On January 30, 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany with a Jewish population of 556,000. The Jewish population's fate came to a change when Hitler got into power. The main paramilitary organization that carried out Hitler's commands were the SS. The Schutzstaffel (SS) was created under Hitler in 1925. They first served as guard units and later grew to form a small paramilitary formation. In March, the SS opened the Dachau concentration camp outside of Munich. This was the first concentration camp established by the Nationalist Socialist (Nazi) government. It was commanded by Heinrich Himmler which was the police president of Munich at the time. The camp was first used to imprison political oppositions and over time, other groups such as Roma, Jews, and homosexuals were also placed into this camp. Between 1933 and 1936, thousands of political prisoners were sent to concentration camps. Boycotts against Jewish-owned businesses arouse throughout the country over the course of these few years. The Nazi party declared their intention to segregate Jews from the Aryan society and believed that the Jewish population was a threat to their superior Aryan German race. Antisemitism and persecution of Jews was an important ideal for the Nazis. In September of 1935, a high point of antisemitism was reached, and the Nuremberg Race Laws were passed. These laws excluded German Jews from citizenship and prevented them from marrying anyone of German blood. This new institution also deprived Jews of their rights to vote and hold public office. The public life of a Jewish person were highly restricted and they were usually looked down upon by the Nazi Party. At the beginning of 1935, Germany began heavy military drafting and strengthened their military forces by tremendous amounts. Western nations appeased to Hitler and allowed him to march into Rhineland, a demilitarized area from the Treaty of Versailles. Many European states thought that when the dissatisfied nations get what they want, peace will be established. This theory will be soon proven wrong.
"...they rounded up all the Jews from the city and the suburbs and they put us all in this ghetto, in this...and surrounded us with walls, and with guards, and we had to live in one...in an apartment, two to three families in a two-room apartment."
As the Nazi regime stretched across Europe, the administration began deporting Slavic people and they planned to provide more living space for German expansion. The Aryan racial empire were so important that Hitler began to use a racial program. In 1941, the Einsatzgruppen special forces were established and they were in charged of overseeing the ghettos. After invasions of countries, these special forces would round up the Jewish population and used many various methods to kill them. One method include mobile killing units. They round up Jews in their villages, execute them, and bury them in mass graves dug by victims before they got killed.
"And it was by the greatest miracle that I survived. There was, every barrack had a little cabin in the front, which was separation where the Blockaelteste, the Blockaelteste meant he was the, the chief of the, of the, of the barrack, and every such cabin had all the breadboxes, the bread was supplied, brought in with a box with a lock and nobody could get to it. That door, the hinge of the box was already torn off, and I was hiding in that box upside down. Here he comes in to search, he even kicks it, but luckily it gave. I was so skinny, it gave. I could see the...and I was sure this is it. This is how I remained alive. But when they already left, the Germans, about an hour they, they left, there was no sign of Germans, I wanted to go back to the barracks, but the Poles, the, the Ukraine, who were not taken on the death march, they wouldn't let me in. So I was hiding out in the heap of dead bodies because in the last week when the crematoria didn't function at all, the bodies were just building up higher and higher. And I sneaked into, among those dead bodies because I was afraid they'd come back or something. So there I was at nighttime, in the daytime I was roaming around in the camp, and this is where I actually survived, January 27, I was one of the very first, Birkenau was one of the very first camps being liberated. This was my, my survival chance."
