History of the Holocaust
17 September 2013
Sociological Causes of Genocide It is hard to consider people who neglect to act in the face of extreme cruelty, especially those who witnessed the events of the Holocaust without intervening, as average humans. However, recent sociological experiments have revealed that most people will witness an emergency without intervening due to altruistic inertia or pluralistic ignorance. In the case of genocide, dehumanization is crucial to the ability of ordinary people to commit or observe unspeakable acts of violence against another. Genocides such as the Holocaust occur due to the nature of most people to be bystanders and the ability of the perpetrators to depict their victims as subhuman. …show more content…
Altruistic inertia occurs when a group of people recognize the signs of trouble without taking action. “When study participants thought there were other witnesses to the emergency, they felt less personal responsibility to intervene” (Keltner 2). In this situation, everyone assumes someone else will help, and personal responsibility is thereby lessened. This was exemplified in Germany during the Holocaust. Millions of people witnessed the crimes committed against the Jews, yet individual and collective action against the Nazis was limited by altruistic inertia. People felt safer and less responsible by assuming others were taking action. Pluralistic ignorance is known as the human tendency to react to an emergency in the same manner as others nearby, and this also contributes to the diffusion of personal responsibility. “There are strong social norms that reinforce …show more content…
German children were taught that they were superior to the Jews through school textbooks. “Hitler’s ‘final solution’ of genocide of all European Jews began by shaping the beliefs of children through the reading of assigned texts in which Jews are portrayed in a series of increasingly negative scenarios” (Zimbardo 1). This created a perception of Jews as an inferior, dirty race that plagued Germany. This image translated into the idea that the murder of the Jews was good for Germany, and morally inconsequential because the Jewish people were unfit to live. By introducing these ideals at a young age, the Nazis were able to cultivate a group of people with virtually no empathy for the Jews. The Nazis also utilized propaganda to portray the Jews as dangerous public enemies. “With public fear notched up and enemy threat imminent, reasonable people act irrationally, independent people act in mindless conformity, and peaceful people act as warriors” (Zimbardo 3). The citizens of Germany were subjected to images of the Jews as “the enemy” on posters, magazines, newspapers, and television. This altered the German citizens’ perception of Jews, and created public fear and hatred. The Jews were depicted as a threat to German ideals, and thereby justified their destruction. Dehumanization through school textbooks and propaganda can instill apathy in humans,