they did not have enough money probably so they did not move
a lot. People are unlikely to answer this question as Germany and other countries have not yet revealed how many have died in Germany so you, nor any other person who wants to find this out, will be able to find out how many Jews have died at the Nazi Germany time.
From 1933 onwards the Nazis made life so difficult for the German Jews (and also for foreign Jews living in Germany) that most of those who could leave did so. In August 1941 the Nazis forbade Jews to leave Germany. Conditions became increasingly bad for the Jews and in the end those still in Germany and German-occupied territory was murdered in the Holocaust.
* The Great Depression * Antisemitism
He had to blame Germany's decline on someone, so he blamed the Jews.
Germany was in a hard economic crisis. Hitler was the solution. Hitler blamed the Jews for owning all bussinesses and not keeping money in Germany.
The United States did not get the Jews out of Germany, so they spent no money on that.
Jews were forced by the Nazis in Germany and occupied Europe to wear a yellow star of David so that they can be instantly reconised as Jews.
Because of the Holocaust. So they could be safe.
Because in Germany and many other nations across the world before the final solution was enabled they had hatred for the Jews. B/C of their fortune, and mostly because they were jealous
Because Germany wanted someone to blame for the unfairness of WWI so he chose Jews because where he used to live he lived in poverty whilst the Jews were rich factory owners so he hated Jews.
Because things are bad in Germany and Europe and he thought that the Jews were responsible. (So did most of Europe, not just Germany) He said that true Germans are Aaryans and the pure race. He did not want the Jews to muddy up the pure blood.
Anti-Semetism has existed for centuries, but in many countries they were accepted or at least tolerated. Nazi Germany used the Jews as scapegoats and blamed all of their postwar economic problems on them. The Nuremberg Laws of 1935 stripped Jews of German Citizenship and basic rights. It led to their isolation and extermination.