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   For hundreds of years Christian Europe had regarded the Jews as the
    Christ -killers. At one time or another Jews had been driven out of almost
    every European country. The way they were treated in England in the
    thirteenth century is a typical example.
   In 1275 they were made to wear a yellow badge.
                                                       GO AT

                                          SC APE
    In 1287 269 Jews were hanged in the Tower of London.

                           wer ea
    This deep prejudice against Jews was still strong in the twentieth century,

               Jews
    especially in Germany, Poland and Eastern Europe, where the Jewish
    population was very large.
   After the First World War hundreds of Jews were blamed for the defeat in
    the War. Prejudice against the Jews grew during the economic depression
    which followed. Many Germans were poor and unemployed and wanted
    someone to blame. They turned on the Jews, many of whom were rich
   Hitler and the Nazis tap into the long-
    held feeling of many Europeans; the
    resentment of Jews
     This is known as anti-Semitism
   Hitler and Nazis say the Aryans — blonde
    hair, blue eyed Germanic peoples — are
    the “master race” of Germany and world
   1935 Nuremberg Laws take away rights
    of German Jews
   Kristallnacht, “the night of shattered
    glass” occurs in 1938.
   Fearing more violence and oppression,
    thousands of Jews tried to leave
    Germany.
   Other countries accepted a large number
    but were unwilling to take all those who
 The Holocaust truly began
  in 1939 at the start of the
  war when the Nazis
  invaded Poland.
 Poland had a large Jewish
  population at the time
  which increased the
  urgency of the “Jewish
  Question”.
 The Nazi’s quickly
  devised ways to deal with     German Troops marching into Warsaw, the
                                           capital of Poland.
  the Jews.
   This is the true story of a Jewish
    man named Wladek Szpilman.
   He and his family were living in
    Warsaw at the time of the Nazi
    takeover in 1939.
   Wladek was a pianist who worked
    for a Polish radio station.
   Wladek and his family rejoiced when
    they heard the news that France and
    Great Britain had declared war on
    Germany.
   However, this is short lived when
    the Nazis completely take Poland in
    just over a month’s time.
 Hitler then ordered all Jews in
  Germany and his conquered lands
  to live in certain parts of cities
  called ghettos or be sent to
  concentration camps where they
  would be put to work for the
  Germany war industry.
 Poland, who had the over 3 million
  Jews, (the largest population in
  Europe), had especially large
  ghettos.
 Warsaw was the largest.
 By 1940, all German Jews were
  deported to Poland.
A newly-constructed wall partitions the central part of Warsaw, Poland, seen on
December 20, 1940. It is part of red brick and gray stone walls built 12 to 15 feet high
    by the Nazis as a ghetto - a pen for Warsaw's approximately 500,000 Jews.
A scene from the Warsaw Ghetto where Jews are seen wearing white armlets bearing
   the Star of David and trams are seen marked with the words "For Jews Only", on
                                  February 17, 1941.
 Hitler hoped that Jews
  in ghettos would die of
  disease, starvation
 Despite bad conditions,
  many Jews survived in
  these areas
The faces of Jewish children living in a ghetto in Poland, under Nazi occupation. This
                   may be the last picture taken of them smiling.
   Sadly, many Jews will not
    survive…
A man carries away the bodies of dead Jews in the Ghetto of Warsaw in 1943, where
                       people died of hunger in the streets.
German soldiers question Jews after the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943.
 Very quickly life for Jews
  deteriorated as the Nazi
  authorities prevent them
  working or owning businesses,
  and force them to wear Star of
  David armbands.
 Wladek and his family were
  forced from their home in 1940,
  into the overcrowded Warsaw
  Ghetto where conditions only
  get worse.
 People starve, the guards are
  brutal and corpses are left in
