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The Nuremberg Race Laws German  Imprint 
NSDAP Division Nuremberg Gibitzenhof in front of the division headquarters Hubertussaele on November 6, 1932, the day of the parliamentary elections
NSDAP Division Nuremberg Gibitzenhof in front
of the division headquarters Hubertussaele on November 6, 1932, the day of the parliamentary elections

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Persecution in Nuremberg

Contemporary witness Herbert Kolb laconically summarises his view of the situation at the time as follows: "Thanks to Streicher, Nuremberg had become Germany’s most anti-Semitic city even before 1933."
The National Socialists regarded the term "Nuremberg Laws" for the Race Laws as a great honour, as the racial hatred of Jews had found a propaganda medium in Nuremberg long before the laws were announced: the provocative newspaper "Der Stürmer", published since 1923 by District Leader and "Franconian Leader" Julius Streicher, a close friend of Hitler. The intellectual roots for the hatred of Jews had been established in this newspaper and given a respectable guise long before the "accession to power".
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