In 1942, Jews in Holland faced increasingly severe persecution under Nazi occupation. The Dutch authorities implemented anti-Jewish measures, including forced registration, curfews, and the confiscation of property. Many Jews were deported to concentration camps, with the majority sent to extermination camps, leading to the tragic loss of a significant portion of the Jewish population in the Netherlands. Resistance efforts existed, but the overall environment was one of fear and oppression.
They were treated in the same way as Jews who fitted the stereotypes: they usually had to do hard manual labour on insufficient food. The young and old were gassed on arrival from early 1942 onwards.
People who were not Jews were treated differently than the Jews in Nazi Germany. Some of the Jews were German citizens but they were treated as Jews.
1
they are treated really good
After World War 2, there were about 160,000 Jews left in Holland.
No
1942
They were treated in the same way as other Jews: one couldn't buy oneself out of the Holocaust.
The Jews went to Holland and the rest of Europe, because of the growing economy and probably for lots of other reasons. (Unfortunately, the question doesn't give a time).
The Jews Were Not liked because of who they were and what they believed in.
nuhtbtybet
poorly