Answer: Although the entire German population was not in agreement with Hitler's persecution of the Jews, there is no evidence of any large scale protest regarding their treatment. There were Germans who defied the April 1, 1933 boycott and purposely bought in Jewish stores, and there were those who aided Jews to escape and to hide, but their number was very small. Even some of those who opposed Hitler were in agreement with his anti-Jewish policies. Among the clergy, Dompropst Bernhard Lichtenberg of Berlin publicly prayed for the Jews daily and was, therefore, sent to a concentration camp by the Nazis. Other priests were deported for their failure to cooperate with Nazi antisemitic policies, but the majority of the clergy complied with the directives against German Jewry and did not openly protest.
Hitler!
prohibiting marrige between jews and non- jews
Because they were scared of Hitler and the Nazi party
Persecution of the Jews had happened before - though without the Nazis' ideoloical baggage, but genocide of the Jews was new. The thoroughness and fanaticism of it were also new.
Hitler treated jews badly
Hitler's persecution of the Jews led to the murder of millions of innocent people.
The first thing Hitler's economic persecution of German Jews involved was the restriction of what industries they could work in. This escalated to restricting where Jews could live, and then again to taking their belongings and transporting them to work and death camps.
Answer this question…Mussolini did not make persecution of Jews a key part of his ideology.
Hitler believed that people of the Jewish faith were dangerous to his rule. His persecution of the them was widespread and devastating.
It is a term used to describe the persecution of the Jews during the era of the Third Reich and Adolf Hitler.
During the Jewish persecution Hitler was in power. and he was incharge of every thing that was happing to the Jews.
No, the Nazi persecution had started in 1933 and intensified rapidly from 1935 on.