For Jews and others persecuted by the Nazis, religion often provided an important means of mental, emotional, and spiritual strength. Religious communities offered material and psychological support and became centers of activism and resistance.
religious life
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Wartime Jewish Press
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"About the Seder"
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the Holocaust"American Churches to Hitler"
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the Holocaust"Desecration of Religion"
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"New-Kosher!"
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"On the Danger of Forced Conversion"
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the Holocaust"Personal View of the German Churches Under the Revolution"
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Wartime Jewish Press
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"Prayers for Victory by Mystics in Meron"
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the Holocaust"Report on the Work of the Refugee Committee"
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Artistic Responses to Persecution
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"Song of the Oppressed"
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the Holocaust"The Ethical Problems of Neutrality: A Columbus Day Sermon of Rediscovering America"
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the Holocaust"The US Army Talmud"
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Jehovah's Witnesses in Nazi Germany
Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi RuleCopy of a Form Promising to Renounce Jehovah's Witnesses
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Holocaust Diaries
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustDiary of Elisabeth Ornstein
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Holocaust Diaries
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustDiary of Peter Feigl
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Holocaust Diaries
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustDiary of Susi Hilsenrath