The Jewish religion doesn't change; but times do. Sometimes it's easier to practice Judaism and sometimes it's trying. During the Holocaust the Nazis tried what many other before (and since) tried; to eradicate Judaism. An impossible task, though it made life harder for Jews, they still kept to their religion. The Jewish religion doesn't change; but times do. Sometimes it's easier to practice Judaism and sometimes it's trying. During the holocaust the Nazis tried what many other before (and since) tried; to eradicate Judaism. An impossible task, though it made life harder for Jews, they still kept to their religion.
The Holocaust was about race, not religion.
The main victims of the Holocaust were people of the Jewish religion. There were other victims, but the Natzis were mainly focused on the Jewish religion when the Holocaust began.
People of the Jewish faith died in the Holocaust. But the religion did not perish.
Thy were laws of what the Jews couldn't do during the holocaust such as practice religion, go to school && things like that.
No, and the Holocaust was about killing the people, not about killing the faith.
Judaism. A Jew is a follower of Judaism. Jewish is NOT a race.
Jewish people have been determined based on the religion that they practice. This was an unfortunate thing for Jews during the holocaust.
centres for practicing it were closed down. The practitioners of it were diminished.
The Holocaust was about race, not religion. However, religion was used as an indicator of race, so anyone with a Jewish grandparent was regarded as a Jew. The Nazis established three 'degree' of 'Jewishness':Three of four Jewish grandparents - 'full Jew'Two Jewish grandparents - 'half Jew'One Jewish grandparent - 'quarter Jew'So, regardless of your religion, if you had three or four Jewish grandparents, you were in big trouble in Nazi Germany.
They became jewish
Jewish kids died in the holocaust because they were Jewish. They were treated like their parents and deprived of food, used as forced labor, or simply killed.
Dismal, hopeless and short.