How the Nazis persecuted the Jews: key dates
1933
Boycott of Jewish businesses.Jewish civil servants, lawyers and teachers sacked.Race Science lessons to teach that Jews are untermensch [Untermensch: A German word for a person who is considered inferior. ].
1935
'Jews not wanted here' signs put up at swimming pools etc.
Nuremberg laws (15 September) Jews could not be citizens. They were not allowed to vote or to marry a German.
1938
Jews could not be doctors.Jews had to add the name Israel (men) or Sarah (women) to their name.Jewish children forbidden to go to school.
Kristallnacht (9 November) - attacks on Jewish homes, businesses and synagogues [Synagogues: These are places of Jewish worship and community.].
1939
Jews were forbidden to own a business, or own a radio.Jews were forced to live in ghettoes.
1941
Army Einsatzgruppen squads in Russia started mass-shootings of Jews.All Jews were forced to wear a yellow star of David.
1942
Wansee Conference (20 January) decided on the Final Solution, which was to gas all Europe's Jews. The main death camps were at Auschwitz, Treblinka and Sobibor.
Answer:
They worked in a southern state that was determined to oppose
federal civil rights laws and to hold on to segregation, and in
an age when women were generally encouraged to become
housewives, nurses, teachers, or secretaries.
Explanation:
The following scenario which would most likely cause the country's literacy rate to decrease would be if A) Libya is torn by civil war. This would cause the literacy rate to decline, because if there is civil war, schools are shut down and it is unsafe for children to go to school, so their education is halted. This ties into the literacy if schoolchildren have their daily reading and writing learning halted.