Freud's four sisters died in Nazi concentration camps.
Sigmund Freud's four sisters, Regina Debora, Marie, Paula and Esther were all elderly when they were killed by Nazis during the Holocaust. They were deported to various concentration camps and perished there due to the harsh conditions, lack of food, and medical care. Their deaths were part of the systematic genocide of millions of Jews during World War II.
The 1936 Berlin Olympics were used by the Nazis as propaganda to showcase their regime and promote Aryan superiority. The event was carefully orchestrated to present an image of Germany as a peaceful and modern nation. However, behind the scenes, the Nazis used the Olympics to further their political agenda and promote their ideology of racial superiority.
The Nazis used euphemisms to disguise the true nature of their actions and policies, particularly those that were morally reprehensible or controversial. Euphemisms helped to sanitize and rationalize their brutal actions, making them more palatable to the public and deflecting criticism. It also allowed the Nazis to manipulate language in order to control public perception and undermine opposition to their regime.
The Nazis used propaganda to spread their message by utilizing radio, newspapers, posters, films, and public gatherings to promote their ideologies and control public opinion. They employed tactics such as demonizing certain groups like Jews and promoting Aryan superiority to manipulate people's beliefs and foster their support for the regime. Propaganda was a powerful tool for the Nazis to unify the population under their rule and advance their political agenda.
The Nazis heavily influenced the youth through organizations like the Hitler Youth, which indoctrinated them with Nazi ideology and military training. They aimed to create a generation of loyal supporters who would carry out the goals of the Nazi regime. Many young people were also targeted for membership and recruitment into the SS and other paramilitary organizations.
The Nazis forced some prisoners to wear a second badge underneath their primary identification badge to denote additional forms of persecution or discrimination, such as being a political prisoner, homosexual, or a repeat offender. This practice aimed to further dehumanize and isolate certain groups of prisoners within the concentration camps.
killed by the nazis
the Nazis killed the Jews ------------------------------- i know of twenty, but there are more, partisans did not keep such records.
the Nazis weren't killed. They killed the Jew's, some were executed after the war though for war crimes
it is hard to count how many were killed by evil Nazis and how many were killed by ordinary Nazis.
generally in battle.
1.5 million children were killed by Nazis.
they killed jews, of course
no
No in fact they killed reactionaries
The Nazis' killed Peter in Vrenary square in Copenhagon
Getting killed.
in the early 1940s.