In some places for brief spells, perhaps. However, certainly not everywhere throughout the entire Holocaust.
With respect, this is a very puzzling question. It implies that the period before the Holocaust was some kind of 'age of innocence', which was certainly not the case.
The Holocaust was not widely taught in schools till after 1980 and it was certainly not taught in the immediate postwar period. From the end of World War 2 till the late 1960s the Holocaust was something of a non-subject apart from media reports on Holocaust trials.
He was certainly Fuehrer at that time. Hitler came to power in 1933 and remained until defeat in may 1945.
if you are looking for people to blame, then he has to take a large share. Though Hitler may have provided the environment and the atmosphere within which the Holocaust might have been able to happen, it would not have been possible to carry it out and certainly not on such a large scale without Himmler.
Daniel was protected in a way that the Jews of the Holocaust were not, but certainly individual people will have taken comfort from different parts of the scriptures.
He certainly did, since he personally approved their construction, and received regular reports on the operations there. At least 4 of the individuals in charge of the genocidal operations were personally awarded medals by Hitler during the war.
He certainly didn't give it to Holocaust or current victims of genocide. I don't believe. It is second hand information passed on and on until the story is no longer valid. I am a Christian.
The holocaust refers to the extermination of Jews. Christians certainly died at the hands of the Nazis, but there is no category I could place this in. Perhaps, people the Nazis wanted dead for various reasons.
The people known as the Roma (they prefer that word over the derogatory "Gypsy") suffered between 500,000 and 600.000 deaths at the hands of the Nazis in World War II. Most of those were at Auschwitz._________________They most certainly do not prefer to be called 'Roma'. The Roma were one tribe particular to southern Germany (and the region) there were a dozen other tribes that were almost completely eliminated it is insulting to pretend that they did not exist.
Yes, the bystanders were (almost certainly) the majority. They were the people who knew or saw what was happening but did nothing: they were neither victims nor perpetrators. It has become fashionable to regard the bystanders as morally even worse than the killers.
Nazi Germany was a totalitarian dictatorship. 'Challenging each other intellectually' was rarely practical. The Holocaust was the kind of topic that generally could only be whispered about furtively; it certainly wasn't a subject that could be discussed openly. Moreover, many Germans knew very little, if anything, about it. It wasn't something that was reported in the media or talked about much by politicians.