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HOLOCAUST - Coggle Diagram
HOLOCAUST
Beginning in 1941–1942, Germans and their allies and collaborators murdered ghetto residents in
masse and dissolved ghetto administrative structures. They called this process “liquidation.” It was
part of the “Final Solution to the Jewish Question.” Most Jews in the ghettos were murdered either in
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May 1945, when the Allied Powers defeated Nazi Germany in World War II. The Holocaust is also
sometimes referred to as “the Shoah,” the Hebrew word for “catastrophe.”
In fact, antisemitism was a basic tenet of their ideology and at the
foundation of their worldview. The Nazis falsely accused Jews of causing Germany’s social,
economic, political, and cultural problems.
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Europe. It affected nearly all of Europe’s Jewish population, which in 1933 numbered 9 million
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The Holocaust (1933–1945) was the systematic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of six
million European Jews by the Nazi German regime and its allies and collaborators.
The Holocaust is also
sometimes referred to as “the Shoah,” the Hebrew word for “catastrophe.”
The Nazis targeted Jews because the Nazis were radically antisemitic. This means that they were
prejudiced against and hated Jews.
In late 1941, the Nazi regime began building specially designed, stationary killing centers in German-
occupied Poland.