The holocaust was a very horrific event that took place in the early 1930s that most people still remember to this day. Yet most people don’t know about the Ghettos and what happened behind there gated homes. The ghettos were first made in October of 1940 so germans established the ghettos just to keep jews in a place where they can be watched constantly.Diseases were one of the main reasons that made the Ghettos such a dreadful place to live. Most of the diseases in the ghettos were causes of poor living conditions. Jewish families lived in very small rooms and didn’t have many things of their belongs since the germans just gave them a few minutes to get what they wanted. The ghettos were so bad that the Jews had to throw their own waste
The creations of the ghettos were the first step to segregating, persecuting, and destroying the Jews as they were forced to stay within the area that were allowed while the SS units made plans for them to be moved. In chapter one, Elie describes how some Hungarian police came to Sighetu and gave rules to follow which he states, “We no longer had the right to frequent restaurants or cafes, to travel by rail, to attend synagogue, to be on the streets after six o'clock in the evening” (pg. 11). Pertaining to the quote, the Nazi parties believed that the Jews should be succumb to the unfavorable living conditions of the ghetto, including lack of food, water, and living space as they were viewed as inhumane. Although the circumstances were harsh,
The Holocaust was a time when Jews were sent to concentration camps and force to work. There were some people who had hope to live and had survived till the very end but there were people who lost hope and died. Lodz ghetto was a laboring camp the had both Jews and Non-Jews. Non-Jews suffered in the Holocaust alongside those of Jewish faith because they were sent to ghettos like the Lodz Ghetto.
According to the Cambridge dictionary a ghetto is: “an area of a city, especially a very poor area, where people of a particular race or religion live closely together and apart from other people”. However the term "ghetto" originates from the name of the Jewish quarter of Venice, created in 1516, so we can say that the ghettos of Jews during World War II are not a new idea of the Nazis, since ghettos of Jews exist since the Middle Ages. During the Second World War, the ghettos were isolated neighborhoods of the rest of the urban fabric by barbed wire or a wall, in which the Germans forced the Jewish population to live in miserable conditions. The ghettos isolated the Jews by separating them from the non-Jewish population and the neighboring
In order to keep Jews away from the German citizens, the Nazis had to have a holding place for the Jews, and that’s what ghettos were. The Jews were forced into the ghettos because the Nazis wanted to enclose them (Byers 70) from their German neighbors (Byers 64). They also were put in ghettos from fleeing from prosecution, and because the government made laws that said Jews had to go to ghettos (Steele 13). The ghetto also provided natural death and forced labor from the Jews (Byers 73) and was during the emigration of the Jews (Lace 74). These ghettos helped the Nazis get more and more Jews without looking for them everytime the concentration camps got empty.
The Jews had to live in an area of housing known as a Ghetto. This is were the government took a group of Jews and put them into a dirty housing community. Disease outbreaks were quite frequent and deadly. Many people not only died from being sent away, but just from the diseases in the Ghettos. According to A Teacher’s Guide to the Holocaust, the ghettos were extremely dirty. Staying warm was very difficult during the freezing winter. There was a major food shortage that resulted in famine. Lots of Jews died of starvation. They had poor sanitation, with extreme over crowding causing people to have to share rooms and beds. Many places had ghettos that were had a barbed wire, brick and stone walls as their boundaries. Guards were placed at openings and gates of the ghettos.(Ghettos) The smallest ghetto held around 3,000 people. The largest ghetto, located in Warsaw, held around 400,000 people. Many of the people in the ghettos came from the local area or nearby. Around 1941, Jews were being deported from Germany to Poland to even further east. Jews were not allowed to leave the ghetto. If they did they would be killed on site. Gas vans were used in
The ghettos were overpopulated and difficult to get where they need to go (Rossel 33). The ghettos were high in religiousness because all the people there all believed in the same thing (Rossel 38-39). The Nazis told the Jews that they were gonna evacuate them to another placed to help them, but
The Nazis created a ton of Ghettos,which were very small and had terrible living conditions. People were starving due to the little amount
