Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'ShUM Sites of Speyer, Worms and Mainz' has mentioned 'Nazi' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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About 60% (numbering around 304,000) emigrated during the first six years of the Nazi dictatorship. | WIKI |
In 1933, persecution of the Jews became an official Nazi policy. | WIKI |
[8] By the end of the war, an estimated 160,000 to 180,000 German Jews had been killed by the Nazi regime and their collaborators. | WIKI |
It published essays and stories by prominent Jewish writers such as Franz Kafka and Leo Hirsch until its liquidation by the Nazi government in 1938. | WIKI |
Part of a series onThe HolocaustJews on selection ramp at Auschwitz, May 1944 Responsibility Nazi Germany People Major perpetrators Adolf Hitler Heinrich Himmler Heinrich Mxc3xbcller Reinhard Heydrich Adolf Eichmann Odilo Globoxc4x8dnik Theodor Eicke Richard Glxc3xbccks Ernst Kaltenbrunner Rudolf Hxc3xb6ss Christian Wirth Joseph Goebbels Ion Antonescu Lxc3xa1szlxc3xb3 Ferenczy Philippe Pxc3xa9tain Organizations Nazi Party Gestapo Schutzstaffel (SS) Totenkopfverbxc3xa4nde (SS-TV) Einsatzgruppen Sturmabteilung (SA) Verfxc3xbcgungstruppe (SS-VT) Wehrmacht Trawniki men Collaborators during World War II Nazi ideologues Early policies Racial policy Nazi eugenics Nuremberg Laws Haavara Agreement Madagascar Plan Forced euthanasia Victims Jews Romani people (Gypsies) Poles Soviet POWs Slavs in Eastern Europe Homosexuals People with disabilities Ghettos Biaxc5x82ystok Budapest Kaunas Krakxc3xb3w xc5x81xc3xb3dxc5xba Lublin Lwxc3xb3w Minsk Riga Warsaw Vilnius Jewish ghettos inGerman-occupied Poland List of selected ghettos Camps Nazi extermination camps Auschwitz II-Birkenau Bexc5x82xc5xbcec Chexc5x82mno Jasenovac Majdanek Sajmixc5xa1te Sobibor Treblinka Nazi concentration camps Auschwitz I Bergen-Belsen Bogdanovka Buchenwald Dachau Dora Gonars (Italy) Gross-Rosen Herzogenbusch Janowska Kaiserwald Mauthausen-Gusen Neuengamme Rab Ravensbrxc3xbcck Sachsenhausen Salaspils Stutthof Transnistria (Romania) Theresienstadt Uckermark Warsaw Transit and collection camps Belgium Breendonk Mechelen France Gurs Drancy Italy Bolzano Netherlands Amersfoort Westerbork Slovakia Serexc4x8f Divisions SS-Totenkopfverbxc3xa4nde Concentration Camps Inspectorate Politische Abteilung Sanitxc3xa4tswesen Extermination methods Gas van Gas chamber Extermination through labour Einsatzgruppen Human medical experimentation Atrocities Pogroms Kristallnacht Bucharest Dorohoi Iaxc5x9fi Izieu Szczuczyn Jedwabne Plungxc4x97 Kaunas Lviv (Lvov) Marseille Tykocin Vel' d'Hiv Wxc4x85sosz Einsatzgruppen Babi Yar Bydgoszcz Czxc4x99stochowa Kamianets-Podilskyi Ninth Fort Odessa Piaxc5x9bnica Ponary Rumbula Erntefest "Final Solution" Wannsee Conference Mogilev Conference Operation "Reinhard" Holocaust trains Extermination camps End of World War II Wola massacre Death marches Resistance Auschwitz Protocols Vrbaxe2x80x93Wetzler report Czesxc5x82aw Mordowicz Jerzy Tabeau Rudolf Vrba Alfrxc3xa9d Wetzler Bricha Jewish partisans Sonderkommando photographs Witold Pilecki Resistance movement in Auschwitz Zwixc4x85zek Organizacji Wojskowej Witold's Report Ghetto uprisings Warsaw Biaxc5x82ystok xc5x81achwa Czxc4x99stochowa International responseJoint Declaration by Members ofthe United Nations Auschwitz bombing debate MS St. Louis Nuremberg trials Denazification Aftermath Bricha Displaced persons Survivors Central Committee of the Liberated Jews Reparations Agreement betweenIsrael and the Federal Republic of Germany Lists Holocaust survivors Deportations of French Jewsto death camps Survivors of Sobibor Timeline of Treblinka extermination camp Victims of Nazism Rescuers of Jews Memorials and museums Resources Bibliography List of books about Nazi Germany The Destruction of theEuropean Jews Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos Functionalism versusintentionalism Remembrance Days of remembrance Memorials and museums Righteous Among the Nations vte | WIKI |
