world war ii. warm up read the section “the holocaust” on page 411 in your book. 1. what was the...

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World War II

Warm Up

Read the section “The Holocaust” on page 411 in your book.

1. What was the Holocaust?2. What was a concentration camp?

Learning TargetsI can describe the impact of World War II on

Georgia’s development economically, socially, and politically.

I can describe the impact of events leading up to American involvement in World War II to include Lend-Lease and the bombing of Pearl Harbor.

I can evaluate the importance of Bell Aircraft, military bases, the Savannah and Brunswick shipyards, and Carl Vinson.

I can explain the impact of the Holocaust on Georgians.

I can discuss the ties to Georgia that President Roosevelt had and his impact on the state.

HitlerBorn in AustriaLeader of Nazi political party in GermanyFought in WWIWrote Mein Kamph (autobiography)- contained idea ofextermination of all Jewscalled it “The Final Solution”

Died: April 30, 1945 Suicide

Allied Troops Enter

In the Spring of 1945, as Allied troops pushed into Poland, Austria, and Germany, nothing could have prepared them for what they found...

Holocaust

Name given to the systematic extermination (killing) of 6 million Jews.

An additional 5 – 6 million people, labeled “undesirables” were also killed by the Nazis.

Planned to destroy all Jews because they believed the Jews were inferior and destructive in purity of the German people.

Still remains the largest genocide (deliberate and systematic destruction of an ethnic, racial, religious, or national group) in human history.

Concentration (Labor) Camps

When the German army entered a city, they herded the Jewish people into trucks or railroad cars and took them to work in labor camps.

They were forced to make supplies for the German army.

•AUSCHWITZ•DACHAU

•TREBLINKA•-THESE WERE THREE OF THE LARGEST AND

WORST CAMPS

Concentration Camps

Branded

Those who survived the German concentration camps had a daily reminder of the horrors they experienced... A number branded into their arms.

Concentration Camps

People who were sick or unable to work were killed immediately .

Many others died in these camps from the hard work and poor living conditions.

Many Were Murdered

Systematically murdered in gas chambers, firing squads, and in other inhuman ways. Prisoners were gassed in chambers they thought were showers.

Their bodies were incinerated in huge ovens or thrown into mass graves.

The deaths of these Jews, Poles, Czechs, Russians, Gypsies, homosexuals, and the mentally or physically disabled all fit Hitler’s plan to rid Europe of what he called “inferior” people.

Some Survived

Battled Disease, Starvation, Mistreatment, Medical Experiments and Brutal Conditions

Holocaust SurvivorsAfter being rescued,

many homeless Holocaust survivors migrated westward to territories.

Jewish agencies helped the survivors with food, clothing and vocational training.

Many migrated to Israel and the United States.

-GEORGIANS SENT AID AND ENGAGED IN RELIEF EFFORTS TO HELP JEWS

IN EUROPE- ALSO FOCUSED ON

FIGHTING ANTI-SEMITISM AT HOME

Georgia

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