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Chapter

A Formula for Genocide:Comparison of the Turkish Genocide (1915) and the German Holocaust (1939–1945)

Chapter

A Formula for Genocide:Comparison of the Turkish Genocide (1915) and the German Holocaust (1939–1945)

DOI link for A Formula for Genocide:Comparison of the Turkish Genocide (1915) and the German Holocaust (1939–1945)

A Formula for Genocide:Comparison of the Turkish Genocide (1915) and the German Holocaust (1939–1945) book

A Formula for Genocide:Comparison of the Turkish Genocide (1915) and the German Holocaust (1939–1945)

DOI link for A Formula for Genocide:Comparison of the Turkish Genocide (1915) and the German Holocaust (1939–1945)

A Formula for Genocide:Comparison of the Turkish Genocide (1915) and the German Holocaust (1939–1945) book

ByHelen Fein
BookGenocide and Human Rights

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Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2007
Imprint Routledge
Pages 24
eBook ISBN 9781351157568

ABSTRACT

This chapter explores the German extension of genocide to the Gypsies, restricting discussion of the Holocaust to German Jews and Gypsies, relating their murder to the selective extermination of the "unfit" in Germany in 1939. German Ambassador Count Wolf-Metternich arrived in Constantinople in December 1915, seeking a statement which would disassociate Germany from Turkish crimes in order to repudiate allegations abroad that Germany had instigated them. The extermination of the Jews, the Gypsies, and Armenians was instigated by ideological imperatives stemming from the "political formulas" adopted by the ruling elites of Germany and the Ottoman Empire to legitimate their domination. The majority of Armenians in 1914 inhabited western Asia, divided between Persia and the Russian and Ottoman Empires. The plan to transform the German people into a race of pure blood, first intent on selective population increase by encouraging eugenic breeding, was radically expanded at the start of World War II.

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