Answer: C. Anti-Jewish laws, ghettos, concentration camps, death camps
Explanation: The Nazi anti-Jewish campaign began with the takeover of power in Germany and began with the enactment and enforcement of anti-Semitic laws, which put Jews in the position of second-class citizens. This meant dismissing Jews from work, prohibiting the employment of Jews, destroying their property without the right to appeal, etc.
Ghettos began to form during WWII, in much of Central and Eastern Europe, in some places before. These ghettos were places where Jews were allowed to live in very poor conditions and poverty. Often such ghettos were formed in parts of cities that were not Jewish neighbourhoods. The goal was to facilitate the transportation of Jews to concentration camps. Ghetto Jews, who were assessed as fit to work, were taken to concentration camps. Concentration camps were intended for forced labor.
Those who were unfit for work were judged to be incapable of living and as such a burden to the Nazi idea, according to which there was no respect for the disabled, the weak and incapable of living. Around 1942, the Nazis began deportation to the so-called death camps.