By 1938, Jews in Nazi Germany were not allowed to work in the government or


A.carry identification.
B.live near other Jews.
C.attend synagogues.
D.attend schools and colleges.

Respuesta :

W0lf93
D. Attend schools and colleges. An array of laws targeted against Jews were passed in Nazi Germany in the 1930s. Already in 1933, the Law against Overcrowding in Schools and Universities limited the number of Jewish students who could enroll. In 1936, the government banned all Jewish teachers from public schools. Then, in November, 1938, the Ministry of Education also banned all Jewish children from public schools. Measures such as these and other laws directed against Jewish persons were only the beginning of what would become the Holocaust -- the planned extermination of millions of Jewish persons and others unwanted in Nazi society.

The correct answer is D.

Since the Nazi party arrived to power in Germany, they started to enact discriminative legislation against Jews: first of all, Jews were forced to carry an identification that consisted on wearing a yellow star. Afterwards, they were restricted from certain jobs (public offices) and banned in schools and colleges.

Later on they would be expelled from their houses and business and forced to move and live all together in separate areas in the cities, called ghettos. The last step took place during the war, and it is the Holocaust, which consisted on the deportation and massive extermination of millions of Jews in death camps.