Why the German people went along with the Nazis in their anti-Jewish programs?
The world was in the midst of the great depression. It is a commonly mistaken fact that the great depression only happened in the USA.The German peoples were angry that ther leaders had surrendered world war one. Hitler and the Nazi party, seized the chance, promising prosperity and rebirth to the German nation, promising they would fix everything, and restore everything that they had lost during world war one. They drove a huge propaganda machine of lies, which most people believed to be true. After the German people had finally figured out what was going on it was too little too late, the Nazi party had taken complete control of Germany and the military. Anyone who disobeyed or wasn't a "good" citizen was either shot or put into forced labor. The German peoples will never forget what Hitler did to them, nor how they let it happen, right in front of there eyes.
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Why did so many Germans go along with the Nazis? What choice did they have? Men in the factories could refuse to pledge allegiance and then they would lose their jobs and their families would starve, or they could be "good Germans" and keep their jobs, at the cost of their integrity. When weighed integrity against your family your integrity has little meaning. Sure there was a possibility that others would stand with you but who is willing to risk their life thinking that maybe someone else will risk theirs along with you. The women also had little choice, after all they were women. They had few decisions and there is nothing that a woman considers more when she makes a decision than her children. No woman would take a risk of her child's life for freedom for someone else, that would be foolish. If there was any group with less choices then women it was children, they could not join the little Hitler fan club, but that was more a decision by their parents than their own. Children could speak out all they wanted, they were still just children. With Germany set up the way it was it was inevitable for someone like Hitler, with a party like the Nazis to come along and make a disturbance, there was no way for the people to stop it. Everyone had something to lose, and no one was willing to take the first step in opposition of Hitler. If one person had stepped forward maybe their family would have been killed, but two more men would step forward in their place until all of German rose up, but that's the problem with us, no on is ever willing to go first. I imagine this was a very hard place for some people to be, but they were there holocaust timeline. It's easy to criticize these men for not stepping forward but I doubt any man would sacrifice his family for anything. Sometimes people realize thing, but often too late to change anything, or so they think. Sometimes people need to put their foot down and say stop if they get rolled over, then they get rolled over. It is a chance people need to take to do what's right.
Why did the Nazi regime single out the Jewish people to exterminate?
Because Hitler had a particular dislike for Jewish people. He applied to an art school and was rejected by the (Jewish) headmaster. It seemed to him that most of the bad instances in his life were caused by Jewish people. He was essentially everything he sought to destroy. He wanted an Aryan race of blonde-haired, blue-eyed people, and he himself had brown hair and brown eyes.
How did Hitler become the official leader of the Nazi party?
Some say he forced politics to or he would kill them, this is rubbish he was choosen because he was a good leader
What did the Nazis do when doing genetic experiments on Jews?
That depends on your definition of success. Every experiment produced data about the human response to such things as poisons, infections and extreme conditions. Experiments involving hypothermia produced some useful results. However, the majority of the experiments could have been studied using less cruel methods or animal testing.
Where did the Nazis captured the jews?
A getto. Really, it originated when Adolf Hitler captured
Jews and made them stay in run-down buildings. This was in the period of the Holocaust.
Why did many Jews remain in nazi Germany and within axis controlled areas of Europe?
Because, largely speaking, they weren't able to leave. Other countries weren't admitting Jews in the 1930s-40s, period.
Until the First World War, there hadn't been so great of a problem with immigration; but there was also not that much motivation for mass movement of Jewish populations, since anti-Semitism was relatively static, ubiquitous, and low-level (with the exception of Russia). But by the time the 1930s had arrived, with the sudden spike in hatred of Jews by Germany, nationalism and border-control had also spiked, and people were suddenly unable to immigrate freely to the various destinations. America (for example), which had accepted 1,800,000 Jews before World War One, suddenly made a drastic reduction in the numbers permitted to arrive there. The same thing happened (for other reasons) in the British Mandate in Israel (Palestine).
The only place in the world to which Jews could enter uninhibited was Shanghai; and about 25,000 did so, despite the vast distance and the hardships involved. Even there, the Nazis badgered their Japanese allies to obliterate the new Jewish community.
Another point is that no one predicted that the Nazis would overrun all of Europe; so that many Jews who did move out of Germany were killed anyway.
What did SS stand for in Nazi Germany?
SS means protection squad
Their purpose in germany is many things because SS is not a thing it a squad of types of SS, the most popular is
Waffen- SS
SS Death Squad (Einsatzgruppen)
The Waffen-SS were frontline combat troops trained to fight in Germany's battles during World War II. During the early campaigns against Austria, Czechoslovakia and Poland, military SS units were of regiment size and drawn from existing armed SS formations:
Hitler's personal bodyguard.
