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Holocaust and World War II Terms 1933-1945 Copy only the information in GREEN Allied Powers • Several countries who go together to fight against the Axis powers. These countries were United States, Britain, France, Soviet Unions, Australia, Canada, and Greece during WWII. Anti-Semitism • Discrimination or hostility towards Jews or Judaism. Aryan • Term perverted by the Nazis to mean a so-called master race. The idealized Aryan was blond, blue-eyed, tall and muscular. The original term refers to a people speaking a Indo-European dialect. AXIS Powers • These were the countries who fought against the Allied Powers during WWII. They were Germany, Japan, and Italy. Crematorium •A furnace where a corpse can be burned and reduced to ashes. Crematorium Extermination Camps • Also known as death camps because prisoners were not expected to survive 24 hours beyond arrival. • These camps were specially established to systematically kill prisoners (genocide). • Over six million Jews were killed in extermination camps. • The most famous extermination camps were Aushcwitz, Treblinka, and Chelmno. Extermination Camps Final Solution •The Nazi plan to exterminate the Jewish people. Gas Chamber • A gas chamber is an apparatus for killing consisting of a sealed chamber into which a poisonous or asphyxiant gas is introduced. Gas Chambers Genocide •Deliberate, systematic destruction of a racial, cultural, or political group. Gestapo • The German internal security police as organized under the Nazi regime, known for its terrorist methods directed against those suspected. Ghettos • The ghettos were transition areas, used as collection points for deportation to concentration and extermination camps. • Many people died in the ghettos because of disease, adequate warmth, and lack of food. Ghettos Adolf Hitler • Appointed Chancellor of Germany on January 30, 1933. • He reorganized the German worker’s party into the National Socialist Party or Nazi Party. • He murdered jews, gypsies, handicapped, and all others who opposed him. • He committed suicide in a bunker on Apr. 30, 1945. Benito Mussolini • Fascist (glorifies the state and nation and assigns to the state control over national life) government by leader who ruled Italy from 19221945. • He joined Germany as one of the Axis Powers during WWII. • At the end of WWII, he was captured, tried, court marshaled, and shot. Later his body was brought to Milan, hanged in a public square, and later buried in an unmarked grave. Liberation • Soviet, British, and American troops overran the camps and forced the Nazis to surrender. Afterward, the troops set up medical tents and provided food, water and clothing for those imprisoned. Kristallnacht • Also known as The Night of the Broken Glass. On this night, November 9, 1938, almost 200 synagogues were destroyed, over 8,000 Jewish shops were sacked and looted, and tens of thousands of Jews were removed to concentration camps. Musselman • slang word in the concentration camps for a prisoner who had given up fighting for life. Jewish (Judiasm) Another name for the Children of Israel. It is a reference to the Jews as a nation, meaning a group of people with a shared history, religion, and a sense of a group identity rather than a territorial and political entity. Harry s. Truman U.S. president at the end of WWII who ordered the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan, causing Japan to surrender. Kapo A prisoner in a Nazi concentration camp who was assigned by the SS guards to supervise forced labor of other prisoners or carry out administrative tasks. Joseph Stalin The Communist dictator of the Soviet Union from the mid-1920s until his death in 1953. He ruled by terror and manipulation, and many Soviets were killed and tortured under his rule. Although allies with the US during WWII, the Soviets and Americans did not hold a good political relationship with each other. Selection Euphemism for the process of choosing victims for the gas chambers in the Nazi camps by separating them from those considered fit to work. Those too weak or too old to work were sent straight to the gas chambers. V-J Day The official day on which Japan surrendered in WWII, in effect ending the war. Josef Mengele physician at Auschwitz camp, notorious for his horrifying medical experiments on prisoners. He also "selected" new arrivals by simply pointing to the right or the left, thus separating those considered able to work from those who were not. Nuremberg Laws • The first law deprived of German citizenship anyone of Jewish faith or any citizen with two Jewish grandparents. • The second made marriage or illegal between Germans and Jews. • The established the swastika flag as the official flag of Germany and the national colours as black, white, and red. • Additional laws banned non-Jewish domestic staff in Jewish households, introduced ‘J’ stamps in Jewish passports, and forced Jews to take surnames identifiable as Jewish. Propaganda • Information, ideas, or rumors deliberately spread widely to help or harm a person, group, movement, institution, nation, etc. Ration Coupon • A coupon book which allowed the holder to purchase a certain amount of goods. • Some rationed goods were food (especially