FEBRUARY 27–28, 1933
The German parliament (Reichstag) building burned down under mysterious circumstances.
The government treated it as an act of terrorism.
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FEBRUARY 28, 1933
Hitler convinced President von Hindenburg to invoke an emergency clause in the
Weimar
Constitution. The German parliament then passed the Decree of the Reich President
for the Protection of Nation (Volk) and State, popularly known as the Reichstag
Fire Decree. The decree suspended the civil rights provisions in the existing
German constitution, including freedom of speech, assembly, and press, and formed
the basis for the incarceration of potential opponents of the Nazis without
benefit of trial or judicial proceeding.
MARCH 22, 1933
The SS (Schutzstaffel), Hitler’s “elite guard,” established
a concentration camp outside the town of Dachau, Germany, for political opponents
of the regime. It was the only concentration camp to remain in operation from
1933 until 1945. By 1934, the SS had taken over administration of the entire
Nazi concentration camp system.
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MARCH 23, 1933
The German parliament passed the Enabling Act, which empowered Hitler to establish
a dictatorship in Germany.
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APRIL 1, 1933
The Nazis organized a nationwide boycott of Jewish-owned businesses in Germany.
Many local boycotts continued throughout much of the 1930s.
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APRIL 7, 1933
The Nazi government passed the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil
Service, which excluded Jews and political opponents from university and governmental
positions. Similar laws enacted in the following weeks affected Jewish lawyers,
judges, doctors, and teachers.
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MAY 10, 1933
Nazi party members, students, teachers, and others burned books written by Jews,
political opponents of Nazis, and the intellectual avant-garde during public
rallies across Germany.
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JULY 14, 1933
The Nazi government enacted the Law on the Revocation of Naturalization, which
deprived
foreign and stateless Jews as well as Roma (Gypsies) of German citizenship.
The Nazi government enacted the Law for the Prevention of Offspring with Hereditary
Diseases, which mandated the forced sterilization of certain physically or mentally
impaired individuals.
The law institutionalized the eugenic concept of “life undeserving of
life” and provided the basis for the involuntary sterilization of the
disabled, Roma (Gypsies), “social misfits,” and black people residing
in Germany.
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JUNE 30–JULY 1, 1934
In what came to be called “the Night of the Long Knives,” on Hitler’s
orders members of the Nazi
party and police murdered members of the Nazi leadership, army, and others.
Hitler declared the
killings legal and necessary to achieve the Nazi party’s aims. The murders
were reported throughout Germany and in other countries.
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AUGUST 2, 1934
German President von Hindenburg died. Hitler became Führer in addition
to his position as chancellor. Because there was no legal or constitutional
limit to Hitler’s power as Führer, he became absolute dictator of
Germany.
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OCTOBER 7, 1934
In standardized letters sent to the government, Jehovah’s Witness congregations
from all over
Germany declared their political neutrality but also affirmed defiance of Nazi
restrictions on the
practice of their religion.
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APRIL 1, 1935
The Nazi government banned the Jehovah’s Witness organization. The Nazis
persecuted Jehovah’s Witnesses because of their religious refusal to swear
allegiance to the state.
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JUNE 28, 1935
The German Ministry of Justice revised Paragraphs 175 and 175a of the criminal
code to criminalize all homosexual acts between men. The revision provided the
police broader means for prosecuting homosexual men.
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SEPTEMBER 15, 1935
The Nazi government decreed the Reich Citizenship Law and the Law for the Protection
of the German Blood and Honor. These Nuremberg “racial laws” made
Jews second-class citizens. They prohibited sexual relations and intermarriage
between Jews and “persons of German or related blood.” The Nazi
government later applied the laws to Roma (Gypsies) and to black people residing
in Germany.
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JULY 12, 1936
Prisoners and civilian workers began construction of the concentration camp
Sachsenhausen at Oranienburg near Berlin. By September, German authorities had
imprisoned about 1,000 people in the camp.
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AUGUST 1–16, 1936
Athletes and spectators from countries around the world attended the Summer
Olympic Games in Berlin, Germany. The Olympic Games were a propaganda success
for the Nazi state. The Nazis made every effort to portray Germany as a respectable
member of the international community and softpedaled their persecution of the
Jews. They removed anti-Jewish signs from public display and restrained anti-Jewish
activities. In response to pressure from foreign Olympic delegations, Germany
also included Jews or part-Jews on its Olympic team.