  the streets.
 On one occasion,
 the Szpilmans
 witness the SS kill
 an entire family
 during a raid on an
 apartment building
 across the street.
 To ensure the death of all Jews,
  Hitler enacts the “Final Solution”
  in 1942.
 He chooses genocide — the
  systematic killing of an entire
  people.
 Germans also turned on many
  other people — gypsies, Poles,
  Russians, and those who were
  mentally or physically disabled,
  homosexuals, etc.
 The Germans put the most
  attention on Jews, however.
   There were 3 phases of the Nazi plan to wipe out
           the Jewish population of Europe.
   Jews were rounded up and told they were to
    be relocated.
   They were then shot, one by one, by the Nazi
    SS “death squads”.
   Their bodies were then buried in mass graves.
   There was even competition between group
    leaders to see who could kill the most Jews.
 The worst round of executions
  took place at Babi Yar, a
  ravine in the Ukraine.
 The Nazi SS rounded up and
  executed 33,771 Jews in a
  single operation in
  September, 1941.
 Other people executed were
  Soviet POW’s and gypsies.
 An estimated 150,000 total
  people lost their lives at Babi
  Yar.
Jewish women, some holding infants, wait in a line for their turn to
be executed by the Nazi SS at Babi Yar.
A German policeman shoots individual Jewish women who remain
alive in the ravine after the mass execution. Many times the people
were told to lie face down. This way, the executioners did not have
to see the individual faces of the people they were murdering.
Portrait of two-year-
old Mania Halef, a
Jewish child who was
among the 33,771
persons shot by the
SS during the mass
executions at Babi
Yar, September,
1941.
Nazis sift through a huge pile of clothes
left by victims of the massacre.
Two year old Mani Halef’s clothes are somewhere amongst these.
 During the
 course of his
 captivity of the
 ghettos, Wladek
 is able to avoid
 and survive
 random
 executions.
 Again, Jews were
  rounded up and told they
  were to be relocated in
  vans.
 The vans were equipped
  so that the van’s exhaust
  was piped back into the
  van.
 700,000 Jews were killed
  using gas vans.
 The Nazis encountered several problems
  with the executions and gas vans.
 First, they were both taking too much time.
 Second, resources such as gas and
  ammunition were becoming scarce.
 Third, soldiers involved were beginning to
  have psychological problems with what
  they were doing.
   Nazi leaders decided to drastically
    speed up the Final Solution.
   There were two different types of
    camps:
     CONCENTRATION CAMPS
     EXTERMINATION CAMPS
   Jews from all over Nazi occupied
    Europe were to be brought here.
   Camps separated the strong from the
    weak.
   Strong prisoners were sent to
    concentration camps and the weak
    (mostly women, children and elderly)
    were exterminated immediately.
   Prisoner selection at
    Auschwitz - Birkenau
   During 1942, Hitler gives the
    order to start separating the Jews
    in the Warsaw Ghetto.
   Wladek’s family is taken and
    relocated but Wladek is saved by
    a friend in the Jewish Ghetto
    Police (Jews working for the
    Nazis).
   He is allowed to remain in the
    ghetto (now the Warsaw
    Concentration Camp) as a worker.
   This would also be the last time
    Wladek would see of his family.
   Millions were gathered and
    placed in concentration (prison)
    camps.
   There were over 100 of these in
    Nazi-occupied Europe.
   First camp was opened in 1933,
    right after Nazis came to power.
   These prisons used the inmates
    as slave workers.
   Many in the camps died of
    starvation, disease and the harsh
    conditions.
   Most often time, prisoners lasted
    less than half a year.
   A prisoner in Dachau is forced
    to stand without moving for
    endless hours as a punishment.
    He is wearing a triangle patch
    identification on his chest.
   A chart of prisoner triangle
    identification markings used in
    Nazi concentration camps
    which allowed the guards to
    easily see which type of
    prisoner any individual was.
In 1943, when the number of murdered Jews exceeded 1 million.
Nazis ordered the bodies of those buried to be dug up and burned
to destroy all traces.




