The Holocaust. A Glossary of Terms

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The Holocaust A Glossary of Terms Anschluss, "Joining together," annexation. On March 12, 1938, Hitler annexed Austria to Germany Antisemitism, Systematic prejudice against Jews. Notice the absence of a hyphen (-); there has never been any such thing as "Semitism." The term "antisemitism" is, properly one word. Aryan, In the Nazi ideology, the pure, superior Germanic (Nordic, Caucasian) race. Babi Yar, A deep ravine outsize the Ukrainian city of Kiev, on the Dnieper River where the Einsatzgruppen killed and buried 34,000 Jews in one or two days (September 29-30, 1941). Belzek, Death Camp located in the Lublin District of Poland. More than 600,000 Jews were gassed at Belzek between 1941 and 1943. Blitzkrieg, "lightning war," used to describe the speed, efficiency and intensity of Germany's military attack against their opponents. Buchenwald, concentration camp established in 1937 between Frankfurt and Leipzig in Germany. While it was primarily a work camp in the German concentration camp system and not a major extermination center, thousands died there from exposure, over-work and execution. Bund, a socialist movement among Jews in the Pale of Settlement in western Russia in the late 1800's. The Bundists supported Jewish linguistic and political autonomy. Their nationalism was cultural rather than territorial and, thus, they were at odds with much of the Zionist movement, Capo, Jews who worked inside the death camps. Their tasks including transporting victims of gassing to the ovens, cleaning the gas chambers of human excrement and blood, removal of gold from the teeth of the victims, shaving the heads of those going to the gas chambers. Chelmo, generally thought to be the first of the six death camps in Poland to become operational. At the beginning, the camp was under the direction of SS Major, Christian Wirth, formerly administrative head of the Euthanasie Programme. Located in the Wartheland. Between December 1941 and fall 1942 and again from May until August 1944 gassings by means of carbon monoxide from motor exhaust gas took place. Altogether more than 150,000 Jews as well as 5000 gypsies died at Chelmo. Concentration camp- a prison camp in which individuals are held without regard for accepted rules of arrest and detention. The Nazis constructed concentration camps to hold Jews, Gypsies, communists, and others considered enemies of the state. Dachau- a concentration camp located in Upper Bavaria, northeast of Munich. In 1942 a gas chamber was established at in connection with the medical experiments of the chief company commander of SS Dr. Rascher also a few experimental gassings were undertaken.

Death camp- a camp where the Nazis murdered people in assembly-line style. The largest death camp was Auschwitz-Birkenau. The term was also used for concentration camps such as Bergen- Belsen and Dachau where thousands died of starvation, disease, and maltreatment. Death Marches, At the end of the war when it became obvious that the German army was trapped between the Soviets to the east and the advancing Allied troops from the west, the Nazis, in an attempt to prevent the liberation of camp inmates, forced them to march westward. Thousands died in these marches. Deportation, the removal of people from their areas of residency for purposes of resettlement elsewhere. With regard to the Jews of Europe, deportation meant removal either to a ghetto or a concentration camp in preparation for yet another removal to an extermination center. Einsatzgruppen, Mobile killing units ("task groups") under the command of Reinhard Heydrich which accompanied German Troops when they invaded Russia. Their task was to dispose of, liquidate, undesirables who posed a threat to the Reich. fuhrerprinzip, See "leadership Principle." General Government The Nazi-ruled state in central and eastern Poland. Headed by Governor Hans Frank. Genocide, the systematic annihilation of a whole people or nation. German Military Rank Provided by Richard Breitman in The Architect of Genocide: Himmler and the Final Solution. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1991 Oberstgruppenfuehrer Obergruppenfuehrer Gruppenfuehrer Brigadefuehrer Oberfuehrer Standartenfuehrer Obersturmbannfuehrer Sturmbannfuehrer Hauptsturmfuehrer Obersturmfuehrer Unterscharfuehrer Rottenfuehrer Sturmann SS-Mann General Lt. General Major General Brigadier General between Brigadier & Colonel Colonel Lt. Colonel Major Captain 1st. Lieutenant Corporal Private, First Class Private No equivalent in U.S. military

