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Life in Nazi Germany - Coggle Diagram
Life in Nazi Germany
The Final Solution
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October 1939: First Ghettos built to seperate Jews from the rest of the population. 1000 ghettos eventually built
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Women
Nazi Policies
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Women were encourage to get married ( Law of encouragement ). This law gave newlywed couples a loan of 1,000 marks, and allowed them to keep 250 marks for each child they had
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Lebensborn program: Aryan Women encouraged to donate a child to the fuhr by having a child with an Aryan SS soldier
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Impacts on Women
100,000 female teachers lost there jobs and 3,000 female doctors also lost their job
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In 1936, 30% more births than 1933
695,000 married couples issued a loan
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Howevr, Female labour was cheap so the number of women in employment actually increased by 2.4 million. Women needed as Germany progressed into next war.
Youth
Nazi Policies
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Those not fitting the Nazi racial ideas , if they were Jew or disabled, were not allowed to join
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Teachers had to be Nazi supporting (Nazi Party members), right wing and anti-socialist
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Impacts
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Some opposed the Nazi youth groups and attended alternative groups such as the Swing Youth and Eldelwiss Pirates.
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Church
Protestant Churches
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In 1933, different protestant churches merged within Germany to form the 'Reich Church' under the leadership of ludwig Muller
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Catholic Church
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In 1933 Hitler and the pope reached a concordat. Catholics could worship in schools but Bishops must swear loyalty to Nazis and all clergy had to stay out of politics
Broke the concordat when Hitler banned Catholic youth organisations, closed Catholic Schools and churches
Jewish Persecution
Dates
1933: SA hold one day boycott of Jew shops. Jewis actors and musicians were banned from recording. Kosher ritual banned
1934: Jewis were banned from public places like parks and swimming pools. Park benches painted yellow just for Jews
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1938: Banned from theatre, cinema and Jewish children banned from German schools.
Kristallnacht:
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7,500 shops belonging to Jews broken, class and rubble everywhere. 20,000 sent to concentration camps
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