Soviet POWs at forced labor in 1943 exhuming bodies in the
ravine at Babi Yar, where the Nazis had murdered over 33,000
Jews in September of 1941.
   Ravensbruck – concentration
    camp for women

   Buchenwald – one of the
    largest, deadliest
    concentration camps. Held
    over 250,000 prisoners

   Dachau – very first Nazi
    concentration camp, held over
    200,000 prisoners               Women of Ravensbruck
This is a picture of Anne Frank. In August of 1944, Anne, her family and others who
were hiding from the Nazis, were all captured and shipped off to a series of prisons
   and concentration camps. Anne died from typhus at age 15 in Bergen-Belsen
   Heinrich Himmler visits Dachau
    concentration camp




                                    Bodies of starved prisoners
                                     at Buchenwald
 Wladek spent most of 1942 as
  a slave laborer in the Warsaw
  Concentration Camp.
 In 1943, he was able to escape
  the concentration camp and
  hides with a non-Jewish friend.
 He is able to hide out for more
  than a year before he has to
  find new places to keep from
  being discovered.
 Starting in 1942, the Nazis
  built “death camps.”
 Many started out as ordinary
  concentration camps and
  were later modified with
  gassing installations for use
  on humans
 At these camps, thousands
  of Jews were gassed to
  death in huge gas chambers.
Zyklon B poison gas of choice by the Nazis. It was originally used
to kill vermin such as rats. The small pellets, were dropped from
the ceiling. When in contact with the air, they dissolve into gas.
   Chelmo – first ever
    extermination camp

   Treblinka – said to have
    executed around 870,000

   Auschwitz-Birkenau –
    most notorious and
    deadliest death camp
 Most Jews “relocated”
  from the Warsaw
  Ghetto were sent to
  the extermination
  camp, Treblinka.
 This included Wladek’s
  entire family where
  they would be
  executed.
   At Auschwitz-Birkenau,
    over 2 million people
    died.
     Around 1.4 million gassed
     Half million died from
      starvation or disease
   Auschwitz was said to
    have killed around
    12,000 people a day!
Smoke rises as the
 bodies are burnt.
16 of the 44 children
                   taken from a French
                   children’s home.
                   They were sent to a
                   concentration camp
                   and later to Auschwitz.
                   ONLY 1 SURVIVED




    A group of
   children at a
  concentration
camp in Poland.
The Nazis ordered the SS to take all possessions from Jews




 TEETH WITH GOLD




                                   PILES OF GLASSES
Bales of hair shaven from
                               women at Auschwitz, used to
                               make felt-yarn.




 After liberation, an Allied
soldier displays a stash of
 gold wedding rings taken
              from victims.
A warehouse full of shoes and clothes taken from the victims
1,400,000
1,200,000
1,000,000
 800,000
 600,000                                 killed in camp

 400,000
 200,000
       0
        Auschwitz   Treblinka   Chelmo
 By 1944, Wladek has to
  continually change hiding
  spots as the city is
  destroyed from constant
  fighting.
 He desperately travels
  from house to house in
  search of food and
  supplies.
 As winter sets in, he is
  alone, cold and starving.
   As the Allies advanced towards
    Berlin, one by one they
    discovered the horrors left by
    the Nazis.
   First the Soviets at Chelmo, then
    the Americans at Dachau and
    many more...
   “Our troops found sights,
    sounds, and stenches horrible
    beyond belief, cruelties so
    enormous as to be
    incomprehensible to the normal
    mind.“ - Colonel William Quinn
 General
 Eisenhower and
 officers look over
 the discovered
 remains of Nazi
 extermination.
 While hiding in a house,
  Wladek is discovered by a
  German soldier, Wilm
  Hosenfeld.
 Wilm learns that Wladek is
  a pianist and ask him to
  play something.
 Moved by Wladek’s music,
  Wilm allows Wladek to
  remain hiding in the attic.
 Wilm would even regularly
  bring food to Wladek.
 In 1945, the Germans are
  forced to leave Warsaw
  because of the advancing
  Soviet army.
 Wilm met up with Wladek
  one last time to promise he
  would listen for him on the
  radio after the war.
 As a last act of friendship,
  Wilm gave Wladek his
  greatcoat to keep warm
  just before he leaves.
 Soviet and Polish
  troops liberate
  Warsaw in 1945 and
  the war comes to an
  end soon thereafter.
 Wladek is rescued
  and is the only one of
  his family through to
  have survived the
  war and the entire
  Holocaust.
 As the war came to and
  end and it was all said and
  done, about 11 million
  people had been killed as a
  result of Nazi
  extermination.
 Around 6 million of the
  victims were Jewish.
 Of the 9 million Jews in
  Europe, fewer than four
  million had survived the
  whole ordeal.
6,000,000

5,000,000

4,000,000

3,000,000
                                               Death Totals
2,000,000

1,000,000

       0
            Jews   Soviet   Polish   Gypsies
                   POW's
Percentage of Jews killed in each country




                             0 Je ws
               6,0    0 0, 00
   ot   a l of
AT
3,500,000
 3,000,000
 2,500,000
 2,000,000
                                                 BEFORE
 1,500,000                                       AFTER
 1,000,000
   500,000
        0
             POLAND   USSR   HUNGARY GERMANY

