The S.A. was the Nazi party's secret police. They went out and assassinated MANY political opponents of the Nazis up until 1934, when Hitler felt that they were getting too powerful and led a miniature civil war of sorts against them to squash them.
Who were the Nazis?
Nazi is a short term for the National Socialist German Workers Party, a right-wing political party formed in 1919 primarily by unemployed German veterans of World War 1. Adolf Hitler became head of the party in 1921, and under his leadership the party eventually became a powerful political force in German elections by the early 1930's. The Nazi party ideology was largely based on nationalism and racism. They promoted Germany as superior to all other nations and promised to restore it to greatness, while championing a scientific theory of racism, in which the Aryan (German) people were racially superior to all others. In 1933, Hitler assumed power in Germany and he ended German democracy and severely restricted basic rights, such as freedom of speech, press, and assembly. He established a brutal Dictatorship through a reign of terror.
Who did the Nazis define as Jews?
Immediately following the Nuremberg Laws in 1935, the Nazis issued the official definition of a Jew. According to German law, anyone with three Jewish grandparents was a Jew, as was anyone with two Jewish grandparents. In addition, anyone married to a Jewish person or who had one Jewish parent was also considered a Jew in the eyes of the law.
How did Hitler take over Europe?
How did a naturally lazy, friendless, minimally educated homeless man take over Europe? And how did such an advanced society allow itself to be seduced and then destroyed by its own capacity for senseless barbarity? The Germans in the thirties were seduced by the glittering success of Hitler in creating jobs, generating a vibrant economy and restoring Germany's military might. William Shirer, who was on the scene in Germany during these critical years, candidly sums up the mood of the country at this juncture: "Not many Germans lost sleep over the arrests of a few thousand pastors and priests or over the quarreling of the various Protestant sects .." It was this apathy and moral indifference in Germany that empowered Hitler and fueled his military juggernaut that was poised to roll inexorably over Europe.
The Nazi party was one of the reasons why Germany was so successful. The Nazis reduced employment, built the Volkswagen, invented the first automatic rifle, invented the jet plane, and invented the rotary engine. So the Nazi party was very important.
The Nazis were the political power that ruled Germany before and durind World War II. Their political beliefs were radical and racist. Their techniques to rise to power were borderline brilliant and they almost conquered the world.
Their belief in the supreme race and their desire to rid the world of what they thought of as inferiors ultimately contributed to their demise.
The Natiz Party is important because it was the people that helped Hitler kill all of the defenseless and innocent people.
No, the Nazis did not have schools in the US.No, the Nazis did not have schools in the US.
The Nazis Strike was created in 1943.
No country in the Americas was occupied by the Nazis.
Yes French Nazis existed. Where ever the Nazis took power, more of their kind sprouted up.
Nazis transported the Jews by train mostly.
Paris France
noah killed all the Nazis
To a significant extent, yes.
The Nazis did not exist during World War 1. The Nazi party was formed in 1920 and rose to power in Germany in the 1930s. They played a significant role in World War II, not World War I.
The most significant events were the day their leaders surrendured to the Nazis, the days the Nazis moved in. The the worst days were when they were bombed which led to the days the Allied Forces and the French people defeated the Nazis. The best days were the celebrations of the victory over the Germans.
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'.
The Nuremberg trials were significant because Nuremberg was the city in Germany where the Nuremberg Laws were created, which deprived Jews of German citizenship. The trials were held in Nuremberg because it was almost like a punishment for the Nazis.
They were called Nazis.
Violence played a significant role in the Nazis' rise to power. They used acts of street violence and intimidation, such as the infamous SA paramilitary group, to suppress opposition and create an atmosphere of fear. This violence helped the Nazis to gain power, as it weakened their opponents and allowed them to consolidate their control.
It's both!
they were moved by the Nazis, not from the Nazis, the Nazis were in Poland. Most long distance travel was made by train.
The Nazis trained them.