You will be given a passport card of a person that was in the Holocaust. Each floor has a reading about that person. Follow their story, find out what happened to them.
Racism, Hate, Prejudice, Genocide
Hate-to dislike intensely or passionately; feel extreme hostility toward; detest
Prejudice- unreasonable feelings, opinions, or attitudes, showing hostility regarding a racial, religious, or national group.
Racism- the belief that race accounts for differences in human character or abilities. The belief one race is superior to another.
Genocide- The deliberate destruction or killing off of a racial, religious, political or cultural group.
The systematic state sponsored murder of six million Jews by the Nazis and their collaborators during World War II.
Holocaust means whole burning, a great or complete devastation or destruction, especially by fire.
Shoah- The Hebrew term for holocaust
The Final Solution to the Jewish Problem- the way the Nazis referred to the murder of the Jews
Studying the history of the Holocaust should help you understand that:
1. Democratic institutions and values are not automatically sustained, but need to be appreciated, nurtured, and protected.
2. Silence and indifference to the suffering of others, or to the infringement of civil rights in any society can, however unintentionally, perpetuate the problems.
3. The Holocaust was not an accident in history. It occurred because individuals, organizations, and governments made choices that not only legalized discrimination but also allowed prejudice, hatred, and ultimately mass murder to occur.
4 Legalized Stages of the Holocaust
1. Definition (identification)- Jews had to register for identity cards and have visible symbols such as the yellow star on their clothing. This caused them to be separated from others.
2. Expropriation- The property and livelihood of the Jews was taken away. They could not hold certain jobs, live in certain places, own businesses, have bank accounts.
3. Concentration- Jewish students could not go to school, travel was restricted, could not own phones, cameras, radios, pets. Moved from the countryside to ghettos in the cities. Worked as slave laborers.
4. Annihilation- Organizing of mass killings of Jews and others. These events took place by mobile killing units and by victims being transported to killing centers.
The decision for this to take place began on January 20, 1942 at Wannsee, a private villa outside of Berlin. Fifteen high ranking Nazis met and developed the “Final solution to the Jewish problem”. The documents they produced were used at the Nuremberg war crime trials. Hitler had already stated in his book, Mein Kampf, in which he wrote that “the final objective must be the removal of the Jews altogether”. Most of these fifteen men held doctorates from German universities. They were considered the Reich’s best and brightest.
Propaganda
Propaganda-the spreading of ideas, information, or rumor for the purpose of helping or injuring an institution, a cause, or a person.
Hitler and Goebbels were experts at using propaganda. They used it to influence the German people. They directed a lot of their propaganda at children.
Goebbels- Hitler's minister of propaganda, had a famous saying "If you tell a lie often enough, people will believe it."
The Exhibition starts on the 3rd floor and covers the things before WWII.
How many titles can you get right?
It is on your right hand side as you go down the first hallway after getting off of the elevator- make sure you look for it.
Just passed the "Poisonous Mushroom" you will come upon a room that highlights "Kristalnact"- The Night of the Broken Glass."
Just passed that is the Voyage of the St. Louis
Beginning in October 1939, public health authorities began to encourage parents of children with disabilities to admit their young children to one of a number of specially designated pediatric clinics throughout Germany and Austria. In reality, the clinics were children's killing wards. There, specially recruited medical staff murdered their young charges by lethal overdoses of medication or by starvation.
What started off with children was expanded to adults not long after.
The categories of patients were:
those suffering from schizophrenia, epilepsy, dementia, encephalitis, and other chronic psychiatric or neurological disorders
those not of German or "related" blood
the criminally insane or those committed on criminal grounds
those who had been confined to the institution in question for more than five years
Careful going through the section with shoes and hair. Be respectful, no comments. These belonged to victims of the Nazis.
Items from the camps and ghettos.
A Box car used to transport victims to the killing centers in Poland.
Bunks from Auschwitz.
Electric fence post from Auschwitz. Ovens from one of the camps.
1st Floor
News reports of the Holocaust.
Heroes that helped the Jews. Resistance.
A boat
Artifacts
Then one the things I find most powerful is at the end, there is a sunken theater that plays survivor stories