Many Jews somehow managed to escape at the end of 1939. However, many Jews remain in Germany. The leftover Jews were forced to emigrate. Hitler believes this is the solution quoted by the "Jewish question". But there are so many Jewish immigrants to other countries that are no longer needed. Foreign Minister of Germany said, "We all want to drive the Jews away, the difficulty is that none of the countries will accept them." At this point, the Nazis wish to release Germany from the Jews on a larger scale.
In 1935 and 1936, the speed of persecution of the Jews became faster. In May 1935, the Jews were forbidden to join the Defense Army (army), and in that year Anti-Jewish advertisements appeared at Nazi's German shops and restaurants. The Nuremberg law of ethnic purity was adopted during the Nazi rally in Nuremberg; on 15th September 1935, the "German blood and honor protection law" was passed, and Aryans and Jewish We prevented sexual relations and marriage between. At the same time, the "Imperial Citizenship Act" was passed in November, and it stipulates that all Jews, even quarters and half Jews, are no longer citizens of their own country (Reichsbürger). ) Their public status has become "the headquarters of the country" Reichsangehöriger. This means that they do not have basic citizenship like voting rights, but voting for non-Jewish German rights at the present time means to vote for Nazi party obligations only.
At the annual general meeting held in Nuremberg in September 1935, the Nazi leaders announced a new law institutionalizing much of the racial theory which was dominated by Nazi ideology. These "Nuremberg laws" exclude German Jews from citizenship of the empire and prohibit them from marrying or having sex with "German or German related". The laws of the subsidiaries of these laws deprive them of the majority of their political rights. Jews are deprived of their citizenship (that is, there is no hope of formal voting rights), and they can not bear the office.
In 1935, the Anti-Jewish Act of Nazi Germany was known as the law of Nuremberg. It is a ban on marriage and non-marriage between non-Aryans and Nazi political opponents between civil servants and what is known as any sexual relationship and "Aryan". "Lian people" (Jews, Romans, Negroes) are banned from Rassenschande or "ethnic waste". The Nuremberg law is based on the concept of racial purity and is trying to maintain the Aryan race at the top of the Nazi race hierarchy Ubermenschen 'herrenvolk' (Master Race) seems to regard Jews as Asians Teach German citizens to