Jewish population before, Jewish population after Holocaust
10,000,000
 9,000,000
 8,000,000
 7,000,000
 6,000,000
                                           JEWISH
 5,000,000
                                           POPULATION IN
 4,000,000                                 EUROPE
 3,000,000
 2,000,000
 1,000,000
         0
             BEFORE   KILLED   SURVIVORS
 Wladek would continue
  playing music his entire life.
 He went on to work for the
  Polish Radio and composed
  over 500 original works for
  radio, plays and movies.
 He even performed more
  than 2000 concerts
  worldwide.
 He died at the age of 88 in
  the year 2000.
   Originally a teacher, Wilm was
    drafted into the military in 1939.
   Throughout the war, Wilm helped
    rescue or hide many Jewish Poles,
    including Wladek Szpilman.
   Wilm was captured by the Soviets
    in 1945.
   He was sentenced to 25 years of
    labor for war crimes (likely
    because of the crimes of his Nazi
    affiliation).
   He died in 1952 after being
    tortured in a Soviet prison camp.

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The Holocaust

  • 1.
  • 2. For hundreds of years Christian Europe had regarded the Jews as the Christ -killers. At one time or another Jews had been driven out of almost every European country. The way they were treated in England in the thirteenth century is a typical example.  In 1275 they were made to wear a yellow badge. GO AT  SC APE In 1287 269 Jews were hanged in the Tower of London.  wer ea This deep prejudice against Jews was still strong in the twentieth century, Jews especially in Germany, Poland and Eastern Europe, where the Jewish population was very large.  After the First World War hundreds of Jews were blamed for the defeat in the War. Prejudice against the Jews grew during the economic depression which followed. Many Germans were poor and unemployed and wanted someone to blame. They turned on the Jews, many of whom were rich
  • 3. Hitler and the Nazis tap into the long- held feeling of many Europeans; the resentment of Jews  This is known as anti-Semitism  Hitler and Nazis say the Aryans — blonde hair, blue eyed Germanic peoples — are the “master race” of Germany and world  1935 Nuremberg Laws take away rights of German Jews  Kristallnacht, “the night of shattered glass” occurs in 1938.  Fearing more violence and oppression, thousands of Jews tried to leave Germany.  Other countries accepted a large number but were unwilling to take all those who
  • 4.  The Holocaust truly began in 1939 at the start of the war when the Nazis invaded Poland.  Poland had a large Jewish population at the time which increased the urgency of the “Jewish Question”.  The Nazi’s quickly devised ways to deal with German Troops marching into Warsaw, the capital of Poland. the Jews.
  • 5. This is the true story of a Jewish man named Wladek Szpilman.  He and his family were living in Warsaw at the time of the Nazi takeover in 1939.  Wladek was a pianist who worked for a Polish radio station.  Wladek and his family rejoiced when they heard the news that France and Great Britain had declared war on Germany.  However, this is short lived when the Nazis completely take Poland in just over a month’s time.
  • 6.  Hitler then ordered all Jews in Germany and his conquered lands to live in certain parts of cities called ghettos or be sent to concentration camps where they would be put to work for the Germany war industry.  Poland, who had the over 3 million Jews, (the largest population in Europe), had especially large ghettos.  Warsaw was the largest.  By 1940, all German Jews were deported to Poland.
  • 7. A newly-constructed wall partitions the central part of Warsaw, Poland, seen on December 20, 1940. It is part of red brick and gray stone walls built 12 to 15 feet high by the Nazis as a ghetto - a pen for Warsaw's approximately 500,000 Jews.
  • 8.
  • 9. A scene from the Warsaw Ghetto where Jews are seen wearing white armlets bearing the Star of David and trams are seen marked with the words "For Jews Only", on February 17, 1941.
  • 10.  Hitler hoped that Jews in ghettos would die of disease, starvation  Despite bad conditions, many Jews survived in these areas
  • 11. The faces of Jewish children living in a ghetto in Poland, under Nazi occupation. This may be the last picture taken of them smiling.
  • 12. Sadly, many Jews will not survive…
  • 13. A man carries away the bodies of dead Jews in the Ghetto of Warsaw in 1943, where people died of hunger in the streets.
  • 14.
  • 15. German soldiers question Jews after the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising in 1943.
  • 16.  Very quickly life for Jews deteriorated as the Nazi authorities prevent them working or owning businesses, and force them to wear Star of David armbands.  Wladek and his family were forced from their home in 1940, into the overcrowded Warsaw Ghetto where conditions only get worse.  People starve, the guards are brutal and corpses are left in the streets.
