They were also barred from the civil service and from certain professions to gather in ghetos and in death camps. Jews were not allowed to have a job in Germany.
Ultimately the German government required that Jews leave German society. There would be many stages and steps before this happened; first the Jews would have to leave certain jobs, like the civil service, they would be encouraged to emigrate, to leave the country of their own accord and eventually those remaining would be deported.
Thrown out of their jobs, rounded up, put into ghettos, deported, beaten and killed.
The first thing Hitler's economic persecution of German Jews involved was the restriction of what industries they could work in. This escalated to restricting where Jews could live, and then again to taking their belongings and transporting them to work and death camps.
For at least 70-100 years before Hitler came to power, Jews in the various German states had more or less the same legal status as non-Jews. However, there were not eligible for employment in the prestigious civil service or in as army officers. The last ghetto - in the sense of a district where Jews were required to live by law - was abolished in 1830. Obviously, that did not mean that they relocated from one day to the next.The German Jews were, on the whole, enthusiatic supporters of the Reform movement in Judaism and were highly assimilated.
No. Not all Germans are Jews and not all Jews are German. But there are German Jews, as well as Jews with many other nationalities.
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.
They had to hate jews even if they liked them (it was their job)
They had to hate jews even if they liked them (it was their job)
Discrimination toward Jews occurred in many areas of Canada. There were hiring restrictions for Jews in businesses, the civil service, and the other professions. In some cities, Jews were forbidden to buy property or to join certain clubs and organizations.
They had to hate jews even if they liked them (it was their job)
The question is preposterous. Jews were in no position to declare anything in 1933. On the other hand, Germany effectively declared war on the Jews in 1933 by stripping them of civil service positions and circumscribing what professions they could practice.
The National Socialist German Worker's Party, or Nazi Party for short, excluded Jews from German citizenship.