Other nations had no responsibilities to stop the persecution of the Jews.
Answer:We all as nations have a duty to humanity to stop the wholesale slaughter of any certain group of people within a country under the direction and control of its government. However, political concerns are often paramount to the deaths of the victims. In some cases other countries intercede and in some well publicized cases they do not. It depends on their interests and whether those interests are served by interceding.
not seeing there family
yes.
Joseph has written: ''Emek ha-bakha' -- subject(s): Jews, Persecutions, History ''Emeq ha-bakha de Yosef ha-Kohen' -- subject(s): Jews, Persecutions, History
they faced torcher chambers and rifle lines for the fun of the germans
Samuel Usque has written: 'Samuel Usque's Consolation for the tribulations of Israel =' -- subject(s): Jews, Persecutions, History 'Bay di taykhn fun Portugal' -- subject(s): Jews, Persecutions, History
Greed is a common feature of many persecutions and witch-hunts.
There were times when the persecutors specifically decreed that the Jews not observe their commandments.
All the collaboratist regimes, such as Vichy France, imprisoned at least some Jews.
The Nuremberg statute redefined Jews as non-human. Thus, Jews were immediately deprived of all the legal rights that they would otherwise have had as human beings or as German citizens (or citizens of other European nations). Jews became the legal equivalent of vermin, such as rats (to which they were compared by the Nazis). This was the necessary preparation for the Holocaust.
Ety Gabai has written: 'Syrian Jewry' -- subject(s): Jews, Persecutions
Tony Wohlmuth has written: 'La Partida' -- subject(s): Biography, German Jews, Immigrants, Jewish Refugees, Jews, Jews, German, Persecutions, Refugees, Jewish
The Holocaust itself Persecutions by the Nazis Discrimination across Europe