A Genocide is the systematic killing of an entire people. The Nazi's used it against the Jews in concentration camps; they killed the entire race of Jews almost, using gas chambers, etc.
the Nazis used propaganda to persuade people to support them/join their army against all Jews, gypsies, homo-sexuals, and the mentally and physically challenged people.
As soon as they were elected in, the Nazis started their anti-Jewish measures.
'There was large scale genocide of the Jews living in Europe during WW2'
Ordinary citizens were already prejudice against Jews, this is why the Nazis persecuted them, had people been prejudice against people who wore glasses, then the Nazis would have campained on that front. What the Nazis did was use that prejudice and build on it. They did this as part of a gradual progress; they first took away the Jews' right to work, then thier citizenship, then their right to own property. So eventually the Jews were poor, unable to earn money or feed themselves, destitute and a burden on society. So when the Nazis suggested deporting the Jews, ordinary people welcomed it.
1.Nazis used leaflets ,and catchy slogans etc to propagate NazismJ 2.Orthodox Jews were stereotyped and marked. 3.Films were made to create hatred for Jews .They were referred to as pests etc....................................
The final solution
Systematic, large-scale killings began in 1941. By that stage the Nazis simply took it for granted that the Jews were enemies of Germany, Communists, very dangerous and evil. They did not 'make excuses' or go in for explanations - after all, the genocide was top secret'. They simply did it. Please see the related question.
Hitler gave it to his soldiers in chocolate so they would be aggravated and be able to stay awake for a long time
The Nazis 'sent the Jews away' in order to use some of them as slave labour and to kill them.
The term the Holocaust (with an upper-case H) was created to refer specifically to the attempt by the Nazis, in 1941-45 to kill all the Jews that they could find. It replaced the Nazis' own term, which was 'the Final Solution of the Jewish Question'. Every event (or series of events) in history is unique.However, if you are asking whether the term also includes other victims of Nazi genocide and other Nazi atrocities there is a problem as there are two definitions in use. Professional historians generally use the term specifically for the Nazi genocide of the Jews, but in popular usage, especially in the US, the term is often used for all victims of Nazi mass murder.If you are asking whether any other people has been subjected to genocide, the answer is yes.For many Jews the Holocaust has become an important 'badge' of Jewish identity: the Jews have become the 'people of the Holocaust'.
In order to use them as slave labour and/or to kill them.
The "final" solution.