GLOSSARY
- Aktion -
- German military or police "action" or "strike" usually
directed against Jews in a ghetto for the purpose of intimidating
the populace or rounding up the populace for deportation to a
death camp. The Jews in the Krakow ghetto suffered a wave of
Aktionen, including the deportations of early June 1942, October
1942, and March 1943. It was during the June 1942 Aktion that
Oskar Schindler observed the Jewish girl dressed in red whose
flight from the SS he would later describe.
- Allies -
- The nations, including the United States, Britain (and
Dominions), and the Soviet Union, as well as the Free French of
Charles De Gaulle, that joined in the war against Germany and the
other Axis nations. The Soviet Union, under Josef Stalin, was an
ally of the Nazis between August 23, 1939, when the
Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact was signed, and June 22, 1941, when
Hitler attacked Russia. On September 17, 1939, during the German
attack on Poland, the Soviets dutifully occupied the Polish
territories east of the Bug River. It is the border today.
Britain became an ally of the Soviet Union only after Stalin
and Hitler went to war. The United States became an ally of the
Soviet Union only after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor. Hitler,
allied to Japan (he called them "yellow Aryans") declared war on
the United States. In sum, the Soviets and the Western Allies
found common ground only in their opposition to the Nazis, and as
soon as the war ended the Soviet Union and the Western Allies
went their separate ways. The result was the Cold War that lasted
until 1989.
- Anschluss (or Union) -
- The incorporation of Austria by Nazi
Germany on March 13, 1938. The majority of Austrians,
disillusioned by economic hardship and inspired by the booming
example of Nazi Germany, greeted German troops with flowers,
giving the Anschluss the sobriquet "The flower war." When the
Nazis seized power in Vienna, Austrian storm troopers humiliated
Viennese Jews by forcing them to scrub the streets. The historian
(and then radio broadcaster) William Shirir, who was present in
Vienna, described the humiliation of the Jews in the Austrian
capital as "an orgy of sadism."
According to the famed Nazi hunter Simon Wiesenthal, a
disproportionately large number of Austrians played leading roles
in the destruction of the Jews, particularly in Poland. One of
the leading Nazis, Adolf Eichmann, was himself an Austrian and
picked his associates from among his fellows. It is said that
anti-Semitism was stronger and more visceral in Austria than it
was in Germany. As one Viennese has said, "He was not an
anti-Semite the man who did not hate Jews much."
- Anti-Semitism -
- Acts or negative feelings against Jews which take
the form of prejudice, dislike, fear, discrimination and
persecution. Anti-Semitism is deeply imbedded in Western culture.
For centuries, many organized Christian religions preached that
the Jews were responsible for the death of Christ. In the 19th
and 20th centuries, the Jews were blamed for being either
capitalists or communists. By the time the Nazis began the
extermination process, many non-Jews had long been conditioned to
view the Jews less than human.
- Aryan -
- A term used by the Nazis to describe Caucasians of
non-Jewish descent. The Nazis believed that the ideal
Aryans---blond-hair and blue-eyed North Europeans---were a master
race ("herrenvolk") destined to rule the world. The opposite of
the Aryan was the "untermenschen" (subhuman) which included Slavs
(Poles, Russians, Czechs) and Jews. Thus, in short order, the
Nazis reduced all people into basic groups: superior, and
inferior; Aryan, and subhuman. The Jew, of course, was at the
bottom of the list of subhuman. Indeed, the Jew was the "eternal
enemy" of the Aryan people.
- Aryanization -
- This is the legal term given to the one-sided
process by which German authorities expropriated Jewish
businesses (and the businesses of other "enemies of the Reich")
in Germany and in the occupied-territories. The expropriated
businesses were handed over to German supervisors or
commissioners. Oskar Schindler, upon his arrival in Krakow in
1939, obtained his enamel factory through this process of
"Aryanization."
- Auschwitz-Birkenau -
- This was the death camp located thirty-five
miles west of Krakow which was the destination of a large number
of Jews deported from the Krakow ghetto. In the summer of 1944,
when Oskar Schindler arranged for his Jewish workers to be
transferred to a new factory in German-occupied Czechoslovakia,
300 of the Schindlerfrauen (Schindler women) were mistakenly
routed to Auschwitz-Birkenau (one account has it Gross-Rosen,
another Nazi camp). The women were released when Schindler
succeeded in bribing the camp's commandant.
