Answer:
Adolf Hitler's racist and particularly antisemitic views were a central part of his ideology and significantly influenced his vision for the "New Order" he sought to create in Germany and Europe.
Step-by-step explanation:
Hitler viewed the Jews as the main enemy of the German "Aryan race." He blamed the Jews for many of Germany's problems and saw them as a threat to German racial purity. This anti-Jewish ideology animated much of Nazi policy, from propaganda to the genocide carried out during the Holocaust. Hitler believed that the Aryans, and Germans in particular, constituted a "master race." He wanted to reorder European society in a racial hierarchy with Germans and other Nordics at the top. Slaves and inferior races would be at the bottom. Hitler's New Order sought to expand the territory controlled by Germany to create "lebensraum," or living space, for the Aryan race. The lands conquered in Eastern Europe were to be colonized by German settlers while the native Slavic populations were regarded as inferior and were exploited or eliminated. Nazi policies of forced sterilization, "euthanasia," and the genocide of the Holocaust all reflected Hitler's desire to strengthen the Aryan race by removing those deemed biologically inferior. An Aryan master race would then dominate the New Order. In summary, Hitler's virulently racist and antisemitic ideology provides the context for understanding many of the most horrible aspects of the Nazi New Order, from the ideology of Aryan supremacy to the genocidal policies carried out in Hitler's name. Race was a defining principle of Hitler's vision for Germany and Europe.