¶ … Structure and Functions of Pre-Genocidal Societies: Nazi Germany and Cambodia
Between the two of them, the genocidal societies of Nazi Germany and Cambodia murdered around 8 million innocent civilians before being stopped by the international community. Not surprisingly, the targeted civilians in these genocides were also subjected to enormous economic discrimination prior to these respective "final solutions," and these issues form the basis of this analysis. This paper explores the relevant literature to describe the structure and functions of these two pre-genocidal societies with an emphasis on economic discrimination, including the historical background, the stages that a society tends to experience preparatory to genocide, and the economic conditions within these modern states prior to genocide. In addition, an analysis of the economic conditions of the people persecuted and their role within the economy prior to genocide is followed by an assessment concerning how these two states economically discriminated in the years leading up to and during the genocide. Finally, a summary of the research and important findings concerning these two pre-genocidal societies is provided in the paper's conclusion.
Historical background of Germany and Cambodia prior to genocide and the groups that were eventually discriminated against
Nazi Germany. The stage was set for the rise of the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, the National Socialist German Worker's Party that became abbreviated as "Nazi" (Munk 9). At this point in its history, Germany had been brought to her knees by World War I and the draconian terms of the Versailles Treaty and the country was especially hard hit by the global economic downturn the followed the Great Depression. For instance, writing while World War II was still being prosecuted, Munk advises that pre-Nazi German economy was "born out of certain social and economic conditions: the decadence of genuine liberal competition, the end of laissez-faire, the vagaries of the trade cycle, the growing awareness of insecurity, unemployment, and frustration in both the classes and the masses" (9). In sum, Adolf Hitler was able to seize power due to the "deprivations and mood of Weimar Germany in the 1920s and 1930s" (Sneider 3).
More to the point, Hitler was also able to seize power during this turbulent period in Germany's history because of his focus on what he perceived to be the source of the country's problems: its Jewish population. In this regard, Sneider confirms that, "The consuming hatred for Jews and the belief in an all-powerful Jewish conspiracy [were] key to Hitler from his earliest days in politics" (3). In fact, by 1936, massive Nazi Party rallies were already taking place at Nuremberg, but many modern historians discount eyewitness reports concerning the economic conditions in pre-Nazi Germany because of the assignment of official chaperones that limited their access to mainstream German society (Bennell 1). What is known for certain is that beginning in the late 1920s, the Nazi Party leveraged the resentment against the Versailles Treaty and harsh economic conditions being experienced by the German people by making all Jewish people a scapegoat for all of Germany's problems (Nazi Germany 2). For instance, one historian reports that, "From 1929 onwards, the worldwide economic depression provoked hyperinflation, social unrest and mass unemployment, to which Hitler offered scapegoats such as the Jews" (Nazi Germany 2).
Following Hitler's appointment as chancellor, the Jews in Germany found their predicament increasingly untenable and in 1935, the enactment of the Nuremburg Laws represented the start of institutionalized anti-Semitic persecution that would become the genocide which would be termed the "Final Solution" (Nazi Germany 3). The Final Solution can be said to have begun in early November, 1938, when a teenaged Polish Jew purportedly attempted to assassinate the German Embassy's Second Secretary in Paris (Doescher 131). After the second secretary died a few days later, the Nazi Party seized on this event as an excuse to launch a series of pogroms that targeted German Jews in which has become known as the "Kristallnacht" (Crystal Night or Night of Broken Glass) (Doescher 132). According to Doescher, "During and after this spasm of violence and plunder, about 30,000 Jewish men were rounded up and sent to concentration camps, where hundreds would perish in the following months" (132). The events of Kristallnacht provided Nazi leaders with the reassurances they needed that even more drastic anti-Semitic efforts would be supported by mainstream German society (Doescher 133). In this regard, Doescher points out that, "[Kristallnacht] clearly showed the Nazi regime that it could count on the wide support of the general population, both young...
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