How Were the Jews Affected?
As early as 1933, Nazi mobs started attacking Jews in the street, beating them up and sometimes killing them. Groups of Jews across Germany were brought to concentration camps 8("Impact of Nazi Policies"). Some other common examples of antisemitism in history were pogroms, which were violent attacks directed at Jews and were often encouraged by the government. The pogroms often happened because of blood libels, which were false rumors that Jews used Christian children’s blood for rituals. 1(“Antisemitism”). Hitler began to notice that these attacks on Jewish people weren't controlled by the state. So, he developed antisemitic laws that would affect every aspect of the Jewish people's lives 8("Impact of Nazi Policies").
French anti semitic caricature symbolizing Jews taking over the world. Rothschild, which was a Jewish banking family, is illustrated as a “demon” hugging the earth 7("The Holocaust").