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In What Year did Nazi Germany fire all Jewish Profs from Universities

2006-12-23 03:13:56 · 5 answers · asked by Frank B 1 in Arts & Humanities History

5 answers

The date you are seeking is 7 April 1933. Following is a time line of events of the period.

AdoIf Hitler is appointed Chancellor of Germany.

February 28, 1933

German government takes away freedom of speech, assembly, press, and freedom from invasion of privacy (mail, telephone, telegraph) and from house search without warrant.

March 4, 1933

Franklin D. Roosevelt is inaugurated President of the United States.

March 20, 1933

First concentration camp opens at Dachau, Germany, for political opponents of the regime.

April 1, 1933

Nationwide boycott of Jewish-owned businesses in Germany is carried out under Nazi leadership.

April 7, 1933

Law excludes "non-Aryans" from government employment; Jewish civil servants, including university professors and schoolteachers, are fired in Germany.

May 10, 1933

Books written by Jews, political opponents of Nazis, and many others are burned during huge public rallies across Germany.

July 14, 1933

Law passed in Germany permitting the forced sterilization of Gypsies, the mentally and physically disabled, African-Germans, and others considered "inferior" or "unfit."

October 1934

First major wave of arrests of homosexuals occurs throughout Germany, continuing into November.

April 1935

Jehovah's Witnesses are banned from all civil service jobs and are arrested throughout Germany.

September 15, 1935

Citizenship and racial laws are announced at Nazi party rally in Nuremberg.

March 7, 1936

Hitler's army invades the Rhineland.

July 12, 1936

First German Gypsies are arrested and deported to Dachau concentration camp.

August 1-16, 1936

Olympic Games take place in Berlin. Anti-Jewish signs are removed until the Games are over.

March 13, 1938

Austria is annexed by Germany.

July 6-15, 1938

Representatives from thirty-two countries meet at Evian, France, to discuss refugee policies. Most of the countries refuse to let in more Jewish refugees.

November 9-10, 1938

Nazis burn synagogues and loot Jewish homes and businesses in nationwide pogroms called Kristallnacht ("Night of Broken Glass"). Nearly 30,000 German and Austrian Jewish men are deported to concentration camps. Many Jewish women are jailed.

November 15, 1938

All Jewish children are expelled from public schools. Segregated Jewish schools are created.

December 2-3, 1938

All Gypsies in the Reich are required to register with the police.

March 15, 1939

German troops invade Czechoslovakia.

June 1939

Cuba and the United States refuse to accept Jewish refugees aboard the ship St. Louis, which is forced to return to Europe.

September 1, 1939

Germany invades Poland; World War II begins.

October 1939

Hitler extends power of doctors to kill institutionalized mentally and physically disabled persons in the "euthanasia" program.

Spring 1940

Germany invades and defeats Denmark, Norway, Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and France.

October 1940

Warsaw ghetto is established.

March 22, 1941

Gypsy and African-German children are expelled from public schools in the Reich.

March 24, 1941

Germany invades North Africa.

April 6, 1941

Germany invades Yugoslavia and Greece.

June 22, 1941

German army invades the Soviet Union. The Einsatzgruppen, mobile killing squads, begin mass murders of Jews, Gypsies, and Communist leaders.

September 23, 1941

Soviet prisoners of war and Polish prisoners are killed in Nazi test of gas chambers at Auschwitz in occupied Poland.

September 28-29, 1941

Nearly 34,000 Jews are murdered by mobile killing squads at Babi Yar, near Kiev (Ukraine).

October-November 1941

First group of German and Austrian Jews are deported to ghettos in eastern Europe.

December 7, 1941

Japan attacks Pearl Harbor.

December 8, 1941

Gassing operations begin at Chelmno "extermination" camp in occupied Poland.

December 11, 1941

Germany declares war on the United States.

January 20, 1942

Fifteen Nazi and government leaders meet at Wannsee, a section of Berlin, to discuss the "final solution to the Jewish question."

1942

Nazi "extermination" camps located in occupied Poland at Auschwitz-Birkenau, Treblinka, Sobibor, Belzec, and Majdanek-Lublin begin mass murder of Jews in gas chambers.

June 1, 1942

Jews in France and the Netherlands are required to wear identifying stars.

April 19-May 16, 1943

Jews in the Warsaw ghetto resist with arms the Germans' attempt to deport them to the Nazi extermination camps.

August 2, 1943

Inmates revolt at Treblinka.

Fall 1943

Danes use boats to smuggle most of the nation's Jews to neutral Sweden.

October 14, 1943

Inmates at Sobibor begin armed revolt.

January 1944

President Roosevelt sets up the War Refugee Board at the urging of Treasury Secretary Henry Morgenthau, Jr.

March 19, 1944

Germany occupies Hungary.

May 15-July 9, 1944

Over 430,000 Hungarian Jews are deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, where most of them are gassed.

June 6, 1944

Allied powers invade western Europe on D-Day.

July 20, 1944

German officers fail in an attempt to assassinate Hitler.

July 23, 1944

Soviet troops arrive at Majdanek concentration camp.

August 2, 1944

Nazis destroy the Gypsy camp at Auschwitz-Birkenau; around 3,000 Gypsies are gassed.

October 7, 1944

Prisoners at Auschwitz-Birkenau revolt and blow up one crematorium.

January 17, 1945

Nazis evacuate Auschwitz; prisoners begin "death marches" toward Germany.

January 27, 1945

Soviet troops enter Auschwitz.

April 1945

U.S. troops liberate survivors at Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps.

April 30, 1945

Hitler commits suicide in his bunker in Berlin.

May 5, 1945

U.S. troops liberate Mauthausen concentration camp.

May 7, 1945

Germany surrenders, and the war ends in Europe.

November 1945-October 1946

War crimes trials held at Nuremberg, Germany

May 14, 1948

State of Israel is established.

2006-12-23 03:26:07 · answer #1 · answered by Randy 7 · 3 1

answer: i'm no longer Jewish yet I even have studied Nazism, WWII and Judaism (nevertheless gaining expertise of). sure, there have been religious leaders in all of the church homes that supported the Nazis, particularly Catholic and Lutheran. there have been persons that have been righteous and stood against the Nazis yet there replaced into help from larger-ups. some say it replaced into by using fact the Catholic church feared the capability of the Nazis and fascists, others have faith they have been falling prey to age-previous bigotry against Judaism. Over all, while the crimes and horrors of the Nazis got here out, they have been denounced via the church homes of all denominations.

2016-10-18 22:09:14 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

1936

2006-12-23 03:21:18 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 3

1939

2006-12-23 03:15:02 · answer #4 · answered by Allen L 4 · 1 3

try this http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Germany/History

2006-12-23 03:15:59 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

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