It is at Auschwitz-Birkenau that the Schindlerfrauen are
herded into a shower where they fully expect to be gassed.
Instead, water is emitted from the pipes. The Jews not selected
for immediate extermination were forced to shower both upon
arriving and departing Auschwitz-Birkenau. The Germans were
terrified of typhus, which, ironically, was one of the few
weapons the Jews possessed.
- Authoritarianism -
- Believing in or characterized by unquestioning
obedience to authority, as that of a dictator, rather than
individual freedom of judgment and action. Nazi Germany was a
"Fuehrer state" based upon the "Fuehrer principle," namely, that
everything the "leader" said was an order to be fulfilled with
the utmost sense of duty. In 1934, at the time the German
president von Hindenburg died, Hitler ordered the armed forces to
swear an oath of loyalty to himself personally. Many German
soldiers felt bound to that oath, and thus a sense of honor bound
them to a criminal regime.
- Axis -
- Germany, Italy, and Japan, signatories to a pact signed in
Berlin on September 27, 1940, to divide the world into their
spheres of respective political interest. The three nations were
later joined by Bulgaria, Croatia, Hungary, Romania, and
Slovakia. The term "axis" was derived from the 1937
propagandistic observation that the world revolved around the
"axis" between Rome and Berlin. It is of note that Hitler
declared war on America in fulfillment of his obligation to
Imperial Japan.
- Baum Gruppe (Herbert Baum Group) -
- Small, clandestine anti-Nazi
organization founded in Berlin at the beginning of the Nazi
regime by Herbert and Marianne Baum. It was composed of young
people, primarily Jewish members of the Communist party, as well
as a number of Zionists. Its activities centered around
increasing education, political, and cultural awareness, but it
also engaged in one act of spectacular sabotage: The bombing of
an anti-Soviet exhibit in Berlin. Most of the members were
denounced, tried, and executed between July 1942 and June 1943.
- Belzec -
- This was the Nazi death camp located about one hundred
and fifty miles east of Krakow. It is the graveyard of Galician
Jewry. The early deportations of Jews from Krakow were sent to
Belzec where they were gassed immediately. An estimated 600,000
Jews were murdered at Belzec between March 1942 and December
1942, a short but lethal period of time. Today the site of the
former death camp at Belzec is a pine forest. There is no hint of
its ignominious place in history, except for the bits of human
skeletal remains everywhere to be seen.
- Brunnlitz -
- Brunnlitz was the industrial town in German-occupied
Czechoslovakia where Schindler relocated his Krakow factory in
late 1944 as the Soviet Red Army advanced towards Krakow from the
east. The weapons factory that Schindler established in Brunnlitz
was a sub-camp of the Gross-Rosen concentration camp. Labor camps
exploiting Jewish and foreign labor like Brunnlitz were located
throughout the Greater German Reich. Brunnlitz, under Schindler,
was one of the few camps where Jews were not treated brutally.
- Buchenwald -
- Located in Weimar, Germany, this was one of the
first concentration camps to begin operation (1937). German and
Austrian Jews and Gypsies arrived in 1938. Thousands of Jewish
men were sent to Buchenwald at the time of Kristallnacht in
November 1938. Before the United States Army liberated the camp
in 1945, the prisoners had seized control of the camp. The Nobel
Prize Laureate Eli Wiesel was liberated at Buchenwald, having
survived Auschwitz-Birkenau beforehand.
- Bystanders -
- Individuals, or governments, who were indifferent to
the plight of the Jews, and other victims of the Nazis.
Bystanders did not come to the aid of Jews and other persecuted
groups. The great majority of the European populace were
bystanders to the destruction of Jews.
- Chelmno -
- This was the first death camp established by the Nazis.
It opened on December 7, 1941, the same day the Japanese attacked
Pearl Harbor on the other side of the world. Chelmno is a village
in western Poland. At Chelmno, the Nazis forced the Jews to strip
in the confines of an old castle, herded them into large vans,
murdered them by carbon monoxide, and dumped the bodies into pits
dug in a nearby forest. The bodies were burned. From this initial
death camp, the Nazis, by experimentation, developed more
efficient and lethal death camps, such as Auschwitz-Birkenau,
where Jews were murdered by poisonous gas (Zyklon-B) that
hitherto had been used to kill rodents. Only two Jews survived
Chelmno.
