Please have a look at the three related questions below.
Those people that opposed Adolf Hitler & the Nazis were threatened (by the Nazis) with beatings, torture, false accusations, loss of all property, death, prison, etc.
There's plenty of guilt to go around for that, but if you have to bring it down to one person most responsible for carrying it out, it would be Heinrich Himmler.
No, he never did, though he did pose in front of it during a Paris victory tour when France was taken by the Nazis.
Under Hitler's rule, the Nazi regime enacted several laws to promote the concept of a "pure race" or Aryan supremacy. The Nuremberg Laws of 1935, for instance, stripped German Jews of their citizenship, prohibited marriage or sexual relations between Jews and non-Jews, and enforced racial segregation. These discriminatory laws laid the foundation for the persecution and eventually the genocide of millions during the Holocaust.
Soviet unio
Because they were scared of Hitler and the Nazi party
The world did not go against the German Nazis because the other countries did not want to get involved in the dispute and have another bloody world war.
Because genocide is wrong.
Those people that opposed Adolf Hitler & the Nazis were threatened (by the Nazis) with beatings, torture, false accusations, loss of all property, death, prison, etc.
a sneaky jew worked for hitler and that jew was ripped and his name was connor smith
There's plenty of guilt to go around for that, but if you have to bring it down to one person most responsible for carrying it out, it would be Heinrich Himmler.
No, he never did, though he did pose in front of it during a Paris victory tour when France was taken by the Nazis.
Genocide happened in World War II primarily due to the extreme ideologies of the Nazi regime in Germany, led by Adolf Hitler. The Holocaust, the most well-known genocide of the war, was fueled by antisemitism and the desire to create a racially "pure" society. Additionally, other genocides, such as the targeting of other ethnic groups by the Axis powers, were driven by the belief in racial superiority and the desire for territorial expansion.
Yes, The NAZIS did fight in Africa and were called the Africa korps. This division was led by commander Erwin Rommel, who later tried to assasinate Adolf Hitler but he failed and was executed. The Nazis fought mainly the British in Northern Africa by the countries of Egypt, Morocco, Algeria, And Libya.
The Van Daan family went into hiding in Amsterdam in 1942 during World War II. They joined the Frank family in the Secret Annex to escape persecution by the Nazis.
The underlying supposition of this question is that murder somehow undergoes a transformation and becomes genocide. This is counter to the definitions of both murder and genocide. Murder is the willful taking of human life. Genocide is the intentional eradication of a people, typically by murdering them. Since the Nazis intended to eradicate the Jews from the get-go, and instituted policies to conform with that agenda they were committing genocide from the onset. The idea of murdering the Jews was only a part of that genocide which also included massive deportations, enslavement, and ghettoization.Answer:At first, in events like Kristallnacht, the Nazis killed relatively small numbers of Jews. They were somewhat wary of world opinion. When they saw that the world didn't say very much on the subject, and did even less, they increased the numbers of their victims until it became millions.
The underlying supposition of this question is that murder somehow undergoes a transformation and becomes genocide. This is counter to the definitions of both murder and genocide. Murder is the willful taking of human life. Genocide is the intentional eradication of a people, typically by murdering them. Since the Nazis intended to eradicate the Jews from the get-go, and instituted policies to conform with that agenda they were committing genocide from the onset. The idea of murdering the Jews was only a part of that genocide which also included massive deportations, enslavement, and ghettoization.Answer:At first, in events like Kristallnacht, the Nazis killed relatively small numbers of Jews. They were somewhat wary of world opinion. When they saw that the world didn't say very much on the subject, and did even less, they increased the numbers of their victims until it became millions.