Nazi Germany — Racial laws: from discrimination to genocide
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概要
Beginning with the early years of the Nazi regime, this episode covers the 1933 boycotts of Jewish businesses, the dismissal of Jewish civil servants under the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, and the gradual exclusion of Jews from professional and public life. These were not random acts of street violence — they were opening moves in a deliberate campaign.
The central focus is the Nuremberg Laws of September 1935: two pieces of legislation that permanently restructured the legal status of Jews in Germany. The Reich Citizenship Law stripped Jews of German citizenship. The Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour banned marriage and relations between Jews and non-Jewish Germans. Together, they gave persecution a legal foundation and brought the full apparatus of bureaucratic precision to racial classification — defining Jews by grandparent fractions, creating categories of Mischlinge, and making discrimination not merely permitted, but codified.
The episode then traces the tightening economic exclusion of Jews through Aryanisation, the regime's push for emigration, and the events of November 1938 — Kristallnacht — when a nationwide pogrom signalled a decisive and violent escalation. This is essential history for anyone seeking to understand how a modern, literate state can destroy a population through its own institutions.
This episode was produced using artificial intelligence. Script, research, and audio are entirely AI-generated. A YesOui production.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
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