not much, they were the lowest priority on any quarter-master's list
yes, they tried to do as much as possible to follow their religion
Just before the Holocaust that ranged from a small fraction of 1% in Denmark to about 10% in Poland.
not so much.
quarantine is where they put the Jews that were used to do experiments on them. Some couldn't survived because, they were torture too much.
== == Six million Jews During the Holocaust there were many cultures that were focused on. Much of the list is as follows: Jews, Gypsies, Homosexuals,..etc. _____ Note the holocaust was directed against peoples (races), not cultures. Many German Jews, for example, were culturally German. Incidentally, homosexuals do not constitute a culture.
yes, they tried to do as much as possible to follow their religion
Just before the Holocaust that ranged from a small fraction of 1% in Denmark to about 10% in Poland.
not so much.
When the Jews were treated really badly by the Germans, and it was so bad it was called The Holocaust.
not so much.
quarantine is where they put the Jews that were used to do experiments on them. Some couldn't survived because, they were torture too much.
during the Holocaust the Jew's ate any food they could afford which in most cases much due to the high prices.
== == Six million Jews During the Holocaust there were many cultures that were focused on. Much of the list is as follows: Jews, Gypsies, Homosexuals,..etc. _____ Note the holocaust was directed against peoples (races), not cultures. Many German Jews, for example, were culturally German. Incidentally, homosexuals do not constitute a culture.
yes, they did, not so much as paid servants but more so as 'slaves"
Not many Jews were killed within the borders of the Netherlands, but around 110,000 Dutch Jews were Killed during the Holocaust. Most of them were sent to Concentration Camps in Poland and Germany.
In both cases the answer is no. However, after Italy surrendered in 1943, much of the country was occupied by the Nazis and they deported Italian Jews to Auschwitz. The Japanese, who were almost entirely unfamiliar with the long-standing "Christian" tradition of antisemitism found the Nazi attitude towards the Jews very puzzling.
There were fewer Jews. For the Jews life had changed a great deal. For gentiles, not so much. Most changes to life in Europe at this time were more due to the war than to the Holocaust.