Want this question answered?
She was both, but in 1933 the Nazi régime came to power in Germany and started to make life extremely difficult for its own Jewish population.
It is estimated that in January 1933, just before the Nazis came to power, Germany had about 494,000 Jews (calculated using Jewish definitions). The Nazis used a wider definition, which would give a higher figure - possibly 800,000 out of a total population of a little over 62 million in Germany.
Around 18 million worldwide.
Because it was under German control and they were Jewish
children were treated different if they were jewish
There was about half a million Jews in Germany in 1933, this represented less than 1% of the population.
In Germany most Jewish students were expelled from universities in April 1933. In 1938 all Jews were expelled from the German universities.
I'm searching for the same answer. I know it was not a large percentage. I could not believe it could have been because I would like to think people 60 years ago had a brain and a heart. Alien45g: about 10.391198% of the Germans were part of the nazi party in 1939(:
The Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service (Gesetz zur Wiederherstellung des Berufsbeamtentums) passed in April 1933 in Germany, allowed for the removal of Jewish teachers from schools and universities. It was one of the initial steps taken by the Nazi regime to exclude Jews from public life and institutions.
The Jewish Boycott Was On April 1st 1933
1933
The process of depriving German Jews of their rights started in April 1933. A hailstorm of anti-Jewish decrees followed, in all about 430 between 1933 and 1943. For example, in late 1933 most Jewish students were expelled from the German universities. It sounds from your question as if they are thinking of specifically of the Nuremberg Laws of September 1935.