The SS Death squad (Einsatzgruppen) were special units of the SS that were formed on an 'as-needed' basis under the authority of the Sicherheitspolizei and later the RSHA, whose commander was Heydrich. The first Einsatzgruppen were created in 1938 for use during the Anschluss of Austria and again in 1939 for the annexation of Czechoslovakia The original purpose of the Einsatzgruppen was to 'enter occupied areas, seize vital records, and neutralize potential threats'. In Austria and Czechoslovakia, the activities of the Einsatzgruppen were mainly limited to Nazification of local governments and assistance with the establishment of new concentration camps. They were in charge of the shootings at the concentration camps, extermination camps and the death camps.
What were five things that the Jews were not allowed to do in Nazi Germany?
Under Hitler, Jews weren't allowed to do anything except die. Michael Montagne I am a Jew. Hitler was not just off limits to Jews. He was so cruel that even his own officers were his enemies. SP
Why do Christians hate Nazis for killing Jews if Jews killed Jesus?
The Pope himself has said that the Jews as a whole are not to blame for the killing of Jesus. See the attached Related Link.
Additional Answer:
A deeper reading of Scripture would reveal to all who endeavor, that Jesus died for the sins of all mankind. Another way of stating that fact is 'every human' killed Jesus as the Bible tells us 'all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God' (Romans 3:23).
As a Christian myself, I have a deep respect for all people regardless of their race, gender or faith. It is the lack of moral character that makes me dislike or better yet, avoid another.
As a Jew, I love this question. First of all, "The Jews" didn't kill Jesus, the ROMANS did. Second, the whole "the Jews wanted Him dead" idea postulated in the NT smacks of anti-Jewish propaganda. A main focus of the NT is to show how Christianity is a "better" religion than Judaism. One way it does this is to cast the Jews in a bad light at every opportunity. This is one such example.
Why did the Nazis decide to follow the final solution?
I think the final solution waned to kill the Jewish people because they didn't really like Jewish and they may think the Jewish did something do with them or they did something to them really bad my name is jessica renea tilley
Why didn't Jews just lie and say they weren't Jewish when the Nazis came?
In Germany, the Nazis set up a vast bureau of records which checked every citizen three generations back. And outside of Germany, people who were thought to possibly be Jewish had to produce baptismal certificates if they were actually non-Jews. And many Jews were ratted out by their neighbors.
Were there Jews in the NAZI party?
Could be, Alfred Rosenberg, the head of the Rosenberg office (Amt Rosenberg) was at least a racial Jew.
Why did the Nazis hate and hurt the jewish people?
The German towns people said they did not know about the killings. The Nazis leaders said the Jews had to be eradicated. The grunts of the Wehrmacht and SS said we were "just following orders". They had no remorse and were rather proud of themselves. It is bad enough the military people did not care, but it is worse that the German populous did not cry, did not beg God for forgiveness or care about the Jews.
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The Nazi leadership and Nazi propaganda claimed that the Jews:
Please see the related question for more detail.
indirectly, Jews died on trains because of the conditions that the Nazis sujected them to.
What was the full name of the Nazi Party in German?
We could write a book on this subject. Here are some facts. Hitler was his own worst enemy in the war. He failed to let his Generals run the war and he micromanaged it. He was a fool about war. In World War 1 he had only been a Private. He had no business telling Generals how he wanted the war run. Another fact: He killed by proxy over six million Jews even up to the last day of the war. He killed 5 million people he deemed undesirable. He kept a mistress during the war hidden and married her during the last days before the Russians reached his door. He was sick and weak. He could not go to the fronts very often because he was suffering badly. He killed himself as the Russians advanced. He would have died from his illnesses eventually anyway.
What nation did the Nazi Party win control over in 1933?
Adolf Hitler's NSDAP the National Zocialiste Deustsche Arbeiter Partei (National German Workers Party) aka the "NAZI" party was a small, often ridiculed political party that started in the early 1920's in Munich, during the bitter poverty and humiliation of Germany after it's defeat in WWI. Hitler built it up into a huge success, with a large following, and by 1933, was able to narrowly win the election, followed by appointment of Adolf Hitler as Chancellor of Germany. After his election, he set about removing the checks and balances that had been in place, ended up controlling the military and everything else, and the rest is history.
What levels or members of German society did the Nazi Party of Adolf Hitler appeal?
The Nazi Party appealed to the unemployed, the young people, and the members of the lower middle class. Actually, the Nazi's had a broad base of support. It also appealed to the industrialists in Germany that would produce the armaments that Hitler needed to wage war in Europe.
What methods did Nazis use to dehumanize their victims?
The Nazi Party was known for its use of violence in order to attain its political goals. These goals included the removal of those it classified as undesirables. The other goal was to subjugate the Slavs, such as Poles and Russians and use them as slave labor in service of the German Reich. At first the Nazi effort to reach these goals was restricted to harassment via mockery as well as violations of basic human rights. Later it turned into a full scale progrom of extermination involving an initial segregation into Ghettoes. These were created by isolating a part of a city and surrounding that part with walls and barbed wire fences. There the Jews were isolated with virtually no recourse to proper nourishment or adequate health care. The overcrowding also contributed to the high death toll. Finally it involved wholesale deportation from the Ghettoes to death camps such as Aushwitz where they were either immediately murdered if unwilling or unable to work, or else slowly worked and starved to death. Others, including Slavic war prisoners, were submitted to medical experiments which often resulted in permanent physical damage or even death. Slavic prisoners were allowed to starve to death in war camps. The following groups were also targeted: 1. Jews murdered= approx 6,000,000 - 2. Gypsies: murdered = 500,000 to 600,000 In December 16, 1942, all Gypsies ordered deported to Auschwitz. 3. Slavs were considered only good for slave labor and treated accordingly. 4. The mentally disabled and other person's whose lives were deemed unworthy of living were murdered. 5. Homosexuals 6. Jehovah's Witnesses: Were sent to Nazi concentration camps for not cooperating. 7. Anyone who disagreed with the Nazi policies. Those interned in hospitals who were deemed as living lives unworthy of living were unceremoniously murdered and a certificate sent to the family purporting that it had been a natural death. Others deemed unworthy of procreation were sterilized. Defective babies were routinely killed in an effort to improve the Genetic pool of the German people.
How did Anne Frank feel about the Nazis?
She was appalled by Hitler, as was any Jew of the era, but Hitler was like a distant abstract to her (understandably). Anne had a few choice words to say about the German puppet leader of The Netherlands, Anton Mussert, however.
How did Hitler and the nazi party gain and maintain power?
Adolf Hitler first came into political power as the head of the National Socialist German Worker's (NAZI) party. After a failed attempt to violently overthrow the government, and a brief stay in prison, Hitler returned to his leadership and started to grow the Nazi party. Gaining hundreds of thousands of members, Hitler's party became the largest in the Reichstag easily. Germany was in a time of extreme unemployment due to the depression. German people wanted immediate change, which made extremist parties like this that much more attractive. Nearly every citizen supported him, from the working class to the wealthy. With the addition of Hitler's genius propaganda and excellent public speaking abilities, the Nazi did nothing if not grow. Under pressure from the public, German President Hindenburg agreed to appoint Hitler as the chancellor of Germany. Within two months, Nazi influence was everywhere. The Reichstag soon passed the enabling act, which gave government the power to ignore the constitution. This was the final move in Hitler's rise to complete power. Hitler remained in power for many years, through a world war, until he committed suicide in his emergency bunker as invading Russians were less than 300 yards away, in 1945. To stay in power, Adolf Hitler used mass propaganda, framing the Jews and Allies to be evil and the Aryan cause and race to be noble and just. He created a personality cult for himself, compared himself to God, and media made into Germany's indestructible, refutable savior. He censored radios, newspapers, TVs, and anything else that could be used to broadcast an anti-Nazi message. He burned books and other media written by Jews, sent controversial authors and playwrights off to concentration camps, and made sure that his autobiography, Mein Kampf, and other pro-Nazi and anti-semitic books were widely circulated. His secret police, the SS, were used to enforce Hitler's extremist policies. He had political rivals assassinated, and anyone who dared to challenge him was at first "encouraged" by the SS to emigrate from Germany, then later in Hitler's rule, troublemakers were convicted of treason and shot.
How did the Nazi's kil the Jews?
Starvation, extermination through labor, shootings, hangings, mass burnings, poisonings (please see the Related Links I've added for more info on Gas Chambers).
Why were the Nazi party called the National Socialist German Workers' Party when they were fascists?
Because at the time that the Nazis came into power, the German people were in a great state of despair. The name, as well as their early tactics to come into power were directed towards making the people feel that their party was there to help them, rather than harm them.
The idea of National Socialism was to foster a great love for the nation above that of the self. So that the people would be willing to sacrifice much for the state.
Adolf Hitler did actually come to power completely by the book. Infact origianally Hitler never wanted to become a leader just someone who had the power to voice his opinion
fascists was a decriptive term then to identify extream right wing political parties