The only German-occupied country to resist deportation of the Jews was Denmark. There was also some resistance in the Netherlands and Belgium. Some of Germany's allies refused to hand over their Jewish populations, in particulcar: * Bulgaria * Finland * Italy (before it was under German occupation).
1933
They were called Nazis.
Initially Denmark was able to carry on as they always had even though the Nazis occupied their country. Eventually the government and the general populous caught on to the brutality and deviousness of the Nazis. The Underground Resistance in Denmark were a group of phenomenal people who sabotaged the Nazis in many ways.
Yes, Germany was occupied by the Nazis in World War II, and so were Denmark, Norway, Finland, Poland, and Germany.+++The Nazis did not "invade" Germany: they were German, albeit coming to power in underhand ways and ruling their own country as a dictatorship.
No. Most came from a German nationality. But there were some Germans who resisted against the Nazi regime. Not all Germans supported Hitler and the Nazis (even half of the German soldiers fighting in the war). Not all Nazis were Germans. Some could've been other European nationalities.
Britain
Concentration camps, mostly in Poland.
1942
After the 1st year of WWII.
Partisans.
they moved the people by box cars.
In the context of World War 2 resistance groups resisted the Nazis.
Those that resisted from within the 'Third Reich' were killed, if they could be found. Very few that resisted survived.
it turned many nations who would have aided the Nazis into nations who resisted them.
Lise was Danish, not Jewish. If the Nazis thought Ellen was Lise, then they would not deport her.
Because at that time the Nazis wanted the Dutch people to become Nazis but they resisted there selves and I do not know of Aruba
Anne Frank was smart, she resisted the Nazis, and refused to give up.