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Society's Influence on Morals. How the Germans were psycologically capable of killing the Jews during WWII
Title: Society's Influence on Morals. How the Germans were psycologically capable of killing the Jews during WWII
Category: History / War & Conflicts
Details: Words: 1862 | Pages: 7.9 (approximately 235 words/page)
Society's Influence on Morals. How the Germans were psycologically capable of killing the Jews during WWII
The atrocities of the Holocaust have prompted much inquiry by researchers to
understand how humans can behave so cruelly toward their fellow man. Theories have
been formed that cite the men of Battalion 101 as "exceptions" or men with "faulty
personalities," when, in fact, they were ordinary men. The people who attempted to
perform a genocide were the same people as you and me with the only difference being
the environment in which they worked. The
showed first 75 words of 1862 total
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showed last 75 words of 1862 total
they can act upon it.
Works Cited
Bortnick, Rachel Amado. "Dallas Honors a Righteous Nation." Dallas Jewish Life
Nov. 1993.
Browning, Christopher R. Ordinary Men. New York: Aaron Asher Books/HarperCollins
Publishers, Inc., 1993.
Fogelman, Eva. Conscience and Courage. New York: Anchor Books Doubleday,
1994.
Jacobs, Mike. Speech to Class. Dallas, 31 Mar. 1997.
Reich, Walter. "The Men Who Pulled the Triggers." The New York Times 12 Apr.
1992.
Weapons of the Spirit. Writ./Dir. Pierre Sauvage. The Friends of Le Chambon. 1988.
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