If you mean the communities that they conquered or took over during the war, the reaction was mixed. There was a lot of fear, but after the battles, the resistance was often low, since people didn't want to be harmed under the new regime. Some people resisted secretly, and some people openly welcomed them and agreed with their policies.
on the rare occasions that the Nazis went into the ghettos they had very little stopping them from doing whatever they wanted.
to keep track of where they was at
basically as soon as the Germans occupied a country, they would put the Jews into ghettos.
because they were one of the main causes of the Holocast. With the ghettos being so over crowded, the Nazis had to create their 'Final Solution'.
they killed them or sent them to ghettos and concentration camps
The theme of the Nazis trying to create a society free of Jews.
Nazis guarded the gates of the ghettos.
When the land that they were living on was claimed by force by the Nazis. Then, the Nazis built ghettos and Death Camps for the Jews.
to keep track of where they was at
The support that the Nazis gave to the ghettos was quickly withdrawn and the ghettos were forced to become profitable.
that would require an essay, but yes they established ghettos, when there were too many ghettos and too many people the Nazis started liquidating them.
they were most likely killed ___ They were given insufficent food and usually no medication in the ghettos. Most of the ghettos were also hopelessly overcrowded and disease spread easily. Moreover, from December 1941 on the inhabitants of the ghettos were taken to extermination camps and killed there.
In practice, that is exactly what the ghettos set up by the Nazis were.
basically as soon as the Germans occupied a country, they would put the Jews into ghettos.
The simple answer is no.
They killed six million Jews, after having thrown them out of their jobs and herding them into ghettos and concentration camps.
They were the first step before they started sending Jewish people off to concentration camps and they also removed them from the outside world, which is what the Nazis wanted.
The Ghettos were an attempt to separate the Jewish people so that transportation to concentration camps would be easier once those camps were available to process the killing of the Jewish people,