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Genocide Essay Research Paper GenocideAfter Rodney King

Genocide Essay, Research Paper


Genocide


After Rodney King was beaten, and the white police officers were


aquitted, he said “Why can’t we all just get along?” A question asked by many


people. Rascist and Genocidal acts such as this have been going on for many


years, and should not be tolerated.


In international law, the crime of destroying, or committing conspiracy


to destroy, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group is known as Genocide.


It was defined in the Convention on Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of


Genocide, which was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly on December 9,


1948.


The crime of Genocide has been committed or attempted many times in


recorded history. The best known example in this century was the attempt by Nazi


Germany during the 1930’s and 1940’s to destroy the Jewish population of Europe,


known as the Holocaust. By the end of World War II, 6 million Jews had been


killed in Nazi concentration camps.


The known objective of the Nazi rule was Jewish extinction. In November


1938, shortly after the assassination of a German diplomat in Paris by a young


Jew, all synagogues in Germany were set on fire, windows of Jewish shops were


smashed, and thousands of Jews were arrested. This “Night of Broken Glass”


(Kristallnacht) was a signal to Jews in Germany and Austria to leave as soon as


possible. Several hundred thousand people were able to find refuge in other


countries, but a nearly equal number, including many who were old or poor,


stayed to face an uncertain destiny.


When war began in September 1939, the German army occupied the western


half of Poland and added almost 2 million Jews to the German power sphere.


Limitations placed on Polish Jewry were much worse than those in Germany. The


Polish Jews were forced to move into ghettos surrounded by walls and barbed wire.


The ghettos were like jailed cities. Each ghetto had a Jewish council that was


responsible for housing, sanitation, and production. Food and coal were to be


shipped in and manufactured products were to be sent out for German use. The


food supply allowed by the Germans was mainly made up of grains and vegetables,


such as turnips, carrots, and beets. In the Warsaw ghetto, the amount of food


given provided barely 1200 calories to each inmate. Some black market food,


smuggled into the ghettos, was sold at a very high price, and unemployment and


poverty were common. The population was large, and the amount of people reached


six or seven persons in a room. Typhus became common, and the death rate rose


to roughly 1 percent a month.


At the time of ghettoization in Poland, a project was launched farther


in the east. In June 1941, German armies invaded the Soviet Union, and at the


same time an agency of the Soviet Socialists, the Reich Security Main Office,


dispatched 3000 men in special units to newly occupied Soviet territories to


kill all Jews on the spot. These mobile detachments, known as “Einsatzgruppen”,


or “Action Squads”, were soon engaged in nonstop shootings. The massacres


usually took place in ditches or ravines near cities and towns. Occasionally,


they were witnessed by soldiers or local residents. Before long, rumors of the


killings were heard in several capitals of the world.


Camps equipped with facilities for gassing people were being created on


the soil of occupied Poland. Most prospective victims were being created on the


soil of occupied Poland. Most prospective victims were to be deported to these


killing centres from ghettos nearby. From the Warsaw ghetto alone, more than


300,000 were remo

ved. The first transports were usually filled with women,


children, or older men, who could not work for the Germans. Jews capable of


labor were being held for work in shops or plants, but they too were to be


killed in the end. The heaviest deportations occurred in the summer and fall of


1942. The destinations of the transports were not known to the Jewish


communities, but reports of mass deaths eventually reached the surviving Jews,


as well as the governments of the United States and Great Britain. In April


1943, the 65,000 remaining Jews of Warsaw put up a fight against German police


who entered the ghetto in a final roundup. The battle was fought for three


weeks.


The death camps in Poland were Kulmhof, Belzec, Sobibor, Treblinka,


Lubin, and Auschwitz, Kulmhof was supplied with gas vans, and it’s death toll


was 150,000. Belzec had carbon monoxide gas chambers in which 600,000 Jews were


killed. Sobibor’s gas chambers accounted for 250,000 dead, and Treblinka’s for


700,000 to 800,000. At Lubin some 50,000 were gassed or shot. In Auschwitz,


the Jewish death count was more than 1 million.


Auschwitz, near Krak?w, was the largest death camp. Unlike the others,


it utilized quick-working hydrogen cyanide for the gassings. The victims of


the Auschwitz came from all Europe: Norway, France, Italy, Germany,


Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Poland, Yugoslavia, and Greece. A large inmate


population, Jewish and non-Jewish, was employed by industry. Some prisoners


were subjected to medical experiments, particularly sterilizations. Although


only Jews and Gypsies were gassed routinely, several hundred thousand other


Aushwitz inmates died from starvation, disease, or shooting. To erase the


traces of destruction, large crematories were constructed so that the bodies of


the gassed could be burned. In 1944 the camp was photographed by Allied


reconnaissance aircraft in search of industrial targets. It’s factories, but


not it’s gas chambers, were bombed.


When the war ended, the Jewish dead in the Holocaust were more than 5


million: about 3 million in killing centers and other camps, 1.4 million in


shooting operations, and more than 600,000 in ghettos.


The most common form of discrimination in the U.S. has been racial


discrimination. The U.S. Constitution recognized the legality of slavery, the


ultimate for of discrimination. The Emancipation Proclamation of 1863 and the


constitutional amendments that followed the American Civil War changed the legal


status of black people, but a series of U.S. Supreme Court decisions struck down


federal statutes designed to enforce the amendments. The most important of


these decisions declared unconstitutional a law that outlawed racial


discrimination by private citizens. For decades after the era of Reconstruction,


the absence of adequate federal laws permitted discrimination against blacks in


employment and housing, in public accommodations, in the judicial system, and in


voting opportunities.


The Civil Rights Act of 1964 outlawed racial discrimination in most


hotels, restaurants, and other public facilities; prohibited private employers


and unions from practicing discrimination; and banned registrars from applying


different standards to white and black voting applicants, a provision that was


strengthened by the Voting Rights Act of 1965 and its later amendments. The 1964


law also authorized the U.S. attorney general to file an action when a “pattern


or practice” of widespread discrimination was found. Federal financial aid


could then be withdrawn from programs in which racial discrimination persisted.


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