- Collaborators -
- The cooperation between the citizens of a country
and its occupiers. There were Nazi collaborators in most of the
countries occupied by the Nazis.
The Germans relied heavily on foreign troops (Ukrainian,
Bylorussian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Estonian, etc.) in the
extermination campaign against the Jews. They did this for two
reasons: 1) German soldiers were needed at the military front and
could not be spared for Jewish Aktionen in the occupied
territories; 2) the psychological consequences of murdering
unarmed civilians were viewed as harmful to German personnel
In the liquidation of the Jewish ghetto in Krakow, the Nazis
were assisted by Ukrainian and Lithuanian auxiliary troops who
had been trained by the SS. Not infrequently, Polish police,
known as the "blue police," assisted the Germans in the roundup
of Jews. Collaboration was not the sole province of Eastern and
Central Europe. The French police, for example, assisted the
Nazis in rounding up the Jews in Paris in the summer of 1942.
Finally, collaborators included Jewish informers and Jewish
ghetto police who aided the Nazis in deporting their Jewish
neighbors --hoping, in exchange, to save themselves and their
families.
- Concentration Camp -
- A prison where the Nazi regime sent people
considered by them to be dangerous. Some concentration camps were
"killing centers" that employed either carbon monixide or poison
gas to systematically kill hundreds of thousands of people, the
great majority of them Jews. Other prisoners were typically
worked or starved to death. Persons held in the camps were
political and religious dissidents, resistors, homosexuals, as
well as racial and ethnic victims of the Nazi regime and its
collaborators (see "victims"). Of the more than 100 camps that
existed, the largest were Dachau, Bergen-Belsen, Buchenwald,
Auschwitz-Birkenau, Belzec, Chelmno, Stutthof, Maidanek, Sobibor
and Treblinka.
- Conformity -
- Acting in accordance with popular opinion, rather
than following the dictates of one's own conscience. It might be
argued that the Nazi era was an act of mass conformity.
- Dachau -
- The first concentration camp, opened in 1933 near
Munich, Germany. An example of a camp that was not equipped for
mass extermination program with poison gas, though many prisoners
from all nations died of overwork, starvation and disease. In
addition to Jews, a large number of Polish priests were murdered
at Dachau. The camp was liberated by the U. S. Army in 1945.
Today the camp is a museum.
- Deportation -
- The forced relocation of Jews, Gypsies, some Poles
, and resistance fighters from their homes to other localities,
usually to ghettos or Nazi concentration camps and killing
centers. The Nazis, who engaged in subterfuge at every turn,
described these brutal deportations with the seemingly innocuous
term "resettlement." The deportations were generally carried out
by use of trains in which Jews were crammed into cattle cars. By
the time the train arrived at the death camp, the journey had
rendered the Jews almost eager for the next step, not knowing
what that might be.
- DEF (Deutsche Email Fabrik) -
- This is the name of the factory
Schindler established in Krakow. The building still stands and
houses yet another factory.
When Schindler arrived in Krakow in September 1939, he
purchased, at a very low price and by the process of
"Aryanization," the old Jewish Rekord factory in a suburb of
Krakow. With the benefit of Jewish capital, Jewish labor, and
Jewish expertise, he reorganized the factory and began producing
enamel bowls and other kitchenware for the German army. Schindler
named his new business Deutsche Email Fabrik, or German Enamel
Factory (DEF). It became the "haven" for an estimated 1,100
Krakow Jews. Schindler repeated a fortune from his factory, but
later spent much of it bribing Nazi officials on behalf of the
Jews.
- Dissent -
- To differ in belief or opinion (especially from
official government policy). The opposite of "dissent" is
"conformity." Not infrequently the Nazi murderers explained their
actions to postwar investigators by saying they did not want to
appear "cowardly" in front of their comrades. Few expressed
"dissent." The majority sought "conformity."
Oskar Schindler, and other Righteous Gentiles, might be
described as "dissenters." They broke with the norm.
