Holocaust Timeline

By Dieselh
  • Hitler becomes chancellor

    Hitler becomes Chancellor
  • NAZI assault, Takeover of power

    In March 1933, Adolf Hitler addressed the first session
    of the German Parliament (Reichstag) following his
    appointment as chancellor.
    After this photograph was taken, all political parties in
    the Reichstag—with the exception of the Socialists and
    Communists—passed the “Enabling Act” giving Hitler
    the power to rule by emergency decree.
  • The terror begins

    A storm trooper (SA) guards newly arrested members
    of the German Communist Party in a basement jail
    of the SA barracks in Berlin. Communists, Socialists, and other political opponents
    of the Nazis were among the first to be rounded up and
    imprisoned by the regime.
  • From citizens to outcasts

    A woman reads a boycott sign
    posted on the window of a
    Jewish-owned department store.
    The Nazis initiated a boycott of
    Jewish shops and businesses on
    April 1, 1933, across Germany. Many Germans continued to enter
    the Jewish stores despite the
    boy-cott, and it was called off after
    24 hours. In the subsequent weeks
    and months more discriminatory
    measures against Jews followed
    and remained in effect.
  • Nazi Race Laws

    An instructional chart distinguishes individuals with
    pure “German blood” (left column), “Mixed blood”
    (second and third columns), and Jews (right two
    columns), as defined in the Nuremberg Laws. Among other things, the laws issued in September
    1935 restricted future German citizenship to those
    of “German or kindred blood,” and excluded those
    deemed to be “racially” Jewish or Roma (Gypsy). The laws prohibited marriage and sexual
    relation-ships between Jews and non-Jews.
  • The "Science" of Race

    Members of the Hitler Youth receive instruction in
    racial hygiene at a Hitler Youth training facility. The
    Nazis divided the world’s population into superior and
    inferior “races.” According to their ideology, the “Aryan race,” to which
    the German people allegedly belonged, stood at the top
    of this racial hierarchy. The Nazi ideal was the Nordic type, displaying blond
    hair, blue eyes, and tall stature.
  • "Night of Broken Glass"

    Residents of Rostock, Germany,
    view a burning synagogue the
    morning after Kristallnacht
    (“Night of Broken Glass”). On
    the night of November 9–10,
    1938, the Nazi regime unleashed
    orchestrated anti-Jewish violence
    across greater Germany. Within 48 hours, synagogues
    were vandalized and burned,
    7,500 Jewish businesses were
    damaged or destroyed, 96 Jews
    were killed, and nearly 30,000
    Jewish men were arrested and
    sent to concentration camps.
  • American Response

    Government policies in the 1930s made it difficult
    for Jews seeking refuge to settle in the United States.
    In May 1939 the passenger ship St. Louis—seen here
    before departing Hamburg—sailed from Germany to
    Cuba carrying 937 passengers, most of them Jews.
    Unknown to the passengers, the Cuban government
    had revoked their landing certificates.
  • "Enemies of the State"

    Within the concentration camp system, colored,
    tri-angular badges identified various prisoner
    categories, as seen in this image of a roll call at the
    Buchenwald concentration camp. Although Jews were their primary targets, the Nazis
    also persecuted Roma (Gypsies), persons with mental
    and physical disabilities, and Poles for racial, ethnic, or
    national reasons.
  • Search for refuge

    Jews in Vienna wait in line at a
    police station to obtain exit visas.
    Following the incorporation of
    Austria by Nazi Germany in
    March 1938, and the unleashing
    of a wave of humiliation, terror,
    and confiscation, many Austrian
    Jews attempted to leave the
    country. Before being allowed to leave,
    however, Jews were required to
    get an exit visa, plus pay large
    sums of money in taxes and
    additional fees.
  • Life in the ghetto

    Jews in the Warsaw ghetto wait in line for food at a
    soup kitchen. LIFE IN THE GHETTO Ghettos were city districts, often enclosed, in which
    the Germans concentrated the municipal and
    some-times regional Jewish population to control and
    segregate it from the non-Jewish population.