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  2. Nuremberg Laws - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuremberg_Laws

    Jewish citizens were harassed and subjected to violent attacks. They were actively suppressed, stripped of their citizenship and civil rights, and eventually completely removed from German society. The Nuremberg Laws had a crippling economic and social impact on the Jewish community.

  3. Anti-Jewish legislation in pre-war Nazi Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Jewish_legislation_in...

    At their annual party rally held in Nuremberg, 10 to 16 September 1935, the Nazi leaders announced a set of three new laws to further regulate and exclude Jews from German society. [12] These laws now known as the Nuremberg laws served also as the legality for the arrests and violence against Jews that would follow. [13] The Nuremberg Laws were ...

  4. Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Law_for_the_Restoration_of...

    In practice, the amendments excluded most Jewish civil servants; after Hindenburg's death in 1934, the amendments were superseded completely by the Nuremberg Laws. Nonetheless, passage of the law was a crucial turning point in the history of German Jewry , for it marked the first time since the last German Jews had been emancipated in 1871 that ...

  5. Jewish refugees from Nazism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jewish_refugees_from_Nazism

    The pinnacle of anti-Jewish legislation was the so-called Nuremberg Race Laws adopted on September 15, 1935. Jews were deprived of German citizenship; mixed marriages were prohibited. Subsequently, amendments were adopted to the laws, and all other racist legal norms were drawn up as an addition to these laws. [15]

  6. Anti-Jewish laws - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Jewish_laws

    The Manifesto of Race published on July 14, 1938, prepared for the enactment of racial laws to be introduced. The Italian Racial Laws were passed on November 18, 1938, excluding Jews from the civil service, the armed forces, and the National Fascist Party, and restricting Jewish ownership of certain companies and property; intermarriage was also prohibited. [1]

  7. Nazi boycott of Jewish businesses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_boycott_of_Jewish...

    This is to be assumed in particular where one parent or grandparent was of the Jewish religion". [24] "Jewish" books were publicly burnt in elaborate ceremonies, and the Nuremberg laws defined who was or was not Jewish. Jewish-owned businesses were gradually "Aryanized" and forced to sell out to non-Jewish Germans.

  8. Aryan paragraph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aryan_paragraph

    This discrimination culminated in the Nuremberg Laws "for the final separation of Jewry from the German Volk". Prior to this, there were exceptions, such as combat veterans, service in the National Rising [ Erhebung ], honorary Aryans , and so on, but now Jews and "Jewish mixed-breeds" ( Mischlinge ) were banned from practically all professions.

  9. 1938 expulsion of Polish Jews from Germany - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1938_expulsion_of_Polish...

    The deported Jews were initially rejected by Poland and therefore had to live in makeshift encampments along the Germany–Poland border. Origins From 1935 to 1938, Jews living within Germany had been stripped of most of their rights by the Nuremberg Laws , and faced intense persecution from the state.