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Annette Jones

Mr. Neuburger

English 102

27 February 2011

Annotated Bibliography

Holocaust

1) "Glossary of Nazi Germany." Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Web. 27 Feb. 2011.

“Selektion”- Selection of inmates for execution or slave labor at a concentration camp.

2) Grobman/Landes. "KRISTALLNACHT." Middle Tennessee State University. Web. 27 Feb. 2011.

Kristallnacht- The Night of Broken Glass. A tragic night when Nazi youth walked through Jewish
neighborhoods breaking windows of Jewish businesses and homes, burning synagogues and causing
riots.

3) "Holocaust FAQ." The Holocaust, Crimes, Heroes and Villains. Web. 27 Feb. 2011.

Hitler and the Nazi's were racist and hated the Jews. Germans believed they were a “master race” and
put the Jews, Gypsies and black people at the bottom of their table. The inferiors were seen as a threat
to the German nation. When Nazi's came to power they were basically exterminated.

4) "Holocaust: Lest We Forget - Segregating the Jews." The Holocaust - Lest We Forget - Dutch Jews

in World War II. Web. 28 Feb. 2011.

The Jews were rounded up by Nazi police and collaborators and put on to trains. When the train got to
the camps, people were rushed over to the entrance. Then separated into gas chambers, or other ways of
physical abuse like starvation and sexual harassment, some even being worked to death.

5) "Liberation of Nazi Camps." United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. 06 Jan. 2011. Web. 28

Feb. 2011.
After liberation any of the Jewish survivors that were left feared going home because of anti-semitism
and fear for their lives. Jews were still being killed and beaten by others. Germans tried getting rid of
evidence of mass murder camps by burning them all down and getting rid of bone and ash remains.

6) Meier, David A. "Hitler's Rise to Power." DSU Computer Services. 2000. Web. 27 Feb. 2011.

Hitler ran for President and won 30% of the vote in 1932. When Hindenburg died in August 1934,
Hitler was the consensus successor. Hitler took credit for the improving economy and such which gave
him power to say. Between the Nazi supporters, the votes from industrial workers, and “financial
support” that Hitler received from big businesses, his rise to power was unstoppable.

7) Noakes, Jeremy, and Geoffrey Pridham. Documents on Nazism 1919-1945. NY: Viking Press, 1974.

The Nuremberg Laws were basically Government decided on a firm policy against the Jews. This
pretty much meant that Jews should be deprived or their rights as citizens.

8) Posner, Gerald. "Auschwitz, Nazi Death Camp." The Holocaust, Crimes, Heroes and Villains. 2011-

13. Web. 28 Feb. 2011.

The total number of Jews estimated killed were 6,017,760. There were six death camps total with the
first camp, Auschwitz-Birkenau, having the most Jews killed. They were exterminated by all kinds of
methods including poisonous gas, being starved to death, shooting or burning.

9) The "Final Solution"" United States Holocaust Memorial Museum. Web. 27 Feb. 2011.

The "Final Solution" was a Nazi plan to exterminate the Jewish people. The final solution was
implemented in stages, first rise to power, and the night of broken glass which aimed to remove all
Jews from German society.

10) Vanderwerff, Hans. "The Wannsee Conference." The Holocaust: Lest We Forget. 22 July 2009.
Web.

27 Feb. 2011.

On January 20th 1942, the Wannsee Conference was held where basically talk of transporting Jews to
German occupied areas, have them work labor for certain projects and let them eventually die or have
them annihilated after completion of the project.

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