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Yes german jews they were treated with a little more respect but not a lot
there were thousands of them and more who ordered the executions.
Several laws that, as they conquered more land, came into effect to strip Jews of all of their rights.
There were more than half a million (religious) Jews in Germany in the years between 1919-1930 or about 0.75% of the whole German population. (Even if you add the non-religious Jews, half-Jews and quarter Jews the total is not more than about 800,000). 80% of German Jews were well educated and urban based. Some had achieved prominence in politics, the press, business, banking and in universities.
because he want to give their jobs to German people and create more jobs for German.
Zimmerman is a German name meaning Carpenter.Like many Germanic names, it is used by both Jewish and non-Jewish families, but is much more common among non-Jews.
Official reasons given included: * Only 'genuine Germans' should work for the German government at any level, and the Nazis claimed that Jews could not be Germans (regardless of citizenship, language, etc). (In fact, collectively, German Jews had a reputation for leaning over backwards to be 'more German than the Germans'). * The claim that Jews are subversives, Communists and so on.
more than one person perpetrated the killings.
Answer It was Poland on account that there were more jews there.
No, the Germans treated Jews as non-human.
German mililtary victories led to more Jews being under their control, which led to the 'Jewish problem' which needed a solution.
ThThese laws were passed on September 15, 1935 until 1938. The first was called The Reich Citizenship Law, which declared that Jews were no longer citizens in Germany. The second law was called The Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor, which did not allow inter-marriage between Jews and 'Aryans.' Their main purpose was to allow for the legalized mistreatment of Jews on a systematically racial basis. Now the Jews themselves could be treated unequally because the laws assured that they were not citizens, so they had no authority. This was part of Hitler's strategy to implement the Final Solution. As the Jews gradually became more isolated, the violence against them increased more and more, until this destruction became known as the Holocaust.