Antisemitic is the term used.
Subjected to various forms of racial discrimination.
discrimination against Jews
The Nuremberg Laws, enacted in 1935, primarily aimed to institutionalize racial discrimination against Jews in Nazi Germany. They stripped Jews of their German citizenship, prohibited intermarriage and sexual relations between Jews and non-Jewish Germans, and established a legal framework for the systematic exclusion of Jews from various aspects of public life. This marked a significant escalation in anti-Semitic policies, laying the groundwork for further persecution and ultimately the Holocaust. The laws dehumanized Jews and entrenched a racial ideology that justified their marginalization and violence against them.
presumably you mean by the Catholics against the Jews; it was called the Holocaust. Though what happened in Yugoslavia was independent of the Holocaust, the victims are counted in with the victims of the Holocaust.
lots of people were killed from discrimination against jews, gypsies, handicapped people, and lots of others.
Anti-semitism is discrimination against Jews.
The Nazis passed the Nuremberg Laws in 1935, which institutionalized racial discrimination against German Jews. These laws stripped Jews of their citizenship rights and forbid marriage or intimate relationships between Jews and non-Jews.
Technically, the official term is Anti-Semitism. However, as the Jews are not the only "Semites," something like judeophobia might be a more accurate term.
Subjected to various forms of racial discrimination.
No groups likes being discriminated against.
In 1917-1918.
The organized name of the racial discrimination of Jews was called the holocoast. The holocoast was lead by Adolf Hitler the leader of his Nazi party
The goal of the Nuremberg Laws, enacted in Nazi Germany in 1935, was to institutionalize racial discrimination against Jews and other minorities. These laws aimed to strip Jews of their rights as citizens and isolate them from the rest of society. The ultimate objective was to create a society based on racial purity and eliminate those deemed inferior by the Nazis.
The Nuremberg Laws were introduced by the Nazi Party in Germany on September 15, 1935. These laws aimed to institutionalize racial discrimination and persecution against Jews in Nazi Germany.
discrimination against Jews
discrimination against Jews
The Nuremberg Laws, enacted in 1935, primarily aimed to institutionalize racial discrimination against Jews in Nazi Germany. They stripped Jews of their German citizenship, prohibited intermarriage and sexual relations between Jews and non-Jewish Germans, and established a legal framework for the systematic exclusion of Jews from various aspects of public life. This marked a significant escalation in anti-Semitic policies, laying the groundwork for further persecution and ultimately the Holocaust. The laws dehumanized Jews and entrenched a racial ideology that justified their marginalization and violence against them.