Some were sent to the German concentration camps. Others hid and fled to Sweden.
"Danes" are natives and/or citizens of Denmark. The term gives no information regarding a person's gender, occupation, political or religious affiliation.
Germany attacked & occupied Denmark beginning 4:15am on April 9, 1940. This was done as part of the German invasion of Norway. Germany needed air bases in Denmark to support its simultaneous invasion of Norway.
During the rescue of Jews from Denmark in October 1943, approximately 600 boats were used to transport them to safety in Sweden. This remarkable operation involved both private fishing boats and larger vessels, with many local fishermen and citizens participating in the effort. The operation successfully helped around 7,200 Jews escape the Nazi occupation.
I belive Hitler invaded denmark because he thought all Jews were bad and deserved to be killed and hurt-plus in denmark there were a lot of Jews.
The Nazis were only able to kill 52 out of 8000 Denmark Jews. This was because the Denmark government sent them to Neutral Sweden.
The Nazis wanted the mineral ore in their mountain near Narvik, Norway. They also wanted to block the passageway in and out of the North Sea and the Baltic Sea. They certainly did not want people escaping from Denmark to Sweden since it is so close to Denmark. They failed at that. The Danes managed to get 700 Jews safely to Sweden. The Swedes welcomed them. Some Danes went there too but came back at the end of the war.
Plain and simple, the safety of the Demark Jews
No.
1943
Denmark
The full answer is too long to fit here, but Jews in western Europe were treated better than in the east. Generally they were made to wear a yellow star before they were segregated and deported, timings on these stages varied.
The policy of cooperation between Germany and Denmark, and the Germans view of the Danes as being of the Aryan race, meant a comparatively peaceful Danish co-existence with the German occupation power. Germany had no desire to endanger this situation, and for long the Danish Jews went untouched by the terrible Nazi racial policy that was carried out in the rest of occupied Europe. The relatively small number of Jews in Denmark undoubtedly also influenced the Germans' indifference to the Danish Jews.