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MARCH 12–13, 1938
German troops invaded Austria, and Germany incorporated Austria into the German
Reich in what was called the Anschluss.
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JULY 6–15, 1938
Delegates from 32 countries and representatives from refugee aid organizations
attended the Evian Conference at Evian, France, to discuss immigration quotas
for refugees fleeing Nazi Germany. However, the United States and most other
countries were unwilling to ease their immigration restrictions.
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SEPTEMBER 30, 1938
Britain, France, Italy, and Germany signed the Munich Pact, forcing Czechoslovakia
to cede its
border areas to the German Reich.
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OCTOBER 1–10, 1938
German troops occupied the Sudetenland in Czechoslovakia under the stipulations
of the
Munich Pact.
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NOVEMBER 9–10, 1938
In a nationwide pogrom called Kristallnacht (“Night of Broken Glass”),
the Nazis and their collaborators burned synagogues, looted Jewish homes and
businesses, and killed at least 91 Jews. The Gestapo, supported by local uniformed
police, arrested approximately 30,000 Jewish men and imprisoned them in the
Dachau, Sachsenhausen, Buchenwald, and Mauthausen concentration camps. Several
hundred Jewish women also were imprisoned in local jails.
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MARCH 14, 1939
Slovakia declared itself an independent state under protection of Nazi Germany.
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MARCH 15, 1939
German troops occupied the Czech lands and established the Protectorate of Bohemia
and Moravia.
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MAY 13–JUNE 17, 1939
Cuba and the United States refused to accept more than 900 refugees—almost
all of whom were Jewish—aboard the ocean liner St. Louis, forcing its
return to Europe.
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AUGUST 23, 1939
The Soviet and German governments signed the Molotov-Ribbentrop Non-Aggression
Pact in
which they agreed to divide up eastern Europe, including Poland; the Baltic
states of Lithuania,
Estonia, and Latvia; and parts of Romania.
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SEPTEMBER 1, 1939
German troops invaded Poland, marking the beginning of World War II.
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SEPTEMBER 3, 1939
Britain and France fulfilled their promise to protect Poland’s border
and declared war on Germany.
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4
SEPTEMBER 28, 1939
In a secret amendment to the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, the German and Soviet
governments outlined their plans to partition Poland.
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OCTOBER 1939
Hitler initialed an order to kill those Germans whom the Nazis deemed “incurable”
and hence
“unworthy of life.” Health care professionals sent tens of thousands
of institutionalized mentally and physically disabled people to central “euthanasia”
killing centers where they killed them by lethal injection or in gas chambers.
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OCTOBER 26, 1939
Germany annexed the former Polish regions of Upper Silesia, Pomerania, West
Prussia, Poznan, and the independent city of Danzig. Those areas of occupied
Poland not annexed by Germany or the Soviet Union were placed under a German
civilian administration and were called the General Governmen (Generalgouvernement).
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4
NOVEMBER 12, 1939
German authorities began the forced deportation of Jews from West Prussia, Poznan,
Danzig, and Lodz (also in annexed Poland) to locations in the General Government.
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NOVEMBER 23, 1939
German authorities required that, by December 1, 1939, all Jews residing in
the General Government wear white badges with a blue Star of David.
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APRIL 9–JUNE 10, 1940
German troops invaded, defeated, and occupied Denmark and Norway.
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JUNE 30, 1940
German authorities ordered the first major Jewish ghetto, in Lodz, to be sealed
off, confining at least160,000 people in the ghetto. Henceforth, all Jews living
in Lodz had to reside in the ghetto and could not leave without German authorization.
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MAY 10, 1940
German troops invaded the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, and France. By June
22, Germany occupied all of these regions except for southern (Vichy) France.
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MAY 20, 1940
SS authorities established the Auschwitz concentration camp (Auschwitz I) outside
the Polish city of Oswiecim.
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4
NOVEMBER 15, 1940
German authorities ordered the Warsaw ghetto in the General Government sealed
off. It was the
largest ghetto in both area and population. The Germans confined more than 350,000
Jews—about 30 percent of the city’s population—in about 2.4
percent of the city’s total area.
