Thundercrack85
Avenger
- Joined
- Sep 2, 2009
- Messages
- 21,668
- Reaction score
- 8
- Points
- 33
I think it's ridiculous to think the German people knew the Jews were being deported to camps for mass execution.
Of course hindsight is 20/20 but they had no idea at the time.
The Japanese were rounded up and put in camps in the USA. Americans didn't expect them to be executed, nor did the Germans who saw Jews rounded up.
I'm not really buying this analogy. First of all, not all concentration camps were built far away from population centers, in fact some of them were next to towns. Jews being used for slave labor was certainly common knowledge.
Also, the American public knew exactly what happened to the Japanese. The Japanese could talk to the press (didn't do them much good, since most of the country hated the Japanese, but they could communicate with the outside world).
Germans presumably knew that the Jews were being gradually exterminated (which most probably supported). The scope of the killing industry may have been beyond their imagination. At least until American troops gave them a first hand tour at gunpoint.
There's really two questions, one, did the Germans know about the genocide, and I think most had some idea, and the second is, did they support the genocide, which is the more controversial question.
Last edited: