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Nazi Party

The Nazi Party was a German political party of National Socialism. Founded in 1919 as the German Workers' Party, it changed its name to the National Socialist German Workers' Party when Adolf Hitler became leader (192021). The nickname Nazi was taken from the first word of its full name, Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter-Partei. The party grew from its home base in Bavaria and attracted members from disaffected elements throughout Germany. It organized strong-arm groups (later the SA) to protect its rallies.

1,191 Questions

What were tactics that the Nazis used to discriminate against the Jewish people?

During the 1930s, the Nazis had Jews ejected from universities, and orchestrated boycotts against Jewish businesses.
Later (1938), they instigated Kristallnacht, and hundreds of synagogues were trashed.
In 1939, they invaded Poland; and later they conquered all of Europe. They herded the Jews into ghettos, pressed some into forced labor, and killed tens of thousands of others.
In the Nazi invasion of the Soviet Union (1941), army units (Einsatzgruppen) were tasked with killing the local Jews, and hundreds of Jewish villages were wiped out.
On January 20, 1942, at the Wannsee conference, the Nazi leaders adopted the official policy of killing all of Europe's Jews, wholesale. Hundreds of concentration camps and labor camps were set up, and six million Jews were killed in the brief space of a few years.

When did the Nazis being to deport Jews from Germany to Poland?

Well, the Nazis moved the Jews from German to Poland with trains that ran for hours until they arrived to the "unknown destination" which would be the concentration camp where many would meet their death. These trains were ran by the high ranking Nazi official Adolf Eichmann. The trains were called cattle wagons and cart trains.

Why did the Nazis want the Jews gone?

because they were all dark haired and had dark eye colours ( they didn't fit in with his race bloned haired blue eyed ) and they were successful buisness men and he thought they were the reason for losing the first war

Why did the Nazi Germans dislike Jews?

The reason why Hitler and Nazis hated Jewish people is for many reasons. One is becuase of their color of their skin. Like how it went the rasicm in America and black and whites. The whites hated blacks and thought they were nothing. Not people. Same thing with Jewish and Nazis. The Nazis used Jews as slaves even.

What people groups did the Nazis exterminate?

Well theJew's obvious and anyone that was a threat to Hitler or people he just didn't like such as political prisoner's, people that weren't of his race Jehovah's witnesses Gypsies, people with mental and physical issues known as asocials, and common and more severe crime criminals and last but not least homosexuals there were some more groups as well

How many death camps did the nazi build?

According to research reports, Nazis actually set up 20 000 concentration camps.

How were Jewish children educated in nazi Germany?

In Nazi Germany children were taught an acultist religion in which the Aryan Germans were placed at the top of society. Also they were taught that the Jewish people were subhuman and that the Aryans had once been a race of gaints that the Jews had contaminated by mingling with the Aryans.

Who financied the Nazis?

Swiss banks and money and property the Nazi's took from the Jews and others that they killed.

Why did the Nazis force Jews to wear stars?

jewish people are awesome :D im a german im not bad shame shame SHAME TO HITLER D: peace YALL ;D

Who was responsible for the killing of 6 million Jews by the Nazis in Germany?

Adolf Hitler, mostly, along with his friend Heinrich Himmler and many other generals in charge of the concentration camps.

Why did the Nazis attack the Jews?

This question implicitly has two parts. The first is a question as to the rationales that the Nazis believed in to justify Anti-Semitic beliefs and the second is a question as to why the Nazis felt the need to kill the Jews as a way to solve these Anti-Semitic concerns.

The Reasons for Anti-Semitism in Germany during that period are numerous, but some of the more important reasons were the following:

1) Decay of the German State: During the 1800s, Jews began to become more integrated in German National Life. They served in its government, its military divisions, and its industry. As was typical of Western Europe, the Jews had more of a hand in the higher echelons of government than their population percentage would account for. The Nazis saw this increasing Jewish percentage in the government as a slow takeover of German policy and a corruption of the German people. They contrasted the great victories under Bismarck with the depressing failure of World War I and noted how a much larger percentage of soldiers in the latter war were Jewish. There was also the sentiment than in the early 20th century, values were beginning to ebb (this is similar to current politics in the United States) and the Jewish integration in the German apparatus (becoming teachers, lawyers, doctors, etc.) was to blame for this recession of values as opposed to modernity as a process.

2) Nationalism: Germany was brought together under the Nationalist conception that all peoples with German culture, history, and language should be united regardless of which principality currently held control. The German self-conception also had an ethnic component, holding that the perfect German was blond and blue eyed. Regardless of the fact that the majority of Germans were dark haired, Jews stuck out like a sore thumb because they overwhelmingly had darker hair. In addition, the idea of a German Jew was still rather new and both Jews and non-Jews tended to see the Jews in Germany as being part of a vast Jewish network and that these Jews just happened to be in Germany. The Nazis capitalized on this cosmopolitan sensibility by claiming that Jews' allegiances were not to the German State, but to secret Jewish Councils organizing world events.