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4
APRIL 6, 1941
German and other Axis forces (Italy, Bulgaria, and Hungary) invaded Yugoslavia
and Greece.
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JUNE 22, 1941
Germany and its Axis forces invaded the Soviet Union in Operation Barbarossa.
German mobile
killing squads called Einsatzgruppen were assigned to identify, concentrate,
and kill Jews behind the front lines. By the spring of 1943, the Einsatzgruppen
had killed more than a million Jews and an undetermined number of partisans,
Roma (Gypsies), and officials of the Soviet state and the Soviet Communist party.
In 1941–42, some 70,000–80,000 Jews fled eastward, evading the first
wave of murder perpetrated by the German invaders.
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JULY 20, 1941
German authorities established a ghetto in Minsk in the German-occupied Soviet
territories and, by July 25, concentrated all Jews from the area in the ghetto.
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JULY 31, 1941
Reich Marshal Hermann Göring charged SS-Gruppenführer Reinhard Heydrich,
head of the
Security Police and the SD (Security Service), to take measures for the implementation
of the “final solution of the Jewish question.” The “Final
Solution” was a euphemism for the mass murder of the Jewish population
of Europe.
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AUGUST 15, 1941
By order of German authorities, the Kovno ghetto, with approximately 30,000
Jewish inhabitants, was sealed off.
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SEPTEMBER 3, 1941
At the Auschwitz concentration camp, SS functionaries performed their first
gassing experiments using Zyklon B. The victims were Soviet prisoners of war
and non-Jewish Polish inmates.
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SEPTEMBER 6, 1941
German authorities established two ghettos in Vilna in German-occupied Lithuania.
German and Lithuanian units killed tens of thousands of Jews in the nearby Ponary
woods.
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SEPTEMBER 15, 1941
The Nazi government decreed that Jews over the age of six who resided in Germany
had to wear a yellow Star of David on their outer clothing in public at all
times.
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SEPTEMBER 29–30, 1941
German SS, police, and military units shot an estimated 33,000 persons, mostly
Jews, at Babi Yar, a ravine on the outskirts of Kiev (in Ukraine). In the following
months, German units shot thousands of Jews, Roma (Gypsies), and Soviet prisoners
of war at Babi Yar.
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OCTOBER 15, 1941
German authorities began the deportation of Jews from the German Reich to the
ghettos of Lodz, Riga, and Minsk.
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OCTOBER 28, 1941
After requiring all Kovno ghetto inhabitants to assemble at Demokratu Square,
German and
Lithuanian units took more than one-third of the ghetto’s population—some
9,200 people—to Fort IX and shot them in what was called the “Great
Action.”
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OCTOBER–NOVEMBER 1941
SS functionaries began preparations for Einsatz Reinhard (Operation Reinhard;
often referred to as Aktion Reinhard), with the goal of murdering the Jews in
the General Government. Preparations included construction of the killing centers
Belzec, Sobibor, and Treblinka in the territory of the General Government.
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NOVEMBER 24, 1941
German authorities established the Theresienstadt (also known as Terezin) ghetto,
in the Germancontrolled Protectorate of Bohemia and Moravia.
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NOVEMBER 26, 1941
SS authorities established a second camp at Auschwitz, called Auschwitz-Birkenau
or Auschwitz II. The camp was originally designated for the incarceration of
large numbers of Soviet prisoners of war but later was used as a killing center.
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DECEMBER 1, 1941
Einsatzkommando 3, a subunit of Einsatzgruppe A that operated in Lithuania,
reported that its
members had killed 136,442 Jews since June 1941.
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DECEMBER 7, 1941
Japan bombed Pearl Harbor, Hawaii. The next morning, the United States declared
war on Japan.
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DECEMBER 8, 1941
Gassing operations began at Chelmno, one of six Nazi killing centers. Situated
in the Polish territory annexed by Germany, Chelmno closed in March 1943 and
resumed its killing operations during two months in the early summer of 1944.
SS and German civilian officials killed at least 152,000 Jews and an undetermined
number of Roma (Gypsies) and Poles at Chelmno using special mobile gas vans.
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DECEMBER 11, 1941
Germany and Italy declared war on the United States.
