Asked by @luhjo_.3
By 1938, Jewish people in Nazi Germany were not allowed to work in the government or
carry identification.
live near other Jewish people.
attend synagogues.
attend schools and colleges.
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct: they were not allowed to work in the government, and by 1938 they were largely barred from attending public schools and universities.
Incorrect: they were not banned from carrying identification (in fact the regime increasingly controlled and recorded Jews’ papers), they were not forced to live only near other Jews inside Germany (forced ghettos came later in occupied areas), and while synagogues were attacked and many closed in the Kristallnacht pogrom (Nov 1938), there was not a single nationwide legal ban on Jewish worship before the later wartime measures.
Incorrect: they were not banned from carrying identification (in fact the regime increasingly controlled and recorded Jews’ papers), they were not forced to live only near other Jews inside Germany (forced ghettos came later in occupied areas), and while synagogues were attacked and many closed in the Kristallnacht pogrom (Nov 1938), there was not a single nationwide legal ban on Jewish worship before the later wartime measures.
Submit Your Answer
We prioritize human answers over AI answers.
If you are human, and you can answer this question, please submit your answer.