groups of people. Although Jews were the primary victims of the Nazi's evil, many other groups were targeted based on both racial and political grounds. Other groups singled out by the Nazis included: LGBTQ individuals,…
Also in 1933, the Nazis began to put into practice their racial ideology. The Nazis believed that the Germans were "racially superior" and that there was a struggle for survival between them and inferior races. They saw Jews, Roma (Gypsies), and the handicapped as a serious biological threat to the purity of the "German (Aryan) Race," what they called the master race.…
Although anti-Semitism in Germany did not begin with Hitler, he had the most extreme methods in “the extermination of the Jewish race”. Hitler was obsessed with the idea of the superiority of the “pure” German race, which he called “Aryan,” and with the twin goals of racial purity and spatial expansion, Hitler opened the first official concentration camp at Dachau in March 1933. Hitler encouraged the German people to blame the Jews for “plunging the German people into the bloodletting of the World War” and “poisoning public opinion”. Propaganda was not the only weapon the Nazis used against the Jews. They also relied on terror.…
The Nazis wanted to get rid of racial minorities such as the Jews, by removing them from positions of power, hounding them out of the country or isolating them from pure Aryans (Hitler believed that the so-called Aryan people- blond, blue-eyed Germans- were superior to other races.…
Exclusion from German society solidified the racial distinction of Jews and Aryans. Propaganda portrayed Jews in a negative, discriminative manner and subconsciously changed the nature of German society. Social ostracism expanded beyond legislation decrees and into the economic realm. It was virtually impossible for Jewish businesses to flourish. Jews were so isolated by the government that SS guards stood outside their enterprises, informing civilians that their shops were owned by Jews. The Gestapo even encouraged ethnic Germans to insult Jews, verbally or physically. Ultimately, “each step in the rapidly accomplished process of exclusion of the Jews not only worsened their objective situation, but at the same time improved the situation of non-Jewish Germans, not just gradually, but in every way,” (Welzer, 169). The Nazis ability to isolate the Jews from German society and politics mirrored their ability to dominate society. Nevertheless, ethnic Germans were increasingly desensitized to their former neighbours as they were portrayed as Germany’s eternal enemy. The Nazis comprehensive policy of extermination expanded from the Third Reich’s anti-Jewish laws to the ethnic Germany…
By winter 1941, an estimated 700,000 Jews had been killed, mainly in unsystematic mass shootings. The SS then decided gassing was more efficient, In January 1942, Nazi policy was co-ordinated and the ‘final Solution’ adopted, with the euthanasia programme as a model.…
As poverty and violence raged on people became desperate. People began to go into utter despair, there was a party that caught peoples attention, the NAZIS – the National Socialist German Worker’s party in 1920. They persuaded the people to join there campaign as they stood for “equal rights”, they even went as far to say that they wood provide food and drink for all the needy and that the idea of ‘fascism’ would not be tolerated and would be terminated. These ideals were met but this gave birth do anti-Semitism. This was what the NAZIS believed, anti-Jewish beliefs were common during that time since many people were blaming the Jews for the failure of world war I. The Germans thought that they were the master race and that they were perfect and everyone else was impure. They wanted to conquer the world.…
Nazi’s anti-semtism were not a good thing. Nazi’s as a governing party staged book burnings, and ordered anti-jewish boycotts. Nazi’s destroyed synagogues and jewish owned businesses. The Nazi’s party gained populartiy after seizing power legitimacy in part by presenting “Jews” as the source of a variety of problems.…