Sample Essay on:
The Nazi Death Camps

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Essay / Research Paper Abstract

An 8 page overview of the atrocities of the Nazi Death Camps of World War II. Provides a factual account of the horrors of the camps and concludes that even though movies like 'Schindler's List' and accounts like 'The Diary of Anne Frank' give one some appreciation of all that occurred, nothing could possibly replicate the experience of having been there. Bibliography lists 10 sources.

Page Count:

8 pages (~225 words per page)

File: AM2_PPnazi.doc

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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:

to power in Germany in 1933. As the leader of the Nazi party his beliefs became the doctrines of the party. Hitlers goals were to recover territory lost after World War 1, crush trade unionism, socialism and get rid of the Jewish menace (Weiss, 1996). Hitler was obsessed with hating the Jews and had made his feelings known in his book "Mein Kampf" which was written during the years when he was attempting to rise to power. He made many speeches where he repeated the philosophy that Jewry was an international conspiracy against the "Aryan civilization" (Weiss, 1996). He was later to write "The Jews are undoubtedly a race, but they are not human" (Spiegelman, 1986, 3). After coming into power and invading Poland in 1939 the Jews of Germany were not allowed a public life, could not marry or have sexual relations with non Jews and had to give up all their property (Weiss, 1996). In Poland special military units, called Einsatzgruppen, were charged with exterminating the Jews. The Einsatzgruppen shot the Jews but this was not very efficient as it was slow and used ammunition which was need at the front lines. The special death squads were responsible for killing about two million people (Weiss, 1996). Because of the slowness of carrying out their orders about 500,000 Jews were pushed into a small area of Warsaw which became known as the "Warsaw Ghetto". More efficient methods of extermination had been developed than merely shooting the victims so the prisoners of the ghetto were being sent to concentration camps as quickly as train cars were available. The Nazis took many precautions to prevent ...

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