- Eugenics and Population Biology Research Station(at the Reich
Health Office for Racial Hygiene and Population Biology) -
- The department responsible for the racial and genealogical
registration of Jews, gypsies and other targeted groups. The
registration of individuals by religious and ethnic category
eventually permitted the Nazi regime to conduct a campaign to
"racially purify" Germany by segregating, sterilizing, deporting,
and murdering members of these groups.
- Einsatzgruppen -
- Mobile killing commando units which closely
followed invading armies into the Soviet Union, Lithuania,
Latvia, and Estonia. Their purpose was to immediately kill the
Jewish population by shooting them or packing them into vans and
gassing them. The four Einsatzgruppen teams worked in close
cooperation with the German army, the Wehrmacht, which did not
interfere in the least bit with the murderous activities in their
vicinity. These units were responsible for two million deaths.
Not infrequently, the commanders of Einsatzgruppen were educated,
cultured people, including lawyers, professors and pastors. The
murder tactics of the Einsatzgruppen initiated the pattern of
mass murder that evolved into the stage marked by the death
camps.
- Euthanasia Program (the T4 program) -
- A Nazi government program
created to kill mentally and physically handicapped Germans
deemed "incurably sick." The program murdered 90,000 people and
was eventually ended due to protests by religious leaders and
victims' families. The T4 death technicians were later
transferred to Poland where they continued to apply their
techniques in the death camps.
The euthanasia program was brought to a halt by public
pressure, including protests from German religious leaders. The
Nazis were very sensitive to public opinion. Hitler didn't want
to have a problem on the home-front when he was fighting a war on
several other fronts. It is also of note that the first people
the Nazis murdered were Germans. Hitler viewed everything in
terms of racial survival: If a German was not healthy, he or she
was not "worthy of life."
- The Final Solution -
- Euphemism used by the Nazis to describe
their plan to exterminate all European Jews. The full name of the
plan was "The Final Solution of the Jewish Question."
- Genocide -
- The deliberate and total extermination of a culture.
The Jews, and to some extent the Gypsies, were slated for
genocide during the Nazi regime.
- Gestapo -
- The secret political police in Nazi Germany created to
eliminate political opposition. The Gestapo enforced Nazi rule
through terror, arrest and torture.
- Ghetto -
- Term used to describe the compulsory "Jewish Quarter"
-- the poor sections of cities where Jews are forced to reside.
During the Nazi occupation of Europe, the Jews were forced into
ghettos as a centralizing point to facilitate later deportation
to the death camps. The ghettoes were sealed by surrounding
barbed wire or walls. Established mostly in eastern Europe, the
ghettos were characterized by overcrowding, malnutrition, and
heavy labor. All were eventually dissolved (or "liquidated") and
the Jews murdered.
- Goeth, Amon (pronounced Gert) -
- Like many of the Nazi criminals
in Poland, Amon Goeth was Austrian. Simon Wiesenthal, the
Holocaust survivor and Nazi hunter, has written, "Austrians
accounted for only eight per cent of the population of the Third
Reich, yet Nazis from Austria were responsible for half of the
murders of Jews committed under Hitler."
Born in Vienna to a family long involved in book printing,
Goeth joined the still clandestine Nazi party in 1930. The
Austrian Nazi party was legalized in March 1938, when Hitler
seized Austria in the bloodless Anschluss.
Goeth joined the SS before the war. In March 1942, he played
a leading role in the liquidation of the Jewish ghetto in Lublin,
a city in eastern Poland, and in Tarnow, a small city east of
Krakow. In Krakow, Goeth lent his considerable expertise to the
liquidation of the ghetto in March 1943. He was also given
command of the Plaszow labor camp outside Krakow. During the next
year, Goeth ruled Plaszow and its Jewish prisoners as if it were
a personal fiefdom.
Helen Rosenzweig, one of Goeth's Jewish servants, said,
"Physically he was a very large man. He decided who would live
and who would die. There was a slap, a kick, a push. But I guess
my time wasn't up. When he had guests I had to look pleasant or
the beatings were limitless."
"I knew Goeth," said Anna Duklauer Perl, a survivor with no
connection to the book or movie. "One day he hung a friend of
mine just because he had once been rich. He was the devil."
After the war, Goeth was captured and returned to Poland for
trial. He was hanged at Plaszow on September 13, 1946.
