History: Understanding the Holocaust
Course details
Course code
Q00019820Course date
Number of classes
2 sessionsTimetable
Tutor
Julian RobertsFee range
How you'll learn
Venue
OnlineLevel of study
Entry Levels 1,2,3: If you have never studied this subject before and you’re not confident in your ̨Íåswag, Entry levels are a good starting point.
Level 1: Covers basic ̨Íåswag and knowledge needed for this subject
Level 2: Building on basic knowledge or experience. Similar to Grade 4/ C at GCSE or O level in England or Standards in Scotland.
Level 3: Learn about the topic in-depth and have a broad range of ̨Íåswag. Independent working Equivalent to an A level in England or Higher in Scotland.
Beginners: A perfect introduction if you have no experience and ̨Íåswag in this subject.
Improvers: The next step if you have basic ̨Íåswag or knowledge but want to progress them further.
Advanced: Build on the solid experience and ̨Íåswag you have in this subject, applying your ̨Íåswag and knowledge in a more complex way.
Course overview
Course description
The defining image of the Holocaust for many people is that of the ramp at Auschwitz. Beside a line of cattle trucks, people are selected for work or death. The process takes a matter of seconds for each person. It is conducted by a small number of Germans in uniform. Over one million people would die in Auschwitz, the majority in the gas chambers, others worked to death in the surrounding factories and in the camp itself.
Before Auschwitz a less remembered Holocaust took place in two phases. Initially the Jewish population within the occupied areas of the USSR were individually shot at hundreds of sites outside cities, towns and villages. It is estimated that over two million people were murdered in this way. When this became unbearable for the perpetrators, death camps were established on pre-war Polish territory. At Chelmno, Sobibor and Treblinka a tiny number of people briefly escaped death to facilitate the mass murder of their fellow deportees. For most, death came quickly on arrival at the death camps. An estimated 1.7 million people were murdered in this way. In total an estimated six million Jews would be murdered mostly in a short, intense phase of killing between Spring of 1942 and summer of 1943.
The facts of the Holocaust raise uncomfortable questions most notably, but not exclusively, for the Germans who perpetrated the genocide. How could this happen and could it have been prevented?
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