The
truth of the photos of the Nazi crimes and atrocities included in this Holocaust
project needs to be shown. The photos are of graphic nature and
disturbing - before providing access to younger learners, parents and
teachers should preview the sites and guide through what they may read
and see.
Dachau was the first concentration camp established in Nazi Germany
- the camp was opened on March 22, 1933. The first inmates were
primarily political prisoners, Social Democrats, Communists, trade
unionists, habitual criminals, homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, beggars,
vagrants, hawkers.
In the late 1930's the Nazis killed thousands of handicapped Germans by
lethal injection and poisonous gas. After the German invasion of the
Soviet Union in June 1941, mobile killing units following in the wake of
the German Army began shooting massive numbers of Jews and Gypsies in
open fields and ravines on the outskirts of conquered cities and towns.
Eventually the Nazis created a more secluded and organized method of
killing. Extermination centers were established in occupied Poland with
special apparatus especially designed for mass murder. Giant death
machines.
Six such death camps existed: Auschwitz-Birkenau, Belzec, Chelmno,
Majdanek, Sobibor, and Treblinka. Large-scale murder
by gas and body disposal through cremation were conducted systematically
by the Nazis and Adolf Hitler's SS
men ..
Victims were deported to these centers from Western Europe and from the
ghettos in Eastern Europe which the Nazis had established. In addition,
millions died in the ghettos and concentration camps as a result of
forced labor, starvation, exposure, brutality, disease, and execution.
/Louis Bülow
Privacy ©2007-09

The Holocaust Websites - Crimes, Heroes
And Villains
www.auschwitz.dk
www.oskarschindler.com
www.deathcamps.info
www.auschwitz.dk
www.oskarschindler.info/
www.fatherkolbe.com
www.canaris.dk/
www.mengele.dk/
www.shoah.dk
www.annefrank.dk
were established 1996 to promote education about the history of the
Holocaust and assist visitors in developing understanding of the
ramifications of prejudice and racism. The resources include essays,
poems, eyewitness testimonies, photographs, documents, films, literature,
timelines, links.
|