During Adolf Hitler's rule in Nazi Germany, anti-Semitism was implemented in its most grotesque form. The Nazis, unrelenting in their belief, used anti-Semitism to carry out the Endlösung, or the Final Solution. Through the persecution and later extermination of European Jews, the Nazis hoped to solve the long-debated "Jewish problem" once and for all.
Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, more than 6 million Jews were murdered.
While much of Nazi Germany was devoted to the concept of anti-Semitism, there were equally as many who were revolted and appalled by these ideals.
We cannot change the past, but we can certainly repeat it. This is equal parts a work of fiction and a work of false hope. It is based in history, but also in modernity; in both past and present affairs.