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terrible
Yes, the killing of the Jews happened towards the end of his life.
before the Hungarian action in the summer of 1944 life was relatively normal.
Before the ghetto I imagine it was neutral.
No. Second Life requires that all users be at least 16 years of age before they can join Second Life.
great
Before the Holocaust, Jews faced persecution in much of the world, just not as bad as the Nazi persecution. Persecution was intense in Russia (both under the Tzars and the Communists). In Western Europe and the United States, Jews enjoyed relatively civil treatment, with many of the rights of citizenship, although there was still considerable legal discrimination against Jews even in the United States. Jews in Arab lands had second-class citizenship, although sometimes this allowed a comfortable existence comparable to that of European Jews. 200 years before the Holocaust, the Spanish Inquisition was still actively persecuting crypto-Jews, sometimes burning them at the stake, and Jews had no secure rights of citizenship in any country.
Well, it depends. For a while, all of the Jewish people had their rights stripped away for a few years before they started being murdered. (Well, a few years before they started to be exterminated). But before Hitler started his power campaign, life for the Jews was the same as everyone else's. Happy or sad.
Eh, you could say Second Life. I've tried Second Life before but it seemed to bore me. But that's my opinion.
The Pueblo were able to continue practicing some of their traditional ways of life after the revolt because they were no longer under Spanish control.
Most people became polytheisticAnswer:The above answer is mistaken. Idolatry had completely died out among the Israelites centuries before the Second Destruction of 66-68 CE. Rather, the result of the ill-advised rebellion was that the Romans destroyed the Second Temple, razed Jerusalem, and made life even harsher for the Jews.
The Pueblo were able to continue practicing some of their traditional ways of life after the revolt because they were no longer under Spanish control.