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JANUARY 16, 1942
German authorities began the deportation of Jews from the Lodz ghetto to Chelmno.
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JANUARY 20, 1942
Senior Nazi officials met at a villa in the outskirts of Berlin at the Wannsee
Conference to discuss
and coordinate implementation of the “Final Solution.”
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MARCH 17, 1942
At the Belzec killing center, an SS special detachment began using gas chambers
to kill people. Between March 17 and December 1942, approximately 600,000 people,
mostly Jews but also an undetermined number of Roma (Gypsies), were killed at
Belzec.
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MARCH 27, 1942
German authorities began systematic deportations of Jews from France. By the
end of August 1944, the Germans had deported more than 75,000 Jews from France
to camps in the East, above all, to the Auschwitz-Birkenau killing center in
occupied Poland, where most of them perished.
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MARCH–APRIL 1942
German SS and police units deported Jews from Lublin, in the General Government,
to Belzec,
where they were killed. The Lublin deportations were the first major deportations
carried out under Operation Reinhard, the code name for the German plan to kill
more than 2 million Jews living in the General Government of occupied Poland.
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MAY 1942
After trial gassings in April, an SS special detachment began gassing operations
at the Sobibor killing center in early May. By November 1943, the special detachment
had killed approximately 250,000 Jews at Sobibor.
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MAY 4, 1942
SS officials performed the first selection of victims for gassing at the Auschwitz-Birkenau
killing center. Weak, sick, and “unfit” prisoners were selected
and housed in an isolation ward prior to being killed in the gas chambers. Between
May 1940 and January 1945, more than one million people were killed or died
at the Auschwitz camp complex. Close to 865,000 were never registered and most
likely were selected for gassing immediately upon arrival. Nine out of ten of
those who died at the
Auschwitz complex were Jewish.
MAY 31, 1942
German authorities opened the I.G. Farben labor camp at Auschwitz III (also
known as Monowitz or Buna), situated near the main camp complex at Auschwitz.
Photo 1
JULY 15, 1942
German authorities began deportations of Dutch Jews from the Westerbork transit
camp in the
Netherlands to Auschwitz. By September 13, 1944, over 100 trains had carried
more than 100,000 people to killing centers and concentration camps in the German
Reich and the General Government.
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JULY 22, 1942
Between July 22 and September 12, German SS and police authorities, assisted
by auxiliaries, deported approximately 300,000 Jews from the Warsaw ghetto to
killing centers and concentration camps. Of that number, about 265,000 Jews
were sent to the Treblinka killing center where they were murdered.
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JULY 23, 1942
Gassing operations began at the Treblinka killing center. Between July 1942
and November 1943, SS special detachments at Treblinka murdered an estimated
750,000 Jews and at least 2,000 Roma
(Gypsies).
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AUGUST 4, 1942
German authorities began systematic deportations of Jews from Belgium. The deportations
continued until the end of July 1944.The Germans deported more than 25,000 Jews,
about half of Belgium’s Jewish population, to the Auschwitz-Birkenau killing
center in occupied Poland, where most of them perished.
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JANUARY 18–22, 1943
SS and police units deported more than 5,000 Jews from the Warsaw ghetto to
the Treblinka killing center. Members of the Jewish Fighting Organization (Zydowska
Organizacja Bojowa, or ZOB) fought against the Germans in armed revolt as Jews
were rounded up for deportation.
MARCH 15, 1943
German SS, police, and military units began the deportation of Jews from Salonika,
Greece, to
Auschwitz. Between March 20 and August 18, more than 50,000 Greek Jews arrived
at the
Auschwitz camp complex. SS staff killed most of the deportees in the gas chambers
at Birkenau.
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APRIL 19–MAY 16, 1943
In what is called the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising, Jewish fighters resisted the German
attempt to liquidate the ghetto. German SS and police units deported many of
those who survived the armed revolt to Treblinka, and sent others to Majdanek
and forced labor camps at Trawniki and Poniatowa in the General Government.
Some resistance fighters escaped from the ghetto and joined partisan groups
in the forests around Warsaw.The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising was the first mass revolt
in Nazioccupied Europe.
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JUNE 21, 1943
Heinrich Himmler, leader of the SS, ordered the liquidation of all ghettos in
the Baltic states and
Belorussia (Reich Commissariat Ostland) and the deportation of all Jews to concentration
camps.
