Some interesting exchanges on here, and arguments I've heard before, from various people...the question always boils down to: Why is the event we call "The Holocaust" treated so specially, when history has been marked by many massacres in many countries?
Here's my answer when someone asks that question: The Holocaust is unique because of its motivation, its intent, and its scope.
Unlike purges and oppression carried out for the purpose of consolidating power and maintaining control over a population, the Nazis targeted Jews solely for the "crime" of being Jewish. People who posed no threat to their conquerors were murdered for no reason other than their faith. (So entrenched was Nazi anti-Semitism that it was in many respects self-defeating; for example, the book I referenced earlier recounts how cobblers sent from Germany to the Eastern front to repair the boots of German soldiers were killed upon their arrival when it was discovered they were Jewish.) To be sure, the Third Reich murdered many other people as well, especially those who were seen as troublemakers or potential threats, but Jews were killed solely for being Jews.
The intent of the Third Reich was to exterminate European Jewry. Not conquer...not subjugate...not oppress...but wipe out. Yes, there have been other genocides, but those were largely limited to specific areas or countries. And that leads to the third difference between the Holocaust and similar events...
The scope of the Holocaust was breathtaking. Think about it: Mass murder across an entire continent -- 6,000,000 people -- carried out with the same efficiency one would associate with an industrial effort. Henry Ford mass-produced automobiles; Adolf Hitler mass-produced corpses. An entire infrastructure was developed and managed for the sole purpose of killing human beings. And these were not combatants, but the civilian population of conquered nations, many of them weak and helpless.
The brutality of the Third Reich is hard to overstate. Thousands of French civilians were executed in reprisals for insurgent attacks against Germans; POWs in the East were starved to the point where acts of cannibalism occurred; slave laborers were worked literally to death, without cessation or mercy.
I am no history expert, and I know there are those with better-informed viewpoints than mine, but I am very passionate about this subject. In only a few years, my great-grandparents' nation went from being one of the most cultured, educated, and religious countries in Europe, to being one where mothers holding their infants were shot through the head by men who were just following orders. If it happened there, it could happen anywhere, given the right circumstances...which is why we must never forget.
Here's my answer when someone asks that question: The Holocaust is unique because of its motivation, its intent, and its scope.
Unlike purges and oppression carried out for the purpose of consolidating power and maintaining control over a population, the Nazis targeted Jews solely for the "crime" of being Jewish. People who posed no threat to their conquerors were murdered for no reason other than their faith. (So entrenched was Nazi anti-Semitism that it was in many respects self-defeating; for example, the book I referenced earlier recounts how cobblers sent from Germany to the Eastern front to repair the boots of German soldiers were killed upon their arrival when it was discovered they were Jewish.) To be sure, the Third Reich murdered many other people as well, especially those who were seen as troublemakers or potential threats, but Jews were killed solely for being Jews.
The intent of the Third Reich was to exterminate European Jewry. Not conquer...not subjugate...not oppress...but wipe out. Yes, there have been other genocides, but those were largely limited to specific areas or countries. And that leads to the third difference between the Holocaust and similar events...
The scope of the Holocaust was breathtaking. Think about it: Mass murder across an entire continent -- 6,000,000 people -- carried out with the same efficiency one would associate with an industrial effort. Henry Ford mass-produced automobiles; Adolf Hitler mass-produced corpses. An entire infrastructure was developed and managed for the sole purpose of killing human beings. And these were not combatants, but the civilian population of conquered nations, many of them weak and helpless.
The brutality of the Third Reich is hard to overstate. Thousands of French civilians were executed in reprisals for insurgent attacks against Germans; POWs in the East were starved to the point where acts of cannibalism occurred; slave laborers were worked literally to death, without cessation or mercy.
I am no history expert, and I know there are those with better-informed viewpoints than mine, but I am very passionate about this subject. In only a few years, my great-grandparents' nation went from being one of the most cultured, educated, and religious countries in Europe, to being one where mothers holding their infants were shot through the head by men who were just following orders. If it happened there, it could happen anywhere, given the right circumstances...which is why we must never forget.