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Racism
Philosophy that attributes a person or
group’s character, abilities, appearance, intelligence, and behavior
to race – usually defined as a population with traits in common.
Racists divide the world into “superior” and “inferior” races, and
believe that, by nature and fate, the superior peoples have the
right to dominate the inferior. Before World War II racism began to
exert great influence on the policies of political movements in
Europe, especially those of the Nazi Party in Germany. The
persecution of specific racial groups during the Holocaust,
particularly the Jews, was a product of the Nazi racial view of the
world.
In the mid-1850s Comte Arthur de
Gobineau published his “Essay on the Inequality of Human Races.”
Before Gobineau, racism was mostly a subject for scientists. He
turned racism into a cultural and political issue, by saying that
the deterioration of the modern age resulted from the mixing of
superior and inferior races. He divided humanity into the black,
yellow, and white races, and claimed that only the pure white, or
Aryan, race was and could be truly noble.
Antisemites used racist theory to prove
the morality of their hatred of Jews. Houston Stewart Chamberlain
pitted Germans against Jews in his writings. Germans were seen as
the highest cultural achievers and the saviors of humanity; Jews
were a “bastard race” of greedy, inferior foreigners who lived in
the midst of Europe, but behaved differently than their neighbors.
Both groups had entered history at the same time, and thus had to
compete to the bitter end for domination. In fact, all of human
history was a struggle between the races, and the Germans were fated
to destroy the Jews. Other antisemites blamed Jews as the middle
class that devoured money and kept others in poverty.
The Nazis sharpened political racist
philosophy for their own purposes and turned theory into practice in
their attempt to destroy all of European Jewry. Racism was a major
element in Nazi ideology; the Nazis were able to “justify” their
horrible actions by making Jews seem less human. Thus, by the time
physical attacks were initiated against the Jews, it seemed they
even deserved what was coming to them. Dietrich Eckart, one of
Hitler’s early political advisors, said that no one would have left
the Jews alive throughout history had they known what their true
nature really was, and what their evil plans for the world were,
Hitler truly believed these ideas; he said that an inferior race,
like the Jews, had more in common with the apes than with superior
human races. Heinrich Himmler motivated his soldiers to carry out
his murderous orders by dehumanizing the Jews completely. He claimed
that the Jews were similar to fleas and mice – disgusting lower
forms of life that deserved to be exterminated. The Nazis tried to
convince the German people of the truth of their claims by creating
propaganda films that visually proved racist theory.
Another way the Nazis made racism look
honorable was to propagate it, not through obvious violence, but
through the cooperation of government agencies. Hitler gradually
promoted racism through “legitimate” laws that his government made,
chief among them the Nuremberg Laws of 1935. These laws legally
called for the separation of Jews from Christians, and also defined
for the first time who was to be considered a Jew, and who was to be
considered an Aryan. A Jew, according to this legislation, was
someone with at least three Jewish grandparents. An Aryan was a
person whose four grandparents all belonged to the Aryan race. In
order to become a member of the elite SS troops, however, a person
had to prove that his ancestors were pure Aryans in the period
before 1800 (at which time the Jews were given greater freedoms and
thus had more of a chance to mix with Aryans, thereby polluting the
gene pool). Someone with only two Jewish grandparents was defined as
a Mischling, meaning a person of mixed heritage. Mischlinge
were not allowed to have sexual relations with either Jews or
Aryans, so they were doomed to have no children and die out. Thus,
these laws brought racism legally out into the open.
As the Germans occupied different
European countries during World War II and expected collaboration
toward the reordering of society in accordance with their racial
views, they put European racism to the test. Many of those
countries’ leaders, especially those who were politically
conservative, were ambivalent about Hitler’s demand to hand over
their Jews. Marshal Ion Antonescu of Romania originally agreed to
deport and exterminate his country’s Jews. He later changed his mind
when he saw where the war was heading. In Hungary, Admiral Miklos
Horthy did not succumb to Nazi pressure until they occupied his
country. Marshall Philippe Petain of France agreed to give up the
non-French Jews who had sought refuge there, but tried to save his
country’s native Jews. In Italy, racism was never successfully
spread to the masses.
The countries allied against Germany
during the war, namely the United States, Great Britain, and the
Soviet Union, loudly condemned racism and used it as a motivation to
win the war and destroy the Nazi regime; this despite their racist
activities at home against blacks, colonial populations, and Jews,
respectively.
Today, the Holocaust is used as the
prime warning against the advancement of racism. However, racism
still continues to exist. The Internet has provided a free forum for
expression of racist ideas, and less-educated groups use stereotypes
as the foundations of their beliefs. Some people still fear those
who are different, and some countries still utilize the racist myths
of the past to shape their modern policy.
From the Facts On File
Encyclopedia of the Holocaust, prepared by Yad Vashem and the
Jerusalem Publishing House, edited by Dr. Robert Rozett and Dr.
Shmuel Spector.
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