Asked by @luhjo_.3

What steps did the Nazis take to control and eliminate the Jewish people?

They gave Jewish people money and rations and made them move to the United States.

They forced Jewish people into ghettos, concentration camps, and labor camps.

They allowed Jewish people to live among non-Jews, but they took control of their businesses.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Correct answer: They forced Jewish people into ghettos, concentration camps, and labor camps.

Brief explanation:
- The Nazis first excluded Jews from public life through laws and propaganda (e.g., Nuremberg Laws), boycotts, and seizure of livelihoods (Aryanization of Jewish businesses).
- They confined Jews in ghettos and deported large numbers to concentration, forced-labor, and extermination camps run by the SS.
- Mass murder was carried out by Einsatzgruppen (shootings) and in extermination camps (gas chambers, starvation, and related killings), plus brutal forced labor and death marches near the war’s end.

Notes on the other options:
- The statement about giving money/rations and sending Jews to the United States is false. The regime expropriated Jewish property, restricted resources, and largely prevented emigration after the war began.
- The statement that they “allowed Jewish people to live among non-Jews, but took control of their businesses” is misleading. While businesses were confiscated (true), Jews were increasingly segregated, persecuted, and ultimately deported and murdered rather than simply being allowed to live normally among non-Jews.