|
Antisemetic exibition in Bordeaux, 1942
|
As Nazi Germany intensified its anti-Jewish policy, increasing numbers of Jews were driven to flee and to seek ways to emigrate. After the occupation of France in the summer of 1940, foreign consulates were confronted with increasing numbers of people seeking a safe haven and asking for visas. Portugal maintained a policy of neutrality. In 1938 the Portuguese Foreign Ministry issued instructions that settling of Jews in Portugal was forbidden, but that they would be allowed to enter as tourists for a stay of 30 days.