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because they were full of people who did not support Nazi ideals.

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Q: Why did the Ghetto's cause problems for the Nazis?
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Related questions

What type of security was there in Ghettos?

Nazis guarded the gates of the ghettos.


When did the Jews in Poland get sent into Ghettos?

When the land that they were living on was claimed by force by the Nazis. Then, the Nazis built ghettos and Death Camps for the Jews.


How were ghettos used by the Nazis?

to keep track of where they was at


Why did Hitler support the ghettos of the Holocaust?

The support that the Nazis gave to the ghettos was quickly withdrawn and the ghettos were forced to become profitable.


Were ghettos just waiting areas for concentration camps and death?

In practice, that is exactly what the ghettos set up by the Nazis were.


When did the Nazis put the Jews in ghettos?

basically as soon as the Germans occupied a country, they would put the Jews into ghettos.


Did the Nazis first use the zip codes in ghettos?

The simple answer is no.


Why were ghettos significant?

because they were one of the main causes of the Holocast. With the ghettos being so over crowded, the Nazis had to create their 'Final Solution'.


What did the Nazis initially do with the Jews?

They limited them and put rules on them, and later moved them to ghettos.


How did the Jews challenge the Nazis in the ghettos?

They Started getting education among themselves.


After WWII started how did the Nazis deal with the Jewish Problem Discuss Ghettoes and camps and describe conditions.?

that would require an essay, but yes they established ghettos, when there were too many ghettos and too many people the Nazis started liquidating them.


What happened to the people in the ghettos?

they were most likely killed ___ They were given insufficent food and usually no medication in the ghettos. Most of the ghettos were also hopelessly overcrowded and disease spread easily. Moreover, from December 1941 on the inhabitants of the ghettos were taken to extermination camps and killed there.