📚 Basic Holocaust Study Guide: Comprehensive Edition 🌍

Because I have come into contact with so many researchers who seem to lack essential Holocaust/ Shoah details/ information, I thought a quick set of pointers/ links might prove helpful to our readership in establishing a basic context.

Be advised, this page is NOT intended to provide a comprehensive study resource for the Holocaust/Shoah. This is but a beginning for those who want to establish and begin building an understanding. Sadly, and unbelievably, this is not the only Genocide perpetrated during WW2, nor have Genocides disappeared since WW2.

Should you wish to contribute additional content & ideas to this page, please use our contact page to let us know. We are happy to hear from you.

Key Definitions


Targeted Groups: Beyond the Primary Victims

While the Jewish people were the primary target for systematic, total annihilation, millions of others were persecuted and killed based on Nazi racial, ideological, and behavioral criteria.

Non-Jewish Victims & Estimated Murdered

Group Estimated Number Murdered Basis for Persecution
Soviet Prisoners of War Around 3.3 million Deemed racially and ideologically inferior (Slavic Untermenschen), subject to starvation and brutal treatment.
Non-Jewish (Ethnic) Poles Around 1.8 million Targeted as "racially inferior" Slavs, particularly the intellectual, religious, and political elite.
People with Disabilities 250,000–300,000 Murdered as part of the Aktion T4 program to "purify" the Aryan race of "life unworthy of life."
Roma (Gypsies) At least 250,000, possibly up to 500,000 Targeted for total annihilation on racial grounds (Porajmos).
Serb Civilians More than 310,000 Killed in mass atrocities, often by Axis-allied groups like the Ustaša, with Nazi support.
Homosexual Men Hundreds, possibly thousands Persecuted under anti-homosexuality laws (Paragraph 175) and imprisoned in concentration camps.
Jehovah's Witnesses About 1,700 Targeted for their religious refusal to swear allegiance to Hitler or serve in the military.

The Persecution of Black People in Nazi Germany

While there was no central, systematic program for total murder akin to the "Final Solution" for the Jews, Black people living in Germany and German-occupied territories faced severe persecution:


The International Response & Allied Action

The response of Allied and neutral governments to the persecution and mass murder of Jews and other victims is a critical and complex area of study, often framed by a prioritization of winning the war over specific rescue efforts.


Sources and Further Reading

The following online resources were used to compile and enhance this study guide.

I. Targeted Groups: Diversity, Equity, and Persecution

II. The International Response & Allied Action

III. General & Foundational Resources


Credits and Licensing

Compiled by Mark Rabideau, Opa & Professional Genealogist.

All materials licensed: CC BY-ND 4.0 by eirenicon llc.