couldn't go to movies and other public places, escpecially school. they had to go to a separate school for the Jews. also Jewish shops were closed, and plus just the discrimination from non-Jews toward the Jews. kind of like racism right after slavery ended.
Technically, yes. I only say technically because not all of them were strictly German. Some of them just moved to Germany and then became Nazi.
Some historians attribute the success of the Nazi Party in Germany to Bismark because of the structures that he laid when he was the leader.
the holocaust and world war II
Initially, the main target of Nazi racism was the Jewish people in Germany. So pretty much the very first thing they did regarding it was pass a series of laws, called the Nuremberg Laws, in September 1935. These laws basically did two things- first, made it illegal for Jews and "Aryans" (the Nazi term for non-Jewish "pure" Germans) to marry or have sex, and some other things (like Jews couldn't hire young Aryan women as housemaids); second, stripped Jews of their German citizenship, changing them to "state subjects"- which also stripped them of any legal protections under the German constitution.
No. Some are in private collections.
the aryan laws were followed by the arian people in nazi Germany
Some of the Nazi Party were jewish.
When the Nazis had hold over Germany for a time, many people that migrated were Jewish. The Nazis were trying to eradicate the Jews, and many left as soon as they were able. Some non-Jewish Germans left as well because they did not agree with Nazi rule.
nazi, neo nazi
some of these Nazi people were on trial in Nurenburg, Germany
A Nazi is a member of the political group during WW2, "The Nazi Party" in which was German and led by Adolf Hitler, Dictator of Germany during the war. Note that not all Germans during the time period were Nazi's, for example some German Jews were sent to concentration camps for being Jewish, by Nazi's, even though they were German.
In some cases they did. In others they didn't.
Some were quarter or half Jews or had some vague Jewish link, such as a wife of partly Jewish origin. See the link.
To identify them as Jewish
Technically, yes. I only say technically because not all of them were strictly German. Some of them just moved to Germany and then became Nazi.
Some historians attribute the success of the Nazi Party in Germany to Bismark because of the structures that he laid when he was the leader.
They made small changes first, which eventually grew. Jews had to wear a yellow star of David to identify themselves as Jewish, then they were restricted to curfews, their stores and businesses were trashed and ransacked, and eventually they were forced into ghettos, then into concentration camps.