Nonetheless, the Nuremberg Laws allowed Hitler the opportunity to try to regulate the Jews by using legislation; which helped …show more content…
create Kristallnacht, for this law made Jews carry legal documents that stated that they were Jews (Spievogel, 275).
This law not only made them carry documents that humiliated their race, it also banned all of their children from receiving an education (Spievogel, 277). Yet the series of laws was just the beginning of the Holocaust, for Hitler went from what he would consider being civil to extreme by the 1940’s, which was around the time of World War II. For he came to the conclusion that in order to get rid of the Jews entirely he would have to kill them, and this resulted in the establishment of death camps. The death camps gave Hitler the guarantee opportunity to exterminate the Jews in camps like Chelmno, Sobibor, Majdanek, and Belzec with the use of a silent killer known as cyclon B (Brose, 255). The Nazi Party and Hitler used the death
camps to kill Jews from all throughout Europe, and they achieved this goal by controlling the transportation system. The Nazis were in control of the trains that traveled within Europe, which gave this opportunity, and by 1942 they had trains going to countries like Poland to deport the Jews from their ghettos and into concentration camps like Auschwitz (Spievogel, 284). However, this camp was more than a death camp, for it was also a labor camp and the Nazi at this location did not kill all the Jews at once. They mainly killed those that were not able to work, and the most of those were children (Spievogel, 285). And while the Nazi Party was destroying the Jews as a race, and a nation, other European countries like Britain and France were battling against them as a result of their torture on the Jews.
For World War II was not just about the Germans wanting to exterminate the Jews off the face of the earth, but it was also about the Nazi Party wanting to take over every nation and ruling them under Hitler’s fascism. For the only country that was safe from the warfare was the Soviet Union because of Stalin agreeing with a non-aggression pact that he had made with Hitler, which allowed Stalin to increase his military industrially without any hassle from Germany (Brose, 225). By 1939, the German armies were ready for warfare thanks to the Blitzkrieg doctrine, which gave their armies the privilege to go into countries like Poland and attack in order to get dominates over their democratic opponents (Brose, 226). Countries like Britain and France had entered into war in hope of protecting their country and their Jewish citizens as well, but ended up becoming victims to the Nazis torture filled with bombs and isolation (Brose, 233). The torture from the German armies resulted in President Roosevelt sending supplies to Britain, and caused the U.S. army to intervene in the war after fighting a war with the Japanese over the Pacific (Brose, 236). WWII put citizens back into the mindset of how to protect their country, and resulted in some of them becoming spies, especially women in France. For they were determine to find other ways to escape the Germans deportation (Brose, 249). By August 25, 1944, the French and American troops freed Paris from Germany’s hold with the help of the defensive groups; which created the motive for D-Day to be a successful event, for the German armies were ruined in France.
Furthermore, D-Day gave other countries the reassurance that Hitler’s dominates was no more (Brose, 260). The war left about, if not more, two million soldiers dead within Europe due to the last couple of months of warfare, which created V-E Day on May 8, 1945. This day was the day when Soviet Union attacked all the men and women in Germany to demolish their justice. The men in the Red Army sexually abused the women of Germany, and either left them alive to relive the terror or killed them. There were about hundred thousand to possibly two million women that went through the hardship (Brose, 263). All in all, the warfare and criminality that progressed from World War I to the Holocaust and World War II was the result of political turmoil from political parties all throughout Europe, especially in places like Russia and Germany. And also, the result of the industrial revolution, for without it Germany would not have been as strong as they were from the late 1930’s to the 1940’s. These advantages caused the progression throughout Europe to transform into the mindset of violence being the answer to all solutions.