10.5 photo montage
Transcript of 10.5 photo montage
By: Sheridan Estep
TimelineJanuary 30th, 1933 - Adolf
Hitler is appointed Chancellor of Germany
February 22, 1933 - 40,000 SA and SS men are sworn in
as auxiliary police.
March 24, 1933 -German Parliament passes Enabling Act
giving Hitler dictatorial powers.
May 10, 1933 –Burning of books in
Berlin and throughout Germany.
September 29, 1933 - Nazis prohibit Jews from owning
land
May 17, 1934 - Jews not allowed
national health
insurance.
November 24, 1933 - Nazis pass a Law against Habitual and Dangerous Criminals, which allows beggars, the homeless, alcoholics and
the unemployed to be sent to concentration camps.
May 21, 1935 - Nazis ban Jews from serving
in the military.
March 12/13, 1938 - Nazi
troops enter Austria, which
has a population of 200,000 Jews, mainly living in
Vienna.
June 30, 1934 - The Night of Long Knives.
April 26, 1938 -Nazis order
Jews to register wealth and property.
July 25, 1938 - Jewish doctors prohibited by
law from practicing medicine.
July 23, 1938 - Nazis order Jews over age 15 to apply for identity cards from the
police, to be shown on demand to any police
officer.
August 11, 1938 -Nazis destroy the
synagogue in Nuremberg.
November 23, 1939 -Yellow stars required to be worn by Polish Jews over
age 10.
February 12, 1940 - First deportation of German
Jews into occupied Poland
April 30, 1939 -Jews lose rights as
tenants and are relocated into Jewish houses
February 21, 1939 - Nazis force Jews to hand over all
gold and silver items.
September 17, 1939 -Soviet troops invade
eastern Poland.
October 12, 1939 -Evacuation of Jews
from Vienna.
June 22, 1940 -France signs an armistice with
Hitler.
May 14, 1941 -3,600 Jews arrested
in Paris.
May 14, 1941 -3,600 Jews
arrested in Paris.
September27/28 - 23,000 Jews killed at Kamenets-Podolsk, in the Ukraine.
In January - Mass killings of Jews using Zyklon-B begin at
Auschwitz-Birkenau in Bunker I (the red farmhouse) in Birkenauwith the bodies being buried in
mass graves in a nearby meadow.
March 30, 1942 -First trainloads of Jews from Paris
arrive at Auschwitz.
September 18, 1942 -
Reduction of food rations for Jews in Germany.
March 31, 1943 - Newly
built gas chamber/cre
matory II opens at
Auschwitz.
April 20, 1942 - German Jews
are banned from using
public transportation
.
January 18, 1945 -Nazis
evacuate 66,000 from
Auschwitz
Adolf Hitler and Hermann Göring greet the participants in the parade as they pass beneath the window of Hitler's new office.
I chose this picture to represent what I learned about the Holocaust because Hitler was the person who organized the Holocaust and the termination of Jews. This photo shows Hitler after he was appointed Chancellor of Germany in 1933. To me, this marks the beginning of the very tragic event known as the Holocaust.
At Buchenwald concentration camp, newly arriving prisoners are registered upon arrival.
I chose this photograph to represent what I learned about the Holocaust because this photo shows a new prisoner arriving at a concentration camp and being registered. Jews did not know what to expect when going to these camps, which makes the whole event that more tragic.
The burning of books that were not German or consisted of “unGerman” ideas in Berlin and cities throughout Germany.
I chose this picture to represent what I learned about the Holocaust because this is a representation of how cruel Nazis really were. They destroyed people’s possessions because of the content of the books and did not feel bad about it.
German policemen tormenting a Jew.
I chose this picture to represent what I learned about the Holocaust because this shows that everyone, even policemen, tormented Jews because of who they were and thought it was humorous.
A woman is sitting on a bench marked only for Jews.
“History has shown that wherever anti-Semitism has gone unchecked, the persecution of others has been present or not far behind. Defeating anti-Semitism must be a cause of great importance not only for Jews, but for all people who value humanity and justice….” —U.S. Department of State, 2008
Please listen to this podcast of Ruth Bader Ginsburg and her view on Anti-Semitism.
Prisoners during roll call at camp Buchenwald.
I chose this photo to represent what I learned about the Holocaust because the faces on the prisoners show how miserable they were; no one had a happy expression on their face.
Credibility
• http://image.guardian.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/red/blue_pics/2008/09/03/Holocaust276.jpg
• http://c.tadst.com/gfx/600x400/un-holocaust-victims.jpg?1
• http://www.ushmm.org/photos/46/46579.jpg
• http://questgarden.com/101/66/5/100419080602/images/holocaust_tattoos_children.jpg
• http://www2.dsu.nodak.edu/users/dmeier/Holocaust/Auschwitz1.jpg
• http://sun.menloschool.org/~nfortman/8th/DCmemorials/zackwb.holocaust/kidingate.gif
• http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2006/03/05/books/dixl1.450.jpg
• http://www.ushmm.org/museum/exhibit/focus/buchenwald/