The Holocaust is the name commonly applied since the mid
1970s to the killing of six million
Jews by
Nazi Germany during
World War II. The term is also used more broadly to include all the victims of Nazi genocide and persecution between 1933 and 1945: political dissidents, Soviet POWs, the disabled, the
Roma,
Jehovah's Witnesses, and gay men.
A number of other terms are also used to describe the genocide.
"Holocaust"
The word ''holocaust'' originally derived from the
Greek word ''
holokauston'', meaning "a completely (''holos'') burnt (''kaustos'') sacrificial offering", or "a burnt sacrifice offered to a god". In Greek and Roman
pagan rites, gods of the earth and
underworld received dark animals, which were offered by night and burnt in full. The word Holocaust was later used to refer to a sacrifice Jews were required to make by the
Torah.
Since the mid-
19th century, the word has been used by many authors to refer to large catastrophes and massacres, particularly those caused by
immolation. According to the
OED, the earliest attested such usage dates from 1671, but it became common in the 19th century. In 1833 a historian writing about the medieval French monarch
Louis VII, wrote that he "once made a holocaust of thirteen hundred persons in a church". This refers to his invasion of
Vitry-le-François in 1142 during which the 1,300 inhabitants of the town were burnt alive in the church.
The term was widely used to refer to massacres of Armenians in Turkey, particularly during
World War I. The
Armenian Genocide was called ''The Holocaust'' (1920) and ''The Smyrna Holocaust'' (1923).
[1] In 1929
Winston Churchill referred to "helpless Armenians, men, women, and children together, whole districts blotted out in one administrative holocaust" (''The World Crisis'').
[2]
Even before the Second World War, the possibility of war was referred to as "another holocaust" (that is a repeat of the
First World War). In the years following the war, writers in English tended to use the term in relation to events such as the fire-bombing of
Dresden or
Hiroshima, rather than the Nazi genocide. The term was also regularly used to refer to the destructive consequences of nuclear war.
By the late 1950s, documents translated from Hebrew used the word "Holocaust" to translate "Shoah", and the scholars began to use the word with this meaning--usually with some qualification, such as "The Nazi Holocaust". It was not until the late 1970s that the Nazi genocide became the conventional meaning of the word, when used unqualified, and with a capital letter. The 1978 television miniseries titled "
Holocaust" and starring
Meryl Streep is often cited as the principal contributor to the current usage.
The term became increasingly widespread as a synonym for "
genocide" in the last decades of the
20th century to refer to mass murders in the form "X holocaust" (e.g. "Rwandan holocaust"). Examples are
Rwanda, the
Ukraine under
Stalin, and the actions of the
Khmer Rouge in
Cambodia.
In order to suggest comparson with Nazi murders other historical events have also been labelled "Holocausts", for example the oppression of lower caste groups in India ("
Sudra Holocaust") or the slave trade ("
African Holocaust"). Such usages are often heavily disputed. Even more contested is the use of the word in the older sense of "immolation" to refer to Allied WW2 bombings, since this is sometimes adopted to imply equivalence between the Allied and the Nazi war record.
[3]
"Final Solution"
Main articles: Final solution
The 'Final Solution to the Jewish Problem' was the Nazis' own term, coined by Adolf Eichmann as a
euphemism. Before the word Holocaust became normative this phrase was also used by writers in English. For example in
William Shirer's ''The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich'' the genocide is described as ''The Final Solution'' in quotation marks (the word ''Holocaust'' is not mentioned).
[4] Whereas the term Holocaust is now often used to include all casualties of the Nazi death camps and murder squads, the "Final Solution" refers exclusively to the genocide of Jews.
''"Shoah"''
The biblical word '''Shoah''' (שואה), also spelled '''Shoa''' and '''Sho'ah''', meaning "calamity" in
Hebrew (and also used to refer to "destruction" since the
Middle Ages), became the standard Hebrew term for the Holocaust as early as the early
1940s. '''Churban Europa''', meaning "European Destruction" in Hebrew (as opposed to simply 'Churban', the destruction of the
Second Temple), is also used.
The Hebrew word ''Shoah'' is preferred by some
Jews and non-Jews due to the supposed
theologically unacceptable nature of the word ''holocaust'' whose original
Greek meaning indicates a sacrifice to a god.
"Porajmos"
The '
Porajmos' (also 'Porrajmos') literally ''Devouring'', or 'Samudaripen' (''Mass killing'') is a term coined by the
Roma people to describe attempts by the Nazis to exterminate most of the Roma peoples of
Europe. The phenomenon has been little studied.
Notes
1. Petrie J., ''The secular word Holocaust: scholarly myths, history, and 20th century meanings'', Journal of Genocide Research, Volume 2, Number 1, 1 March 2000 , pp. 31-63(33)
2. Churchill, W, ''The World Crisis'', vol. 5: Aftermath," New York, 1929, p.157.
3. Telegraph report
4. Shirer, W., ''The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich'' New York: 1960, Simon and Schuster, pp. 963-979
External links
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"The Secular Word 'HOLOCAUST'"