If you count the fact that they changed their Immigration policy for Jews to make it harder for them to escape the Nazis, then you could say that they got involved very quickly.
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No, the US immigration laws were tightened during the early 1920s.
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No, in the mid-1930';s though the quotas for German emigration stayed the same as those introduced in 1927 (if memory serves), it became harder for Jews to fill those places as people could no longer apply in person at an embassy. The US wanted to keep a tighter reign on where an when visas were granted, before by issuing them from the embassy there was a fair amount of 'lag' and it was unsure whether an applicant was using the previous or the next years visa, so the system became more centralized and the criteria for being granted a visa harsher. It has been many years since i studied US immigration policy, but as i remember, this is accurate.
There have been many things like the Holocaust, but none over such a long period, across so many countries and in the West.
People didn't want to believe it.
Oh, dude, the Holocaust usually happens during World War II, specifically from 1941 to 1945. It was a pretty dark time in history, like the ultimate party foul on a global scale. So yeah, definitely not a fun time for anyone involved.
I would think so. Probably some of them did from being there so long.
The term "gypsies" refers to the Roma people, who were a targeted group during the Holocaust. They were subject to persecution, forced labor, and mass killings by the Nazis and their collaborators. It is estimated that hundreds of thousands of Roma people were killed during this time.
My Aunts dad was in the Holocaust and he found a dead soldier so he took his clothes and got out of the area.
the holocaust lasted from 1941-1944 so 2-3 years depending on what month
he hated jews so when he took power in germany he decided to put millions of jews into concentration camps and kill them in nasty ways. this is the holocaust
Because it took place over such a large area from many countries.
It depends if you are talking about location. Do you mean in Germany where the Holocaust took place or just everywhere in the world? If you're asking if lizards existed in Germany during the Holocaust then that would be yes and so would the other question.
There have been many things like the Holocaust, but none over such a long period, across so many countries and in the West.
Almost none: They both involved death, that's about it for similarities. The Rape of Nanking was a single action, the Holocaust was a collections of actions. The motivations for them were different, and so forth.
People didn't want to believe it.
It took so long to make stalking a crime because it's hard to define when someone is stalking. There are also First Amendment issues involved. The case that set the precedent involved Rebecca Shaeffer, who was murdered by an obsessed fan who had stalked her for 2 years prior to the incident.
it is hard to estimate so long after the event.
because it took a long time.
There are some unstated assumptions in this question: 1. that the Holocaust happened so long that the time has come to forget and and to shut up about it. 2. That the numbers involved (6 million) make it rather unimportant. 3. That the Holocaust and the slave trade are comparable.As for #1 the slave trade ended long, long before the Holocaust began, so go figure the logic of what you are asking. #2 Yes, there have been other cases of genocide ... and they are all outrageous. #3 It has become fashionable to compare the Holocaust and the slave trade, but it is a misleading comparison. Of course, both involved gross indignities, suffering and deaths. However, the slave trade was not about extermination: the aim was to get the slaves to the New World alive and sell them. The purpose of the Holocaust was to kill all Jews in Europe.The words 'still talking' are misleading. If one goes back to the 1950 and early 1960s one finds that very little was said in public about either the Holocaust or the slave trade.