Holocaust & genocide
-
Upload
quin-riddle -
Category
Documents
-
view
58 -
download
1
description
Transcript of Holocaust & genocide
HOLOCAUST & GENOCIDE
The Holocaust, Residential schools in Canada, & the Zulu
kingdom War
TABLE OF CONTENTS
The German Holocaust
The Residential Schools in Canada
The Zulu Empire
Similarities and Differences
The 8 stages of Genocide
Conclusion
THE HOLOCAUST
It began with a simple boycott of Jewish shops and ended in the gas chambers at Auschwitz as Adolf
Hitler and his Nazi followers attempted to exterminate the entire Jewish population of Europe.
Adolf Hitler came into power of Germany in January of 1933.
Jewish people were slowly forced out of German society due to the numerous laws the were put in
place, culminating in the Nuremberg Laws of 1935 which deprived them of their German citizenship and
forbade intermarriage with non-Jews. They were removed from schools, banned from the professions,
excluded from military service, and were even forbidden to share a park bench with a non-Jew.
Jewish people in the Nazi Reich were rounded up and sent to ghettos, labour , and concentration camps.
Four million Jewish people were gassed in the death camps and another two million were either shot or
killed in the ghettos.
Seven months later, the Nuremberg War Crime Trials began, with 22 surviving top Nazis charged with
crimes against humanity.
RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS IN CANADA
The first residential facilities were developed in New France by Catholic
missionaries to provide care and schooling.
The death toll was over 3,000.
Children in the schools were abused, verbally, sexually, and physically.
In 1884 the Indian Act was amended to include compulsory residential school
attendance for status Indians under age 16.
The Roman Catholics operated three-fifths, the Anglicans one-quarter and the
Methodists and Presbyterians the remainder.
Students were forced to speak English or French, and were punished if they
spoke their own native languages.
The last Indian Residential School was closed in 1996.
THE ZULU KINGDOM WAR
Shaka was the founder of the Zulu Empire.
The death toll was around 2 million.
Shaka rose to power among the ranks in the Mthethwa Empire, soon to assume the
throne at the death of ruler Dingiswayo, who had been killed in battle at the hands of
Zwide, the king of Ndwandwe.
From the 1810s until its destruction by the British in 1879, the Zulu kingdom was the
largest in southeastern Africa.
Prisoners of war, women, children, and even dogs were killed.
Shaka became a symbol of African barbarism.
Some people saw Shaka as a heroic figure, yet many others South Africans have seen
Shaka as an oppressor who indiscriminately slaughtered not only his opponents, but also
innocent noncombatants, including women and children..
SIMILARITIES
The Holocaust and the Zulu War are similar in that they were both in a
war time, and that many people killed in the genocide were killed through
war.
The Holocaust and the Residential Schools in Canada are similar in that
the people being prosecuted were lied to and told they were being
protected, when really they were abused, starved and or killed.
The Zulu War and the Residential School System are similar in that they
were both people who had taken over another country and tried to make
the native people of those countries adopt the invaders culture and
abandon their own.
DIFFERENCES
The Holocaust and the Zulu War were different in that the Nazis were trying to
eliminate an entire group of people in order to create what they called the “Master
Race”, and the Zulus were just creating a huge empire and killing anyone who got in
their way.
The Holocaust and the Residential Schools were different in that the Residential
School System was put in place to try and assimilate the Aboriginal peoples of Canada
into European culture, not to exterminate them like the Holocaust.
The Residential Schools in Canada and the Zulu War were different in that The Zulus
were waging a war against the South of Africa, and people were brutally murdered in
the course of this, where as the Residential Schools were supposed to be good for the
children who attended, when really they were being horribly abused and mistreated.
8 STAGES OF GENOCIDE
Classification
Symbolization
Dehumanization
Organization
Polarization
Preparation
Extermination
Denial
“Never Again”
SOURCES
The History and Sociology of Genocide. (n.d.). Retrieved April 24, 2014, from http://books.google.ca/books?
id=UgzAi1DD75wC&pg=PA223&lpg=PA223&dq=the+zulu+empire+genocide&source=bl&ots=DgJ0z1AaEH
&sig=g1wixOQLPoGImhUV_b1mnMiQU8U&hl=en&sa=X&ei=CNZZU_DEOo2uyASJ2YGgDQ&ved=0CF8Q6AE
wBw#v=onepage&q=the%20zulu%20empire%20genocide&f=false
The History Place - Genocide in the 20th Century: The Nazi Holocaust 1938-45. (n.d.). Retrieved April 15,
2014, from http://www.historyplace.com/worldhistory/genocide/holocaust.htm
Military History Online - The British-Zulu War. (n.d.). Retrieved April 11, 2014, from
http://www.militaryhistoryonline.com/zuluwars/
Residential Schools. (n.d.). Retrieved April 24, 2014, from
http://www.aadnc-aandc.gc.ca/eng/1302882353814/1302882592498
Residential Schools. (n.d.). Retrieved April 24, 2014, from
http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/residential-schools/
(n.d.). Retrieved April 24, 2014, from http://www.encyclopedia.com/article-1G2-3434600373/zulu-empire.html
Zulu Empire - Afropedea. (n.d.). Retrieved April 24, 2014, from http://www.afropedea.org/zulu-empire