not easy to find out as Judaism was illegal in the Soviet Union.
Certainly. There are surely some settings in which illegal behaviour would be considered morally commendable. It may have been illegal to harbour Jews from the Nazis (I am not sure - this is just an example), yet to do so was certainly morally justifiable.
Yes it is, and always has been, illegal to murder Jewish People. It was the main reason for the outbreak of World War 2; Hitler ordered the Nazis to kill Jews left and right (about 12,000,000 died).
They were called Nazis.
Generally so yes. The obvious reason for this is that death camps mean killing people and murder is illegal in most of the word. Some governments may use them but not no way near compare to the extend the Nazis went to.
It's both!
they were moved by the Nazis, not from the Nazis, the Nazis were in Poland. Most long distance travel was made by train.
Peter brings the illegal newspaper to the Johansens because he trusts them and knows that they are involved in the resistance against the Nazis. He believes they will know how to handle the information in the newspaper and use it to further the cause against the occupation.
It violated the Treaty of Versailles. Arguments could be made that it was legal or illegal, with the former being that Germany was still a sovereign state in spite of the treaty.
The Nazis trained them.
Hitler wasn't keen on the Catholic church as he believed that anyone who was loyal to the pope couldn't be loyal to him. That said, many senior officers and Nazis were at least nominal Catholics and there is no evidence that anyone was killed JUST for being a Catholic. The main resistance movement in Austria was the Catholic Resistance, and members were shot, but it was because of their resistance rather than their faith.
No, the Nazis did not have schools in the US.No, the Nazis did not have schools in the US.