Question
How did the Teutonic Knights who ruled parts of Germany in the 14th century set a pattern for future Jewish persecution?
A. They massacred Jews because they believed them to be ethnically inferior, thus setting a precedent for genocide.
B. They intermarried with Jews in order to dilute their ethnicity, thus setting a pattern for the Holocaust.
C. They prohibited Jews from marrying non-Jews, thus setting a precedent for the future Nuremberg Laws.
D. They prohibited Jews from settling in territory they controlled, thus setting a pattern for Jewish segregation.
I read my text and there's two answers that are close but I'm going to go with A?
A. They massacred Jews because they believed them to be ethnically inferior, thus setting a precedent for genocide.
B. They intermarried with Jews in order to dilute their ethnicity, thus setting a pattern for the Holocaust.
C. They prohibited Jews from marrying non-Jews, thus setting a precedent for the future Nuremberg Laws.
D. They prohibited Jews from settling in territory they controlled, thus setting a pattern for Jewish segregation.
I read my text and there's two answers that are close but I'm going to go with A?
Answers
Writeacher
I disagree.
Leia
Ok then my second answer would be D
Anonymous
Its D