English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

can any body expalin why Hitler hated jews

2006-12-06 00:08:35 · 7 answers · asked by malcom 3 in Politics & Government Military

7 answers

Root of Hitler's/Nazi Hatred for Jews
There are many contributing factors and possible theories. Here are some points to consider:


The only reason the jews were killed by the nazis were that the nazis were jealous that the jews had the riches and the main businesses, and a great life thats it 11 million people died of jealousy

Jealousy. Some Jews were successful and held powerful positions in Austria and Germany in the 1920s and 1930s. At the same time, the world was suffering in the Great Depression. For various reasons, including war reparations for World War I, Germany was being hit the hardest by the worldwide economic depression. Successful Jews were envied and blamed for "taking German jobs."

During World War I, communism was on the rise. Lenin's Revolution had forced Russia out of the war. The German Army at times faced near rebellion among their own troops. This contributed to Germany being forced to sue for peace. Since some socialist/communist leaders were Jewish this was exploited as another reason for Germans to hate Jews. Hitler often spoke of Bolshevik (communist) Jewry. There is still a strong association in some people's minds between Jews and leftism of various kinds.

Hitler and other Germans absorbed some of their parents' racism. Anti-Semitism has a long history.

Some Germans held to the belief that "Jewish bankers" were responsible for the Treaty of Versailles because they stopped funding WWI.

The Balfour Declaration of 1917 supposedly proves that Jews betrayed Germany in World War I. According to one who holds this theory, "During the Great War (World War I), members of the Zionist Jewish elite bartered with England and promised to bring the United States into the war in exchange for Palestine. This is the root cause of the belief that the Jews contributed to the defeat and subsequent economic rape of Germany in the post-war years." However, this wasn't something mentioned much in Germany and seems to be a post-1945 (!) preoccupation of a few anti-Zionists.

Jews became a scapegoat for all of Germany's economic problems. (According to this racist sentiment, "international Jewish financiers like the Rothschilds, Oppenheimers, Bilderbergs, etc., plunged the world into a war for their business profit.")

Hitler and many Nazis were influenced by an anti-Semitic book called "Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion."

Some claim that Hitler's mother was half-Jewish and he was ashamed of this. (Hitler's grandmother on his father's side was a housekeeper in the home of a Jewish family. When she left she was pregnant with his father.)

A rumor says that in Hitler's youth he slept with a Jewish prostitute and contracted syphillis.

There is one theory that says Hitler hated Jews so much because of his mother's death. She died in a hospital and the doctor may have been Jewish. There is a story that the Jewish doctor needed to examine Hitler's mother's breast because she had breast cancer. Hitler resented the man touching his mother intimately. Alternately, he hated the doctor for not being able to save her. One piece of evidence that contradicts this theory is a letter from Hitler to the Jewish doctor, where he apparently thanks the doctor numerous times for his help.

Hitler lived in Vienna from 1907 to 1913 and those were the most difficult years of his life. Hitler was trying to become an Architect or to make himself a name in field of arts. He was twice rejected from the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts. The second rejection by the Academy was one of the most traumatic experience of his life; all his dreams were shattered. After discovering that four out of seven professors that rejected him were Jewish he blamed the Jews for his failure.

The Nazis had a vision of an Aryan German race that did not include Jews and many other groups of people.

Here is an example of Hitler's anti-Semetic racism from a speech given in Munich in July 1922: "His is no master people; he is an exploiter: the Jews are a people of robbers. He has never founded any civilisation, though he has destroyed civilisations by the hundred...everything he has stolen. Foreign people, foreign workmen build him his temples, it is foreigners who create and work for him, it is foreigners who shed their blood for him."

Jewish communities tend have a very strong group collective mindset. They differentiated themselves from other Germans. This made them easier to single out for hatred.

Some say Hitler and the Nazis were simply opportunistic demagogues. Inciting hatred of the Jews was the means to an end. The Nazis used hatred of the Jews to unify the German people and create a new German empire. Nothing unites a people more than when they believe they are constantly under attack and fighting a common enemy. The Jews were convenient enemies. After propogating this idea of Jews being the scum of the earth so passionately, Hitler and the Nazis may have deluded themselves into believing it more deeply.

The Christian religions blamed the death of Christ on the Jews. One can see in the Bible the statement that the Jews demanded the death of Jesus, and said, "let it be upon our heads and that of our children." This became an excuse to abuse the Jews for more than a thousand years. It was not until the 1960's (I think) that the Catholic Church stated that the Jews were NOT to blame for the death of Jesus.