Ghetto, a Yiddish word referring to a walled section of a city in which Jews were required to live during the Middle Ages. The concept was revived by the Nazi regime as part of the Final Solution to the Jewish Question. Holocaust, a Hebrew word (olah) meaning "burnt offering. In the Septuagint version (translated Hebrew Bible into Greek during the reign of Ptolemy II, 3rd century B.C.), the word, olah, is consistently translated by the Greek word, holokauston, "an offering consumed by fire." Juden, The German word for Jew. Judenrat, Jewish community authority, appointed by the Nazis for administration within the ghetto. Leadership Principle, Ger. fuhrerprinzip, the ideological and administrative principle established by Hitler early in his rise to power of one vital party controlled by one, and only one, leader to whom all subjects owed absolute and unquestioning obedience. Lebensraum, one of Hitler's motivations for invading Poland and, later, the Soviet Union, was to acquire lebensraum, or additional "living space," to be colonized by German people. Madagascar Plan, in 1940, before the invasion of the Soviet Union, the Nazis seriously considered moving all Jews under their authority to the island of Madagascar, a French possession off the east coast of AAfrica. Majdanek, located in the Lublin district, general government of Poland. The concentration camp existing since September 1941 turned into an extermination camp when between April 1942 and November 1943 mass shootings took place to which 24,000 Jews fell victim. In October 1942 also two, later three gas chambers were built. In the beginning the killings in these were done by means of carbon monoxide. Later Zyclon B was implemented. Up until the dissolution of the camp in March 1944 about 50,000 Jews have been gassed. The camp was closed in 1944 after a major inmate riot occurred and several inmates escaped. Nuremberg, a city in Germany where the Reichstag met in September, 1935 to promulgate the Nuremberg Laws. A decade later, an International Military Tribunal convened there to hold trials of Nazis accused of War Crimes in connection with the Holocaust. Operation Barbarossa, the military code name for Nazi Germany's invasion of the Soviet Union. The invasion began in June, 1941. Operation Reinhard, the code name for the entire process of building extermination camps, deportation of Jews first to ghettos, then to the camps for extermination and incineration. The Operation was named for Rinehard Heydrich. Pink Triangle The Nazi concentration camps developed a system of badges to be worn by inmates depending on why they were imprisoned. Those convicted of sexual deviance, primarily homosexuality, were required to wear a pink triangle. Jews were required to wear the yellow Star of David. Purple designated Jehovah's Witnesses, red for political criminals, black for asocials, including the Roma, and green for criminals.

Pogrom, A Russian word meaning devastation used to describe an organized, systematic discriminatory action against Jews. Reichstag, the German Parliament under the Weimar Constitution. It was purely ornamental during Hitler's dictatorship. SD, Sicherheitsdienst - The SS Security Service Sonderkommandos. SS, originally Hitler's elite guard. Under Himmler's leadership, the SS was in charge of the death camps. Selection - the process the Nazis used to separate those prisoners who would be assigned to forced labor from those who were to be killed immediately. Shoah, a Hebrew word meaning "Desolation." Shoah has come to be the preferred term for the Holocaust by Jewish scholars who feel that "Holocaust" has lost much of its significance through overuse. Sobibor, located in the Lublin District, general government) received in April 1942, three, later in September 1942 six gas chambers and until October 1943 it was "in operation". During this period at least 200,000 Jews were murdered through carbon monoxide gas. Third Reich, Nazi Germany from the end of the Weimar Republic to the end of World War II. Treblinka, located in the Warschau District of the general government in eastern Poland. From the end of July, 1942 on, Treblinka had three gas chambers and at the beginning of September, 1942, installed ten larger gas chambers. Up to the dissolution of the camp in November 1943 altogether 700,000 Jews were killed there by carbon monoxide. Vichy, France, after the Nazis conquered France, a puppet government was set up here. Wannsee (Conference, a conference held on January 20, 1942 beside Lake Wannsee in Berlin. At this conference it was decided and made official Nazi policy that the total annihilation of European Jews was the only rational means of a "Final Solution" to the Jewish Question. Yad Vashem, a museum in Jerusalem dedicated to the memory of Holocaust victims. The name of the Museum is taken from an Old Testament passage in Isaiah: "I will build for them a name and a memorial." (Isiah 56:5). Zionism- The fervent desire of Jews of the Diaspora to return to their ancestral homeland of Palestine. This ideal is at least 2,500 years old, dating to the Babylonian Captivity. Its first statement is found in Psalm 137:1, "By the waters of Babylon, there we sat down and wept as we remembered Zion. Political Zionism which emerged in the 19th century and ultimately resulted in the creation of the modern state of Israel in 1948 is an outgrowth of spiritual Zionism. Zyklon B, hydrogen cyanide, a poisonous gas originally developed as a fumigation agent to remove pesticides. In October, 1941, it was used experimentally on Soviet prisoners of war. The success of these experiments had devastating consequences for millions of Jews who were gassed in the Nazi death camps.

