Up to 1938, the approximately 40,000
Italian Jews suffered far less persecution in
Fascist Italy than the Jews in
Nazi Germany did in the lead up to
World War II. In the territories occupied by the Italian Army in Greece, France and Yugoslavia after the outbreak of World War II Jews even found protection from persecution. This began to change with the
Italian Racial Laws of 1938, when Jews lost their
civil rights, including to property, education, and employment. Unlike Jews in other Axis-aligned countries, they were however not murdered or deported to
extermination camps at this point. On 25 July 1943, with the
fall of the Fascist Regime, the situation in Italy temporarily changed, with inmates in internment camps gradually released, including Jewish prisoners. This process was however not completed by the time German authorities took over the camps in September 1943, after the Italian surrender on 8 September. The attitude of the Italian Fascists towards Italian Jews drastically changed again in November 1943, after the Fascist authorities declared them to be of "enemy nationality" during the
Congress of Verona and begun to actively participate in the prosecution and arrest of Jews. Initially, after the Italian surrender, the Italian police had only assisted in the round up of Jews when requested to do so by the German authorities. With the
Manifest of Verona, in which Jews were declared to be foreigners and, in times of war, enemies, this changed. ==Order==