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AUGUST 2, 1943
Jewish prisoners revolted at the Treblinka killing center. Although more than
300 prisoners
escaped, most were caught and killed by German SS and police units assisted
by army troops. The SS special detachment forced surviving prisoners to remove
all remaining traces of the camp’s existence.
After the killing center was dismantled in November 1943, the special detachment
shot the remaining prisoners.
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SEPTEMBER 15, 1943
SS authorities converted the Kovno ghetto into a concentration camp (Concentration
Camp Kauen) under the direction of SS Captain Wilhelm Goecke.
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SEPTEMBER 23, 1943
SS authorities ordered the final deportation of Jews from the Vilna ghetto.
SS and police units in Vilna deported 4,000 Jews to the Sobibor killing center
and evacuated approximately 3,700 to labor camps in German-occupied Estonia.
Photo 1
OCTOBER 14, 1943
Jewish prisoners at the Sobibor killing center began an armed revolt. Approximately
300 escaped. German SS and police units, with assistance from German military
units, recaptured more than 100 and killed them. After the revolt, SS special
detachments closed and dismantled the killing center.
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OCTOBER 21, 1943
German authorities declared the Minsk ghetto officially liquidated after they
murdered the
remaining 2,000 Jews.
NOVEMBER 3–4, 1943
German SS and police units implemented Operation Harvest Festival. The purpose
of Harvest Festival was to liquidate several labor camps in the Lublin area.
During Harvest Festival, German SS and police units killed at least 42,000 Jews
at Majdanek,Trawniki, and Poniatowa.
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MARCH 19, 1944
German military units occupied Hungary.
MAY 15–JULY 9, 1944
Hungarian gendarmerie (rural police units), under the guidance of German SS
officials, deported nearly 430,000 Jews from Hungary. Most were deported to
Auschwitz-Birkenau where SS staff immediately killed about half of them in gas
chambers.
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JUNE 6, 1944
D Day. British and American troops launched an invasion of France.
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JUNE 22, 1944
A massive Soviet offensive destroyed the German front in Belorussia.
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JULY 8–12, 1944
As the Soviet army neared, SS authorities liquidated the Kauen concentration
camp, transferring 6,000 Jews to the Stutthof and Dachau concentration camps
in the German Reich.
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JULY 22, 1944
SS authorities evacuated most of the remaining prisoners from Majdanek westward
to evade the
advancing Soviet army.
JULY 23, 1944
Soviet troops liberated Majdanek. Surprised by the rapid Soviet advance, the
Germans failed to
destroy the camp and the evidence of mass murder.
AUGUST 7–30, 1944
SS and police officials liquidated the Lodz ghetto and deported approximately
60,000 Jews and an undetermined number of Roma (Gypsies) to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
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AUGUST 28/29–OCTOBER 27, 1944
Members of the Slovak resistance revolted against the German-supported Slovakian
government. Between September and October, German SS and police officials, assisted
by German military units and Slovak fascist paramilitary units, deported approximately
10,000 Slovak Jews to Auschwitz-
Birkenau.
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OCTOBER 6, 1944
At Auschwitz-Birkenau, the Sonderkommando (special detachment of Jewish prisoners
deployed to remove corpses from the gas chambers and burn them) blew up Crematorium
IV and killed the guards. About 250 participants of the revolt died in battle
with SS and police units. The SS and police units shot 200 more members of the
Sonderkommando after the battle was over.
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OCTOBER 30, 1944
The last transport of Jews from Theresienstadt (Terezin) arrived at Auschwitz.
During October, SS officials deported approximately 18,000 Jews to the Auschwitz
camp complex. Most of them were killed in the gas chambers at Birkenau.
Photo 1
NOVEMBER 25, 1944
The SS began to demolish the gas chambers and crematoria at Auschwitz-Birkenau.
Photo 1 2
JANUARY 17, 1945
As Soviet troops approached, SS units evacuated prisoners in the Auschwitz camp
complex, marching them on foot toward the interior of the German Reich. The
forced evacuations came to be called
“death marches.”
Photo 1 2
JANUARY 27, 1945
Soviet troops liberated about 8,000 prisoners left behind at the Auschwitz camp
complex.
