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Ways Nazi's persecuted Jews in Germany - Coggle Diagram
Ways Nazi's persecuted Jews in Germany
Kristallnacht
Night of Broken Glass
Livelihoods destroyed
Businesses destroyed
Yellow stars imprinted onto buildings
Death and destruction
Propaganda - Political Tool
Due to an assassination
Nuremberg Laws (1935)
Only those of German blood can be citizens.
Jews must become subjects not citizens.
Jews cannot vote, have a German passport or work for the
government.
No Jew must marry a German citizen.
No Jew is allowed to have sexual relations with a German
citizen.
Jews must wear a yellow star-shaped patch sewn on clothes for ease of identification.
Businesses
1937 Jewish businesses were taken over by Aryans.
1933 One Day Shop Boycott
1938 Kristallnacht
1939 Jews can't owns businesses
Social and Economic Effects
1933 Jewish actors and musicians were banned from performing. Jewish civil servants and teachers were sacked. Jews were no longer allowed to join the army. Jews were banned from inheriting land. There was an SA one-day boycott of Jewish lawyers and doctors.
1934 Some Jews were banned from public places like parks and swimming pools – other councils painted park benches yellow specifically for Jewish people.
1935 Nuremberg Laws
1937 Jewish passports had to be stamped with a ‘J’. ‘Israel’ or ‘Sarah’ had to be added to Jewish names.
1939 The Reich Office for Jewish Emigration was set up with the purpose of expelling all Jews from Germany.