- Gypsies -
- Collective term for the Romani and Sinti nomadic people
originally from northwest India. Like the Jews, the gypsies were
targeted for destruction.
- Holocaust -
- The systematic, bureaucratic annihilation of six
million Jews by the Nazi regime and their collaborators during
World War II. Although Jews were the primary victims, up to
one-half million Gypsies and at least 250,000 mentally or
physically disabled persons were also victims of genocide. In
addition, three million Soviet prisoners of war were killed
because of their nationality. Poles, as well as other Slavs, were
targeted for slave labor, and as a result ten of thousands
perished. Homosexuals and others deemed "antisocial" were also
persecuted and often murdered. In addition, thousands of
political and religious dissidents such as communists,
socialists, trade unionist, and Jehovah's Witnesses were
persecuted for their beliefs and behavior and died as result of
maltreatment.
- Jew -
- A person whose religion is Judaism. The Jewish faith is
not comprised of any one ethnic group, but rather has followers
among all nationalities, races and ethnic groups. The principal
difference between Jews and Christians is that Jews believe that
the Messiah has yet to come; Christians believe that Christ, who
was Jewish, was the Messiah.
- Jewish Ghetto Police (OD) -
- In Poland, as in other occupied
territories, the Nazis established Jewish police forces by which
the they controlled the Jewish population in the ghettos. In
Krakow, the Jewish police, armed with truncheons, assisted the
Nazis in the liquidation of the ghetto. In the film Schindler's
List, a young Jewish boy saves Mrs. Dresner. It is a touching
scene, but it should be remembered that the little boy was in the
service of the Nazis, and, although he saved one Jewish life, his
efforts were mainly directed at rounding up Jews for their
deportation to an unknown yet ominous destination.
- Jewish Council (Judenrat) -
- In the cities and towns of the
German-occupied territories, the Nazis established a Jewish
Council or Judenrat (also known as "a council of Jewish elders").
The councils, often comprising prewar leaders of the Jewish
community, transmitted German orders to the Jewish population.
The role of the Jewish Councils is the subject of intense debate.
On one hand, it is argued that the Jewish Councils abetted the
destruction of Jews, while, on the other hand, it is argued that
the Councils attempted to alleviate Jewish suffering in the
period before the Jews understood that destruction was the German
aim. Once the nature of the Nazis' genocidal plans became known,
some Judenrat members believed that following German orders to
deport some Jews (like the sick or elderly) was the best way to
save the remnant of the Jewish population and, not least,
themselves.
- Killing Centers -
- Camps maintained to systematically kill Jews.
Gas chambers were built especially for that use. There were five
such camps, all in Poland: Auschwitz-Birkenau, Belzec, Chelmno,
Majdanek, Sobibor and Treblinka. Poland was the setting the Nazis
chose for the Holocaust. Pope John Paul II, himself a Pole, has
said, "The assassins did this on our land, perhaps to cover it
with infamy. But no land can be covered in infamy."
- Krakow (or Cracow) -
- This is the architectural gem of a city in
southern Poland where Schindler lived between 1939 and 1944. The
ancient seat of Polish kings, Krakow was designated the capital
of Nazi-occupied Poland, the so-called "Generalgouvernement"
which was the administrative unit comprising those parts of
Poland not incorporated into the German Reich.
When German troops attacked Poland on September 1, 1939,
fifty-six thousand Jews lived in Krakow, equivalent to the entire
Jewish population of Italy. This number swelled as refugees from
the countryside sought safety in Krakow. The Jews of Krakow were
deported to the death camps in a serious of brutal Aktionen. They
had lived in Krakow for seven centuries, and many had become
leaders in industry, the arts and science.
- Kristallnacht (Crystal-Night) -
- The Night of Broken Glass -
November 9-10, 1938. The night Nazi police and collaborators
subjected Jews to an onslaught of anti-Semitic violence. Nazis
vandalized and burned synagogues and Jewish business, and
randomly terrorized Jews. This macabre event made it very clear
that there would be no future for Jews in Nazi Germany. The
following day, the streets of Germany were littered with the
glass from the broken windows of Jewish stores. This broken glass
gave the pogrom its name: Kristallnacht, or Night of the Broken
Glass.
