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Canada & ww ii

Canada & ww ii. THE DEPRESSION & WORLD POLITICS The depression caused social & economic instability around the world. Dictators & invasions seemed to be the answer for many. GERMANY Hated Treaty of Versailles War Guilt Clause , $32 billion in reparations , printed $, inflation.

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Canada & ww ii

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  1. Canada & ww ii

  2. THE DEPRESSION & WORLD POLITICSThe depression caused social & economic instability around the world.Dictators & invasions seemed to be the answer for many. • GERMANY • Hated Treaty of Versailles • War Guilt Clause, $32 billion in reparations, printed $, inflation. -The west tried to make payments easier. • Germany still could not meet payments. • ASIA • Japan hit hard by tariffs. • Keynesian economics – gov’t $ to help. • Invade China for much needed resources. • RUSSIA • 1917 = Bolshevik Revolution => U.S.S.R. • Appeared to work during depression • => people questioned capitalism. • Stalin = dictator • policies = millions of deaths. U.S. gave Germany money & later lowered payments but recalled these loans when depression hit. SLIDE FROM CH. 4

  3. THE RISE OF TOTALITARIANISMTOTALITARIANISM – DICTATATORSHIPS THAT USE INTIMIDATION, VIOLENCE, & PRPOAGANDA TO RULE ITS CITIZENS. Rd. p 120 Rise of Totalitarianism SPAIN • A brutal depression led to Spanish Civil War. • Franco = help from Mussolini & Hitler. • Despite Canadian help Franco = violent controlling fascist dictator. - Francisco Franco STALIN’S SOVIET UNION • 1917 = Communism (Lenin)/ 1924 = Stalin • 5 Yr. Plans – Industrialize the USSR • 1stCollectivization agr. => 2ndIndustrialize. • Censorship, secret police, Great Purge, Gulags Millions would die from “Man of Steel” MUSSOLINI’S ITALY (Il Duce) • Fascism - authoritarian gov’t / . • Supported by middle class. • Blackshirts intimidated for the National Fascist Party. • Anti-communist but used Soviet model as an example. • Censorship, Ind., Agr., & labour all under his control. **Invaded Ethiopia in 1935. GERMANY (Fuhrer Hitler / 1933) • WW I = democratic Weimar Republic => lost trust of the people . • Nazis to power in 1921 (National Socialist German’s Worker Party) • Censorship, fear, SS / Gestapo, defied Treaty Of Versailles(Reparations / Increased Military), Autobahn, Improved Economy/Jobs. • Master ‘Aryan’ Race – Nuremberg Laws, Kristallnact, Final Solution, Holocaust (more to come ) Stalin / ‘Mr. Paranoia’ “Messier” “Brad Marchand” JAPAN • Depression allowed military & large corporations to take control. • Run like a Fascist state but controlled by Emperor. • Power through seizing resources – Asia. ** Invaded Manchuria (1931) “Hulk Hogan” “Lance Armstrong” Emperor Hirohito “George St. Pierre”

  4. GROUP WORK In your groups make your own analogy pairings (similar to Truant’s sports analogies). Be prepared to explain your analogies to the class. Ideas – Movie stars, Cars, Entertainers, Canuck players, Teachers (be nice!!!), Politicians, Fast food outlets, Stores, etc.

  5. CAUSES OF WW II TREATY OF VERSAILLES • Too harsh???? / Loans called in. APPEASEMENT • -Germany Advances: Rhineland=> annexed Austria => Sudetenland (Germans in Czech) => “Peace In Our Time” => Czech. NAZI-SOVIET NON-AGGRESSION PACT • Hitler wanted Poland / Russia would see it as a threat • Deal => Hitler take Poland give half to Soviets (Russia) • Germany took Poland & Brt. & Fr. declare war. FAILURE OF THE LEAGUE OF NATIONS • No army to back it up. (Depression/No USA) • Japan invades Manchuria (China). • Resources needed • League condemned ;Japan left League. • Italy invades Abyssinia (Ethiopia) • Angry that Italy received no land after WW I . • League boycott does not include oil . • => Hoped Italy would join against Germany.

  6. APPEASEMENT (“A..piece..ment”) HITLER TO POWER – 1933 Economy up, Charisma, Hope. MANDATORY CONSCRIPTION / RE-ARMAMENT- 1935 Jobs, Power, “A great Germany” SAAR VOTE – 1935 Voted to join Germany – Economy / Hope RHINELAND – 1936 To be demilitarized zone. Bluff => Retreat if challenged NAZI-SOVIET NON- AGGRESSION PACT. Invade Poland split Territory. ANSCHLUSS / AUSTRIA 1938 Treaty forbade / Hitler feared loss & invaded with no resistance. CZECHOSLOVAKIA / MUNICH – 1939 Hitler takes rest of Czech. Loses all credibility. SUDETENLAND – 1938 Reunite Ethnic Germans – Benes to challenge Chamberlain “Peace In Our Time” Hitler – “No more territorial demands”