Taken in March 1933, immediately after the Nazis seized power, this photo shows Nazi SA militants forcing a Jewish lawyer to walk barefoot through the streets of Munich wearing a sign that says "I will never again complain to the police" | WIKI |
In 1933, persecution of the Jews became an active Nazi policy, but at first laws were not as rigorously obeyed or as devastating as in later years. | WIKI |
In May 1935, Jews were forbidden to join the Wehrmacht (Armed Forces), and that year, anti-Jewish propaganda appeared in Nazi German shops and restaurants. | WIKI |
The Nuremberg Racial Purity Laws were passed around the time of the Nazi rallies at Nuremberg; on September 15, 1935, the Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor was passed, preventing sexual relations and marriages between Aryans and Jews. | WIKI |
By April 1939, nearly all Jewish companies had either collapsed under financial pressure and declining profits, or had been forced to sell out to the Nazi German government. | WIKI |
On November 7, 1938, a young Polish Jew, Herschel Grynszpan, attacked and shot two German officials in the Nazi German embassy in Paris. | WIKI |
(Grynszpan was angry about the treatment of his parents by the Nazi Germans.) | WIKI |
However, as Nazi legislation worsened the Jews' situation, more Jews wished to leave Germany, with a panicked rush in the months after Kristallnacht in 1938. | WIKI |
Overall, of the 522,000 Jews living in Germany in January 1933, approximately 304,000 emigrated during the first six years of Nazi rule and about 214,000 were left on the eve of World War II. | WIKI |
Commonly referred to as xe2x80x9cdashers and divers,xe2x80x9d the Jews lived a submerged life and experienced the struggle to find food, a relatively secure hiding space or shelter, and false identity papers while constantly evading Nazi police and strategically avoiding checkpoints. | WIKI |
Avoiding arrest was particularly challenging in 1943 as the Nazi police increased their personnel and inspection checkpoints, leading to 65 percent of all submerged Jews being detained and likely deported. | WIKI |
After World War I, antisemitism grew again, during the time of the Weimar Republic and later on during the Nazi reign. | WIKI |
Various studies have been done to try and explain the reasons for the growth of anti-Semitism during the Weimar Republic and particularly during the Nazi regime. | WIKI |
Nico Voigtlxc3xa4ndera and Hans-Joachim Voth analyze and discuss a combination of studies done by the National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, and the Center for Economic Policy Research, London on German Anti-Semitic teachings during the Nazi era. | WIKI |
Their research notes that attitudes forged during the Nazi regime are still influencing younger generations. | WIKI |
Regions that suffered from the Black Death pogroms were 6 times more likely to engage in antisemitic violence during the 1920s, racist and fascist parties like the DNVP, NSDAP and DVFP gained a 1.5 times higher voting share in the 1928 election, their inhabitants wrote more letters to antisemitic newspapers like xe2x80x9cDer Stxc3xbcrmerxe2x80x9d, and they deported more Jews during the Nazi reign. | WIKI |
The persistence of anti-Semitism really stemmed from the Nazi regime. | WIKI |
The significance that came from the findings is that Germans that grew up under the Nazi regime are much more anti-Semitic today than those born before or after that period. | WIKI |
Most Jews who settled in East Germany did so either because their pre-1933 homes had been there or because they had been politically leftist before the Nazi seizure of power and, after 1945, wished to build an antifascist, socialist Germany. | WIKI |