Question

How did anti-Semitism contribute to the events of the Holocaust?

Most Germans blamed World War I for the economic issues facing their country. 

Germany formed alliances with Italy and Japan to create the Axis powers.

Most countries did not accept Jewish refugees, so Jews could not relocate after being ordered to leave Germany.

The government blamed economic issues on Jewish people, leading to their persecution and mass murder.

Drag each item to the correct location.

Put responses in the correct input to answer the question. Select a response, navigate to the desired input and insert the response. Responses can be selected and inserted using the space bar, enter key, left mouse button or touchpad. Responses can also be moved by dragging with a mouse.

anti-Semitic actions not anti-Semitic actions

forcing Jews into ghettos
seizing Jewish homes, money, and belongs

ordering Jews to leave Germany establishing killing centers where Jews were murdered

What was the primary ideology that drove the Nazi party’s actions during the Holocaust? 

anti-communism

Economic nationalism

religious fundamentalism

Aryan supremacy

Answers

Answered by GPT-4o mini
To organize the responses based on whether they are anti-Semitic actions or not anti-Semitic actions, we can sort them as follows:

**Anti-Semitic Actions:**
- forcing Jews into ghettos
- seizing Jewish homes, money, and belongings
- ordering Jews to leave Germany
- establishing killing centers where Jews were murdered

**Not Anti-Semitic Actions:**
- (There are no responses provided that fall under this category)

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Regarding the primary ideology that drove the Nazi party's actions during the Holocaust, the correct answer is:

**Aryan supremacy**

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