  • 17.  On one occasion, the Szpilmans witness the SS kill an entire family during a raid on an apartment building across the street.
  • 18.
  • 19.  To ensure the death of all Jews, Hitler enacts the “Final Solution” in 1942.  He chooses genocide — the systematic killing of an entire people.  Germans also turned on many other people — gypsies, Poles, Russians, and those who were mentally or physically disabled, homosexuals, etc.  The Germans put the most attention on Jews, however.
  • 20. There were 3 phases of the Nazi plan to wipe out the Jewish population of Europe.
  • 21. Jews were rounded up and told they were to be relocated.  They were then shot, one by one, by the Nazi SS “death squads”.  Their bodies were then buried in mass graves.  There was even competition between group leaders to see who could kill the most Jews.
  • 22.
  • 23.
  • 24.  The worst round of executions took place at Babi Yar, a ravine in the Ukraine.  The Nazi SS rounded up and executed 33,771 Jews in a single operation in September, 1941.  Other people executed were Soviet POW’s and gypsies.  An estimated 150,000 total people lost their lives at Babi Yar.
  • 25. Jewish women, some holding infants, wait in a line for their turn to be executed by the Nazi SS at Babi Yar.
  • 26. A German policeman shoots individual Jewish women who remain alive in the ravine after the mass execution. Many times the people were told to lie face down. This way, the executioners did not have to see the individual faces of the people they were murdering.
  • 27. Portrait of two-year- old Mania Halef, a Jewish child who was among the 33,771 persons shot by the SS during the mass executions at Babi Yar, September, 1941.
  • 28. Nazis sift through a huge pile of clothes left by victims of the massacre. Two year old Mani Halef’s clothes are somewhere amongst these.
  • 29.  During the course of his captivity of the ghettos, Wladek is able to avoid and survive random executions.
  • 30.
  • 31.
  • 32.  Again, Jews were rounded up and told they were to be relocated in vans.  The vans were equipped so that the van’s exhaust was piped back into the van.  700,000 Jews were killed using gas vans.
  • 33.
  • 34.  The Nazis encountered several problems with the executions and gas vans.  First, they were both taking too much time.  Second, resources such as gas and ammunition were becoming scarce.  Third, soldiers involved were beginning to have psychological problems with what they were doing.
  • 35. Nazi leaders decided to drastically speed up the Final Solution.  There were two different types of camps:  CONCENTRATION CAMPS  EXTERMINATION CAMPS  Jews from all over Nazi occupied Europe were to be brought here.  Camps separated the strong from the weak.  Strong prisoners were sent to concentration camps and the weak (mostly women, children and elderly) were exterminated immediately.
  • 36. Prisoner selection at Auschwitz - Birkenau
  • 37. During 1942, Hitler gives the order to start separating the Jews in the Warsaw Ghetto.  Wladek’s family is taken and relocated but Wladek is saved by a friend in the Jewish Ghetto Police (Jews working for the Nazis).  He is allowed to remain in the ghetto (now the Warsaw Concentration Camp) as a worker.  This would also be the last time Wladek would see of his family.
  • 38.
  • 39. Millions were gathered and placed in concentration (prison) camps.  There were over 100 of these in Nazi-occupied Europe.  First camp was opened in 1933, right after Nazis came to power.  These prisons used the inmates as slave workers.  Many in the camps died of starvation, disease and the harsh conditions.  Most often time, prisoners lasted less than half a year.
  • 40.
  • 41. A prisoner in Dachau is forced to stand without moving for endless hours as a punishment. He is wearing a triangle patch identification on his chest.  A chart of prisoner triangle identification markings used in Nazi concentration camps which allowed the guards to easily see which type of prisoner any individual was.
  • 42. In 1943, when the number of murdered Jews exceeded 1 million. Nazis ordered the bodies of those buried to be dug up and burned to destroy all traces. Soviet POWs at forced labor in 1943 exhuming bodies in the ravine at Babi Yar, where the Nazis had murdered over 33,000 Jews in September of 1941.
  • 43. Ravensbruck – concentration camp for women  Buchenwald – one of the largest, deadliest concentration camps. Held over 250,000 prisoners  Dachau – very first Nazi concentration camp, held over 200,000 prisoners Women of Ravensbruck
  • 44. This is a picture of Anne Frank. In August of 1944, Anne, her family and others who were hiding from the Nazis, were all captured and shipped off to a series of prisons and concentration camps. Anne died from typhus at age 15 in Bergen-Belsen
  • 45. Heinrich Himmler visits Dachau concentration camp  Bodies of starved prisoners at Buchenwald