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APRIL 11, 1945
U.S. troops liberated more than 20,000 prisoners at Buchenwald.
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APRIL 29, 1945
U.S. troops liberated approximately 32,000 prisoners at Dachau.
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APRIL 30, 1945
Hitler committed suicide in his bunker in Berlin.
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MAY 2, 1945
German units in Berlin surrendered to Soviet forces.
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MAY 5, 1945
U.S. troops liberated more than 17,000 prisoners at Mauthausen concentration
camp and more than 20,000 prisoners at the Gusen concentration camps in the
annexed Austrian territory of the German Reich.
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MAY 7–9, 1945
German armed forces surrendered unconditionally in the West on May 7 and in
the East on May 9. Allied and Soviet forces proclaimed May 8, 1945, to be Victory
in Europe Day (V-E Day).
Photo 1 2
AUGUST 3, 1945
United States special envoy Earl Harrison made public a report to President
Truman on the treatment of Jewish displaced persons (DPs) in Germany. Following
World War II, several hundred thousand Jewish survivors were unable or unwilling
to return to their home countries. Harrison’s report contained a strong
indictment of Allied military policies, underscored the plight of Jewish DPs,
and led eventually to improved conditions for them in the American zone of occupied
Germany.
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SEPTEMBER 2, 1945
Japan surrendered. World War II officially ended.
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NOVEMBER 20, 1945
The International Military Tribunal (IMT), made up of United States, British,
French, and Soviet
judges, began a trial of 21 major Nazi leaders at Nuremberg, Germany.
Photo 1 2
DECEMBER 22, 1945
President Truman issued a directive giving DPs preference in receiving visas
under the existing quota restrictions on immigration to the United States.
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JULY 4, 1946
Mob attack against Jewish survivors in Kielce, Poland. Following a ritual murder
accusation, a Polish mob killed more than 40 Jews and wounded dozens of others.
This attack sparked a second mass migration of Jews from Poland and Eastern
Europe to DP camps in Germany, Austria, and Italy.
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AUGUST 1, 1946
The IMT passed judgment on the major Nazi war criminals on trial in Nuremberg,
Germany.
Eighteen were convicted, and three were acquitted. Eleven of the defendants
were sentenced to death.
OCTOBER 16, 1946
In accordance with the sentences handed down after the convictions, ten defendants
were executed by hanging. One defendant, Hermann Göring, escaped the hangman
by committing suicide in his cell.
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JULY 11, 1947
The Exodus 1947 ship carrying 4,500 Jewish refugees sailed for British-administered
Palestine from southern France, despite British restrictions on Jewish immigration.The
British intercepted the ship and forced it to proceed to Haifa in Palestine
and then to the French port of Port-de-Bouc, where it lay at anchor from more
than a month.
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SEPTEMBER 8, 1947
Ultimately, the British took the Jewish refugees from the Exodus 1947 to Hamburg,
Germany, and forcibly returned them to DP camps.The fate of the Exodus 1947
dramatized the plight of Holocaust survivors in the DP camps and increased international
pressure on Great Britain to allow free Jewish immigration to Palestine.
NOVEMBER 29, 1947
As the postwar Jewish refugee crisis escalated and relations between Jews and
Arabs deteriorated, the British government decided to submit the status of Palestine
to the United Nations. In a special session on this date, the United Nations
General Assembly voted to partition Palestine into two new states, one Jewish
and the other Arab. The decision was accepted by the Jewish and rejected by
the Arab leadership.
Photo 1
MAY 14, 1948
David Ben-Gurion, leader of the Jews of Palestine, announced the establishment
of the State of Israel in Tel Aviv and declared that Jewish immigration into
the new state would be unrestricted. Between 1948 and 1951, almost 700,000 Jews
immigrated to Israel, including more than two-thirds of the Jewish DPs in Europe.
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JUNE 1948
Congress passed the Displaced Persons Act, authorizing 200,000 DPs to enter
the United States in 1949 and 1950. Though at first the law’s stipulations
made it unfavorable to Jewish DPs, Congress amended the bill, and by 1952, thousands
of Jewish DPs entered the United States. An estimated 80,000 Jewish DPs immigrated
to the United States with the aid of American Jewish agencies between 1945 and
1952.
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