19 - The Development of anti-Semitic policies 1938-40

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  • The Development of anti-Semitic policies 1938-40
    • The Effect of the Anschluss with Austria March 1938
      • Anschluss - union between Germany and Austria
        • Banned under the Versailles Treaty but achieved in March 1938
          • German troops were welcomed by the Austrians
            • 'Bloodless Victory'
        • The Austrian government had called a plebiscite to show their opposition to the union
          • When it was clear Britain/France/Italy wouldn't help Austria, they surrendered and Germany invaded
      • Hitler's next target was Czechoslovakia
        • A large German minority lived in a part of Czech called the Sudetenland
          • Sept 1938 Hitler demanded this and be handed over, and Britain and France agreed to it
        • March 1939 he succeeded in occupying the rest of Czechoslovakia
      • August 1939 Nazi-Soviet non-aggression pact
        • The U**R wouldn't oppose German invasion of Poland
          • This invasion happened in Sept and sparked war between Germany and Britain
      • Balance of power in the regime shifted towards radical approaches as Schacht was swept aside
        • Schacht hadn't wanted to alienate foreign investors so discouraged anti-Semitism
        • Goeing was determined to get rid of all Jews in business
          • The occupation of Austria accelerated this campaign as Nazis in Austria could do this without restraint
      • Anti-Semitic Decrees, April - November 1938
        • April 1938 Decree of Registration of Jewish Property
          • confiscated all Jewish property over 5000 marks
        • Jews were banned from working as travelling salesmen, security guards, travel agents and estate agents
          • 30,000 Jewish travelling salesmen lost their jobs
        • Jews lost entitlement to public welfare
          • Increased number of unemployed and poor Jews who depended on Jewish charities
        • Oct 1938 Jewish passports had to be stamped with a J
        • 1939 all Jewish men had to adopt the name Israel + women Sarah
          • Hitler turned down the idea for Jews to wear yellow stars
    • Reichskristallnacht 9-10 Nov 1938
      • Jewish homes, businesses were looted + vandalised; synagogues ruined + Jews killed and beaten up
      • Nazi propaganda described this night as 'the National soul has boiled over'
        • However after the night Hitler ordered Goering to sort things out and calm the SA down
      • Orchestrated by Nazi leadership but carried out through **/SA not wearing uniform
      • 9th Nov Ernst Vom Rath was murdered in a bank by Herschel Grynszpan (a jew whose parents had been left on the Polish border)
        • Used as an excuse for unleashing violent anti-Semitism
        • Goebbels orchestrated it to look unorganised by Nazis
          • The majority of Germans understood it had been organised by the State
        • 9th Nov was 15th anniversary of Much Putsch so this was a celebration
      • 91 Jews were killed + thousands injured
        • The ** directed the police not to intervene + place more than 20,000 Jews in preventive detention
          • The fire brigade were only concerned about stopping the fires from spreading to other buildings
      • Some ordinary citizens joined in with the violence while others were horrified
        • Reports claim some people in Leipzig and Hamburg were appalled and stunned
        • A British official claimed he didn't meet anyone who didn't disapprove of the violence
      • Goering prevented insurance companies from compensating Jewish victims
      • The Decree for the Restoration of the Street Scene
        • Meant Jews had to pay the cost of repairs
        • Jewish community had to pay 1 billion Reichsmark for compensation of disruption of the economy
      • The Decree Excluding Jews from German Economic Life 12th Nov - aryanisation of Jewish business
    • Emigration
      • Voluntary emigration was the first way a Jew-free Germany was achieved
        • As the war approached this moved on to forced emigration
          • 1938-41 forced emigration was seen as the solution to the Jewish problem
      • Voluntary Emigration
        • 1933 - 37,000 Jews left Germany
          • Overall 150,000 Jews voluntarily left Germany between March 1933 and Nov 1938
        • Nazis both encouraged emigration whilst also threatening to confiscate Jewish assets
          • he Nazis also encouraged Zionists (returning to homeland) to move to Palestine under British rule
        • Those with transferable skills and those with relatives in other countries found the decision easy to leave Germany
        • Most Jews felt German and wanted to stay
        • Germany had difficulty finding other countries who wanted to take the Jews
          • Many countries began to raise the barriers for Jewish immigration
            • Even Palestine could receive only a certain amount
        • Naiz policies were contradictory and stripped Jews of their wealth whilst encouraging emigration
        • Many Jews sought safe refuge after Reichskristallnacht
        • 9000 Jewish children were sent to Britain 1938-39
      • Controlled emigration
        • Controlling emigration was a key Nazi policy
        • After Anschluss Reinhard Heydrich used Austria as a laboratory for developing ** policy
        • The Central Office for Jewish Emigration was set up
          • 45,000 of Austria's 180,000 Jews were forced to emigrate
          • The illegal seizure of their property funded the emigration of poorer Jews
        • Jan 1939 Heydrich took charge of the Reich Office for Jewish Emigration
        • The SD began to amalgamate all Jewish organisations into one 'Reich association of the Jews in Germany'
          • The Jews had to deal with organisation themselves

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