History of the Holocaust | Montreal Holocaust Museum (2025)

The following is a summary of A Brief History of the Holocaust: A Reference Guide.The words followed by an asterisk refer to the glossary of the guide.

What is the Holocaust*?

The Holocaust was the systematic persecution and murder of 6 million Jews, organized by the Nazi State and its collaborators from 1933 to 1945.

In addition to committing genocide against the Jews, the Nazis committed genocide against the Roma and the Sinti.
Other marginalized groups were also persecuted during this period: people with disabilities, homosexuals, Slavic people, political opponents, and Jehovah’s Witnesses.

Pre-Holocaust* Jewish Communities

By 1939, Jews had been in Europe for more than 2,000 years. In Germany, they made up less than 1% of the total population.

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Jewish children in a daycare centre, Paris, 1934.

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Elie Dawang and his parents, Paris, 1938.

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Eastern European Jew before the Holocaust.

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Call of the Shofar during the High Holidays.

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Polish Jews before the Holocaust

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The wedding of Stephan Molnar and Edith Gero, Budapest, Hungary,1932.

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Actors in a play on the occasion of Purim at Chorostkow, Poland, 1934.

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Kiddush blessing before the Sabbath meal.

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Meeting of Labour Zionist party in Warsaw, 1919Loaned by Frances Nemetz Lew.

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Friends in a park, Paris, 1934.

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Novak family in the Czech Republic, 1935.

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Jewish students, Hungary, 1939.

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Erika Urbach, with her teddy bear, Poland, 1927.

Antisemitism, or hostility towards Jews, had existed in Europe since the first millennium AD.

To find out more about antisemitism: A Brief History of Antisemitism in Canada

The Birth of the Nazi Party (and Its Rise to Power) 1919-1939

Following its humiliating defeat in the First World War (1914-1918), Germany suffered an economic and political crisis. This instability facilitated the Nazis rise to power in 1933.

Click on the picture below to access an interactive timeline.


The Nazi party was both antisemitic* and racist. They divided human beings into two categories: Aryans* (the Germanic people), whom they considered “genetically superior”; and the “inferior races” composed of Jews, Slavs, Roma and Sinti*, and Blacks.

Following this classification, a number of measures against Jews were introduced in Germany between 1933 and 1939.

Click on the picture below to access an interactive timeline.

On November 9 and 10, 1938, the Nazis organised a pogrom* against the Jews of Germany and Austria, referred to as the Night of Broken Glass (Kristallnacht*). More than 30,000 Jews were sent to concentration camps. More about Kristallnacht.

While the persecution of the Jews intensified, reactions throughout the rest of the world were minimal and ineffective.

Click on the picture below to access an interactive timeline.

The Second World War

The history of the Holocaust is directly linked to the history of the Second World War. The war began with the German invasion of Poland on September 1, 1939 and ended with Germany’s surrender on May 8, 1945.

Click on the picture below to access an interactive map.

Ghettos

In September 1939, Germany and the Soviet Union occupied and divided Poland. Out of 3.3 million Polish Jews, approximately 2 million found themselves under German control while the other 1.3 million were under Soviet control. The Jews in German-occupied Poland were confined to ghettos*, where they often died from starvation, disease, and mistreatment.

Hundreds of ghettos were established throughout Central and Eastern Europe. They facilitated the deportation of Jews to camps.

Click on the picture below to access an interactive map.

Concentration Camps

Between 1933 and 1945, Nazi Germany established over 20,000 camps and sub-camps in order to imprison “enemies of the State.” Death, disease, starvation, overpopulation, torture, and unsanitary conditions were part of everyday life in the camps.

To listen to survivors of the concentration camps, visit the page devoted to survivors’ stories, theme of the camps.

The “Final Solution*” and Killing

The mass murder of Jews began in 1941 with “mobile killing units” (Einsatzgruppen*), which executed 1.3 million Jews in Eastern Europe. Deeming this method inefficient, Nazi authorities undertook the creation of gas chambers.

Please be aware, this video contains the testimony of a person who survived a round up and shooting. It may be offensive to some viewers.

At the Wannsee Conference on January 20, 1942, Nazi leaders decided on the “Final Solution* to the Jewish Question”. The extermination of a group of people became official government policy.

In order to carry it out, the Nazis created six death camps: Auschwitz, Belzec, Chelmno, Majdanek, Sobibor, and Treblinka, all of which were located in occupied Poland. 2.5 million people, who had been transported from all over Europe in cattle cars, were murdered in gas chambers.

Click on the picture below to access an interactive map.

Jewish Resistance and the Rescuers

In order to preserve their identities, humanity, and lives, Jews resisted the Nazis and Nazi collaborators in ghettos*, concentration camps, and death camps.

Click on the picture below to access an interactive timeline.

Thousands of people risked their lives to rescue Jews, for example, by hiding them or providing them with falsified papers.

To find out more about resistance during the Holocaust and other genocides, hear testimonies, and discover related objects, visit our virtual exhibition “United against genocide: Understand, question, prevent“.

Nazi Collaborators

The governments of other countries also arrested Jews and deported* them to death camps. Some went so far as to commit atrocious acts against their own compatriots, within their own borders.

Liberation

As they advanced through occupied territories between July 1944 and May 1945, the Allied Forces* liberated the camps.

Altogether, six million Jews were murdered. They comprised two thirds of Europe’s Jewish population.

Displaced Persons’ Camps

Camps for “displaced persons” were created for those who could not return to their homes or who would face hostility there, which was the case for thousands of Holocaust* survivors.

Those who attempted to migrate to North America were hampered by strict quotas. Canada finally opened its doors to displaced persons in 1948 and took in approximately 25,000 Holocaust* survivors. The creation of the State of Israel in 1948 provided survivors with an alternative.

The Pursuit of Justice

Immediately after the Second World War, tribunals were set up to bring Nazi leaders to trial. However, justice can be a slow process. Even today, Nazis continue to be discovered and brought to justice over 70 years after Liberation. Others will never be exposed nor tried.

Click on the picture below to access an interactive timeline.

To find out more about the pursuit of justice after the Holocaust or other genocides, visit our virtual Exhibition “United against genocide: Understand, question, prevent“.

Please click here to download the complete Brief History of the Holocaust – A Reference Tool.

History of the Holocaust | Montreal Holocaust Museum (2025)

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