  7. CANADA DECLARES WARUP TO 1939 CANADA PRACTICED ISOLATIONISM AN AUTONOMOUS CANADA In WW I if Britain was at war, Canada was at war. Now Canada was an autonomous country. BRITISH COMMONWEALTH AIR TRAINING PLAN (BCATP) - King hoped to avoid conscription by showing our support through supplies & training. • BCATP created to train pilots. PARLIAMENT VOTES FOR WAR - Parliament encouraged Canadians to support the war effort. • King promised ‘no conscription’. • Remember WW I???? • Sept 10, 1939, Canada declared war. TOTAL WAR – all resources put towards war effort. • Howe put in charge of Dept. of Munitions & Supplies. • produce everything from wheat & beef, to planes & tanks. MOBILIZING CANADA’S RESOURCES • No cheering crowds like WW I • 58 000 volunteers. • Canada = small unprepared armed forces. • Aboriginals still = highest % CANADA’S WW II “isms” Canada/USA – Isolationism Anti-Semitism C.D. Howe (“Min. of Everything”)

  8. Ardennes Forest Surprise Attack AXIS ADVANCES ALLIES Britain France Commonwealth - Canada - New Zealand - Australia WW II : THE START “Phony War” -7 months of nothing. April 1940 Gemany launched “Blitzkreig” - first Denmark & Norway. - Netherlands, Luxembourg, & Belgium. - French troops pushed to shores of the English Channel (Port of Dunkirk) AXIS Germany Italy Japan 1941 ***USA ***USSR GERMAN BLITZKREIG Surprise/Speed/Strength (‘Lightning War’) Luftwaffe sent to cut communication Parachute behind the enemy Tanks rolled thru front lines. EVACUATION AT DUNKIRK • Allied troops surrounded. • ‘Anything that floats’sent to rescue => ‘A Miracle’ • Morale was boosted even though great losses. Soldiers followed to clean up afterwards

  9. AXIS ADVANCES (cont.) BATTLE OF BRITAIN – ‘Operation Sea Lion’ • “The Blitz” Hitler bombed RAF, industry, harbours, miliray, & London. • Blitz failed due to radar, Spitfire, & Hurricane. • Was Hitler closer than he thought???? ‘Blitz’ caused high civilian losses. RAF Spitfire OPERATION BARBAROSSA – ‘Red Beard’ • Hitler broke Non-Aggression Pact. • wanted Soviet agr., resources, oil, & labour. • Early success => ill-equipped for winter. • Troops spread thin in Africa. NORTH-AFRICA CAMPAIGN – ‘Desert War’ • A war of: resources (oil in Mid East) • Strategic locations (Suez Canal / St. of Gibraltor) • Italian failures forced Germany to spread army thin. Pearl Harbor WAR IN THE PACIFIC • Japan knew USA threatened oil, rubber, & tin in Asia. • Pearl Harbor (Dec.7, 1941 )=>USA became involved. • Battle of Hong Kong / Black Christmas – Dec 25, 1941,Hong Kong fell to Japan. • Every Canadian killed or POW / Harsh treatment = anti-Japanese. • Carried over to internment camps. - would later face war crimes War in the Pacific

  10. CANADA’S CONTRIBUTIONS • BATTLE OF THE ATLANTIC (RCN) • Allies reliant on Canadian & US goods & transportation. • Wolf packs / U-boats became an issue. • Early = adv. Germany / Later adv. Allies (more ships/convoys/corvettes & cracked Naval code) • WAR IN THE AIR (RCAF) • Bomber Command =>controversial bombing of German cities. Corvettes protected convoys. German u-boats targeted British supplies. Convoys were set up To protect supply lines From the ‘wolf packs’ Britain bombed German cites in retaliation of the ‘Blitz’. Industry, military, & German morale were targeted but civilian losses caused heated debate.

  11. THE TIDE TURNS THE DIEPPE RAID – Aug. 1942 • USSR in the East lost close to a million men. - Stalin demanded the allies attack from west. • Allied forces attempted to land at Dieppe. • ‘Disaster at Dieppe’ – 2nd Canadian Division to lead. • Failure – Germ. convoy alerted => no surprise • Pre-dawn delayed => broad daylight. • tanks stuck on beach. • poor communication. • Disaster or Learning experience????? THE ITALIAN CAMPAIGN - Failure at Dieppe led Churchill to the “Soft Underbelly” • Not Soft – 6 000 Canadians died in Italy. • Battle of Sicily – Victory led to Mussolini’s downfall. • Mussolini was overthrown & new government surrendered. • Battle of Ortona – Canadians pushed Germans north and Joined troops in France.

