History, asked by somapal746, 10 months ago

describe in detail Hitler's treatment of the Jews​

Answers

Answered by utu4sungh
8

Answer:

Explanation:

The took Jews to gas chamber where they were executed. There films and Jews insulting them German and could not talk to each other Jew teacher were fired out of the schools

Answered by BrainlyRaaz
38

Hitler's treatment of the Jews

Explanation :

Once in power, the Nazis quickly began to implement their dream of creating an exclusive racial community of pure Germans by physically eliminating all those who were seen as "undesirables. These included mentally or physically unfit Germans, gypsies, Blacks, Russians, and Poles.

But Jews remained the worst sufferers in Nazi Germany. They were stereotyped as "Killers of Christ and Usurers."

Until Medieval times, Jews were barred from owning land. They survived mainly through trade and money lending. They lived in separately marked areas called 'ghettos'. They were often persecuted through periodic organised violence and expulsion from land. All this had a precursor on the traditional Christian hostility towards Jews for being the killers of Christ. However, Hitler's hatred for Jews was based on pseudo-scientific theories of race, which held that conversion was no solution to the Jewish problem. It could be solved only through their total elimination.

From 1933-1938, the Nazis terrorised, pauperised and segregated the Jews, compelling them to leave the country. The next phase from 1939-1945 aimed at concentrating them in certain areas and eventually killing them in gas chambers in Poland.

Under the shadow of war, the Nazis proceeded to realise their murderous, racial ideal. Genocide and war become two sides of the same coin.

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