Children in the Holocaust
During the Holocaust the Nazis saw Jewish children as the next Jewish generation so they didn’t care how old were them, they just killed them. They separated children according to their age. There were 3 groups the first one was from infants and toddlers up to age 6, the second one was young children ages 7 to 12 and the third one was adolescents from 13 to 18 years old. Their respective changes for survival and their ability to perform physical labor varied enormously by age.
The destiny of Jewish
children was also categorized in the following way: 1) children killed when
they arrived in killing centers; 2) children killed immediately after birth or
in institutions; 3) children born in ghettos and camps who survived because
prisoners hid them; 4) children, usually over age 12, who were used as laborers
and as subjects of medical experiments; and 5) those children killed during
reprisal operations or so-called anti-partisan operations.
The killing of disabled children
marked the beginning of the euthanasia program and continued throughout the
war. Although it is impossible to calculate the number of children killed in
these special children's wards during World War II. They also invented a
program to kill every German child that was born with a disease, deformation or
even a physical problem. Because they said that they were the next generation
of the Nazi regime so if they were born with some defect they wouldn’t be able
to continue with the regime.
But in the other hand we have the Jewish children that lived
in the ghettos, Jewish children died from starvation and contact as well as
privation of acceptable clothing and shelter. The German authorities were
indifferent to this figure death because they considered most of the younger
ghetto children to be unproductive and later “useless eaters.” Because children
were generally too young to be installed at forced labor, German authorities
generally selected them, along with the elderly, ill, and disabled, for the
first expulsions to killing centers, or as the first victims led to mass graves
to be shot.
A few Jewish children survived by
hiding and participating in the underground partisan resistance, as runners,
messengers, and smugglers, but because nobody ever talked about that there is
nothing to that secures it completely.
Germans were really cruel with
children as we already talk they killed them for many reasons, and in many
ways. They not only killed Jewish kids they also killed German kids because of
their diseases. I think in that time Germans became really cruel specially with
kids in the case of Jewish kids I think that they shouldn’t have killed them
because they were the next Jewish generation they could just told them that
they need to forget about their religion and start behaving like a German. And
in the case of Germans kids I think that is completely ridiculous to kill them
just because they thought that if they had any disease or difficulties they
couldn’t continue with the regime because they could help them with the doctors
that worked for the Nazis.