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e #5: the nuremberg race laws according to the nuremberg laws of 1935, …

Question

e #5: the nuremberg race laws
according to the nuremberg laws of 1935, how did the german government decide if someone was jewish?

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

The 1935 Nuremberg Race Laws defined Jewish status based on ancestry, not religious practice. The government used genealogical records to count the number of Jewish grandparents:

  1. A person with 3 or 4 Jewish grandparents was classified as fully Jewish.
  2. A person with 2 Jewish grandparents was classified as a Mischling (mixed blood) of the first degree, and could be further categorized as Jewish if they practiced Judaism, were married to a Jew, or had Jewish children.
  3. A person with 1 Jewish grandparent was classified as a Mischling of the second degree.

Answer:

Under the 1935 Nuremberg Race Laws, the German government determined Jewish status exclusively through genealogical records, counting the number of full Jewish grandparents:

  • Those with 3 or 4 Jewish grandparents were deemed fully Jewish.
  • Those with 2 Jewish grandparents were labeled Mischlinge (mixed blood) of the first degree, and could be classified as Jewish if they engaged in Jewish religious practice, were married to a Jew, or had Jewish children.
  • Those with 1 Jewish grandparent were labeled Mischlinge of the second degree.

Religious identity or self-identification was not the determining factor.