During the Holocaust, Jews were forced into closed off portions of cities in order to separate them from the German race, protect society from them, and weaken them (Allen 37). There was, however, a deeper meaning to this: it was the Nazis goal to find an easy way to control the Jews while they decided what exactly they were going to do with them, meaning they whether they were going to kill them, banish them, or use them for some other twisted purpose (Ghettos). The first one of the ghettos used in the Holocaust was established as of October 8, 1939, and was located in the city Piotrkow Trybunalski in Poland (Blohm 11). However, ghettos used to separate Jews from the rest of society had been in use since the thirteenth century and had only
The Holocaust was a tragic event that took the lives of 6 million innocent Jews. Nazis believed that Jews were a problem that needed to be removed. This resulted in prosecutions, and mass killings of the Jews. The life of a Jew was grueling, unjust, and overall a terrible one. This was due to forced labor, minuscule food rations, mass extermination, and many other harsh
The Holocaust was a dark period of time, occurring in the 20th century. It had began in the early 1930’s, and grew to become increasingly gruesome up until the mid-fourtees. The Holocaust was a mass murder of Jewish people, Romas, homosexuals, mentally and physically disabled, Jehovah’s witnesses, trade unionists and many other classes of people. Though the Holocaust was a very important part of history, there were many things distracting the German population, along with the rest of the world, leaving the Holocaust in the dark and left unknown.
During the Holocaust, Jews were sent to Ghettos to be separated from the rest of society, this act of oppression caused a time of grief and misery for Jews. Most know of the appalling events happening throughout Europe during World War II, but some don’t realize that Jews suffered before going into concentration camps. Not only was discrimination an inconvenience that was dealt with, but Jews were required to leave all their belongings behind, to move into an isolated section of the city. Ghettos were designed to gather together Jews, being an important step in Hitler’s goal of destroying the Jewish race. Many overlook what Jews went through before even going into concentration camps.
During the holocaust, Jews would first removed from their homes and were sent to ghettos. Some ghettos had areas with diseases in the air. They were purposely sent there. People were catching other people’s diseases and illnesses. In the ghettos, Jews were put in small apartment rooms with a maximum of 2-3 families in each room. People were overcrowded in these rooms and only had a handful of possessions with them. All these people caused food storage. Jews were fed little amount of foods. People would die of starvation and dehydration.
During the Holocaust, the ghettos were a significant part of the Nazi’s plan for inhalation of all Jews. In order, to do this, the Nazis planned to send the Jews to Ghettos to hold them until they were ready to murder them. The central ghettos that they were sent to were Lodz, Krakow, Białystok, Lwów, Lublin, Wilno, Kowno, Częstochowa, Minsk, and Warsaw. Ghettos in Poland were described as having harsh living conditions and citizen continually fighting for the will to live. The word ghetto had originated from the name of a Jewish quarter.
Around this time the Nazis came up with the term “The Final Solution” This meant to have all Jewish people segregated and put into ghettos, limiting their freedom and lives. People were evicted from their properties and also from their business just because they were Jews, and they were put in the “ghettos”. Life in the ghettos was unbearable and overcrowding. Specially when they have ten families living in one small apartment. They were also limited on the food that they could buy, since Nazis did not let them buy enough food for them and their family they were only aloud to buy small amounts, they were trying to make the Jewish starve. Jewish kids also sneak out through small openings in the ghetto walls to smuggle food, but if they got caught they were going to be severely punished. The housing inside ghettos were unsanitary specially when plumping broke down, and human waste was thrown in the streets along with garbage and caused contagious diseases that spread rapidly in the ghettos. Many people died every day in the ghettos because of the terrible conditions they lived and some
The Holocaust was the murder and persecution of approximately 6 million Jews and many others by the Nazi regime and its collaborators. The Nazis came to power in Germany in January of 1933. The Nazis thought that the “inferior” Jews were a threat to the “racially superior” German racial community. The death camps were operated from 1941 to 1945, and many people lost their lives or were forced to work in concentration camps during these years. The story leading up to the Holocaust, how the terrible event affected people’s lives, and how it came to and end are all topics that make this historic event worth learning about.