A Guide to Jewish References in Night Elie Wiesel grew up in a traditional Jewish community. Throughout Night, there are references to ideas, practices, and events important to that community. Brief definitions of those terms are provided. The page numbers refer to pages in the Bantam paperback edition of Night. Beadle a caretaker or man of all work in a synagogue. (page 1) Cabbala Jewish mysticism. Followers believe that every aspect of the Torah has hidden meanings that link the spiritual world to everyday life. The teachings of the cabbala can be found in the Zohar, which was compiled in the thirteenth century. (page 1) Hasidism a Jewish reform movement inspired by the cabbala that spread through Eastern Europe in the 1700s. For Hasidic Jews, the divine presence is everywhere, in everything. They therefore try to live a life of total dedication to God. The word hasidic is an adjective used to describe followers of Hasidism or some aspect of their practices and beliefs. (page 1) Job a biblical figure who questioned why the just must suffer while the wicked flourish. (page 42) Kaddish a prayer Jews recite in memory of a loved one. The prayer praises and reaffirms a belief in one God. (page 31) Maimonides a great Jewish scholar who lived in the twelfth century. (page 1) Messiah the savior and deliverer of the Jewish people. Jews believe the Messiah is yet to come; Christians believe that Jesus was the Messiah. (page 42) Palestine territory assigned to the British in 1920 by the terms of the post-world War I treaty with Turkey, the former ruler of the area. British control ended in 1948 when the territory was divided into the State of Israel and the Kingdom of Jordan. Palestine is the ancient homeland of the Jewish people. (page 6) Passover a Jewish holiday that is celebrated for eight days each spring to recall the Exodus of the Jewish people from Egypt where they were held in slavery. (page 8) Pentecost the Jewish holiday that commemorates the revelation of the Law on Mount Sinai. Called Shavuot in Hebrew, it is celebrated about seven weeks after Passover. (page 10) Phylacteries (tefilin) two small leather boxes containing four excerpts from the Bible. One box is strapped to an arm and the other to the forehead during weekday morning prayers. Tefilin help religious Jews focus their entire being on God as they recite their weekday morning prayers. (page 13)

Rosh Hashanah the Jewish New Year. The holiday, which falls in September or October, marks the beginning of a ten-day period of divine judgment a time when Jews believe God calls them to account for their actions. These days are marked by repentance, regret, and resolutions to make amends to one another as well to God. The period ends on Yom Kippur. (page 63) Synagogue a Jewish house of prayer. (page 1) Talmud from a word that means study or learning. A collection of rabbinical teachings and commentaries on the Torah, the Five Books of Moses. (page 1) Temple, The a reference to the Temple in Jerusalem, which the Romans destroyed in 70 A.D. It was the center of Jewish worship in ancient times. Today Jews recall its destruction in their daily prayers. (page 1) Yom Kippur the Jewish Day of Atonement, a fast day devoted to prayer. It marks the end of the ten most solemn days in the Jewish calendar, which begins with Rosh Hashanah. (page 65) Zohar the Book of Splendor; a commentary on the Five Books of Moses and the major work of the cabbala. (page 3) Zionism the belief that Jews must once more become a nation with a land of their own in Palestine. A commitment to Zionism led a number of European Jews to settle in Palestine in the early 1900s. (page 6)