Sicherheitsdienst Essays

  • The Schutzstaffel: Hitler's Reign Of Power In Nazi Germany

    579 Words  | 3 Pages

    Nuremberg War Crimes Trials began in Germany. They were to be the definitive judgement of the crimes against humanity by the Nazis. In the midst of the trial, it was determined that the SS, along with its associated organizations such as the Sicherheitsdienst (SD--the security and intelligence organization within the SS) and Geheime Staatspolizei (Gestapo—State Secret Police), was a criminal organization.1 The verdict placed on the SS was as follows: The Tribunal declares to be criminal within the

  • How Fear Used In Animal Farm

    592 Words  | 3 Pages

    Many people in power have used fear as a weapon and also to gain control of their country and of their people. In Greg Orwell’s Animal Farm and in real-life history, someone in power used fear as a weapon. They use fear to scare their people and to have control over them. In Animal Farm Napoleon is the one who uses fear as a weapon, and in real-life history, Hitler and Vladimir Putin use fear as the most important weapon. Fear is a scare tactic that can be the most important weapon when used by those

  • Jewish Holocaust Research Paper

    629 Words  | 3 Pages

    Beginning January 30, 1933, when Adolph Hitler came into power as the chancellor of Germany, Germany and Poland began to see the first signs of the most destructive ethnic cleansings of European history. Hitler, as well as the Nazi party, held the belief that those of the Jewish population had diluted the pure German economy and culture. Through a series of political actions and explicit propaganda, Hitler and the Nazi party created a world of anti-Semitic racism with the claim that the Aryan race

  • How Did The Gestapo Cause Violence In Germany

    757 Words  | 4 Pages

    As Hitler and the Nazi party claimed control of Germany as a dictatorship, they prominently used terror as a method to control the German public from forming opposition and to repress any negative opinions against Nazi policies; to do this, they used a range of methods such as the establishment of the Gestapo to cause terror through insecurity in everyday life for the German public, departmentalization of the SS to gain control of the previously used concentration camps that would be used as a form

  • Night Of Broken Glass Essay Topics

    1103 Words  | 5 Pages

    The SS’s beginning of implementing the “Final Solution” came in 1934 when a special department was created in the Security Service (Sicherheitsdienst-SD) to start “researching” the Jews. Shortly after this, they, along with other police forces, directed the Kristallnacht and focused it specifically towards the Jews. Although this “Night of Broken Glass” was only meant to encourage the Jews

  • Heinrich Himmler (Or The Schutzstaffel (SS)

    1322 Words  | 6 Pages

    The Schutzstaffel better known as the “SS”, was founded on the 4th of April 1925, by German leader and Fuhrer of the National Socialist German Party (NSDAP), Adolf Hitler. They were established as Hitler’s personal bodyguards and provided protection for him and other Nazi leaders and speakers. The symbol which represented the SS were two white bolts (pictured on the left) and were seen on all SS officers. On the 20th of January 1929, Hitler announced Heinrich Himmler (pictured below) as the new

  • Research Paper On Anne Frank

    1779 Words  | 8 Pages

    Anne Frank A Young Girl With an Impactful Diary John F. Kennedy once said, “Of the multitude who throughout history have spoken for human dignity in times of great suffering and loss, no voice is more compelling than that of Anne Frank.” Anne Frank is mostly known as a young girl who wrote a diary throughout her time being discriminated by the Germans during World War II. However, her story was like an intricate spider web full of emotions. Anne Frank gave the world an inside look of the Jewish

  • Holocaust And Eichmann's Trial Summary

    1612 Words  | 7 Pages

    Calamity of Errors, the Holocaust and Adolf Eichmanns Trial The subject and purpose of her work was not just to report on the trial, as requested, she took it further, and analyzed the situation of the man and the people involved with the final solution. All the while never placing blame on anyone person or group, but rather a set of circumstances that unfolded that brought about the death of approximately 6 million humans. Mrs. Arendt, was without the best qualified to tackle such a task; with