  • 46.  Wladek spent most of 1942 as a slave laborer in the Warsaw Concentration Camp.  In 1943, he was able to escape the concentration camp and hides with a non-Jewish friend.  He is able to hide out for more than a year before he has to find new places to keep from being discovered.
  • 47.
  • 48.  Starting in 1942, the Nazis built “death camps.”  Many started out as ordinary concentration camps and were later modified with gassing installations for use on humans  At these camps, thousands of Jews were gassed to death in huge gas chambers.
  • 49. Zyklon B poison gas of choice by the Nazis. It was originally used to kill vermin such as rats. The small pellets, were dropped from the ceiling. When in contact with the air, they dissolve into gas.
  • 50. Chelmo – first ever extermination camp  Treblinka – said to have executed around 870,000  Auschwitz-Birkenau – most notorious and deadliest death camp
  • 51.  Most Jews “relocated” from the Warsaw Ghetto were sent to the extermination camp, Treblinka.  This included Wladek’s entire family where they would be executed.
  • 52. At Auschwitz-Birkenau, over 2 million people died.  Around 1.4 million gassed  Half million died from starvation or disease  Auschwitz was said to have killed around 12,000 people a day!
  • 53.
  • 54.
  • 55. Smoke rises as the bodies are burnt.
  • 56. 16 of the 44 children taken from a French children’s home. They were sent to a concentration camp and later to Auschwitz. ONLY 1 SURVIVED A group of children at a concentration camp in Poland.
  • 57.
  • 58. The Nazis ordered the SS to take all possessions from Jews TEETH WITH GOLD PILES OF GLASSES
  • 59. Bales of hair shaven from women at Auschwitz, used to make felt-yarn. After liberation, an Allied soldier displays a stash of gold wedding rings taken from victims.
  • 60. A warehouse full of shoes and clothes taken from the victims
  • 61. 1,400,000 1,200,000 1,000,000 800,000 600,000 killed in camp 400,000 200,000 0 Auschwitz Treblinka Chelmo
  • 62.  By 1944, Wladek has to continually change hiding spots as the city is destroyed from constant fighting.  He desperately travels from house to house in search of food and supplies.  As winter sets in, he is alone, cold and starving.
  • 63. As the Allies advanced towards Berlin, one by one they discovered the horrors left by the Nazis.  First the Soviets at Chelmo, then the Americans at Dachau and many more...  “Our troops found sights, sounds, and stenches horrible beyond belief, cruelties so enormous as to be incomprehensible to the normal mind.“ - Colonel William Quinn
  • 64.
  • 65.  General Eisenhower and officers look over the discovered remains of Nazi extermination.
  • 66.  While hiding in a house, Wladek is discovered by a German soldier, Wilm Hosenfeld.  Wilm learns that Wladek is a pianist and ask him to play something.  Moved by Wladek’s music, Wilm allows Wladek to remain hiding in the attic.  Wilm would even regularly bring food to Wladek.
  • 67.  In 1945, the Germans are forced to leave Warsaw because of the advancing Soviet army.  Wilm met up with Wladek one last time to promise he would listen for him on the radio after the war.  As a last act of friendship, Wilm gave Wladek his greatcoat to keep warm just before he leaves.
  • 68.  Soviet and Polish troops liberate Warsaw in 1945 and the war comes to an end soon thereafter.  Wladek is rescued and is the only one of his family through to have survived the war and the entire Holocaust.
  • 69.  As the war came to and end and it was all said and done, about 11 million people had been killed as a result of Nazi extermination.  Around 6 million of the victims were Jewish.  Of the 9 million Jews in Europe, fewer than four million had survived the whole ordeal.
  • 70. 6,000,000 5,000,000 4,000,000 3,000,000 Death Totals 2,000,000 1,000,000 0 Jews Soviet Polish Gypsies POW's
  • 71. Percentage of Jews killed in each country 0 Je ws 6,0 0 0, 00 ot a l of AT
  • 72. 3,500,000 3,000,000 2,500,000 2,000,000 BEFORE 1,500,000 AFTER 1,000,000 500,000 0 POLAND USSR HUNGARY GERMANY Jewish population before, Jewish population after Holocaust
  • 73. 10,000,000 9,000,000 8,000,000 7,000,000 6,000,000 JEWISH 5,000,000 POPULATION IN 4,000,000 EUROPE 3,000,000 2,000,000 1,000,000 0 BEFORE KILLED SURVIVORS
  • 74.  Wladek would continue playing music his entire life.  He went on to work for the Polish Radio and composed over 500 original works for radio, plays and movies.  He even performed more than 2000 concerts worldwide.  He died at the age of 88 in the year 2000.
  • 75. Originally a teacher, Wilm was drafted into the military in 1939.  Throughout the war, Wilm helped rescue or hide many Jewish Poles, including Wladek Szpilman.  Wilm was captured by the Soviets in 1945.  He was sentenced to 25 years of labor for war crimes (likely because of the crimes of his Nazi affiliation).  He died in 1952 after being tortured in a Soviet prison camp.

