While the millions of victims who perished during the Holocaust were overwhelmingly Jewish and at the forefront of Adolf Hitler‘s psycho-driven efforts to “purify” Europe, and eventually, the world of non-white peoples, Black people were also casualties of the Holocaust, according to the United State Holocaust Memorial Museum.
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While the museum states that there was no systematic program for the elimination of Blacks as there was for Jews and other groups, people of African descent were certainly not safe during the Holocaust period.
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During the war, Black Americans and Europeans captured by the Nazis were interned in concentrations camps. Bayume Mohamed Hussein of Tanzania died in the Sachsenhausen camp, near Berlin and Lionel Romney, an American sailor with the U.S. Merchant Marine, was imprisoned in the Mauthausen concentration camp. There were many more:
Black prisoners of war faced illegal incarceration and mistreatment at the hands of the Nazis, who did not uphold the regulations imposed by the Geneva Convention (international agreement on the conduct of war and the treatment of wounded and captured soldiers). Lieutenant Darwin Nichols, an African American pilot, was incarcerated in a Gestapo prison in Butzbach. Black soldiers of the American, French, and British armies were worked to death on construction projects or died as a result of mistreatment in concentration or prisoner-of-war camps. Others were never even incarcerated, but were instead immediately killed by the SS or Gestapo.
Even before WWII, the Nazis treated its native black citizenry (Children whose mothers were usually German and fathers were of African descent) with pure inhumanity:
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