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United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, "The Nurembeg Race Laws", The Holovaust: A learning Site For Students,
https://www.ushmm.org/search/results/?q=nuremberg+laws, 5 April 2016.
The Nuremberg Law's first law was institutionalized on September 15, 1935. It stated that Jewish people could not become citizens of the German empire. In the eyes of the law, the term "Jew" referred to anyone that had three or four more Jewish grandparents. This was particularly troubling for some Germans with Jewish blood, as this law targeted a person's family tree, not religion.
The Nuremberg Laws continued to put more isolation on the Jewish population. These laws caused the people of German blood to become superior over the oppressed Jewish people. The laws also placed the Jews in financial ruin. Jewish owned businesses were closing down and families were starving. To make matters worse, the Jews were viewed as a worthless burden to the economy. This fueled the German's hatred for the Jewish people and led to more harmful actions.
The Nuremberg Laws were anti-Semitic laws institutionalized by the Nazi party in Germany in the year of 1935. This set of laws further separated and isolated the Jewish population from the German empire. Not only did the laws discriminate the Jewish people, they also relinquished any political and social power the Jews had.
The next law that was brought into German society was the Law for Protection of German Blood and Honor. This law stated that Germans cannot marry anyone of Jewish descent.