Answer: Holocaust killed a third of Jews. Jews were persecuted for the anti-Semitic ideas of Nazi Germany. The Jews were imprisoned in concentration camps. The United States and the world have generally not done much for the Jews. The Holocaust had lasting consequences.
Explanation:
- Nazi crimes almost exterminated Jews from Europe. During World War II, about six million Jews were systematically killed. The most significant number were casualties in concentration camps stationed throughout Europe. In some parts of the Holocaust, entire Jewish communities were destroyed.
- Hitler persecuted Jews for his anti-Semitic views. He considered Jews guilty of the post-World War I state of Germany. Germany, as a defeated country, had to pay substantial war damages and was in a difficult economic situation. Hitler needed a culprit for such a case, and he considered them Jewish. In his book "Mein Kampf" he outlined his anti-Semitic views, which were later included in the official political platform of the National Socialist Party.
- The systematic incarceration of Jews began even before the official start of World War II. The first camps were opened in 1933. By the beginning of the War, there were about 25,000 people in these camps, some of them Jewish. By the end of 1945, millions of Jews would be killed in concentration camps. Over a million Jews were killed in Auschwitz alone.
- The United States and the world have generally not done much about the Holocaust. Even before the outbreak of the War, one could have hinted at what Hitler was planning on the Jews. Immigration and visa restrictions for foreigners began during President Hoover and continued during Roosevelt. There was no sympathy among the American society itself about the Jews. Also, there have been a number of officials in the government who have supported restrictions on US Dollar Jews. During the First World War, it turned out that journalists were often misreporting about German crimes, so journalists were very careful when it came to reporting on the Holocaust. Germany itself struggled to cover up crimes against Jews. At the time when such news came out, American society did not care much for that information, and they were more focused on other news from the War. America received just over 10,000 Jews during and before World War II.
- The experiences of Holocaust survivors are similar. There are many testimonies available by Holocaust survivors. They are critical because they talk about the proportion of the destructive policies of Germany and its allies during the War. These painful experiences have had lasting effects on the victims. Every January 27 marks the day of remembrance of the Holocaust victims, and the world is reminded of the horrors of Hitler's politics during the War.
Answer:
The fall of all communist countries
Explanation:
The Berlin Wall was a physical border set in the city of Berlin which was dividing the communist and democratic part of it. The people were not able to communicate, move between the two sides, or even see each other. The wall was set by the Soviets, and it represented very well how their politics was. When this wall finally was taken down after three decades, it meant that Germany was united again, and that the communism came to an end in the country. The symbolism of the fall of the Berlin Wall though is much wider, and it not only symbolizes the end of communism in Germany, but across most of the world, as it coincided with the period when the Soviet Union was falling apart and numerous countries got independent, free to make their own decisions, and become democratic societies.
China joined the side of the Tripple Entente during World War I.