1. 1929, the whole of Europe faced the Great Depression, and Germany also suffered heavy losses. At that time, wealthy Jewish businessmen in Germany did not help the country tide over the economic crisis. Even when there was a shortage of milk, Jewish businessmen would rather dump it than sell it to the poor at a reduced price. These actions made the German government and people hate Jews.
In the face of the impact of the economic crisis, there is widespread hatred of wealthy Jews in Germany.
2. Religious issues. In Europe, many people believe in Christianity. In western cultural legends, Christians believe that Jews crucified Jesus and Jews murdered him. Therefore, in the hearts of many Europeans, there is religious hatred against Jews.
After Hitler came to power, he was very dissatisfied with those Jews who refused to help the country through the economic crisis. In order to strengthen the economic foundation of fascism, the Nazis deprived Jews in various ways. If you kill a Jew, you can get Jewish wealth and enrich the Nazi treasury.
Second, Jews, also known as Jews, are a branch of Semitic people and are of the same origin as Arabs. The race is Europa, and Semitic subspecies are widely distributed in all countries of the world.
After wandering around the world for nearly two thousand years, Jews intermarried with local people, which made the skin color of Jews diversified, including white Jews, yellow Jews and black Jews, as well as sub-skin Jews in India and Latin America.
Extended data
Jews do not come from any country or culture, but from many countries and belong to different cultures. The first Jews who arrived in the North American colonies were the so-called Sefadi Jews. They lived in Spain and Portugal for centuries before, and their situation is very different from that of Germany, Russia or Eastern Europe where American Jews came from later generations.
No matter how confused outsiders are, these Jews actually belong to different communities. They are not yet fully integrated. Today, the vast majority of American Jews are descendants of Jews who immigrated to the United States from Russia, Poland and other Eastern European countries between 1880 and 1920. During these 40 years, one third of Eastern European Jews immigrated to the United States.
Despite the cultural rupture caused by different countries. Even in religious theory and practice, there are internal differences, but Jews not only worship the same ancestor of ancient Israel and share the same core of religious belief and historical tradition, but also, as a minority, they have suffered long-term hostility from different ethnic groups to varying degrees no matter where they live.
Other races have become "minorities" only in the United States, while Jews have lived in European countries as "minorities" for hundreds of years.
References:
Baidu encyclopedia-Jews
Baidu encyclopedia-Jewish holocaust