Those non-Jewish people risked their lives by hiding Jews or by helping them escape to neutral countries such as Switzerland or Sweden.
They hid them in their house, and covered for them.
They either hid them, gave them false identities, or tried to get them out of Nazi controlled areas.
They smuggled them out of the country, adopted them, gave them their identity papers...
Hide them and or help them escape to escape to another country.
They hid them
Some people were hiding some Jewish people. Some would secretly bring them food and blankets and supplies. Some knew where some were hiding but they didn't tell on them. and like Oscar shindler they had the Jews work for them until the war was over.
people saw rapid growth and power of nation. Germanies industries were booming. But the wars and killing of jews were also there.
they gave world another direction...Germans hate Jews while Italians hate black people
Mussolini created the fachism and Hitler created nazism and they were the two of them were called the fachism killing inoccent people like jews or criminals like mafia.
They hid them
They hid them in there homes, or other safe places. Tried to stand up to Hitler.
Passover is usually only celebrated by Jews
Some people were hiding some Jewish people. Some would secretly bring them food and blankets and supplies. Some knew where some were hiding but they didn't tell on them. and like Oscar shindler they had the Jews work for them until the war was over.
people saw rapid growth and power of nation. Germanies industries were booming. But the wars and killing of jews were also there.
they gave world another direction...Germans hate Jews while Italians hate black people
Mussolini created the fachism and Hitler created nazism and they were the two of them were called the fachism killing inoccent people like jews or criminals like mafia.
* Ghettoization * Being treated as slave labourers * Extermination
Actually, few people expected the horrors which, at the end of the war, became clear that had happened. It was clear that there was persecution against Jews, but the mass exterminations were not generally known until after the Germans were defeated.
They invaded Europe and Africa, tried to kill all the jews, and tried to spread Nazism.
You need to specify whose second generation.
There was no conflict, no war between the Jews and the Germans. If anything, many Jews were inclined to be pro-German. There was a completely unprovoked onslaught by the Nazis against the Jews, mainly because the Nazis regarded Jews as Communists - and Nazism saw the eradication of Communism at its key 'mission'.