Answer:
To
me, citizenship means the right to live freely in the country of my birth or
the country where I desire to live. The French Revolution defined citizenship
in a way which was different from the way that the Nazism defined it.
The French people thought that all men have equal rights as they are born
equal. The rights of a citizen include liberty, security, owning of property
and resisting oppression. Also they believed in the freedom of expression,
whether verbal or in writing, art, etc. They believed in the rule of law and
that no one can be above it.
However, the Nazi definition of citizenship was quite
different. It was defined with the perspective of racial discrimination against
all except the 'pure Aryan' Nordic race. So they said that Jews and other
'undesirable' population would not be considered as citizens of Germany. These
people were given very harsh treatment like death in the gas chamber or
banishment to concentration camps. Many of them were forced to flee to other
countries because of this.
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