The Role Of Jews In The 19th Century

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More than half a century after the Third Reich was defeated by a massive military coalition headed by the United States, the Soviet Union, and Great Britain, Hitler and the Nazis remain powerful symbols of the worst possible villains imaginable. They regime that promoted a terrifying principle of racial purity, incarcerated many of its own citizens in concentration camps because of their political or religious views or their sexual orientation, started a world war, and attempted to murder all European Jews was the twentieth century’s icon of absolute evil.

The majority of the German party consisted of the Nazi party and the Catholic Centre Party. Industrialists and large landowners opposed and poured money into the Nazi party. The Nazi party increased from 2.6% to 37.3% in Reichstag in 1932 and President Von Hindenburg appointed Hitler as Chancellor.

Most of the 6 million Jews annihilated in the Holocaust were gassed immediately upon arriving by train at one of the six Nazi death camps in Poland. Only a small minority were selected for labor in the death camps or for
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This development was due not only to the rising nationalism of the 19th century, but also to the conscious preservation, especially among Orthodox Jews, of cultural and religious barriers that isolated the Jewish minorities from other citizens. It has also been charged that in the years between the fall of Napoleon and the rise of Hitler the Roman Catholic Church, which sometimes subscribed to the idea of Jewish racial identity and sometimes denied it, not only failed to condemn European anti-Semitism, but actually contributed to it. Jewish reaction to the phenomenon of anti-Semitism in its many forms found political expression in