Showing posts with label genocid. Show all posts
Showing posts with label genocid. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 21

The Holocaust: Tragedy of a Century


Tyranny, war crimes and genocidal violence were always a constant in human history. However, the Holocaust is the most extreme form of genocide that ever happened, being a process of methodical extermination of certain human groups, mostly targeted on “biological”, “racial” considerents.
The Holocaust (Shoah – “Catastrophe”, in Hebrew) means the deliberated mass murder of 5-6 million Jews, plus millions of others members of various ethnic and religious groups, political opponents, war prisoners etc. by European Axis Powers during World War II. This extreme violence occured in the context of  a war that caused the death of around 50 million people in Europe only, a war triggered by Far-Right ideology, extreme nationalism and militarism (Jones, 2006, p. 233).
The so-called “unique uniqueness” of the Holocaust comes right from the intentional, determined and seriously organized process of wiping out an entire population, regardless of age, gender and other considerations (Heinsohn, 2000, Jones, 2006, p. 254).

Origins and Causes

Intolerance and, especially, Judeophobia, were already common in traditional European societies. Their rejection of Jesus and His Divinity, association with His execution and a perceived attack on the Christian moral order were the reasons Jews were discriminated in Christian countries, often violently. From isolation in ghettos to full-scale pogroms and mass expulsions, anti-Jewish persecution was a constant of European Middle Ages.
After the rise of modern states, despite a tendency towards tolerance and integration, even in Pre-War Germany, residual Judeophobia also gained new arguments, including the “backwardness” of traditional Jewish communities, a perceived control over modern means of production (industry, banking), association with cosmopolitanism and an attack on traditional values, all these fueled by modern pseudo-scientific racial theories (Jones, 2006, p. 235).
This became more obvious during the Weimar Republic, when Jews became some of the favorite scapegoats for the WWI disaster of German Far-Rightists, including the leaders of the National Socialist German Workers’ Party (NSDAP). By exploiting divergences in the Democratic camp and the economic crisis, the Nazis managed to get political power in Germany, in January, 1933 (Gilbert, 1987, p. 23, Jones, 2006, p. 235). For Hitler, Jews were the main target, and the “annihilation of the Jews” was a primary goal, even since the early years of the NSDAP. (Jones, 2006, p. 240).
The initial campaign against political opponents of the new regime quickly continued with a growing persecution against Jews. With the Nuremberg Laws (1935), German Jews lost their citizenship rights and large numbers were forced to emigrate. The Kristallnacht (1938) meant the beginning of violent repression (Gilbert, 1987, p. 47-48, Jones, 2006, p. 235-237).
The war further aggravated the situation, as regions with substantial Jewish populations, such as Poland and Soviet territories, were occupied by Nazis and their allies. Ghettoization and “Holocaust by bullets” (punctual massacres perpetrated by military and SS death squads, causing roughly 1.8 million casualties) were the first stages of the extermination process (Jones, 2006, p. 239).
Announced by the decision to halt Jewish emigration from occupied areas, in May, 1941, the “final solution” officially started with the Wansee Conference on January 20, 1942 (although methodic extermination, including the use of gas chambers was already employed in Eastern occupied territories, ever since the autumn of 1941 (Gilbert, 1987, p. 152-184).
The creation of an extensive system of death camps (Auschwitz, Treblinka, Belzec, Sobibor, Chelmno, Majdanek etc.) provided the Nazi regime with a solution for a faster elimination of Jews and other targeted groups. Concentration camps were already common in Fascist countries, while gas chambers were first set up in 1939, so the whole process just required an enlargement of an existing infrastructure (Jones, 2006, p. 240-241).

Targeted Groups

Jews

Jews were the primary target of the Holocaust. Around 5-6 million people with Jewish background were exterminated in Germany, other Axis countries and occupied territories.

Polish and Soviet Civilian Citizens

While Jews were the hardest hit community by the Nazi repression, Slavic peoples were seen by Hitler and other Nazi leaders as the primary target for mass extermination. In addition to the 3 million Jewish Poles, another 3 million Christian Poles died during German occupation. Around 18 million Soviet civilians also lost their lives.
A large numbers of these victims were due to intentional mass murder, deportations, forced labor and forced famine. On a long term, Nazi leaders envisioned a total extermination of Central and Eastern European Slavs, as a premise for a German colonization of the area (Jones, 2006, p. 270-271).

Roma People

Persecution against German gypsies started in 1935, reaching a genocidal climax during the war. The Porrajmos (“Devouring”) – the methodic genocide of Roma peoples by Germany and other Axis regimes claimed somewhere between 500,000 and 1.5 million lives (Jones, 2006, p. 274-276).

