Jews were at sent to labor work at places called ghettos, they built tanks and weapons for support of the German War Machine. Getting more towards the end the Nazis began to systematically kill all of the in-slaved Jews through gun shot, of which showed to be much to expensive at which point the gas chambers were developed. The Nazis would place vast amounts Jewish prisoners in these to kill all of them in a relatively cheap way. Going back in the ghettos the Nazis would starve the Jews for days, they would get very small portions and it would have to feed their whole family since only laborers were given food and children were not accepted as actual workers, women would make clothing for soldiers and men would support the war machine for weapons and vehicle. Families would be split apart, most of the families never reunited. So basically Jews were starved, worked to the bone, killed systematical, and finally freed by the U.S.A military.
There were no significant regional variations within Germany, so the answer is that the Jews in Saxony suffered in the same way as Jews throughout Germany.
Poorly.
People out in the sun
I believe that the Nazi regime inhumanely rounded up Jews and put them in certain areas within the Jews own neighborhoods then erected barriers to keep the Jews from leave those areas.
During World War 2 the Nazi regime governed Germany under the Third Reich and Adolph Hitler.
The Nazi regime referred to it as the Final Solution of the Jewish Question. See related questions below.
They were exterminated by the Nazi regime.
Poorly.
people who are being prosecuted for their beliefs by other people who do not agree with them, a classic example of that happened during the Second world war, where Jews were being rounded up and exterminated by the Nazi Regime of Germany.
people who are being prosecuted for their beliefs by other people who do not agree with them, a classic example of that happened during the Second world war, where Jews were being rounded up and exterminated by the Nazi Regime of Germany.
People out in the sun
In April 1933 the Nazi regime dismissed most Jews and people of Jewish origin from public sector jobs in Germany - in other words, well before the start of the Holocaust. It was the very first Nazi measure against the Jews.
Virtually exterminated
I believe that the Nazi regime inhumanely rounded up Jews and put them in certain areas within the Jews own neighborhoods then erected barriers to keep the Jews from leave those areas.
they were relocated.
During World War 2 the Nazi regime governed Germany under the Third Reich and Adolph Hitler.
Not at all - they lived in a state of constant fear.
During the years 1939 - 1945, there was an effort by Nazi Germany to kill all the Jews of Europe; six million Jews were killed, although a small number of European Jews did manage to survive.