Hitler's View Of Jews Against The World

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Jews against the world
On January 30th, 1933 Hitler became chancellor of Germany, when that happened everything changed. People were being told what to do where to live and how to live their lives. Especially Jews, they were the most hated people in the world soon after Hitler gained power. Jewish people were excluded from public life on September 15th, 1935 when the Nuremberg laws were issued. Hitler always believed Jews were the main cause of all the problems in the world, so he wanted to get rid of them permanently. A central belief in the system by which they lived was that the Jews represented everything diametrically opposed to them and for this reason, they had to be removed. They were stripped from their everyday lives and placed …show more content…

Jews were not even allowed to keep their real names, they were assigned German sounding names. All Jewish people were forced to wear a yellow star of David on their clothes instantly identifying them as Jews. Their passports were marked with a red “J”. Jews were just like everyone else but because Hitler didn’t like them he wanted to abolish all of them for no reason. Hitler blamed the Jews for all the misfortunes that had befallen Germany. They were forbidden to vote, to go out at night or to even marry Germans. They were stripped from all their beliefs and were told how to live their lives and what to do every day. They were excluded from six branches of industry in the summer of 1939 (security, information, real estate, housing, mortgage services, marriage services and foreign …show more content…

Approximately 304,000 Jews emigrated during the first six years of the Nazi dictatorship, leaving only approximately 214,000 Jews in Germany proper on the eve of the world war II. In the main Kampf, Adolf Hitler wrote, “When… I scrutinized the activity of the Jewish people, suddenly there rose up in me the fearful question whether inscrutable destiny, perhaps for reasons unknown to us poor mortals, did not, with eternal and immutable resolve, desire the final victory of this little nation.” The Nazi government abolished trade unions. Workers, employees and employers were forced into the German labor front, which was under the control of Nazi leader Robert ley. In the years between 1933 and 1939, the Nazi regime had brought radical and daunting social, economic, and communal change to the German Jewish