Actions against the Jews in Norway during the war

The deportations of Jews from Norway in 1942 and 1943 represent the climax of a series of actions by both the Germans and Nasjonal Samling, a political Nazi party founded in 1933, beginning in the summer of 1941 and appearing more clearly as a part of consistent anti-Jewish policy from the outset of...

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Main Author: Oskar Mendelsohn
Format: Article
Language:Danish
Published: Donner Institute 1981-09-01
Series:Nordisk Judaistik
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/nj/article/view/69365
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author Oskar Mendelsohn
author_facet Oskar Mendelsohn
author_sort Oskar Mendelsohn
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description The deportations of Jews from Norway in 1942 and 1943 represent the climax of a series of actions by both the Germans and Nasjonal Samling, a political Nazi party founded in 1933, beginning in the summer of 1941 and appearing more clearly as a part of consistent anti-Jewish policy from the outset of 1942. More sporadic actions had, however, already occurred from the very first days of the German occupation. They began in the middle of May 1940 when the Norwegian police, on order from the German police, confiscated radios belonging to the Jews. The German police also commanded the local Norwegian police to prepare lists of members in the Jewish communities in Oslo and Trondheim. The NS sought to boom the resolution of March 1942 by the Quisling government. It was a resolution which restored the prohibition of paragraph 2 in the Constitution of 1814 barring admission of Jews into the country.
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spelling doaj.art-96f6452dfdf64870ab5102ede229c7552022-12-21T20:46:30ZdanDonner InstituteNordisk Judaistik0348-16462343-49291981-09-013210.30752/nj.69365Actions against the Jews in Norway during the warOskar Mendelsohn0OsloThe deportations of Jews from Norway in 1942 and 1943 represent the climax of a series of actions by both the Germans and Nasjonal Samling, a political Nazi party founded in 1933, beginning in the summer of 1941 and appearing more clearly as a part of consistent anti-Jewish policy from the outset of 1942. More sporadic actions had, however, already occurred from the very first days of the German occupation. They began in the middle of May 1940 when the Norwegian police, on order from the German police, confiscated radios belonging to the Jews. The German police also commanded the local Norwegian police to prepare lists of members in the Jewish communities in Oslo and Trondheim. The NS sought to boom the resolution of March 1942 by the Quisling government. It was a resolution which restored the prohibition of paragraph 2 in the Constitution of 1814 barring admission of Jews into the country.https://journal.fi/nj/article/view/69365Jews -- NorwayWorld War, 1939-1945DeportationNational socialism -- GermanyNorway -- PoliticsPolitics and Judaism
spellingShingle Oskar Mendelsohn
Actions against the Jews in Norway during the war
Nordisk Judaistik
Jews -- Norway
World War, 1939-1945
Deportation
National socialism -- Germany
Norway -- Politics
Politics and Judaism
title Actions against the Jews in Norway during the war
title_full Actions against the Jews in Norway during the war
title_fullStr Actions against the Jews in Norway during the war
title_full_unstemmed Actions against the Jews in Norway during the war
title_short Actions against the Jews in Norway during the war
title_sort actions against the jews in norway during the war
topic Jews -- Norway
World War, 1939-1945
Deportation
National socialism -- Germany
Norway -- Politics
Politics and Judaism
url https://journal.fi/nj/article/view/69365
work_keys_str_mv AT oskarmendelsohn actionsagainstthejewsinnorwayduringthewar