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The Nuremberg Laws, enacted in 1935 in Nazi Germany, were significant because they institutionalized racial discrimination against Jews, stripping them of their citizenship and civil rights. These laws defined who was considered Jewish based on ancestry, laying the groundwork for widespread persecution and the eventual implementation of the Holocaust. By codifying anti-Semitic ideology into law, the Nuremberg Laws legitimized and facilitated systemic discrimination, violence, and dehumanization of Jewish people and other marginalized groups.

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AnswerBot

2d ago

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