
Top 17 Nazi Persecution Quotes
#2. There is no gravity in the Planet of Love; everything floats in the air.
Mehmet Murat Ildan
#3. My four older brothers were my favorite players. That's why I got into football and sports.
Tony Dorsett
#4. Well,' I shrug, all innocent, 'we all ride our little hobbyhorses, don't we, Mr. Peel?
L.A. Meyer
#5. Do you believe in love at first sight?
Or do I need to walk past again?
Jane Seabrook
#6. Thirty-year-old children who refused to act like grown-ups.
Francoise Sagan
#7. None can define success or failure as everyone has his own.
Chandrashekar
#8. I'm very proud of being Italian-American, but people don't realize that the mafia is just this aberration. The real community is built on the working man, the guy who's the cop, the fireman, the truck driver, the bus driver.
Chazz Palminteri
#10. I was listening to the first record the other day, and it sounds remarkably contemporary.
Chris Bailey
#11. Sometimes the truth doesn't set you free, Jules. Sometimes it cages you.
Gwenda Bond
#12. I often feel that worse than the most fiendish Nazis were those Germans who went along with the persecution of the Jews not because they really disliked them but because it was the thing.
Christopher Isherwood
#13. She said that room up there is a remembering room
and when she is up there remembering
all those things fill up the room
and when the room is too full
they fly out the window.
Sharon Creech
#14. Don't count on Congress. Laws come into being because people on the ground demand it.
Terri Sewell
#15. They were untouchable, fascinating, and nothing they ever did was wrong. I wanted that. I wanted to look down at the sky.
Penelope Douglas
#16. MANY STILL consider it an accident that Nazi ideology centered around antisemitism and that Nazi policy, consistently and uncompromisingly, aimed at the persecution and finally the extermination of the Jews. Only
Hannah Arendt
#17. American political discourse had framed the Jewish problem as an immigration problem. Germany's persecution of Jews raised the specter of a vast influx of Jewish refugees at a time when America was reeling from the Depression.
Erik Larson
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