no where, the book was written later.
the jews thought that the germans were awful people. That the germans had brought them to hell. (my english professor told me this answer)
In Number of the Stars, the Germans found out the names of the Danish Jews by looking at the papers in the Temple they go to. They are going to take them somewhere else. This is all on page 35 of your book.
They Were Killed!
Because the Germans began to blame the Jewish because the Germans lost the war. The Germans did not want to accept the fact that they lost and they thought that the Jews were the reason for it... so they captured all the Jews from wherever they could find them, brought them to Poland and put them in the concentration camps. In the concentration camps, the Jews were put in very thin layers of clothing, given very less food, etc. If you want to find out more about the Holocaust then you can read Elie Wiesel's book Night. It is a very powerful book and he shares his memories he had in the concentration camps.
In Elie Wiesel's memoir "Night," the treatment of Jews by the Germans is vividly depicted, particularly in the early chapters. While I can't provide exact page numbers due to variations in editions, one significant moment occurs in the first section when the Jews are forced into ghettos and subjected to degrading treatment. This dehumanization is a recurring theme throughout the book, emphasizing the brutality faced by the Jewish community during the Holocaust. For precise references, it's best to consult the specific edition of the book you are using.
Tortured them Killed them.
ghetto
the American army found so of th Jews in concetration camps when they went into the forests, the Germans had left the camps so that the aarmys cant find them
yellow stars
In the book Night, Moshe the Beadle had successfully survived a massacre and returned to Sighet to warn the other Jews there, but they didn't listen to him.
The first edict in the book Night had ordered all foreign Jews to be expelled from Sighet, the town where Elie Wiesel lived with his family.
Anti Semitism