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The Holocaust β was the systematic, state-sponsored persecution and murder of six million European Jews by the Nazi German regime and its allies and collaborators. One of the signs exhorts: "Germans! Defend yourselves! Don't buy from Jews! When they came to power in Germany, the Nazis did not immediately start to carry out the mass murder of Jews.
However, they quickly began using the government to target and exclude Jews from German society. The Nazi persecution of Jews became increasingly radical between and This radicalization culminated in a plan that Nazi leaders referred to as the "Final Solution to the Jewish Question.
The Nazi German regime implemented this genocide between and By the end of the Holocaust, the Nazi German regime and their allies and collaborators had murdered six million European Jews. The Nazis targeted Jews because the Nazis were radically antisemitic. This means that they were prejudiced against and hated Jews. In fact, antisemitism was a basic tenet of their ideology and at the foundation of their worldview. Some Germans were receptive to these Nazi claims. Anger over the loss of the war and the economic and political crises that followed contributed to increasing antisemitism in German society.
The instability of Germany under the Weimar Republic β , the fear of communism , and the economic shocks of the Great Depression also made many Germans more open to Nazi ideas, including antisemitism. However, the Nazis did not invent antisemitism. Antisemitism is an old and widespread prejudice that has taken many forms throughout history. In Europe, it dates back to ancient times. In the Middle Ages β , prejudices against Jews were primarily based in early Christian belief and thought, particularly the myth that Jews were responsible for the death of Jesus.
Suspicion and discrimination rooted in religious prejudices continued in early modern Europe β At that time, leaders in much of Christian Europe isolated Jews from most aspects of economic, social, and political life. This exclusion contributed to stereotypes of Jews as outsiders. As Europe became more secular, many places lifted most legal restrictions on Jews. This, however, did not mean the end of antisemitism.