- Nazism -
- The political doctrine of the Nazi party. Nazism
advocated anti-Semitism, racism, militarism, one-party rule,
anticommunism and a rigid authoritarian dictatorship.
- Nazi Party (NSDAP, or National Socialist German Workers' Party) -
- After the German defeat in the First World War, the embittered
ex-soldier Adolf Hitler joined the NSDAP in Munich, Germany.
Hitler quickly took over the Nazi Party and, abetted by the
economic dislocation and frustrations of the world depression,
the Nazis won the largest number of votes of any political party
in Germany in the elections of 1932. On this basis, the aged
Reichspresident, Hindenburg, appointed Hitler chancellor of
Germany on January 30, 1933. The Nazis, whose obscure birthplace
was a smoke filled beer hall in Munich, took over the reins of
the potentially most powerful nation in Europe. The precepts of
the Nazi party: the superiority of the German people; German
domination of Europe; the extermination of inferior peoples,
particularly the Jews, who were characterized as the archenemy of
the German people.
Like many Germans, Schindler joined the Nazi party both for
reasons of opportunity (one simply could not advance in Nazi
Germany without being a member of the party) and for reasons of
nationalism, or German patriotism.
Although he apparently was appalled by the early Nazi
atrocities in the Sudetenland, in Czechoslovakia in 1938, there
is no reason to believe that Schindler disagreed with the
national goals of the Nazis, particularly the subjugation of
Poland. As the author Keneally writes, probably quite rightly,
Schindler approved "of the national business, though he did not
like the management."
- Nuremberg Trials -
- Trials of Nazi war criminals conducted by
former military opponents of Germany after World War II. The
trials resulted in several executions and prison sentences,
though thousands of Nazi war criminals escaped prosecution.
Testimony at the trials gave wide publicity to the Nazi policy of
mass murder.
- Occupied-Territories -
- Those nations overrun and occupied by the
Nazi government. This included most of Europe between 1939 and
1945. Britain, however, resisted German air raids in 1940-41
which were intended to break British resolve. They did not, and
Britain avoided an invasion. Hitler turned his attention to the
Soviet Union, which he invaded on June 22, 1941. The brutal
policies typical of the Nazis were more severe in Eastern Europe,
in the Soviet Union, and in Yugoslavia than they were in Western
Europe. The Nazis felt a racial affinity for the people of
Western Europe and only contempt for the people of the East.
- Peer pressure -
- Social pressure to conform to the beliefs and
behaviors exerted by those people of about the same age, status,
etc.
- Perpetrators -
- In the Holocaust, those persons, agencies, or
governments who assist in or gain from the persecution of others.
- Prejudice -
- A negative, inflexible attitude toward a group
(ethnic or religious) impervious to evidence or contrary
argument. In most cases racial prejudice is founded on
suspicions, ignorance, and irrational hatred of other races,
religions or nationalities.
- Plaszow -
- On March 13, 1943, after three years of various
Aktionen, the Nazis launched the final liquidation of the Krakow
ghetto. Yet many Jews were "essential workers" engaged in war
production, such as the Jews who worked in Schindler's enamel
factory, and for these remaining Jews a labor camp had been
established in the Krakow suburb of Plaszow, on the site of two
Jewish cemeteries and beside a quarry. This camp was commanded by
the Viennese SS officer Amon Goeth, a sadist whom Schindler
befriended and in whose villa overlooking the camp Schindler
often stayed following drunken and lust-filled parties.
The setting at Plaszow was macabre: Jewish gravestones had
been uprooted by the Nazis and laid out as pavement stones. The
stones remain at Plaszow today, and apparently for this reason
Jewish representatives prohibited Stephen Spielberg from filming
at the original camp. Spielberg was also prohibited from filming
at Auschwitz-Birkenau. In the film, the scene at
Auschwitz-Birkenau is actually outside of the original camp, with
the original camp in the background.
The Jewish slaves in Plaszow worked in nearby factories run
by Germans. Though they were treated brutally, Plaszow was not a
death camp on the model of Auschwitz-Birkenau or Belzec where the
gassing was immediate. Plaszow was typical of the thousands of
little work camps that were to be found outside of virtually
every city and village in every corner of the Third Reich.
- Racism -
- The belief that a racial group is inferior because of
biological or cultural traits.
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