Adolph Hitler was born in Austria in 1889. When Hitler lived in Vienna he knew that Austrian Germans were a minority, but they felt superior to Jews, and other ethnic groups. Hitler soon developed the financial anti-Semitism that would later play a major role in his rise to power. After Hitler was released from prison after a failed attempt to seize power in Munich, he found enthusiastic followers among veterans and lower-middle-class people who felt frustrated about the future. The Great Depression played into Hitler's hands. As unemployment rose, Nazi membership grew to almost a million. Hitler's program appealed to workers and business people alike. He promoted to end reparations, create jobs and re-arm Germany. He soon started to believe more in prejudice and anti-Semitism. This was only the beginning of Hitler's rein of terror.
One way that Jewish human rights were violated was in religion. Adolph Hitler deprived Christianity as "week" and "flabby." He sought to replace religion with his racial creed. In attempt to control the churches, the Nazi combined all protestant sects into a single. Nazis closed all catholic schools and got rid of the clergy in an attempt to erase Christianity.
A second way in which Jewish rights were violated was economically. Hitler set out to drive Jews from Germany. In 1935, the Nuremberg laws placed severe restrictions on Jews. Jews were prohibited from marrying non-Jews, attending of teaching at German schools or universities, holding government jobs, practicing law of medicine, or publishing books. Nazis beat and robbed Jews, and convinced mobs to do