Part of a series on |
The Holocaust |
Part of: German, Jewish,
Polish, Romanian, and LGBT history
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Responsibility
- Nazi Germany
- People
- Major Perpetrators
- Adolf Hitler
- Heinrich Himmler
- Reinhard Heydrich
- Adolf Eichmann
- Odilo Globocnik
- Theodor Eicke
- Richard Glücks
- Ernst Kaltenbrunner
- Rudolf Höss
- Christian Wirth
- Joseph Goebbels
- Organizations
- Nazi Party
- Gestapo
- Schutzstaffel (SS)
- Sturmabteilung (SA)
- Verfügungstruppe (VT)
- Wehrmacht
- Collaborators during World War II
- Nazi ideologues
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Early policies
- Racial policy
- Nazi eugenics
- Nuremberg Laws
- Haavara Agreement
- Madagascar Plan
- Forced euthanasia
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Victims
- Jews in Europe
- Jews in Germany
- Romani people (Gypsies)
- Poles
- Soviet POWs
- Slavs in Eastern Europe
- Homosexuals
- People with disabilities
- Freemasons
- Jehovah's Witnesses
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Ghettos
- Białystok
- Budapest
- Kaunas
- Kraków
- Łódź
- Lublin
- Lwów
- Minsk
- Riga
- Warsaw
- Vilnius
- Jewish ghettos in German-occupied Poland
- List of selected ghettos
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Atrocities
- Pogroms
- Kristallnacht
- Bucharest
- Dorohoi
- Iaşi
- Jedwabne
- Kaunas
- Lviv (Lvov)
- Tykocin
- Vel' d'Hiv
- Wąsosz
- Einsatzgruppen
- Babi Yar
- Bydgoszcz
- Częstochowa
- Kamianets-Podilskyi
- Ninth Fort
- Odessa
- Piaśnica
- Ponary
- Rumbula
- Erntefest
- "Final Solution"
- Wannsee Conference
- Operation Reinhard
- Holocaust trains
- Extermination camps
- End of World War II
- Wola massacre
- Death marches
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Camps
- Nazi extermination camps
- Auschwitz-Birkenau
- Bełżec
- Chełmno
- Jasenovac
- Majdanek
- Maly Trostenets
- Sobibor
- Treblinka
- Nazi concentration camps
- Bergen-Belsen
- Bogdanovka
- Buchenwald
- Dachau
- Gonars (Italy)
- Gross-Rosen
- Herzogenbusch
- Janowska
- Kaiserwald
- Mauthausen-Gusen
- Neuengamme
- Rab
- Ravensbrück
- Sachsenhausen
- Sajmište
- Salaspils
- Stutthof
- Theresienstadt
- Uckermark
- Warsaw
- Transit and collection camps
- Belgium
- Breendonk
- Mechelen
- France
- Gurs
- Drancy
- Italy
- Bolzano
- Netherlands
- Amersfoort
- Westerbork
- Divisions
- SS-Totenkopfverbände
- Concentration Camps Inspectorate
- Politische Abteilung
- Sanitätswesen
- Extermination methods
- Inmate identification
- Gas van
- Gas chamber
- Extermination through labor
- Human medical experimentation
- Inmate disposal of victims
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Resistance
- Ghetto uprisings
- Warsaw
- Białystok
- Łachwa
- Częstochowa
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Allied response
- Joint Declaration by Members of the United Nations
- Auschwitz bombing debate
- Nuremberg Trials
- Denazification
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Aftermath
- Bricha
- Displaced persons
- Central Committee of the Liberated Jews
- German Reparations
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Lists
- Holocaust survivors
- Deportations of French Jews to death camps
- Survivors of Sobibor
- Timeline of Treblinka
- Victims of Nazism
- Rescuers of Jews
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Resources
- Bibliography of The Holocaust
- The Destruction of the European Jews
- Functionalism versus intentionalism
- Auschwitz Protocols
- Vrba-Wetzler report
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Remembrance
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While black people in Nazi Germany and German-occupied territories were not subject to systematic elimination, they were victimized in diverse ways. Anti-black racism existed in Germany prior to the rise of the Nazi government, with mixed race children facing social and economic discrimination, and blacks became a target of Nazi eugenics by 1937, with many facing compulsory sterilization. Others became the victims of human experimentation, assassination, or false imprisonment (including American citizens Valaida Snow and Josef Nassy), and some simply vanished. Black prisoners of war were sometimes killed outright or through the poor treatment they received in Nazi concentration or prisoner-of-war camps, while others were worked to death.