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As a general rule people who hate a particular race, religion or creed do so because of fear or ignorance. It is also encouraged by people with an agenda against that group, using Propaganda, half truths and lies. Hatred also underlies much violence in the world. If people stopped exerting so much energy toward hating people who are different, they might just have the energy to rebuild this world to be a happier place.

As specifically concerns the Europeans, for the longest period of time, Jews were the only "other" in European society and thus received the brunt of the us vs. them dialogue. Some important forms of Anti-Semitism in Europe are:

  • Religious Anti-Semitism: The Jewish rejection of Christ and the Church, not to mention the allegations that Jews were Christ-killers was one of the most important causes of Anti-Semitism prior to the 19th century.
  • Economic Anti-Semitism: Jews were forced by edict to work in very few fields and principal among them was banking. Therefore, Jews were often accused of being greedy and usurious because they made lemonade out of the lemons handed to them.
  • Racial and Pseudo-Scientific Anti-Semitism: Jews, especially in the later modern period, were believed to be a weaker, inferior race than the true ethnic Christian and this could be "verified" through scientific observations.
  • Ideological Anti-Semitism: By the power of the odds, Jews would be associated with radical or liberal movements in a minor fashion, however, rather than targeting those from the majority who were Communists of Anarchists, Jews who did these acts were labelled traitors.
  • Cultural Anti-Semitism: Many Europeans thought Jews were "diseased" and would impact the social and moral fabric of society. This is similar to the accusations currently leveled at the Gay Community with just as much truth.
  • Islamic Anti-Semitism: After World War II, many Muslims immigrated to Europe and brought ingrained Anti-Semitic beliefs with them, equating Jews to monkeys and pigs. While there are certainly European Muslim leaders (such as Tariq Ramadan) who argue that such things are un-Islamic, they persist.
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During the second World War what European countries required Jews to wear yellow stars?

Germany and all the countries that Germany had occupied.


Why did Netherlands accept persecuted Jews?

Most West European countries accepted some refugees from Nazi Germany.


How did Hitler manage to kill those Jews who lived outside Germany?

From 1938 on Germany expanded and annexed (took over) and later invaded lots of other European countries. In each case more and more Jews came under German control.


What did Jews of the 1930s wear as casual attire or due to religion?

That depends on the countries and on whether the Jews were orthodox or Reform. In Germany, for example, the majority of Jews were NOT orthodox and dressed very inconspicuously - as in many other countries.


If the Nazis were trying to exterminate the Jews why did they allow them to emigrate out of Germany?

Nazi policy towards the Jews (or at least towards West European Jews) changed in August/September 1941. Until then the Nazis wanted Jews out of Germany and other West European countries under their control. From September 1941 onwards the policy changed to extermination. The first deportations of Jews from Germany to killing fields in Latvia and Belarus began in October 1941. (It is worth noting that the requirement that Jews in Germany and other Nazi occupied countries was introduced in September 1941. In Poland, where Nazi policies towards the Jews became harsher earlier, it had been introduced a year earlier). The idea that the Nazis had always wanted to exterminate the Jews and had some kind of blueprint for the Holocaust already in the 1920s is one of those popular myths and went virtually unchallenged from 1945 till about 1960. Nazi policy became more extreme over time.

Related Questions

Other than in Germany what happened to Jews elsewhere in Europe?

Between 1938 and 1941 Germany took over and/or invaded most other European countries, and the Jews in nearly all these countries were subjected to the same kinds of laws as in Germany, and were deported and killed.


Which European countries had the most Jews?

Germany, Poland, Russia. these are the main ones


During the second World War what European countries required Jews to wear yellow stars?

Germany and all the countries that Germany had occupied.


What was traditional hatred for Jews in Germany?

Antisemitism in Germany before the Nazis came to power (1933) was no greater than in most other European countries. The German Jews did not feel particularly threatened, and Jewish organizations did not see Germany as a risky country for Jews to live in.


The other people that were Jews from other countries how did Hitler get them to go to the concentraion?

Hitler's Nazi Germany invaded many European countries. Where a Nazi-friendly regime was installed, the Nazis could get some of the locals to point the finger at Jews, thus the Jews could be rounded up and transported.


Why did Netherlands accept persecuted Jews?

Most West European countries accepted some refugees from Nazi Germany.


How did Hitler manage to kill those Jews who lived outside Germany?

From 1938 on Germany expanded and annexed (took over) and later invaded lots of other European countries. In each case more and more Jews came under German control.


Did Hitler kill Jews in places other than Germany?

Many concentration camps were not in Germany. Auschwitz is in Poland for example. As the Germans invaded other countries, they found other Jews that were also sent to the camps.


Where the Jews were persecuuted?

In most European countries.


Which two European countries were most successful by saving the Jews?

* Denmark succeeded in shipping nearly all its Jewish population to Sweden. * Bulgaria, after dithering, refused to hand over its Jews to Germany.


What did Jews of the 1930s wear as casual attire or due to religion?

That depends on the countries and on whether the Jews were orthodox or Reform. In Germany, for example, the majority of Jews were NOT orthodox and dressed very inconspicuously - as in many other countries.


If the Nazis were trying to exterminate the Jews why did they allow them to emigrate out of Germany?

Nazi policy towards the Jews (or at least towards West European Jews) changed in August/September 1941. Until then the Nazis wanted Jews out of Germany and other West European countries under their control. From September 1941 onwards the policy changed to extermination. The first deportations of Jews from Germany to killing fields in Latvia and Belarus began in October 1941. (It is worth noting that the requirement that Jews in Germany and other Nazi occupied countries was introduced in September 1941. In Poland, where Nazi policies towards the Jews became harsher earlier, it had been introduced a year earlier). The idea that the Nazis had always wanted to exterminate the Jews and had some kind of blueprint for the Holocaust already in the 1920s is one of those popular myths and went virtually unchallenged from 1945 till about 1960. Nazi policy became more extreme over time.