The storm of anti-Semitic violence loosed by Nazi Germany under the leadership of Adolf Hitler from 1933 to 1945 not only reached a terrifying degree in Germany itself but also inspired anti-Jewish movements elsewhere. Anti-Semitism was promulgated in France by the Cagoulards (French: “Hooded Men”), in Hungary by the Arrow Cross, in England by the British Union of Fascists, and in the United States by the German-American Bund and the Silver Shirts.
In Nazi Germany, anti-Semitism reached a dimension never before experienced. Christianity had sought the conversion of the Jews, and political leaders from Spain to England had sought their expulsion, but the Nazis sought the “final solution to the Jewish question,” the murder of all Jews— men, women, and children—and their eradication from the human race. In Nazi ideology the elimination of the Jews was essential to the purification and even the salvation of the German people.
The novelty of the Nazi brand of anti-Semitism was that it crossed class barriers. The idea of Aryan racial superiority appealed both to the masses and to economic elites. In Germany anti-Semitism became official government policy—taught in the schools, elaborated in “scientific” journals and research institutes, and promoted by a huge, highly effective organization for international propaganda. In 1941 the liquidation of European Jewry became official party policy. An estimated 5.7 million Jews were exterminated in such death camps as Auschwitz, Chelmno, Belzec, Majdanek, and Treblinka during World War II.
In-Nazi-Germany-Jews-were-required-to-wear-a-yellowIn Nazi Germany, Jews were required to wear a yellow Star of David on their clothing.[Credits : © United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]
The-Wandering-Jew-illustration-by-Gustave-Dore-1856The Wandering Jew, illustration by Gustave Doré, 1856.[Credits : Courtesy of the trustees of the British Museum; photograph, J.R. Freeman & Co. Ltd.]
Caricature-from-the-anti-Semitic-Viennese-magazine-KikerikiCaricature from the anti-Semitic Viennese magazine Kikeriki. Its caption read: “In the …[Credits : © United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]
SA-troops-guarding-a-Jewish-owned-business-in-Vienna-shortlySA troops guarding a Jewish-owned business in Vienna shortly after the Anschluss. The graffiti on …[Credits : © Marschalek/United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]
SA-troops-lock-hands-to-prevent-Jews-from-entering-theSA troops lock hands to prevent Jews from entering the University of Vienna.[Credits : © National Archives/United States Holocaust Memorial Museum]
In 1933 Adolf Hitler’s National Socialists were voted into power, and the campaign of terror began. …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
Discussion of the anti-Semitic policies of the Nazis.[Credits : Copyright © 2004 AIMS Multimedia (www.aimsmultimedia.com)]
U.S. soldiers, having defeated the German military, come face-to-face with the horrors of Nazi …[Credits : Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.]
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