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World War II broke out when Germany and Russia invaded Poland on September 1, 1939. The German blitzkrieg, or lightning war, strategy was revealed: Sixty divisions of 1.5 million German soldiers invaded, with support from 2,000 tanks, 900 bombers, and 400 fighter planes. The world was shocked by the rapid progress of German forces through Poland and by the ruthlessness of the German advance; hundreds of thousands of Polish soldiers and civilians were killed or injured. Overwhelmed by the German invasion (Poland managed to mobilize around a million troops, but they had no tanks, outdated weaponry, and only a very small air force), Poland was defeated by October of 1939. Poland was partitioned between Germany and the Soviet Union.
Germany’s control of Poland allowed them to institute their program of state-sanctioned antisemitism, which banned Jews from schools, shops, and workplaces and redistributed Jewish populations from their existing housing into crowded, unsanitary ghettos. Most of these Polish Jews were then forcibly transported to concentration camps in the early 1940s (Hughs, Thomas A. & Rhoyde-Smith, John Graham. “WWII.” Britannica, 1998).
Part of Hitler’s plan for German expansion and domination was the extermination of European Jewry; Hitler conceived of Judaism as a race rather than as a religious belief system. Hitler believed that Jews were a lesser, subhuman species: Untermenschen, who were determined to achieve world domination at the detriment of all other races. Most notably, these Untermenschen were allegedly taking wealth and power from the Aryan race, whom Hitler identified non-Jewish Germans (apart from Roma and Sinti groups and Germans of African descent) as belonging to.
Initially, murders of Jews took the form of close-range shooting into mass graves. This was carried out by a specialized sub-group of the Nazi army called the Einsatzgruppen. Tens of thousands of Jews in Poland, Ukraine, Latvia, and Lithuania lost their lives in this way. However, this was not considered an expedient solution, and the physical and psychological strain on German troops from this method of killing was considered problematic. Furthermore, by October 1939, the Nazis had control of over 2 million Jews between Germany, Poland, Austria, and the Czech Republic (known at the time as the territories of Sudetenland, Moravia, and Bohemia), and this number continued to grow with German expansion.
In 1942, the Nazi party developed the “final solution” to the Jewish “problem”: an intentional, mass extermination of European Jews. Purpose-built killing centers were established in German-controlled Poland: Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzec, Chelmno, and—most notorious of all—Auschwitz. Mobile gas vans were initially used at these centers. Later, permanent gas chambers were built attached to crematoriums. To minimize the psychological cost to German personnel, slave labor of Jewish prisoners or prisoners of war were often used as the sonderkommandos, the workers in the gas chambers and crematoria.
Over 6 million European Jews were murdered during the Holocaust, which only ceased when camps were liberated by allied soldiers (Berenbaum, Michael. “Holocaust.” Britannica, 2024).
After the conclusion of World War II, many Europeans were living a spartan existence. Food was scarce, and power was often out. There was mass unemployment, homelessness, and millions of displaced people and refugees living rough or in refugee camps. There was an immense need for reconstruction and repair, but there was a shortage of resources for rebuilding. People lived among ruin and rubble for years. Economies had been stretched to a breaking point with wartime expenses; European countries that had been involved in the war were in massive debt, often relying on loans from Britain and America for handouts to their populations (“Post War Europe 1944-1951.” Historiana, 2023).
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