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A level edexcel A*37/40 coursework essay for the question- Historians have disagreed about the extent to which the Holocaust was a long-term plan. What is your view about the extent to which the Holocaust was a long-term plan?

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This is an A+ 37/40 coursework essay for Edexcel A Level History that I wrote and submitted for the 2025 Examination series. DO NOT PLAGIARISE THIS. If you do, the exam board will terminate your entry and not reward you an A Level qualification. This can be used for inspiration and to mimic the structure I used. My topic was 'To what extent was the Holocaust a long term plan? I also have my reading log available to buy on my profile

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Historians have disagreed about the extent to which the Holocaust was a

long-term plan. What is your view about the extent to which the Holocaust

was a long-term plan?



Introduction

The Holocaust was one of the most harrowing atrocities of WW2. It’s defined

as the systematic attempt to massacre European Jewry by the Nazis between

1941 and 1945.1 Although the persecution of Jews began in 1933 after Hitler

became Germany's chancellor, a large-scale massacre started during WWII

with the invasion of the USSR by the Nazis in 1941.2 German soldiers

advanced with mobile death squads (Einsatzgruppen), assisted by local

allies.3 In the pretext of security, they massacred more than a million Jewish

residents in their recently annexed areas. These atrocities would later be

merged into a well-organized annihilation program at the start of 1942, with

millions of Jews being sent to death camps or getting worked to death in

various concentration centres. When Nazi Germany eventually collapsed in

1945, it’s estimated that the Nazi killing machine had annihilated about 5-6

million Jews or approximately 60-70% of European Jewry.4 This systematic

massacre of Jews left historians in disagreement concerning whether the

Holocaust was a long-term plan. Since the 1970s, historians have disagreed

1
David Cesarani, Final Solution: The Fate of the Jews, 1933-1949 (St. Martin’s Press, 2016), p. xxx.
2
Daniel Jonah Goldhagen, Hitler’s Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust (New York: Knopf,
1996), p. 148.
3
Ibid.
4
Karl A Schleunes, The Twisted Road to Auschwitz: Nazi Policy toward German Jews, 1933-1939 (Urbana Ill.:
University Of Illinois Press, 1990), p. 4.

, 1


over whether Hitler's goal to exterminate European Jewry was always

premeditated or if the genocide developed gradually due to other factors.

The Holocaust has been interpreted through two main schools of thought:

intentionalists and structuralists. Intentionalists argue that the idea of

exterminating the Jews was premeditated and began after the founding of

the Weimar Republic in 1918, whereas structuralists maintain that the

Holocaust was an unintended “cumulative radicalisation” brought about by

the polycratic regime's chaotic process of decision-making and the

ideological drive to purge Germany of its perceived enemies.5 Structuralists

can be subdivided into two sub-schools: extreme and moderate. Extreme

structuralists opine that the genocide arose from the frustrations that the

Nazis suffered during WWII, while moderate structuralists focus on

gradualism and maintain that the path to Holocaust lacked a clear direction.

The extent to which the Holocaust was a long-term plan can be assessed

through these three key works: "Modern Germany" by Berghahn, “The

Origins of the Final Solution” by Browning, and Farmer’s “Hitler and the

Holocaust.” Berghahn, an intentionalist, argues that the Holocaust was

Hitler’s long-term plan. He writes that when Hitler began his career as the

key opposition figure of the Weimar Republic in 1919, his anti-Semitism was

characterised by pathological hatred and extremism that were bound to deal

a major blow to Jewish life once he could assume power and get access to

the country’s vast executive machinery.6 Berghahn notes that Hitler led the

5
Cesarani, Final Solution, p. xxxi.
6
V R Berghahn, Modern Germany (Cambridge University Press, 1982), p. 132.

, 2


Nazis in blaming the Weimar Republic’s predicament on Jews based on the

conviction that the Germans and the Jews were involved in a race war from

which only one could win. Such philosophy of a life-and-death rivalry, the

result of which was believed to determine humanity's entire future, implied,

at the very least, a generalised physical eradication of the Jewish minority. 7

To Hitler, Jews were dangerous outcasts who deserved to be avoided at all

costs, justifying the use of all "defensive" tactics.8 Browning, an extreme

structuralist, argues that the Nazis opted for the Holocaust after they failed

in their attempt to invade the Soviet Union in 1941.9 According to Browning,

since the start of WWII, the Nazi German troops – the Wehrmacht – enjoyed a

string of military triumphs but these victories came to an abrupt stop in late

October 1941. The Wehrmacht’s advancement came to a halt due to a

combination of factors, including lack of supplies, fatigue of the troops, bad

weather, impassable roads, and strong resistance from the Red Army’s

remnants, which made Moscow’s invasion elusive.10 Although the Soviet

Union was spared, the European Jewry was not. The Nazis directed their

attention to a mass annihilation program that would see the massacre of the

Jews of Europe as part of Hitler’s attempt to claim some form of quick victory

in the war.11 Farmer, a moderate structuralist, differs from Browning but

partly agrees with Berghahn on the short-term nature of the Holocaust.

7
Berghahn, Modern Germany, p. 132.
8
Ibid.
9
Christopher R Browning, The Origins of the Final Solution: The Evolution of Nazi Jewish Policy, September 1939-
March 1942 (Lincoln: University Of Nebraska Press, 2005), p. 427.
10
Ibid.
11
Ibid.

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