The Nuremberg Trials
After the war, some of those responsible for crimes committed during the Holocaust
were brought to trial. Nuremberg, Germany, was chosen as a site for
trials that took place in 1945 and 1946. Judges from the Allied powers
-- Great Britain, France, the Soviet Union, and the United States -- presided
over the hearings of twenty-two major Nazi criminals.  Twelve prominent Nazis were sentenced to death.
Most of the defendants admitted to the crimes of which they were accused,
although most claimed that they were simply following the orders of a
higher authority. Those individuals directly involved in the killing received
the most severe sentences. Other people who played key roles in the Holocaust,
including high-level government officials, and business executives who
used concentration camp inmates as forced laborers, received short prison
sentences or no penalty at all.
The Nazis' highest authority, the person most
to blame for the Holocaust, was missing at the
trials. Adolf Hitler had committed suicide in the
final days of the war, as had several of his
closest aides. Many more criminals were never
tried. Some fled Germany to live abroad, including
hundreds who came to the United States.
Trials of Nazis continued to take place both
in Germany and many other countries. Simon Wiesenthal, an Nazi-hunter,
located Adolf Eichmann in Argentina.
Eichmann, who had helped plan and carry out the deportations
of millions of Jews, was brought to trial in Israel. The testimony of
hundreds of witnesses, many of them survivors, was followed all over the
world. Eichmann was found guilty and executed in 1962.
For more information, see "War Crimes Trials" in the Holocaust Encyclopedia.
|
|