In the 1930s there was a lot of anti-Jewish feeling and resentment in the Western world. Many Jews who wanted to escape the persecution in Germany were refused entry into the US and other European countries.

As a nationalist party, any group that felt it had a higher loyalty than the nation was going to be in for trouble. This is why the Nazis tried to suppress all religion, and even set up its own secular Church. Jews tended to have family links outside Germany, especially in Russia or the US, which would make them much harder to indoctrinate with nationalist bull.

Anti-semitism has been rife throughout European history, largely because they were a distinct, easily identifiable group, who refused to integrate. (Those who really wanted to integrate converted.) Of course now we see pluralism as a virtue, and a variety of ethnicities and religions as a positive thing. However, if you want to set yourself up as the totalitarian dictator of a NATION then you have to establish a clear identity for that nation and stick to it; variety is an anathema.

Another key element of a dictatorship is fear, and a visible scapegoat experiencing the wrath of the state is a good way to keep people from stepping out of line.

Hitler was an unstable man.


read more about it here :

http://www.faqfarm.com/Q/Why_did_Hitler_and_the_Nazis_hate_Jews_and_try_to_kill_them

2006-12-06 03:09:41 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Please read the following information obtained from this site-
http://www.simaqianstudio.com/forum/index.php?&act=ST&f=31&t=1644

He was born in Austria at the end of the 19th century. Enough to make him have antisemitic views.

But Hitler's passion for antisemitism was something more than just his upbringing. There is little indication in his correspondance or his friend's and relative's memories that he strongly believed in a Jewish plot to destroy Germany until 1919. Part of his antisemitism in this case is psychological, news of the war's end and Germany's loss came to Hitler when he was half blind in Pasewalk hospital, which would have increased the blow. Ludendorff's stab in the back theory (the belief that the Jews were responsible for the end of the war) had a big impact on Hitler (what soldier wouldn't be influenced by his top commander?), and the Jewish involvement in the communist uprisings and the later hated Weimar Republic would have cemented this in Hitler's mind. And for a guy who was pretty much a homeless failure before the war, a hero during it, andprobably would return to the homeless failure afterwards unless he did something, Hitler would have been looking for someone to blame.

2006-12-06 19:09:08 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Insanity. There is a cultural history of bigotry and racism, but Jews were a nation without sovereignty, same as the Kurds are now. Hitler was mentally ill however. Just read a few pages of Mien Kampf.

2006-12-06 00:26:26 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The world has been contemplating on that since April 30 1945

2006-12-06 00:11:57 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Read Mein Kampf and you will better understand Adolf. But to be honest he was a very disturbed man. THere are too many probable reasons on why he hated Jews. I have read where young Adolf wanted to be an artist but his Art Teacher (who was a Jew) told Adolf that he stunk and was a crappy thus causing young Adolf's heart to be crushed.

2006-12-06 01:18:07 · answer #5 · answered by JohnRingold 4 · 0 0

the comparable reason a crap load of political activists, homosexuals, many Christians, and different scapegoats have been killed. The Jews have been the biggest scapegoat of all of them, and a handy label for all people that did no longer in effective condition into the Nazi's thought of a splendidly molded society. As for the people who went alongside with it, properly, it is not approximately "how undesirable Christianity could be". If all and sundry heavily thinks Hitler became right into a Christian then they are, frankly, an entire f*cking fool. Hitler became into and is a prevalent Satanic occultist, no longer a Christian, yet like limitless evil men in the previous him and doubtless limitless evil men after him he used faith as a skill to an end. Hitler became right into a soft talker who timed his upward push to means completely. Germany became into in difficulty and he gave them somebody in charge. information flash--an excellent style of Germans weren't in settlement with persecution of Jews. in actuality, the only reason they did no longer riot became into concern for their very own lives. Many a Christian--and the different properly meaning individual--chanced on themselves shipped to between the concentration camps besides for sympathizing with the Jews and different scapegoats. The wholesale slaughter of Jews became right into a wholesale slaughter of a a grab bag of cultures, ethnicities, and religions, and became into no longer with the aid of any stretch of the mind's eye constrained to Jews. Hitler became into an evil, brutal, merciless guy who used those people and their lives as a skill to an end.

2016-10-04 22:59:55 · answer #6 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Main reason was politics of the time and mind set of the people of that era.

2006-12-06 00:59:02 · answer #7 · answered by minootoo 7 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers