Jews were considered second-class citizens at best. Even during times of quiet, they were subject to ostracism from various guilds of craftsmen, extra taxation, and the occasional burning of Jewish texts. In the worst instances, there were massacres, pogroms, and expulsions. See also:
There was no single Christian policy towards Jews in the Middle Ages. In some places Jews were invited into kingdoms and protected, because the kings understood the benefits of having a Jewish population. In others, the Jews were expelled or killed because of bigotry or a desire to discharge debts to them without payment. A lot depended on the understanding and integrity of the monarch.
Hitler's policy towards the Jews was the "Final Solution" which was the total annihilation or genocide of the Jewish race and culture.
it is unclear whether you are asking what a 'policy of genocide' is, or was 'Hitler's policy' one of genocide. otherwise it answers itself: Hitler had a policy of genocide towards European Jews.
Baptists are a specific Christian denomination. Messianic Jews can be adherents of any or no Christian denomination. Note that the consensus among most Jews is that Messianic Jews are actually to be considered as having relinquished Judaism. The primary difference between Baptists and Messianic Jews is that Baptists observe traditional Christian holidays such as Christmas, Easter, and Pentecost whereas Messianic Jews observe Jewish holidays such as Shabbat, Passover, and Rosh Hashanah, but they do so with a bent towards Christian interpretations of those holidays.
The final solution was a fundametal change in Nazi policy towards the Jews. Up until that point the Nazis had either deported Jews or placed them in Ghettos or concentration camps and used them as forced labour. With the final solution the Nazis actively pursued a policy of deliberate murder of Jews on an industrial scale.
No, Jews will not name their children 'Christian'.
No. By and large, Napoleon reacted positively towards Jews and dedicated a sizable part of his domestic policy towards the Emancipation of the Jews (i.e. making them legally equal citizens to Christians). He actually spent so much effort towards emancipation that some Rabbis were afraid that he would lead to Jews leaving Judaism since the discrimination had the effect providing useful external pressure that kept the community together.
Belgium was under German occupation from May 1940 till late 1944 and had a collaborationist government. At that time it was not the sort of country where Jews were safe.
Nazi policy towards the Jews (or at least towards West European Jews) changed in August/September 1941. Until then the Nazis wanted Jews out of Germany and other West European countries under their control. From September 1941 onwards the policy changed to extermination. The first deportations of Jews from Germany to killing fields in Latvia and Belarus began in October 1941. (It is worth noting that the requirement that Jews in Germany and other Nazi occupied countries was introduced in September 1941. In Poland, where Nazi policies towards the Jews became harsher earlier, it had been introduced a year earlier). The idea that the Nazis had always wanted to exterminate the Jews and had some kind of blueprint for the Holocaust already in the 1920s is one of those popular myths and went virtually unchallenged from 1945 till about 1960. Nazi policy became more extreme over time.
jews
They are Jews who believe in Christ as a Messaihe
The outcome of the persecution towards the jews were The Holocaust. The mass murders of 6.8 million Jews