Asked by tfy
The 1935 Nuremberg Laws impacted Jewish people in Germany by
permitting Jewish people to holding government jobs.
prohibiting Jewish people from marrying non-Jewish Germans.
permitting Jewish doctors to treating Jewish people.
prohibiting Jewish people from forming Jewish-only schools.
All Answers 1
Answered by
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Only the second statement is correct.
- Permitting Jewish people to hold government jobs — False. Jews were increasingly barred from civil service (a 1933 law removed many Jews from government positions) and the Nuremberg Laws (1935) further stripped Jews of many rights by revoking full German citizenship.
- Prohibiting Jewish people from marrying non‑Jewish Germans — True. The 1935 Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour forbade marriages and extramarital relations between Jews and “German or related blood” citizens.
- Permitting Jewish doctors to treat Jewish people — Misleading/False. The Nuremberg Laws did not grant such permission as a benefit; instead Jews were removed from many professional organizations and increasingly restricted in whom they could treat by later Nazi regulations. Jewish doctors were progressively limited to treating Jewish patients as exclusionary policies intensified — not because the Nuremberg Laws “permitted” it as a positive right.
- Prohibiting Jewish people from forming Jewish‑only schools — False. Jews were expelled from many public schools and universities; Jewish communities set up separate schools. The laws enforced segregation and exclusion, they did not ban Jewish‑run schools.
- Permitting Jewish people to hold government jobs — False. Jews were increasingly barred from civil service (a 1933 law removed many Jews from government positions) and the Nuremberg Laws (1935) further stripped Jews of many rights by revoking full German citizenship.
- Prohibiting Jewish people from marrying non‑Jewish Germans — True. The 1935 Law for the Protection of German Blood and German Honour forbade marriages and extramarital relations between Jews and “German or related blood” citizens.
- Permitting Jewish doctors to treat Jewish people — Misleading/False. The Nuremberg Laws did not grant such permission as a benefit; instead Jews were removed from many professional organizations and increasingly restricted in whom they could treat by later Nazi regulations. Jewish doctors were progressively limited to treating Jewish patients as exclusionary policies intensified — not because the Nuremberg Laws “permitted” it as a positive right.
- Prohibiting Jewish people from forming Jewish‑only schools — False. Jews were expelled from many public schools and universities; Jewish communities set up separate schools. The laws enforced segregation and exclusion, they did not ban Jewish‑run schools.
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