Edward
Puritanboard Commissioner
Hitler also asked the world jewish congress if they wanted to go to Palestine. The Jews said no.
Which didn't start until the war started. Hitler wanted the Jews out of Europe but the Jews said no.
In fact, the Jews were onboard with emigration. The problems were the British (who didn't want them in Palestine), the French (Madagascar) and the Americans (US and Cuba). An objective study of the issues leaves the British looking really bad (although they did eventually take in 10,000 children and perhaps 30,000 valuable immigrants), the Germans less so that modern propaganda depicts as everyone projects backwards from the Final Solution (which was the last choice of the Nazis.) About a quarter of a million Jews made it past the British (and later Russian) gauntlet to Palestine 1933-1941. (Yes, even a couple of years into the war with Germany, the Brits were still devoting resources to keeping the Jews out.)
Read up on the MV Struma (1942) and the SS Patria (1940) to get a very small taste of what was going on. And, of course, the well known case of the St. Louis.
The Austrian Jews and t he Nazis tended to agree that the immigrant to Palestine be the young, healthy folks.
In at least one case, the Germans released an inmate from the Dachau concentration camp so he could attempt to get to Palestine.
Hitler wanted to have all Jews exterminated, as they were the main cause in his sick and perverted mind as to why the German master race had become polluted.
Don't believe everything you learned in school. He wanted the Jews out of Europe. It was the what, not the how, that was important to most of the Nazi leaders.