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20 Rutgers J. L. & Religion 1 (2019-2020)

handle is hein.journals/rjlr20 and id is 1 raw text is: 







     THE  HUNT   FOR  WITCHES AND JEWS: HATRED
               INFUSED WITHIN THE LAW

                   LaSheyna  T. Alexander*

                       I. INTRODUCTION

   The law should not be a vehicle of hate, but rather an

instrument of fair judgement ... here, as everywhere.1 As such:

             The law demands  three things: (1)
             that the defendant be charged with a
             punishable crime; (2) that he have full
             opportunity for defense; and (3) that
             he be judged fairly on the evidence by
             a proper judicial authority. Should it
             fail to meet any one of these three
             requirements, a trial would not be
             justice.2

Under this test, both the Salem Witch Trails of 1692 to 1693 and

the court trials enforcing the Nuremberg Laws of 1935 in Nazi

Germany  fail.

   The focus of this article will be to show how authorities may

use the law as a weapon to accomplish their own ends at the

expense of human lives and dignity. First, the Nuremberg Laws in

Nazi Germany  alongside the witchcraft laws established in Salem,

Massachusetts during the Witch Trials are outlined, followed by a



* Associate Nuremberg Editor, Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion; Juris
Doctorate Candidate May 2020, Rutgers Law School.
1 Henry L. Stimson, The Nuremberg Trial: Landmark in Law, 25 FOREIGN AFF.
179, 180 (1947).
2 Id.

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