The Holocaust was a time in Germany that was dreadful for the Jews and for anyone who interacted with the Jews, and was created by a powerful man named Adolf Hitler. 1933-1945 was the time period for Germany’s most well known hardships for the country to ever through. The Holocaust was not only the most depressing time for Germany, it was also the biggest accomplishment that Adolf Hitler was known for.
Adolf Hitler with no doubt gave Germany a run for its money. With no college level education, he seemed to persuade many with his dictating and crowd pleasing speeches. Dropping out of school at the age of 16, he soon traveled to Vienna, where he strove to be an artist thus being shortly after the death of his mother. While …show more content…
He was known as the master of obliteration and organized insanity. He controled the German politics and held the title of being leader of the National Socialist German Workers Party, also known as the Nazi Party. From 1934 to 1945, Hitler was chancellor of Germany and he served as dictator. From being so powerful, he commenced a Nazi camp system that started in January 1933. The first official concentration camp opened in Dachau, a small village located near Munich. It began as a system of repression directed against political opponents of the Nazi state. 1935, the regime began to imprison those whom it designated as racially or biologically inferior, especially Jews. During World War 2, the scale of the organization went up rapidly and the purpose of the camps evolved beyond imprisonment toward forced labor and outright murder. The Germans started to arrest those who resisted their domination and those they judged to be racially, so really you did not want to be around the Germans when they were roaming the streets of Europe. After the war, it brought unpredicted growth in both the number of prisoners and camps. Within the three years the number of prisoners quadrupled from about 25,000 before the war and then about 100,000 in March 1942. In September of that year, the prisoners subjected to “Extermination through work” By January 1945, there were more than 700,000 prisoners registered in the concentration camps. Adolf Hitler was