P:The Nazi Regime was an impactful …show more content…
Rather, he states, “Propaganda is meant for the masses who cannot comprehend logic and intellect, but can be convinced of anything if their emotions are manipulated”. This had a major impact on the Jews as the Germans gave into the propaganda and this led the Jews to be teased for the way they looked, acted and the morals that they upheld, making them feel unwanted. E: The ongoing antisemitic propaganda that grew overtime eventually led to the Nazi Regime’s boycott of Jewish businesses on the 1st April 1933. Even though the boycott in Germany was not a success, their intent was to make no one purchase goods from Jewish companies which had a significant impact on Jews as they were made to feel unwanted by society and isolated by society. E: ____________________________. E: After all of the propaganda and deception made about the Jews, Hitler was able to establish the Nuremberg Laws on September 15, 1935. These laws were enacted to protect what the Nazis claimed was “German Blood” and to uphold the superiority of …show more content…
The next step of the Nazi Regime was the transition into the ghettos. Ghettos were enclosed districts that isolated Jews from the non-Jewish population and from other Jewish communities. E: This process was primarily done to dehumanise Jews, which impacted them as they weren’t provided with the right amount of food, causing starvation, they couldn’t shower which led to poor levels of sanitation and disease, and they were given hard labour tasks which weakened their ability to take care of themselves. E: On February 8, 1940, the Nazi’s established a ghetto in the northeastern section of Lodz, where 160,000 Jews, almost a third of the entire population of Lodz, had been forced into a small area of the city. E: Ella, a Holocaust survivor who was five years old at the time when the Holocaust started, explains what her life was like in the ghettos, stating “beds were all together in the same room, food had to be rationed in order to preserve it and one day the police let in smugglers with food so that people could buy food”. This further reiterates how congested the ghettos were as well as the process of creating the ghettos which were established by the Nazis, which impacted the Jews as they were segregated from socialising with Non Jewish