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    Under the new government in Germany human rights were destructed. The German Jews faced even harsher degradation and persecution. The German government also singled out minorities as enemies of the new state and objects of persecution. From the beginning of the regime racism was institutionalized as state policy. The national socialist party SA and SS created offices to study and develop policies on racial matters such as the “Jewish question”. Between 1933 and 1939 The Nazis progressively striped

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    implemented by the allies had a great effect on Germany. The European Allied Powers implemented this treaty which forced Germany to concede territories to Belgium‚ Czechoslovakia‚ and Poland. It also took away all overseas colonies and gave them to the League of Nations‚ demanded they remove military personnel from the Rhineland‚ and the most humiliating of all was Article 231. In Article 231 also known as the “War Guilt Clause”‚ it forced Germany to take full responsibility for the initiation of

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    The Nazi party‚ led by Adolf Hitler‚ was a left-wing totalitarian fascist political movement that ruled Germany from 1933 to 1945. Before and while they were in power‚ the Nazi regime was “guided by the principle of extreme nationalism” (Szalay‚ 2017). They existed to “rescue Germany from the disgrace of weak democratic leadership and from the threat of communism” and they lead by their belief of national socialism and social Darwinism. The Nazi appeal rested on approximately 90% nationalism and

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    Explain the impact and importance of the railroads in the unification of Germany Germany‚ during the two decades of the first major railroads being built‚ was separated into three-dozen individual states. The railroads provided an opportunity for those states to merge into a united country. This was accomplished through a unified trading system‚ linking the industrial cities‚ uniting Western and Eastern Prussia‚ delivering a more effective structure to law and order and competition between states

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    forces were Russia‚ USA and Britain. to stop Nazi Germany from attempting to take over the world. By 1945‚ Western Europe had been rampaged‚ an entire race of people had come close to eradication‚ and the dynamic of power in many participating countries was to change forever. A man from Germany‚ Adolf Hitler was in charge of the Nazi party with an intention to kill anyone not normal like Jews. After WW1‚ the Treaty of Versailles‚ meant that Germany was limited in what they could do. During the 1930s

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    power‚ recent study has also turned away from just Hitler and his henchmen to include lower levels of Nazi party members and ordinary people. This study of ordinary people in the relam of Nazi Germany includes women. Perhaps the most well known of the debates in the field of women’s history in nazi Germany is the Historikerinnenstreit‚ perhaps all the more well known because of its two opponents-Claudia Koonz and Gisela Bock. Though multifaceted in depth‚ one major theme of the arguemtn is the role

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    The delineation of human life is perceiving existence through resolute contrasts. The difference between day and night is defined by an absolute line of division. For the Jewish culture in the twentieth century‚ the dissimilarity between life and death is bisected by a definitive line - the Holocaust. Accounts of life during the genocide of the Jewish culture emerged from within the considerable array of Holocaust survivors‚ among of which are Elie Wiesel’s Night and Simon Wiesenthal’s The Sunflower

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    "Different Drummers: Jazz in the Culture of Nazi Germany" by Michael Kater There has only been one moment in history when jazz was synonymous with popular music in the country of its origin. During the years of‚ and immediately prior to World War II‚ a subgenre of jazz commonly referred to as swing was playing on all American radio stations and attracting throngs of young people to dancehalls for live shows. But it wasn’t only popular amongst Americans; historian Michael H. Kater‚ in his book

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    too much power and by having entire system with absolute proportional representation. Which indirectly assisted to raise the power of Hitler’s legitimate. 2) The verdict of the treaty of Versailles is not harsh stead of quiet kindness to Germany‚ because Germany deserved something bad in return‚ they should realize this was going to happen to them when they killed and wounded hundred and thousand innocent people‚ and Jewish’s desire might be the fuse of all the matters‚ but they don’t deserve to

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    territory hit Germany hard in another way‚ it hit them hard patriotically. This demoralised the German public for they had lost territory‚ they had lost parts of their country and this affected them much. The war guilt clause meant that Germany was fully responsible for the war‚ along with the damage and deaths caused during the war. This gave the big three free reign over Germany and all of their punishments‚ even where the allies has caused the damage. This guilt cause meant that Germany could also

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