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HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION Prejudice and Persecution (Pack 6.2) The Persecution of the Jews in Nazi Germany HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION CASE STUDY OF PREJUDICE AND PERSECUTION THE JEWS AND THE NAZIS IN GERMANY 1918 — 1945 WHY THE NAZIS VICTIMISED THE JEWS • The Nazis were the insider group (more of them, more power, more influence) • Wanted scapegoats after loss of World War I, as Hitler and Nazis could not accept Germany’s defeat • Treaty of Versailles (1919) harsh (reparations, loss of land, colonies armed forces and War Guilt clause). Many Germans wanted someone to blame • Depression of German economy, and inflation • Unemployment (6 million in the 1930s) HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION • Hatred of Jews (anti-Semitism) was used to unite German people • Nazi propaganda (e.g. rewriting school books, Hitler Youth, control of the media) and censorship (preventing opposition views), spreading anti-Semitic message • Ruthless oppression of those who spoke out against the Nazis • Hitler and Nazis early successes in other ways persuaded many Germans the Nazis must be right • Complacency and anti-Semitism of other countries and religions (e.g. refusal to help Jewish refugees) • The Nazis were in power in Germany after 1934 when Hitler became the Fuehrer • Jealousy of Jewish success (medicine, the arts, law and education) HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION WHY WERE THE JEWS AN EASY TARGET? • Outsider group (fewer in number, less influential, less power) • Already an ancient tradition of antiSemitism (diaspora, crusades, pogroms) • Visibly different (often Mediterranean skin colour) • Stood out through cultural differences (kosher, Hassidic clothing, Jewish areas in cities, Hebrew writing and names) • Stood out through religious differences (synagogues, Sabbath, torah) HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION WHAT HAPPENED TO THE JEWS? Persecution followed the “Continuum of Persecution” • antilocution • ostracism • non-violent discrimination • violent discrimination • genocide HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION HOW DID THE CONTINUUM APPLY TO THE JEWS IN NAZI GERMANY? ANTILOCUTION From 1918 (end of World War I) Nazi speeches and writing against the Jews in the media OSTRACISM 1934 Hitler becomes Chancellor Germans encouraged not to use Jewish businesses and to cut off social links with Jews HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION NON-VIOLENT DISCRIMINATION Nuremburg Laws (1935) passed against Jews. No longer allowed certain jobs, to move freely or to marry non-Jewish Germans VIOLENT DISCRIMINATION Transportation, ghettoes, beatings and concentration camps begin HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION GENOCIDE Under the “Final Solution” the holocaust begins with shooting then gassing of Jews in extermination camps like Auschwitz. By end of Won War II in 1945, 6,000,000 Jews exterminated. HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION WHO WAS TO BLAME? • Hitler and the Nazis • Fear of the Nazis from opponents (who kept quiet) • Concealment by the Nazis of what was going on • Lack of reaction from the Allies (UK, USA, Russia) • Lack of reaction from religions (e.g. the Pope would not speak out against it) HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION HOW CAN WE OVERCOME PREJUDICE? We need to accept that prejudice comes from badly formed attitudes. When we stereotype, we fail to understand that every human being is different and unique. When we understand this, stereotyping becomes impossible. So, how can we overcome stereotyping: • Socialisation: Our primary socialisers (parents) and secondary socialisers (teachers, media, peers, work, religion etc.) can help us to learn to respect the uniqueness of all human beings HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION • Education: Deliberate teaching (like this module) may help people to come to understand the causes of prejudice, thus giving them the capacity to resist it. • The Law: Can make some prejudice illegal, but doesn’t always change attitudes • Lobbying – putting pressure on politicians or other influential people • Support of the UN Conventions on Human Rights and the Rights of the Child. HUMANITIES G.C.S.E. REVISION RIGHTS, RESPONSIBILITY AND RESPECT • The applicability of these rights to everyone (from local to worldwide) • The fact that rights can conflict with each other • That rights are a common ethical / moral language that is shared worldwide • Rights relate to SURVIVAL, e.g. the right to life PROTECTION, e.g. the right to live in safety DEVELOPMENT, e.g. the right to education and PARTICIPATION, e.g. the right to vote by secret ballot • Be prepared to write about how we use rights education at JHCS to improve the atmosphere, build respect, reduce bullying etc., through peer education, peer listening, citizenship, rights newsletter, school council development etc.