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I'd first have to ask, "which Germans?" Some Germans who thought cause of "aryan" (in Nazi doctrine, a Caucasian of non-Jewish, esp. Nordic, descent) supremacy a viable one, felt demise of Jews was necessary and justifiable. Many other Germans who were able to maintain personal convictions of equality among humans in a time of pervasive persecution against such thinking, helped to save many Jews from the chambers and work within underground organizations that moved Jews to safe locations. There's quite a lot evidence that Nazi anti-semitism wasn't that popular in Germany. However, the terror machine (as well as all kinds of other difficulties) meant that very few Germans were able to give practical help to Jews in WW2.

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19y ago

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