The Gradual Increase of Nazi Persecution of the mental and physical disabilities

  • Anti jewish ecomany law

    The “Decree on the Exclusion of Jews from Economic Life” prohibited Jews from owning businesses or engaging in trade. • Jewish-owned businesses had already faced pressure to “Aryanize,” which meant that the Jewish owner would be forced to sell his or her business at a steep discount to a non-Jewish employee or Nazi supporter
  • Reichstag Fire Decree

    This law gave the government complete power over what news and information they wanted to be spread or published. If people choose to publish information on their own, advertise, or assemble and present information, the government could arrest these individuals. They could also get rid of any political organizations that they didn’t like and censor all published material in the news, newspapers, magazines, billboards, pamphlets, etc.
  • Enabling Act

    to get everyone to vote for Hitler (Ew). The way that this was affecting everyone’s lives was because they were influenced to vote for a leader that is actually not going to do much good for them.
  • Sterilization Law

    400,000 germans were sterilized from January 1934 to May 1945 and they couldn't have children because they didn’t want more disabled people
  • Numbering laws extended

    Frick stated that the citizenship law also applied to Roma and Sinti (so-called “gypsies”) and to Afro-Germans. • Roma, Sinti, and Afro-Germans lost their citizenship and were not permitted to marry “Aryan” Germans. • This racial identity card identifies Konrad Lehman as a Zigeuner (Gypsy).
  • Rational definition explained

    The regulation clarified that Germans who were descended from one or two Jewish grandparents would be considered Mischling (mixed race). Those who had three or more Jewish grandparents were classified as Jews
  • Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honor

    People could only marry someone of the same race as them.
  • Jewish name law

    The “Law on the Alteration of Family and Personal Names” required Jews who did not have “Jewish first names” to take the middle names “Israel” (for men) or “Sara” (for women)
  • Euthanasia Decree

    This law was the first mass-killing from the Nazis and killed over 250,000 people. 10,00 of those people were children from 1-17. Children were submitted into hospitals and were killed by lethal doses or starvation.
  • alfred wodl

    Alfreds was transferred to the children's ward at the am spiegelgrund institute in Vienna . he was murdered on February 22 1941. They were told that he had died of “pneumonia”.
  • Jewish badge introduced to germany

    A “Jewish badge” was not unique to Nazi Germany but had a long history. In pre-modern times, Jews were sometimes forced to wear badges, patches, medals, or other means of identification. These orders were almost always accompanied by antisemitic laws. • Nazi Germany forced Jews to wear badges—most often a yellow patch in the shape of a Star of David—as an easy way to identify them