🇨🇿 Regulace cen v nacistickém Německu, 1935.

„Prodejnu policie uzavřela, protože ceny byly příliš vysoké. Majitel obchodu je na převýchově v Dachau.“

🇬🇧 Price regulation in Nazi Germany, 1935

“The store was closed by the police because the prices were too high. The owner of the shop is being re-educated in Dachau.”

https://nostrcheck.me/media/public/nostrcheck.me_3401629785980311481698310524.webp

Reply to this note

Please Login to reply.

Discussion

I had no idea that the camp was operational before the war... Crazy!

Nazi anti-Jewish policy functioned on two primary levels: legal measures to expel the Jews from society and strip them of their rights and property while simultaneously engaging in campaigns of incitement, abuse, terror and violence of varying proportions. There was one goal: to make the Jews leave Germany.

On March 9, 1933, several weeks after Hitler assumed power, organized attacks on Jews broke out across Germany. Two weeks later, the Dachau concentration camp, situated near Munich, opened. Dachau became a place of internment for Communists, Socialists, German liberals and anyone considered an enemy of the Reich. It became the model for the network of concentration camps that would be established later by the Nazis. Within a few months, democracy was obliterated in Germany, and the country became a centralized, single-party police state.

On April 1, 1933, a general boycott against German Jews was declared, in which SA members stood outside Jewish-owned stores and businesses in order to prevent customers from entering.

Approximately one week later, a law concerning the rehabilitation of the professional civil service was passed. The purpose of the legislation was to purge the civil service of officials of Jewish origin and those deemed disloyal to the regime. It was the first racial law that attempted to isolate Jews and oust them from German life. The first laws banished Jews from the civil service, judicial system, public medicine, and the German army (then being reorganized). Ceremonial public book burnings took place throughout Germany. Many books were torched solely because their authors were Jews. The exclusion of Jews from German cultural life was highly visible, ousting their considerable contribution to the German press, literature, theater, and music.

https://www.yadvashem.org/holocaust/about/nazi-germany-1933-39/beginning-of-persecution.html