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Hitlor

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 2.15
  Total Words: 537
  Total Characters: 2856
  Number of Sentences: 36


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 14.92
  Characters per Words: 5.32


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 56.52
  Fog Scale Level: 12.52
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 9.08  

Hitlor

Hitler & The Concentration Camps Of all the examples of injustice against
humanity in history, the Jewish Holocaust has to be one of the most prominent.
In the period of 1933 to 1945, the Nazis waged a vicious war against Jews and
other "Lesser races". This war came to a head with the "Final
Solution" in 1938. One of the end results of the Final Solution was the
horrible Concentration and death camps of Germany, Poland, and other parts of
Nazi-controlled Europe. In the aftermath of the Holocaust, final tallies of
human losses shocked people around the world, and the people responsible were
punished for their inhuman acts. The Holocaust was a dark time in the history of
the 20th century. One can trace the beginnings of the Holocaust as far back as
1933, When the Nazi party of Germany, lead by Adolph Hitler, came to power.
Hitler's anti-Jew campaign began soon afterward, with the "Nuremberg
Laws", which defined the meaning of being Jewish based on ancestry. These
laws also forced segregation between Jews and the rest of the public. It was
only a dim indication of what the future held for European Jews. Anti-Jewish
aggression continued for years after the passing of the Nuremberg Laws. One of
these was the "Aryanization" of Jewish property and business. Jews
were progressively forced out of the Economy of Germany, their assets turned
over to the government and the German public. Other forms of degradation were
programs, or organized demonstrations against Jews. The first, and most
infamous, of these programs were Krystallnacht, or "The night of broken
glass". This program was prompted by the assassination of Ernst von Rath, a
German Diplomat, by Herschel Grymozpan in Paris on ...

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