294
THE FINAL SOLUTION
OF THE JEWISH
QUESTION
THE WANNSEE CONFERENCE (1942)
O
n January 20, 1942, 15
members of the Nazi Party
and German officials met
in the Berlin suburb of Wannsee
to discuss the implementation
of the “Final Solution of the Jewish
Question”—the code name for the
systematic annihilation of European
Jews. During the conference, a
tabulation of all the Jews in Europe
was presented, country by country,
as well as a target number for
extermination: 11 million. The
meeting lasted two hours and was
matter-of-fact and dispassionate.
After approving the “Final Solution”
and the slaughter of the Jews, the
men called for brandy and cigars.
IN CONTEXT
FOCUS
The Holocaust
BEFORE
1933 The first concentration
camp is built in Dachau, near
Munich. Its first inmates are
communists, socialists, and
trade unionists.
September 1935 As a result
of the new Nuremberg Laws,
Jews lose their civil rights.
1938 During Kristallnacht, the
“Night of Broken Glass,” the
Nazis terrorize Jews across
Germany and Austria.
June 1941 The German
invasion of the Soviet Union
is accompanied by the mass
killing of Jews.
AFTER
May 1942 Gassings start at
Auschwitz, in Poland.
1945–46 At the Nuremberg
trials, 24 Nazi members are
indicted and 12 sentenced
to death.
Hitler becomes ruler of
Germany and introduces
legislation discriminating
against Jews.
The Nazis look for efficient
ways to kill millions after
the invasion of Russia.
The Wannsee
Conference
organizes the
Final Solution.
Hitler’s takeover of Austria
is followed by widespread
attacks on Jews.
Germany conquers
Poland, and Polish Jews
are forced to move into
overcrowded ghettos.
More than 6 million
Jews are killed in
the Holocaust.
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295
Auschwitz, in southern Poland, has
become a byword for the Holocaust.
Those prisoners subjected to forced
labor were summarily executed when
they became too weak to work.
See also: The Treaty of Versailles 280 ■ The Wall Street Crash 282–83 ■ The Reichstag Fire 284–85 ■
Nazi invasion of Poland 286–93 ■ The establishment of Israel 302–03 ■ The Siege of Sarajevo 326
THE MODERN WORLD
The Wannsee Conference was far
from the start of Nazi brutality
against Jews. Adolf Hitler had
come to power in 1933, spreading
his belief that Germans were the
Aryan master race, superior to all
others, and that their blood should
not be contaminated. He identified
Jews as a race of people, not just
a religious group. German Jews
were banned from marrying non-
Jewish Germans and subjected
to increasing discrimination and
segregation. From the time of the
German takeover of Austria in
1938, Nazi brutality against Jews
worsened. Jews wanting to flee
German rule found other countries
unwilling to accept them.
Gathering momentum
After Germany’s invasion of Poland
in 1939, the Nazi campaign against
the Jews reached a terrifying new
level. Herded into ghettoes, Polish
Jews began to die in large numbers
of starvation and ill-treatment.
When Germany invaded Russia in
1941, paramilitary death squads
carried out mass killings of Jews in
the conquered areas. To start with,
victims were shot, up to 30,000 at a
time, but the SS then began gassing
Jews in the backs of vans. Poison
gas was found to be a more efficient
way to commit mass murder.
Until 1941, the Nazi leadership
had envisaged solving the “Jewish
problem” by deporting Jews to a
distant location. By the time of the
Wannsee Conference, however, they
were committed to systematically
killing Europe’s Jewish population.
Six dedicated death camps were
built in Poland. Adolf Eichmann of
the Nazi paramilitary corps, the SS,
arranged the transport of Jews to
the camps from right across Europe,
including France, Greece, Hungary,
and Italy. The Jews from the Polish
ghettos were also taken there to be
exterminated. Prisoners arrived at
these huge killing factories by train
and were gassed in shower rooms,
their corpses burned in large
crematoria. At the Belzec camp,
about half a million Jews were
killed, and only seven prisoners are
known to have survived. The death
camp at Auschwitz, however, also
had a labor camp attached, where
those who were not killed on arrival
were made to work. The Germans
needed slave labor to support their
war effort, and this offered Jews
their best chance of survival. Along
with other prisoners—including
socialists, homosexuals, Roma, and
prisoners of war—many Jews were
sent to concentration camps. Their
heads were shaved, and they were
given a uniform to strip them of
their identity. When the Allies
liberated the camps in 1945, they
found a vision of hell. The survivors
were skeletal and traumatized.
State-sanctioned genocide
The Wannsee Protocol, the minutes
of the conference, represents the
unimaginable. For the first time, a
modern state had committed itself
to the murder of an entire people.
As many as 6 million Jews lost their
lives, and an estimated 5.5 million
others—Slavs, homosexuals,
communists—were also killed. ■
The Nuremberg Trials
After the end of World War II,
the Allies sought to bring the
Nazis to justice. An international
tribunal was held at Nuremberg,
Germany, beginning in 1945.
Newsreels captured from
the Nazis revealed the gas
chambers, the massacre of
civilians, and the ill-treatment
of prisoners. The trials were
televised, showing to the
world—and, in particular the
German people—evidence of
the horrors that had taken place
in the concentration camps.
Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler,
head of the SS, and Joseph
Goebbels, head of propaganda,
had committed suicide, leaving
24 defendants facing four counts:
crimes against peace, planning
and waging wars of aggression,
war crimes, and crimes against
humanity. Most said they were
“only obeying orders.” Albert
Speer, head of war production,
was jailed for 20 years, while
12 of the other defendants were
sentenced to death; the trials led
to the setting up of a permanent
international criminal court in
The Hague, in the Netherlands.
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