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Kristallnacht: The Outbreak Of The Holocaust

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The first outright discriminatory laws against Jewish people came in 1933. These laws stated Jews could not hold a position in any branch of government and they were allowed no admission to universities. In the coming years, these anti-Semitic laws grew in their absurdity, exponentially. Jews were deprived of their citizenship, more and more job opportunities were taken away, they were not allow to own a vehicle, denied admission to public schools, and stripped of their property. All of these events were leading up to one harsh attack, the Kristallnacht (Night of Broken Glass). On November 9, 1938, Nazi soldiers killed dozens of Jews, destroyed hundreds of homes in Jewish neighborhoods, and set fire to nearly all of the Jewish temples in Germany. After the Kristallnacht, the Nazis sent more than 30,000 Jews to concentration camps. Hundreds or thousands fled the country. In 1933, Hitler began the process of German rearmament and militarization that would eventually lead to World War 11. Hitler's plan to dominate the world …show more content…
Unfortunately, Hitler terrible miscalculated when he assumed the conquest of the USSR would be easy. His assumptions were based on his belief that the Soviets, many of whom were from Slavic descent, were an inferior race controlled by the Jews under the guise of socialism. This resulted in Hitler making no military preparations for that war and counted on a quick victory to provide Germany with the resources, mainly oil, needed for the fourth war, which was to be waged against the United States. Hitler thought that actually fighting the Americans would be fairly simple, but technical preparations for the battle had to be made well in advance because of the distance between Germany and the United States and the fact that they had a very large and powerful

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