The "Final Solution"
The origin of the "Final Solution," the Nazi plan to exterminate the Jewish people,
remains uncertain. What is clear is that the genocide of the Jews was the culmination
of a decade of Nazi policy, under the rule of Adolf Hitler. The "Final
Solution" was implemented in stages. After the June 1933 Nazi party rise to power,
state-enforced racism resulted in anti-Jewish legislation, boycotts, "Aryanization,"
and finally the "Night of Broken Glass" pogrom, all of which aimed to remove the
Jews from German society. After the beginning of World War II, anti-Jewish
policy evolved into a comprehensive plan to concentrate and eventually
annihilate European Jewry.
The Nazis established ghettos in occupied Poland. Polish and western
European Jews were deported to these ghettos. During the German invasion
of the Soviet Union in 1941, mobile killing squads (Einsatzgruppen) began killing entire Jewish
communities. The methods used, mainly shooting or gas vans, were soon
regarded as inefficient and as a psychological burden on the killers.
After the Wannsee Conference in January 1942,
the Nazis began the systematic deportation of Jews from all over Europe
to six extermination camps established in former
Polish territory -- Chelmno, Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka, Auschwitz-Birkenau, and Majdanek. Extermination
camps were killing centers designed to carry out genocide. Over three
million Jews were gassed in extermination camps. In its entirety, the "Final Solution" consisted of gassings, shootings,
random acts of terror, disease, and starvation that accounted for the
deaths of about six million Jews -- two-thirds of European Jewry.
For more information, see "The Final Solution" in the Holocaust Encyclopedia.
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