Other Ethnic Groups

Other groups were also targeted by Axis regimes, and their identity and reasons for persecutions varied from country to country. For instance, a few thousands of Afro-Germans were closed in concentration camps, where many of them died (while other thousands were expelled or sterilized; Heinsohn, 2000).
The Ustaša regime in Croatia primarily targeted Orthodox Serbs, seen as the main obstacle in establishing a fully Croat and Catholic state (Manhattan, 1986, p. 38).

War Prisoners

3.3 million Soviet war prisoners died due to intentional murder or inhumane treatment in Nazi concentration camps. (Jones, 2006, p. 271). 

Religious Dissenters

Within this category, fall members of mainstream religions in Germany and allied countries, who contested the regime on religious grounds, but mostly Neoprotestants (with Jehovah’s Witnesses as the primary target) seen as enemies of the regime, due to their pacifist and anti-establishment beliefs. 10,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses were arrested and over 1,200 were killed in Germany only (Jones, 2006, p. 267).

Political Opponents

Political opponents to Hitler’s rule and, especially, Left-Wing activists were the first target of the Nazi repression. While there are no clear numbers of these victims, it seems that only the Communists exterminated by the Nazi regime exceeded 100,000 (Jones, 2006, p. 264).

Disabled People

State directed “euthanasia” of disabled people, seen as social parasites even before the Nazi regime was installed, claimed over 250,000 lives. The so-called “Aktion T-4” was, actually, the first mass extermination process undertaken by Hitler’s government, starting in September 1939 (Heinsohn, 2000, Jones, 2006, p. 268-269).

Undesirables, Asocial, Homosexuals

Unemployed persons, those considered “criminals” under vague arguments and part of the male homosexual minority were the target of persecutions. While few were actually isolated in death camps, imprisonment conditions were so harsh that thousands of them died (Jones, 2006, p. 264-266).

Perpetrators

The Reich Main Security Office (RSHA – the security division of the SS) and, especially, the Jewish Affairs Department (with representatives throughout the Reich, occupied areas an allied states) led by Adolf Eichmann was the main institution overseeing the “Operation Reinhard”, i.e. the extermination of Jews. The implementation was handled by various SS units, as well as the German regular army (Gilbert, 1987, p. 284).
Apart from Germany, other Axis nations enforced genocidal measures against Jews, Roma and other groups.
Admiral Horthy’s regime in Hungary organized mass executions of Jews, Serbs, Roma etc., even since the beginning of their involvement in the War (Gilbert, 1987, p. 287-288). In March 1944, Horthy agreed to start mass deportations of Jews to German camps (Gilbert, 1987, p. 662-681). 63,000 Jews were killed in Hungary (including occupied territories), prior to the Nazi occupation. More than 400,000 were deported to death camps after the occupation, most of them being killed (Cole, 2001).
Romania, under the Antonescu regime, organized the killing of hundreds of thousands of Jews, nomad Roma people and religious dissenters, starting with punctual pogroms, such as those in Iasi and Galati, in June 1941, and going up to full-scale deportation, isolation in death camps and mass executions (such as those in Odessa, in October 1941) in occupied Soviet territories (Gilbert, 1987, p. 161-219).
The puppet “Independent State of Croatia” was one of the regimes most involved in mass extermination of “undesirable” categories, meaning political opponents, Jews, Roma but, mostly Serbs. Death camps, massacres, deportation, torture, etc. were employed to establish a politically, religiously and ethnically homogenous state, a process that claimed at least 700,000 civilian lives (Manhattan, 1986, p. 34-75).
The Vichy Regime in France, the Quisling regime in Norway and Tiso’s government in Slovakia deported much of their Jewish population to German concentration camps. On the other hand, Finland, Bulgaria and Italy, while also Axis members, refused deportation and other violent repression measures (Gilbert, 1987, p. 547-548).
Besides Axis countries and puppet regimes, pro-Nazi militias and auxiliary forces in occupied regions were also involved in mass murder of “undesirable” populations, mostly Jews. Ukrainian, Lithuanian and Latvian nationalists were among the fiercest collaborators in organizing anti-Jewish pogroms (Gilbert, 1987, p. 154-157).

Consequences

The most evident consequence of the Holocaust and other Nazi war crimes was the demographic one. Millions of people perished, with dramatic consequences on a short term (workforce shortage, abnormal sex ratio, low fertility, “missing generations”) and on a long term (a lower population and different ethno-confessional structure; Gitelman, 1993, p. 3-4).
Another consequence was that the Holocaust gave a significant boost to the Zionist ideology, with hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing to Palestine and even more seeing emigration as the sole solution to a safe future, and the assimilationist doctrine losing terrain. This led to the creation of a new state, Israel, with all the related conflicts in the Near East.

Finally, the horrific accounts of these war crimes caused a significant shift in Global public opinion, towards a firm rejection of Antisemitism, Racism and Far-Right ideologies. However, in some regions, in the USSR, for instance, this rejection was used to suppress various nationalist movements, associated or not with Nazism (Gitelman, 1993, p. 4-9).