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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper which examines anti-Semitic policies in the Nazi state in detail, including 1938’s Kristallnacht. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGkrisnact.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
That would become perhaps the most fatal error of collective judgment in world history. Prior to Hitlers establishment of the Nazi state, there had been no articulated government policy
regarding the Jews (Weinberg, 1986). This was swiftly rectified by Hitler in a series of legal and social acts against Jewish citizens. This organized discrimination of the Jews
because of their religious beliefs is known as anti-Semitism. Soon, anti-Semitism represented the official policy of the Nazi state. It began rather innocuously, with Hitler proclaiming an official
one-day boycott of Jewish stores in 1933 (Kristallnacht, 2003). Soon, there were laws against kosher butchering and then restrictions against the education of Jewish children were imposed (Kristallnacht, 2003).
Within two years, Jews were no longer permitted to serve in the armed forces, and in September 1935, the notorious Nuremberg Laws were passed (Weinberg, 1986). This deprived
Jews of citizenship, excluded them from civil service and academic employment, imposed a quota on Jewish lawyers and physicians, and the "Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor"
forbade marriage or sexual relations between a Jew and a non-Jew (Weinberg, 1986, p. 107). These policies generated a palpable panic among Jewish residents of the Nazi state, and resulted
in a mass exodus of Jews from Germany to seek asylum elsewhere. The following year, the freedoms of Jews were further limited by their prohibition from participating in parliamentary
elections (Kristallnacht, 2003). Also around this time, shopkeepers were beginning to blatantly discriminate against Jews by hanging signs that read, "Jews Not Welcome" (Kristallnacht, 2003). Of course, these
signs were removed prior to the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, so that the rest of the world would remain blissfully unaware of the Nazis anti-Semitic policies (Kristallnacht, 2003). In
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