America and the Holocaust As the concentration camps were released at the end of the Second World War, the immediate problem was how to deal with the Jews who could not go anywhere. In March 1933, the first Camp Dachau was held. Dachau is a concentration camp, or a prison camp maintained by the Third Reich. [The German name when the government was dominated by Adolf Hitler]. In addition to these concentration camps there are two other types of camps, labor camps and death camps. Theresienstadt is the main concentration camp.
In 1984, the second book on the subject of David S. Weiman, "Abandonment of the Jews: America and the Holocaust" (1941 - 45) stimulated this theme. Fierce criticism of Wiman's US inaction has arisen from extensive research. Even Wyman's critics do not help, but I am impressed with his research scope. Similarly, strong criticism has been given to the second PBS documentary "America and the Holocaust: fraud and indifference" which is part of PBS's popular series "American Experience". According to historian David McCullough, it depends greatly on Wyman's work and is severely prosecuting Roosevelt and American Jews. The premise of the movie was obvious from the first frame when the talker killed the 6 million Jews "waiting in the US" during the Second World War. The movie responds to what critics frequently hear. . The US deliberately gave up the Jews. In other words, this is an intentional policy, not rude or bureaucratic confusion.
According to the US Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM), the country officially marks the Holocaust. "The Holocaust was the killing of millions of people by the 6 million Jews and Nazis and their co-workers during World War II. More than half of the population is German Jewish. The term genocide Refers generally to the organizational killing of the Jews under European occupation in Germany, but the Nazis also killed a number of non-Jews who are considered nonhuman (Untermenschen) or unpopular. Several victims fall within the category of extinction, such as assimilated Jews or descendants of Jews who are members of Jehovah's Witnesses.
Many groups moved to the United States to escape persecution, tyranny, or true death (Jews escape the Holocaust), African people were taken to the United States for persecution and tyranny , Their death was regarded as not important. The Statue of Liberty asks the United States "Your exhaustion, your hunger, your dense mass is anxious to breathe freely." African people are forced to get exhausted, and people gathering together are enthusiastic about breathing freely. Throughout history, this distinction has been diluted, forgotten or completely ignored.