sugar), gas, and clothing. Star of David • A six pointed star consisting of two crossed equilateral triangles, which has come to represent Jewry. Swastika • A figure used as a symbol or an ornament in the Old World and in America since prehistoric times, consisting of a cross with arms of equal length, each arm having a continuation at right angles. • This figure as the official emblem of the Nazi party and the Third Reich. Winston Churchill • British Prime Minister, 1940-1945 at the height of Hitler’s conquest of Western Europe. Churchill was one of the very few Western politicians who recognized the threat that Hitler posed to Europe. He is remembered for rallying Great Britain to fight on during the darkest of times. Synagogue • A building or place of meeting for worship and religious instruction in the Jewish faith. Third Reich •Germany state during the Nazi dictatorship under Hitler from 1933-1945. Charles DeGaulle Leader of France until the Nazis took control, then was exiled to England. Scapegoat •A person or group made to bear the blame for others or to suffer in their place. Battle of the Bulge • The last major German offensive campaign of World War II. The surprise attack caught the Allied forces completely off guard. American forces bore the brunt of the attack and incurred their highest casualties of any operation during the war. The battle also severely depleted Germany's armored forces on the Western Front, and they were largely unable to replace them. Terezin • Established in early 1942 outside Prague as a "model" ghetto. Terezin was not a sealed section of town, but rather an eighteenth-century Austrian garrison. It became a Jewish town, governed and guarded by the Nazis. The Nazis used Terezin to deceive public opinion about the treatment of Jews. Mein Kampf • Mein Kampf (My Struggle)is an autobiography written by Adolf Hitler while he was in jail. Hitler outlines his political ideology and future plans for Germany. Throughout his writings he blames Jews for Germany’s economic issues and claims the Aryans as the perfect race. SS St. Louis • The steamship St. Louis was a refugee ship that left Hamburg in the spring of 1939, bound for Cuba. When the ship arrived, only 22 of the 1128 refugees were allowed to disembark. Initially no country, including the United States, was willing to accept the others. The ship finally returned to Europe where most of the refugees were finally granted entry into England, Holland, France and Belgium. Treaty of Versailles • The treaty was signed by Germany and the Allied Powers in 1919 and ended World War I. • Germany was very dissatisfied with the treaty because they had to pay reparations to the destroyed countries, they lost territories, was forced to reduce the German military to 100,000. Zionism • A Jewish movement that arose in the late 19th century in response to growing antiSemitism and sought to reestablish a Jewish homeland in Palestine and develop Israel. Nazi • A member of the National Socialist German Workers' party of Germany, which in 1933, under Adolf Hitler, seized political control of the country, suppressing all opposition and establishing a dictatorship over all cultural, economic, and political activities of the people, and promulgated belief in the supremacy of Hitler as Führer, aggressive anti-Semitism, the natural supremacy of the German people, and the establishment of Germany by superior force as a dominant world power. The party was officially abolished in 1945 at the conclusion of World War II. Franklin D. Roosevelt • President of the United States during most of WWII. He tried to keep the country as neutral as possible until Japan attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941. Pearl Harbor • Just before 8 a.m. on December 7, 1941, hundreds of Japanese fighter planes attacked the American naval base at Pearl Harbor near Honolulu, Hawaii. The Japanese managed to destroy nearly 20 American ships, including eight battleships, and more than 300 airplanes. More than 2,000 Americans soldiers and sailors died in the attack, and another 1,000 were wounded. The day after the assault, President Franklin D. Roosevelt asked Congress to declare war on Japan Emperor Hirohito • Hirohito was the Emperor of Japan. He played a significant role in Japan's attacks on not only other Asian countries during World War II, but against the United States as well. The most notable of these attacks was the Pearl Harbor attack on Dec. 7, 1941 • Hirohito refused to surrender until the atomic bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Aug. 15, 1945. Days later Hirohito admitted defeat. U-boat • U-boats were Nazi submarines. Its main weapon was the torpedo, though mines and deck guns (while surfaced) were also used. By the end of the war, almost 3,000 Allied ships (175 warships; 2,825 merchant ships) were sunk by U-boat torpedoes. Concentration Camp • A detention site created for military or political purposes. • Many of these camps were used to exploit prisoners for slave labor or experimentation. • A large portion of prisoners died of mistreatment, malnutrition, and disease. Concentration Camp HOLOCAUST • The systematic mass slaughter (especially by fire) of European Jews in Nazi concentration and extermination camps during World War II.