To begin with, it can be used as an example for future similar trials for war crimes. During the trials, a great number of men were executed, arrested, and banished. For example, for other genocides like the Rwanda genocide, the actions that were made during the Nuremburg Trials could act as a baseline for how trials should be held. As proven, the Nuremburg Trials can help by outlining what needs to be done in future trials. Furthermore, after seeing how Germany ended up after the genocide, it could encourage other political leaders to be more careful with their decisions. For example, Stephen Harper realized how wrong the Aboriginal residential schools were, so he publicly apologized for its inhumanity. As shown, the consequences of the Jewish genocide may help prevent anymore crimes against peace in this world. Although Jewish people looked at these trials as a form of justice, it left Germans with a different point of…
* Reason for trials: seen as important to make the Germans realise the scale of destruction that had occurred, the atrocities committed by the Germans were part of official government policy, the idea that if it was shown that this behaviour would not go unpunished then such evil would not be repeated and the hope that International Justice would be a good sign for the future of the United…
Since the end of the World Wars, international criminal tribunals have had a growing role in the prosecution of international crime. In November 1945 the allied powers got together and showed procedural fairness against the Nazi officials. For crimes against humanity, this was the first time this occurred on a global scale. In the…
2. What were the results of the Bolshevik Revolution in Russia and what happened to the Romanov family?…
People were in denial that they had lost the war, but the Jews were also denied their basic rights. The Nuremberg laws outlawed many basic rights of the Jewish people while the Germans were fine with it because they didn't affect them. For example, Document 1, the Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honor, outlawed Jewish people marrying German people. “1. Marriages between Jews and citizens of German or kindred blood blood are forbidden. Marriages concluded in the defiance of this law are void, even if, for the purpose of evading this law, they were concluded abroad.” (Nuremberg Laws, 1935). These laws made the Jews living in Germany have little power and stopped them from doing basic things, such as going to school, or even sitting on the same bench as a non-jew. These laws show that the Jews were treated as subhuman and that they were below the normal German citizens. The Germans were happy to be treated as above all else, so this made them support Hitler…
Furthermore, Wiesenthal was able to detain (with the help of many others) Adolf Eichmann, one of the major organizers for the Holocaust, giving justice to those who fell victim. Nevertheless, the overall motivation in which Wiesenthal began capturing past war criminals was not because he wanted revenge, but because justice was needful for the millions who were persecuted and bedeviled. Moreover, the outcome of prosecution of war criminals primarily resulted in prison time – sentences varying from five years to life (but there were always the extremists who gave justice on the spot). Lastly, the universal themes that lay present from the Crucible in comparison to the Nazi hunts are that one relied on persecution whereas the other relied on prosecution for those who persecuted. Thus, persecution will always result in…
The Salem Witchcraft Trials and The Nuremberg Trials are two alike yet very different trials. The Salem Witchcraft Trials is about the trials of people who were accused to be witches. The Nuremberg Trials is about the trials of the men charge of the Nazi Germany army and the killing of inconcent men, women and children. The two trials are alike because they both have to do protecting the public and doing good for the public. They are diffrent because Salem Witchcraft Trials Trials is about witches that were nonexistent in reality, but the Nuremberg Trials were about leaders that did affect the death are actual people. These trials are both very inportant in there own reasons.…
To what extent can the high concentration of witch trials in the German states be explained by political and religious tension?…
To begin, the Nuremberg Trials were a series of trials prosecuting and questioning Nazi war criminals. When Hitler came to power, he created laws persecuting Jews and other enemies of Nazi. These laws provoked the death of 6 million European Jews. In response, the allied leaders of Great Britain, the U.S., and the Soviet Union “issued the first joint declaration officially noting the mass murder of European Jewry and resolving to prosecute those responsible for violence against civilian populations,” (United States Holocaust Memorial Museum…
The Holocaust was an unparalleled crime composed of millions of murders imprisonment, racism, and destruction. It destroyed millions of lives and wiped out over six million Jews during the course of World War II under Hitler’s power. The aftermath of these horrific events proved to be a difficult one since no form of punishment could ever suffice to the torture and pain the Nazi’s inflicted on the Jewish Community. This challenge was attempted by the International Military Tribunal (IMT) held at Nuremberg, Germany where they held Nazi’s in court for crimes of war and genocide. These became known as the Nuremburg Trials.…
According to Ryan McMaken, “the deadly effects of the war, the repressive measures enacted by supposedly enlightened regimes… paved the way for its even bloodier sequel twenty-five years later” (mises.org). These changes were essential components for the Holocaust, because they allowed for the cheapening of human life and the devaluing of human freedom. The sheer size of the armies and great number of causalities during WWI helped to desensitize people to death and made human life seem dispensable. As a result of the war, the Treaty of Versailles was registered by the League of Nations. Though this treaty wasn’t directly linked to the Holocaust, it certainly helped to instill bitterness in the German people, which made it easier for the Nazi party to re-kindle a dispirited German youth into enlisting in the German…
If the south won the Civil War The civil war started when the confederates bombarded Union Soldiers at Fort Sumter, South Carolina on April 12, 1861. The civil war ended in spring 1865. Robert E. Lee surrendered the last confederate army to Ulysses S. Grant at Appomattox Courthouse on April 9, 1965. In addition the last battle was fought at Palmito Ranch, which is located in Texas on May 13, 1865.…
The word I choose to write about is flamingo. Flamingo is a three syllable word that has the nasal sounds /m/ and /n/ in it. This paper will walk you through the steps it takes to physically produce the word. Spoken language may seem effortless, but it requires a complex dance of the muscles in the lips, jaw, tongue and voice box.…
By the end of World War II, about two-thirds of the Jewish population were killed. Countless people lost their family and their friends. When the survivors were released from the concentration camps, numerous individuals had nowhere to go, and no place to call home. The Allied forces tried a multitude of Nazi War criminals in the Nuremberg Trials hoping that the imprisonment or killing of these flawed, yet guilty German officials would bring justice to those who survived the Holocaust. But was justice truly ever achieved?…
The Nuremberg Trials is the general name for two sets of trials of Nazis involved in crimes committed during the Holocaust of World War II. The first, and most famous, began on November 20, 1945. It was entitled the Trial of the Major War Criminals before the International Military Tribunal, which tried the most important leaders of Nazi Germany. The second set of trials, for lesser war criminals, was conducted under Control Council Law No. 10, at the U.S. Nuremberg Military Tribunals.…