Answer:
C.forced to use “non-Jewish” names.
Step-by-step explanation:
The Nuremberg Laws (Nürnberger Gesetze in German) were a series of laws of racist and anti-Semitic character in Nazi Germany adopted unanimously on September 15, 1935 during the seventh annual congress of the NSDAP (Reichsparteitag) held in the city of Nuremberg ( Germany).
The laws of Nuremberg were drafted by the jurist and politician Wilhelm Frick in his position as Minister of the Interior of the Reich (1933-1943), under the consent of Adolf Hitler and Julius Streicher as co-author. Frick was a recognized anti-Semite and drafted these laws that prevented the Jewish collective from becoming racially related to the German people. These racial laws were the beginning of discrimination and persecution of the Jewish collective in Germany.
These laws did not aim to discriminate against the Semitic ethnic group due to their religious beliefs as such (Judaism); they had a relationship with the Jewish community itself and its main objective was to avoid Jewish racial mixtures with the German people.
Who was responsible for disseminating these laws was precisely Julius Streicher, a close associate of Hitler, and his newspaper Der Stürmer of which he was the owner, thanks to this publication, Streicher helped to convince the German masses that the Jew was a social scourge inserted in the German village and that it should be "extirpated as a cancerous tumor", as explained in Hitler's book, Mein Kampf.