History, asked by resshmi17, 1 year ago

explain why nazi propaganda was effective in stopping jews?

Answers

Answered by ziniyakhan
6
1) Blaming the Jews for Germany's problems , Hitler and his nazis began persecuting them . The Numemberg Laws of 1935 deprived Jews of their German citizenship and banned them from marrying non-jews . Many Jews were forced to live in the ghettos and wear a yellow star to show that they were Jews .
2) In November 1938 , Nazi mobs attacked Jewish property and synagogues all over Germany . Over the following seven years , six million Jews , Gypsies , homosexuals and coloured people were sent to the concentration camps .
3) Anti-semitism relates to the anti-jewish policy of Hitler . The Germans considered it as their duty to annihilate the Jews in the territories conquered by them . The Nazis believed that the Jews had deceived Christ . This view prevailed in the whole Christiandom for many centuries . The European Christians , therefore , considered the Jews as unwanted race .
4) The anti-jew feelings had grown in Hitler's mind while he was in Austria . In Austria , the anti-jews feelings were at their height . The Catholics too supported this view . But it must be noted that by persecuting the Jews , Hitler was in no way serving the Catholic Church . He did not allow the Catholic Church to interfere in the state affairs . He even many Catholic priest killed in the concentration camps .

resshmi17: thank you
ziniyakhan: ur wlcme
Answered by Anonymous
1

Answer:

The Nazis effectively used propaganda to win the support of millions of Germans in a democracy and, later in a dictatorship, to facilitate persecution, war, and ultimately genocide. The stereotypes and images found in Nazi propaganda were not new, but were already familiar to their intended audience.

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