The US considered them to be inferior, along with eastern and southern Europeans, there were tighter quotas on these people than others because they believed in the theories of eugenics that said that they were lesser people.
It killed an estimated six million Jews. Jewish culture and tradition was, let us face it almost wiped out in Germany. In this horrible sense it was a success. apart from diplomats from Israel, the Jews never came back to Germany.
It's not that the Germans wouldn't let Jews convert, It is that that the Jews couldn't convert. If they did convert, they would still be known as Jews because of their old Jewish records, that the govonment would keep.
The simplest answer is because they did not care. It was not the concern of other countries, most were trying to get rid of their own Jews and many had legislation in place that discriminated against them.
liberation.
Auschwitz was liberated by the American army.
Let out? Do you mean after America liberated the Jews? Jews didn't fight back afterwards in the masses or anything. I'm sure some of them attacked soldiers to try to get revenge, but nothing substantial. l But if you mean during the war, yes. Some tried to fight back at least. But Jews also knew that if they tried to they would be killed imediately.
Because, when Germany wanted to kill all the Jews they could get their hands on, (aka "The Final Solution"), most countries shut their doors and would not let the Jews enter their nation, including the USA which only took about 1000 Jews to Fort Oswego NY. Since the world turned their backs on the Jews in their time of need, and 6 million were murdered, many wanted their old homeland in Israel open to them for the first time in 2000 years since the Romans exiled them from their land.
It killed an estimated six million Jews. Jewish culture and tradition was, let us face it almost wiped out in Germany. In this horrible sense it was a success. apart from diplomats from Israel, the Jews never came back to Germany.
over 100,000 but let's not remind everybody else about that day
NO IT DID NOT! Hitler dominated various parts of Europe and began to spread antisemitism there. Antisemitism is the hatred of Jews and discriminating or persecuting against them in any way to harm them trying to let them know Jews are hated a lot. Hitler's hate speeches gave a rise to hating Jews and became extreme at certain times when pogroms or other events were called out. People still hate Jews today and many other races too.
Hitler believed that the Jews were destroying Germany, taking jobs, (like teaching) and ya. he was crazy. but think about it... if he wanted to eliminate the Jewish Race, he probably wouldn't want them to learn or have jobs.
Only when was the emancipation in Germany- from 1792: a constitution that let them this permition. In 1938, a little bit before the world war two, hitler was canceling it.
It's not that the Germans wouldn't let Jews convert, It is that that the Jews couldn't convert. If they did convert, they would still be known as Jews because of their old Jewish records, that the govonment would keep.
Sweden did to help the Jews is that the Sweden risk their lives.also they let the Jews take them to another country.
The question is puzzling. In the early 1930s Jews accounted for at most 1.4% of the population of Germany. (This figure includes people with only one Jewish grandparent and various other groups who did not regard themselves as Jews in any meaningful sense).The Jews inside and outside Germany had very little power or influence (contrary to what Nazi propaganda claimed).It is worth adding that none of the groups persecuted by the Nazis in Germany challenged his rule directly.
The simplest answer is because they did not care. It was not the concern of other countries, most were trying to get rid of their own Jews and many had legislation in place that discriminated against them.
In 1657 by Cromwell.