Teaching the Holocaust with Primary Sources

Introduction: Nuremberg Race Laws | Kristallnacht | Ghettos
Concentration Camps: Dachau | Bergen-Belsen | Auschwitz
Righteous Among the Nations: Gies | Schindler | Winton | Grueninger
Primary Source and Analysis Tools | Library of Congress Resources
Primary Source Sets | PDF Version
A Final Solution: Concentration Camps
The ghettos were a terrible experience, but no one predicted the horror
awaiting the Jewish people after they left. From the ghettos, people were loaded into boxcars filled so tightly that no one could move. There was no food, water, bathrooms, or fresh air. These death trains could take days to reach the final destination, a Nazi concentration camp.
Between 1933 and 1945, the Nazi regime created nearly 20,000 concentration camps.10 These camps were designed and constructed for hard labor and terminations. Hitler's "final solution" was a plan for the mass destruction of all Jewish people to secure a true Aryan race. The camps were tools to achieve that goal. Some camps had the sole purpose of killing Jews that arrived daily. As soon as they were unloaded from the trains, the people of all ages were taken to "the showers". Nazi guards would deceive prisoners by telling them they were going to take a shower for sanitary purposes. Then unsuspecting victims would leave their clothes and enter "the showers". Instead of water, SS guards would throw Zyklon-B pellets into the chamber from a hole in the ceiling. When exposed to air, Zykon-B creates a vapor that when breathed in staves the body of oxygen and causes death. When there was no sign of life, the bodies were thrown into piles before being sent on to the crematorium and destroyed.
Citations:
10. The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Holocaust Encyclopedia,
Nazi Camps. Accessed 8.6.12
Contact Information
Teaching with Primary Sources
Eastern Illinois University
600 Lincoln Ave.
Charleston, IL 61920
217-581-7857
Director: Cindy Rich, Ph.D.
Schedule
TPS EIU Calendar
Newsletters
Analysis Tools
(pdf or doc)
- ABC Photo Analysis
pdf doc - Book Analysis
TPS - Cartoon Analysis
pdf doc - Letter Analysis
pdf doc - Map Analysis
pdf doc TPS - More You Look Photo Analysis
pdf doc TPS - Motion Picture Analysis
pdf doc TPS - Poem Analysis
pdf doc - Poster Analysis
pdf doc - Put Yourself in the Picture Photo Analysis
pdf doc - Sheet Music Analysis
pdf doc TPS - Sound Recording Analysis
pdf doc TPS - Storyboard Sheet
pdf doc - Written Document Analysis
pdf doc TPS
Quick Start
- Why Use Primary Sources?
- Selecting Primary Sources
- Citing Primary Sources
- Quick Start
-
Disclaimer: Content created and
featured in partnership with
the TPS program does not
indicate an endorsement by
the Library of Congress.






