Jews were victimized in Nazi Germany - if that's what you're referring to - mainly because Hitler used them as a scapegoat for Germany's problems.
1) He claimed that there had been lots of Jews in government when the Treaty of Versailles was signed. (The government at that time were known as the 'November criminals' because the Treaty was signed in November).
2) It was easy to blame unemployment and economic problems on the Jews because the Jews often had well-paid jobs such as Accountants or money-lenders, and were stereotyped as being tight-fisted.
Hitler played on these to create a hatred of the Jews.
The Einsatzgruppen were set up in order to kill Jews.
Adolf Hitler believed Germans, being inherently superior human beings, were threatened to their very existence by the inherently inferior Jews. The threat to the Sub-humans was so great that the only option was to exterminate them as though they were vermin.
Hitler and the Nazis most likely victimised the Jews because he thought the blonde-haired blue-eyed people and the Germans were the ultimate races. Hitler thought the Jews were nothing, less than people. He made it look like the concentration camps were fun, not evil.
They felt victimised.
The Tutsis mainly, but some Hutus were also victimised and killed.
No
i will tell them to change my attidude. or if they won't allow me i'll stay along, whatever they want to do. because important for me is i'm still alive.
I find that by crying and hitting myself repeatedly i convey to my friends that i am not really as confident as people think i am
The verb of victim is victimise.Other verbs are victimises, victimising and victimised. These verbs depend on the tense of your writing or speech.
jews jews jews jews jews jews jews jew jews jews jews jews jews jews jews jews jews jews jews jews ejws
Some words which could describe the feelings of a victim are: victimised powerless suffering unsupported oppressed bullied wounded inferior weak
Jews, Jews, Jews.