The Jews had to live in ghettos.
Ghetto currently means slums or area of a city housing low income populations. During World War 2 the German Nazi use of the word Ghetto was a section of a city in which all Jews were required to live in many European cities. A good definition would be "a section predominantly inhabited by Jews" during WW2. Most of the Jews who had been housed in the ghettos did not survive the war because they were either killed or starved to death.
ghetto
Ghettos were where the Jews got sent to and also concentration camps were where Jews were sent to they were crowded and unsanitary
Shanghai was really about the only area in the entire world where Jews would be accepted without possessing a proper visa. Shanghai was a unique city in all of China and indeed in many parts of the world. It was ruled (until 1942 at least) by three separate countries- the Chinese section which would come under the influence of the Japanese until war was declared between Japan and the Axis nations, the British section and the French part. Thus, with such an unusual governance structure, the city was unique. It also had a thriving Jewish section, mostly descending from Spanish Jews who would be outnumbered by Jews from Europe after World War II and Nazi aggression. The Germans tried to persuade the Japanese - their ally - to help them with what they called "The Jewish Question" but due to Jewish intervention as well as a decision by the Japanese themselves, while there were restrictions, Jews in Shanghai were never treated in the Holocaust-like conditions pervasive in Europe.
Ghettos were a small section of a city where Jews were herded into and kept until they were sent to concentration camps.
The Berlin Wall
Berlin Wall
Currently, yes. Since Israel controls the city, Jews from all over the world do not have problems arriving.
It's spelled Krakow, and it is in Poland. What happened to the Jews there during the Holocaust; they were first concentrated into a ghetto in the city. Then they were put in a concentration camp in the city's district of Plaszow, or to Auschwitz-Birkenau.
The "Berlin Wall" .
The duration of The City Without Jews is 1.33 hours.
Jews have grown up in numerous cities around the world. If there is a European, United States, North African, or Middle Eastern city with more than 300,000 people, it is likely that at least a few Jews were raised there at some point in time, if not currently.