3) Economy: Whether it was true or not, there was perception among Germans and the Nazis in particular that Jews were wealthy individuals and had a higher per-capita income than the Germans. In many ways (because of the above two reasons) Germans felt that the Jews were "stealing" their money while they were poor and suffering.

4) Pseudo-Science: The late 19th and early 20th century was filled with radical new ideas concerning Social Darwinism. It was believed by the Pseudo-Scientific community (which was rather in vogue) that different groups of people or races exhibited different emotional traits that were linked to physical differences. This led to the belief that Jews were corrupt and thieving by their irreversible nature and that they could not be "cured" and brought up as proper Europeans. This formalized Racial Anti-Semitism in Germany and made the situation much more dire for German Jews.

5) Heresy: Although not as much an issue in World War II as it may have been 500 years prior, Jews were still considered the heretics who murdered the LORD and Savior. This helped to justify Anti-Semitism as the Jewish comeuppance for their accepting of the Christ Bloodguilt.

Why was killing the Jews necessary?

The answer to the second part, while cold, is brutally honest. The Nazis encouraged the German population to believe that this myriad of Anti-Semitic issues was ingrained in German Society by making it part of the national curriculum and teaching it to millions of German children. The Nazis proposed that the only way to improve Germany was to remove the Jews entirely. There were two options for such a removal: exile or genocide. Since no country was willing to take the Jewish population en masse (and this includes the United States and United Kingdom due to prevailing stereotypes there) the Nazis made the executive decision to commit genocide to "save Germany".
When Hitler was young, he thought Jews hated him. He believed that because when his mother died, a Jewish doctor was caring for her. So he believed that Jews hated Nazis and that they were no better than rats that lived in the sewers. So he thought they should die for just being Jewish.

Why were nazis so willing to kill the jews?

the question suggests that the Nazis killed Jews for weakness, this does not make sense, weakness was not a cause. Please rephrase.

Why was the Hitler youth so important to the Nazi Party?

probably because they wannted to bring the children up thinking it was good but it know it was from 1922 to 1955 for boys adge 14 to 18

How were the Jews treated in Nazi Germany?

The Natzis simply tortured and killed the jews.THey were sent to concentraton camps where they had to work all day and at the endof the day, for instance, a nazi officer gather them and simply shoots a group of them, and the next day the same procdure continues.Jews were looked upon as the "stabbers" in WWI, therefore a kind of hate has grown towards them from the germans.

Why didn't the Nazis like the Jews?

When Germany lost, they blamed it on not just the Jewish, but Christians, mentally retarded, homosexuals, and all other "flawed" people. Hitler didn't like the Jews because he wanted to enter an art college run by them.

How did Jews escape capture in Nazi Germany?

By farting in the guards' faces as hard as possible and then having sex with the ones that hated him. next, someone would have to run away through the exit and dodge any incoming bullets that may force the prisoner to die horrifically after all that they ad been through.

THE END.

What rhymes with Nazi?

These are all known as "end rhymes": accost bossed cost crisscrossed crossed defrost embossed exhaust flossed frost glossed hoarfrost lost sauced star-crossed tossed uncrossed

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How many Nazis were against the Jews?

very little because there was terror and because nazi successes, economic fears and the grates effects of propaganda

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*** Although little there was some. Although the Nazi's did terrorise people with the 'Gustapo' (Secret Police) and almost brainwash them with Nazi ideas there were alot of people who hated the Nazis but because of fear kept it to themselves incase they were taken away. There were such teenage groups such as 'The Edelweiss Pirates' and 'The Swing Movement' who went against Nazi rules.

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What ways did the Nazis persecute the Jewish people in Germany between 1933 - 1935?

Germans persecuted Jews in a number of ways throughout the 1930s. Almost as soon as Hitler came to power, the Nazis began boycotting Jewish owned businesses, and they required Jews to mark themselves with a star. In 1938, Jews are openly attacked and Jewish businesses are ransacked. This was the precursor to the roundup of the Jewish people into the camps.

When did the Nazis start gassing the Jews?

In October of 1939 amid the turmoil of the outbreak of war Hitler ordered widespread "mercy killing" of the sick and disabled.

Code named "Aktion T 4," the Nazi euthanasia program to eliminate "life unworthy of life" at first focused on newborns and very young children. Midwives and doctors were required to register children up to age three who showed symptoms of mental retardation, physical deformity, or other symptoms included on a questionnaire from the Reich Health Ministry.

A decision on whether to allow the child to live was then made by three medical experts solely on the basis of the questionnaire, without any examination and without reading any medical records.

Why did the Nazis make the prisoners run?

They hunted the Jews in order to kill them. Please see related question.