Read Jewish Life in Nazi Germany: Dilemmas and Responses Online
Authors: Francis R. Nicosia,David Scrase
as a whole, Jewish winter Relief would subsidize 26 percent of a greatly diminished and aging population.
19.
IF,
36, no. 29 (19 July 1934): 20.
20.
BJFB
10, no. 1 (1934): 11. See also:
BJFB
, 10, no. 10 (1934): 5.
21.
IF
, 25 June 1936.
25.
IF
, 21 May 1936. See also
Frankfurter Israelisches Gemeindeblatt,
January 1936: 137.
26.
IF
, 14 July 1938: 12.
217–218.
xxV (1980): 318;
JWS
, 1937: 163.
26 July 1933, the government demanded the
Reichsfluchtsteuer
. on 11 September 1935, Jews were issued passports valid only within Germany, making their flight more difficult. on 11 october 1935, Jews could take foreign securities with them only if they could prove that they had them before 1 January 1933. This was intended to prevent Jews from taking their money with them. on 2 April 1936, emigrés had to place their money in blocked accounts and were not given the use of their own cash to take information trips abroad. on 1 December 1936, the Law against economic Sabotage declared the death penalty for anyone caught sending money abroad or leaving it there, thereby hurting the German economy. In May and June of 1938, Jews had to inform the government of everything they took with them and requests from Jews to bring valuables abroad were to be denied. Laws list-ed in: Joseph walk, ed.,
Das Sonderrecht für die Juden im NS-Staat: Eine Sammlung der gesetzlichen Massnahmen und Richtlinien—Inhalt und Bedeutung
(Heidelberg: Müller Juristischer Verlag, 1981).
and Boston: Allen & Unwin, 1986), 28–30. See also, elizabeth Bab, memoirs, LBI: 180. In the rare cases in which husbands followed their wives’ assessment and emigrated, the wives either brought in other male friends to help convince the husbands or were themselves professionals whose acumen in the public world was difficult to deny. Marie Bloch, who had read Hitler’s
Mein Kampf
in 1929 and insisted on sending her children out of the country in 1933, constantly urged her husband to emigrate. After the Nuremberg Race Laws, she knelt in front of his bed, begging him to leave. He said he could not leave his factory and could not “give up the thought that the Germans would see in time what kind of a man Hitler was.” Driven to despair, she asked him whose opinion he would respect and invited that friend to consult with them. The friend told them to flee to the United States where he, himself, was heading. only then did her husband agree to go. Marie Bloch interview (born 1890, interviewed 1971), 6, 8. Research Foundation.
edel,
Wenn es ans Leben geht: meine Geschichte
(Berlin: Verlag der Nation, 1979), 149–150.