  12. D-DAY: THE NORMANDY INVASION OPERATION OVERLORD– June 6, 1944. • Five beaches – Sword, Juno (Canadians), Gold, Omaha, & Utah • Reasons for success: paratroopers, weather, secrecy (dummy camps), After Juno, Canadians marched through Dieppe, Belgium, & the Netherlands.

  13. VICTORY VICTORY IN EUROPE • Allies push from the west; USSR pushed from the east. • Germany surrendered May 7, 1945. • Hitler committed suicide. • May 8 declared Victory in Europe (VE) Day JAPAN SURRENDERS • Fighting in the Pacific continued after VE Day. • Japan = “Fight to the last person” despite fire-bombings. • Truman and the Manhattan Project / Atomic Bomb. • Canada supplied the uranium. • Enola Gay => Hiroshima / Three days later = Nagasaki • Japan surrendered Aug. 14, 1945.

  14. THE HOLOCAUST As the troops closed in on Germany, the truth about the Jewish people became known. Buchenwald Concentration Camp “The Ovens” Families split, transported, stripped, hair cut, deloused, killed or sent tolabour camps. Hitler’s anti-Semitic views were well know by the 1930s. The Nazi government adopted “The Final Solution”/ Genocide By the end of thr war the Nazis killed 6 million Jews & another 5 million “undesirables” Goering at Nuremberg Trials The Nuremberg Trials put Nazi leaders on trial for atrocities committed during the war. It was the first time ever this had happened Gruesome discoveries as the allies move in. Nazi medical experiments

  15. SWASTIKA Originally derived from words “”su” & “asti” Translation = “it is well” / “well-being” German dentist brought Hitler the first rendition & it was adopted As official on Sept.15th, 1935. Hindus & Buddhists = Good fortune / success Swastika Ontario. Founded in 1908 1920 Europe = Good Luck Found on: - Art - Poker Chips - Children’s Books - Board Games Should they have changed the name? Prior to Nazi Germany the Greeks, Native Americans, Africans, and even ancient Troy had used the symbol. Flying the Swastika in Germany today is a serious crime

  16. THE WAR AT HOME Rosie the Riveter” – Nickname for women workers. Canada USA • THE CONSCRIPTION CRISIS • At start of war King promised no conscription. • By 1940 we needed more men. • ‘Not necessarily conscription, but conscription if necessary.’ • National Resources Mobilization Act. (NRMA) • Allowed gov’t emergency powers (conscription) • Plebiscite – Canada voted yes. • Quebec did not. • In reality only 2500 made it to the front. Ronnie the Bren Gun Girl WOMEN & THE WAR EFFORT They were in demand as factory workers Even daycares provided. CANADA’S WARTIME ECONOMY • People were working & had $$$. • King feared inflation & encouraged: - Victory Bonds - Increased Income tax, - Wartime Prices & Trade Board (Controlled prices, tried to limit labor/union activity) - Rationing WPTB The very popular American campaign.

  17. JAPANESE CANADIANSENEMY ALIENS By the 1940s, over 23 000 Japanese lived in Canada. David Suzuki stayed in an internment camp at age six while his father was sent to a labour camp. Japanese fish boats tied up at the mouth of the Fraser R. All were shipped to concentration camps in the interior. One of the many interior camps The government gave in to public pressure and removed the threat of spies. Many had never set foot in Japan. Prime Minister Brian Mulroney signing the Japanese Canadian Redress Agreement in 1988. ($21 000)

  18. WHAT THE WAR MEANT TO CANADA ECONOMIC GROWTH - Due to war almost every sector of the Canadian economy boomed. (Aluminum, wood, paper, mining, smelting, petroleum, production, transportation, processing, services) - Canada transformed from a rural economy to a modern industrial nation. - Manufacturing out did agriculture. SOCIETAL CHANGES • War increased prestige of women • War brides (48 000 came back to Canada) • Unions build power with shortage of laborers WAS IT WORTH IT??? BUILDING AN IDENTITY • By the end of WW II Canada was • a major player in global conflict. - One of the world’s top navies, 4th largest allied air force,

  19. WW II QUOTES ALBERT EINSTEIN – “I don’t know what weapons will be used in WW III, but in WW IV, people will use sticks and stones” (1879-1955). WINSTON CHURCHILL – “ An appeaser is one who feeds a crocodile hoping it will eat him last”. WINSTON CHURCHILL – “A prisoner of war is a man who tries to kill you and fails, and then asks you not to kill them”.

  20. WW II ESSAY How did WWII affect Canada: A. socially, economically, and politically? Introduction • _______________ - _______________ - _______________ - _______________ - _______________ • Socially • _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • Economically • _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • Politcally • _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ B. Canadian Military? • Army • _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • Navy • _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • Air Force • _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ • - _______________ Conclusion • _______________ - _______________ - _______________ - _______________ - _______________ C. DOMESTICALLY -_____________ INTERNATIONALLY -_______________

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