Even after World War II, social exclusion and discrimination against Jews was still set forth
Yes. Foreigners were able to visit Germany without much difficulty till the start of World 2 and many commented on the persecution of the Jews. What's more, large numbers of German Jews fled to the U.S., Britain and other countries from 1933 on. (Many who applied to enter were not allowed in). When the Holocaust started the Allies were informed by the Polish Resistance and others.
Before the Holocaust, Jews faced persecution in much of the world, just not as bad as the Nazi persecution. Persecution was intense in Russia (both under the Tzars and the Communists). In Western Europe and the United States, Jews enjoyed relatively civil treatment, with many of the rights of citizenship, although there was still considerable legal discrimination against Jews even in the United States. Jews in Arab lands had second-class citizenship, although sometimes this allowed a comfortable existence comparable to that of European Jews. 200 years before the Holocaust, the Spanish Inquisition was still actively persecuting crypto-Jews, sometimes burning them at the stake, and Jews had no secure rights of citizenship in any country.
It was not so much a crucifixion of the Jews as a persecution. The Jews were persecuted by the Egyptians because they refused to accept the pagan religion that was being forced upon them. The Jews believed that God would protect them from whatever persecution they would suffer, and God delivered. He sent people like Moses to lead the Jews to the Promised Land. After Moses set God's people free, the rest is history!
The Japanese were completely bewildered by antisemitism. At that time it was very much a feature of European and related cultures.
There are several reasons Jews were targeted. Jews, as a whole, were more prosperous than many Germans, so greed and jealously were also tied in with the persecution. Hitler and the Nazis also saw the Jews as an inferior race and much of National Socialism hinged on racial stratification. Finally,Hitler believed the Jews, particularly the Zionist Jews, had sold out Germany at the end of World War I. As a former World War I German soldier, this belief caused him to develop an unnatural hatred for the entire race of Jewish people.
No, there are much worse things.
You don't specify a time frame. If you are talking about the Nazi genocide of the Jews the word is the Holocaust.Answer:The persecution of the Jews was (and is) the phenomenon of Jewish people being harassed, threatened, assaulted and killed, on and off over the last two thousand years, for being Jewish. This includes the Holocaust, the Inquisition, the Expulsions from Spain, Portugal, England, France and elsewhere, plus pogroms, blood libels, Crusades, and much more.
"The world" had very little to do with the decision. It was made by the Jews themselves, and much of "the world" has been trying to undo their decision for the past 64 years.
Tbh even Hitlers former political Nazi friends were put in the camp if they betrayed or dis-obeyed orders, but others that were his rivals were also put in the camps so that Hitler could continue what he was doing, and that was getting rid of all the Jews, taking over Europe, and finally the entire world at one point.
Isn't there persecution everywhere? Actually, press freedom is much more curtailed in Tunisia.
Hitler was one of the most rabid Anti-Semites in the history of the World. He did not only not like Jews, he not only hated Jews, he virulently despised and repudiated Jews.
Percentage of Christians in ChinaCurrently thought to be 7.25%, but may be much higher. People in China are often "underground." That means they must hide from the government or be subject to persecution, imprisonment, or worse.