Antisemitism was one of the factors which led to the Holocaust.
It reached a peak in the Holocaust.
The antisemitism during the Holocaust was just an exaggerated form of pre-Holocaust antisemitism.
Yes, and the Japanese were completely bewildered by antisemitism.
Words related to the Holocaust include "genocide," referring to the systematic extermination of a particular group; "concentration camps," where victims were imprisoned and often killed; "antisemitism," which is hostility towards Jews; and "survivors," referring to those who lived through the atrocities. Other significant terms include "Nazi," the regime responsible for the Holocaust, and "liberation," which marks the end of the camps’ horrors. Each of these terms encapsulates critical aspects of the Holocaust's historical and social context.
it is not. The people who perpetrated the Holocaust may have been, or the Holocaust may have some roots in antisemitism, but it is a name given to the events, it holds not prejudice, it just is.
it affected them by the nazi starting the holocaust
The word antisemitism means prejudice against or hatred of Jews.
Yes. Without long-standing prejudices against the Jews it would have been virtually impossible to demonize them in way that the Nazis did and to try to exterminate them. From a social and political point of view, one cannot simply pick on any group and exterminate it. It has often been said that antisemitism is as irrational as hating people with red hair, but of course 'redheads' have not been demonized and persecuted.
There was no guerilla warfare in connection with the Holocaust.
Matti Myllykoski has written: 'Murhatun Jumalan varjo' -- subject(s): History, Judaism, Jews, Persecutions, Christianity and antisemitism, Church history, Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), Antisemitism
No.