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. MASS EXECUTION USING A FIRING SQUAD WAS COMMON. THESE WOMEN HAVE BEEN ORDERED TO REMOVE EVERYTHING, CLOTHES, JEWELLERY, EVEN WEDDING RINGS AND ARE BEING FORCED TO LINE UP AND WAIT FOR THEIR TURN TO BE KILLED. SOME TIME LATER...
  2. THEY HAVE BEEN ORDERED TO LIE, FACE DOWN ON THE GROUND AND HAVE BEEN SHOT. THE GERMAN POLICEMAN IS SHOOTING INDIVIDUALS WHO HAVE ESCAPED DEATH FROM THE INITIAL ROUND OF BULLETS. THIS IS HORRIFIC BUT WE CANNOT SEE THE INDIVIDUAL FACES OF THOSE KILLED, WE DON'T REALLY KNOW WHO THEY ARE OR WHAT THEY REALLY LOOKED LIKE. SO TAKE A LOOK AT THIS NEXT PICTURE...
  3. THIS PICTURE TELLS US A LOT. HER PARENTS ARE OBVIOUSLY WEALTHY ENOUGH TO HAVE HAD A PORTRAIT DONE, SO IT SHOWS US THAT THE STATUS OF THE JEWS DID NOT MATTER TO THE NAZIS. IT WAS NOT JUST THE POOR WHICH WERE KILLED. THEY WERE KILLED REGARDLESS OF WEALTH OR STATUS, THEIR DEATH WAS DETERMINED BY RELIGION AND RACE.
  4. GIVES SOME IDEA OF THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE. BUT WHY DID THE NAZI WANT THEM TO REMOVE THEIR CLOTHES? WHAT DID THEY WANT WITH THEIR JEWELLERY, CLOTHES, EVEN HAIR?
  5. OBVIOUSLY TOWARDS THE END OF THE WAR THEY TRIED TO COVER THEIR TRACKS. IT WAS NOT GUILT THOUGH AND THEY DID NOT DO THE WORK THEMSELVES. THEY MADE JEWS AND OTHER PRISONERS OF WAR DIG UP THE BODIES AND BURN THEM INSTEAD.
  6. NO. MORE OFTEN THAN NOT, ESPECIALLY WHEN THE NUMBER OF PEOPLE MURDERED GREW ESPECIALLY HIGH, NAZIS BURNED THE BODIES. SO WHAT OTHER METHODS WERE USED TO SYSTEMATICALLY MURDER THESE PEOPLE?
  7. HOW DID THEY KILL THESE INNOCENT CHILDREN, ALONG WITH THEIR PARENTS, GRANDPARENTS, FRIENDS ETC.. YOU WILL ALL HAVE PROBABLY HEARD OF THE WAY NAZiS GASSED THE JEWS.
  8. THESE PICTURES SHOW WHAT THEY WANTED. WERE THE NAZI'S NOT WORRIED ABOUT THE CONSEQUENCES OF THEIR ACTIONS? DID THEY NOT THINK ABOUT WHAT MIGHT HAPPEN IF ALLIED COUNTRIES DISCOVERED WHAT WAS HAPPENING?
  9. How did they manage to get together all these Jews to kills them? How did they kill them when they had them? To begin with there were concentration camps.