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Genocide Information Questions
Genocide Information Questions

... forcibly expelling a group from a geographic area (by killing, forced deportation and other methods). The convention entered into force in 1951 and has since been ratified by more than 130 countries. Though the United States was one of the convention's original signatories, the U.S. Senate did not r ...
Chapter 17 Section 2
Chapter 17 Section 2

17.2 the axis advances
17.2 the axis advances

... cities, and brutally treated local Chinese, Filipinos, and other conquered people. • The Nazis sent millions of Jews and political opponents to concentration camps. • The Nazis also targeted other groups they ...
17.2 the axis advances
17.2 the axis advances

... cities, and brutally treated local Chinese, Filipinos, and other conquered people. • The Nazis sent millions of Jews and political opponents to concentration camps. • The Nazis also targeted other groups they ...
The United States After WWII
The United States After WWII

... “For months, for years we had one wish only: the wish that some of us would escape alive, in order to tell the world what the Nazi convict prisons were like. There was the systematic…..urge to use human beings as slaves and to kill them when they could work no more” - Marie Vaillant ...
Post-Decolonization: Southwest Asia WHAP/Napp Do Now: “The
Post-Decolonization: Southwest Asia WHAP/Napp Do Now: “The

... geographical name of the area through the centuries after the Romans departed) were Muslims. When Jews actually did begin to return to Palestine in significant numbers, toward the end of the nineteenth century, the hundreds of thousands of Arabs resident there saw that return as a challenge to their ...
Chapter 17 Review - Guthrie Public Schools
Chapter 17 Review - Guthrie Public Schools

... used atomic bombs it was not successful. ...
World War II
World War II

... causes. Each of these countries invaded other countries. ...
Chapter 19 The Cold War
Chapter 19 The Cold War

... Rather than return to Europe after the end of WWII, many Jews moved to Palestine despite Arab protests Britain, who ruled Palestine since WWI, was unable to resolve the conflict and turned it over to the UN in 1947 The UN divided the nation up into 2 states, one for the Jews and one for the Arabs, b ...
World War Two (part one)
World War Two (part one)

... Millions of Jews remained trapped in Nazi-dominated Europe because they could not get visas to the United States or to other countries. On January 20, 1942, Nazi leaders met at the Wannsee Conference to decide the “final solution” of the Jews and other “undesirables.” The plan was to round up Jews a ...
Jewish Immigration to the United States
Jewish Immigration to the United States

... of the Russian Empire, began as far back as 1821, but did not become especially noteworthy until after the German immigration fell off in 1870. Though nearly 50,000 Russian, Polish, Galician, and Romanian Jews went to the United States during the succeeding decade, it was not until the pogroms, anti ...
1

International response to the Holocaust

In the decades since the Holocaust, some national governments, international bodies and world leaders have been criticized for their failure to take appropriate action to save the millions of European Jews, Roma, and other victims of the Holocaust. Critics say that such intervention, particularly by the Allied governments, might have saved substantial numbers of people and could have been accomplished without the diversion of significant resources from the war effort.Other researchers have challenged such criticism. Some have argued that the idea that the Allies took no action is a myth—that the Allies accepted as many German Jewish immigrants as the Nazis would allow—and that theoretical military action by the Allies, such as bombing the Auschwitz concentration camp, would have saved the lives of very few people. Others have said that the limited intelligence available to the Allies—who, as late as October 1944, did not know the locations of many of the Nazi death camps or the purposes of the various buildings within those camps they had identified—made precision bombing impossible.In three cases, entire countries resisted the deportation of their Jewish population during the Holocaust. In other countries, notable individuals or communities created resistance during the Holocaust.
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