This question does not make sense. Please reword it.
No. Not all Germans are Jews and not all Jews are German. But there are German Jews, as well as Jews with many other nationalities.
They required them to leave. Jews were banned from many places and eventually deported.
Many German Jews were sent to Auschwitz. Others were slaughtered in Belarus and the killing fields of Latvia.
Of course. Not all Germans believed in the Nazi way. In fact, many of the Jews who were put to death were German themselves.
there were alot of them past
Ultimately the German government required that Jews leave German society. There would be many stages and steps before this happened; first the Jews would have to leave certain jobs, like the civil service, they would be encouraged to emigrate, to leave the country of their own accord and eventually those remaining would be deported.
No. Not all Germans are Jews and not all Jews are German. But there are German Jews, as well as Jews with many other nationalities.
They required them to leave. Jews were banned from many places and eventually deported.
There were many German-Jews who at the time of the WWII, but there wasn't really a "Good" leader who was all that great to the Jews. The Jews were basically cut to nothing by all the Germans.
The Holocaust.
Many German Jews were sent to Auschwitz. Others were slaughtered in Belarus and the killing fields of Latvia.
At the time of Christ, most Jews were involved in farming or mercantile businesses. Many were involved in the Temple ministry. Many of the remaining Jews were slaves.
Of course. Not all Germans believed in the Nazi way. In fact, many of the Jews who were put to death were German themselves.
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I don't think there is a count for WWI. Remember, WWI was not fought because of persectution of Jews but on the invasion of Belgium.
The Jews had no problem about the Germans, until the Nazis persecuted them and made their lives impossible. In fact, the German Jews and many Jews outside Germany were pro-German till 1933.
For a very long time the native language of German Jews has been German. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union (1991) a significant number Jews from the former Soviet Union (perhaps as many as 150,000) have settled in Germany. The second generation generally speaks German, the first generation a range of languages, which often includes Russian and Yiddish.