Look at the shoes, then read the text below.
Hungarian anti-Jewish laws were first introduced the 1920s. In 1944, when Nazi Germany occupied Hungary, the situation worsened for Jews. Ghettoization of Jews from the Hungarian countryside began that April; deportations quickly followed. Between mid-May and early July, Hungarian Jews from outside Budapest were deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau, a concentration camp complex in Nazi-occupied Poland. The majority of Hungarian Jews deported to Auschwitz-Birkenau were killed upon arrival.
Because of international demands, governor Miklós Horthy stopped the immediate deportations of Budapest’s Jewish community. By the end of the summer, it became clear that Nazi Germany was going to lose the war. On October 16, the Arrow Cross Party, with their anti-Jewish and extreme nationalistic beliefs, seized power.