At the iron gates of Auschwitz-Birkenau, one of the most infamous extermination camps of Nazi Germany, the chilling phrase “Arbeit macht frei” (“Work sets you free”) still casts a haunting shadow. These deceptive words led into one of history’s darkest chapters.
Among those victims were 6 million Jewish men, women, and children, murdered in the genocide we now call the Holocaust. Millions more were persecuted, including:
Roma and Sinti people (ethnic groups often called “Romani”)
People with disabilities
LGBTQ+ individuals
Political dissidents
Anyone who resisted Nazi rule
This leaves us with a haunting question: How do hatred and propaganda become so powerful that mass murder becomes normalized?
This is the central question students confront in HIST6336: Third Reich and Holocaust, an online course offered by The University of Texas Permian Basin’s online Master of Arts in History program.
What Led to the Nazi’s Rise to Power?
In 1918, Germany founded the Weimar Republic, an attempt at democracy that faced serious challenges. On June 28, 1919, European officials signed the Treaty of Versailles, which demanded massive reparations from Germany for its role in World War I. The treaty:
Forced the struggling nation to lose much of its territory
Restricted the German military
Crippled the German economy
After the treaty, hyperinflation took hold in the Weimar Republic. A loaf of bread costing 250 marks in January of 1923 cost about 200 billion marks by November of that year. Widespread homelessness, poverty, and crushing unemployment devastated the nation, and these conditions created a breeding ground for extremism.
When Propaganda Overpowers Reason
The Nazi Party’s rise didn’t happen overnight. In 1933, Hitler became chancellor of a coalition government where Nazis were first a minority. However, the Nazis—led by Hitler’s fiery oration—used intimidation, violence, and emergency decrees to seize total power.
Their message was carefully crafted through propaganda, manipulation, and a calculated exploitation of human fear. Jews and other minority groups were blamed as scapegoats, tapping into centuries-old prejudices already present across Europe, and fueling division.
Propaganda boiled down to a dangerous message: “You suffer because of them.”
Meanwhile, Nazi leaders promoted their supposed achievements: job creation, investments in infrastructure and arts, sports and youth programs. They also promoted the myth of German superiority and dehumanized anyone who didn’t fit their narrow definition of “German.”
The Reichstag Fire: The Final Collapse of Democracy
In February 1933, a fire at the German parliament building (the Reichstag) gave Hitler the excuse he needed. He convinced Weimar Republic’s president, Paul von Hindenburg, to invoke emergency powers and later passed the Enabling Act, which gave him absolute control.
Soon after:
Opposition parties were banned
Independent newspapers were shut down
Books were burned in public
Teachers were fired or silenced
Artists and intellectuals were imprisoned
Neighbors and friends turned against each other. Families vanished. The SS (Hitler’s protection squads) and Gestapo (secret police) built a frightening surveillance state, while the SA (Stormtroopers) terrorized opponents.
Extermination Camps: The Machinery of Death
Auschwitz-Birkenau. Sobibor. Dachau. Treblinka.
From 1933 to 1945, concentration and extermination camps spread across much of Nazi-occupied Europe: sites of mass murder, starvation, torture, and medical experiments.
Trains arrived daily. Families who had traveled without food, water, or bathrooms for days were forced out of the wagons and separated into “showers”—gas chambers that ended their lives. One survivor recalled arriving at Auschwitz: cold air biting her skin, the deafening silence broken by barking dogs and shouting guards. Her family was torn apart in seconds. Her mother’s last words urged her to stay strong—words she honored as the family’s sole survivor.
Despite this darkness, countless people refused to be silenced. People sparked camp uprisings like those at Treblinka, created hiding places, organized resistance groups, and kept diaries. Survivors lived to tell the truth. These acts remind us that when faced with unimaginable evil, the human spirit can endure.
Why This History Still Matters
After the horrors of World War II came the Cold War, and with it, the rise of the Berlin Wall—a 96-mile-long concrete barrier that stood until 1989. It was a reminder of how the destruction of Nazi Germany continued to shape decades of international relations, tension and human struggle.
As time goes on, fewer survivors remain, but their voices urge us to listen. History calls us not only to remember, but to act: to speak up, to ask tough questions, and to refuse to look away.
What We’ve Learned
The Third Reich used propaganda, fear, and legal manipulation to destroy democracy.
Over 6 million Jews and millions of others were murdered in the Holocaust.
Ordinary people and institutions became complicit.
Understanding this history helps us recognize early warning signs and fight hatred today.
Learning From the Past, Protecting the Future
Third Reich and Holocaust, an online course offered by UT Permian Basin,is a deep dive into this period in history and its lasting impact. Students explore topics like:
How modernization, democracy, and dictatorship met in Nazi Germany
How institutions like railroads and bureaucracies—and even everyday citizens—enabled mass murder
How propaganda and surveillance controlled daily life, youth culture, and even private life
Most importantly, the course asks timeless questions:
What makes dehumanization possible?
How do propaganda, political systems, and personal choices intersect?
What warning signs from that era do we still see today?
Join the Journey: Understanding History at UTPB
UTPB’s fully online Master of Arts in History is more than a study of the past. It’s a call to engage with it. This program challenges you to confront difficult truths, explore the forces that have shaped our world, and discover your voice as a thoughtful future leader.
By understanding history, we gain the tools to build a future rooted in compassion, justice, and critical thinking. As Holocaust survivor Otto Frank once said, “To build up a future, you have to know the past.”
Ready to deepen your understanding and make a difference? Your next chapter starts here. Start your journey at UTPB today.
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