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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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustForty-two Weddings in the Łódź Ghetto
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Post-Holocaust Testimony
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustGaston Guez, "Our Martyrs"
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Jewish Displaced Persons in Postwar Europe
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustHerbert Friedman, Purim Play Photograph
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Exclusion of Jews in Nazi Germany
Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi RuleIdentity Card of Ruth Kittel
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the HolocaustInterview with Bishop Henry Knox Sherrill
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the HolocaustLetter from J. L. Published in The Golden Age
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the HolocaustLetter from Reverend Hugh M. Newlands to His "Jewish Friends and Neighbors"
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The Holocaust in Yugoslavia
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustLetter of Hinko Gottlieb to the Jewish Community of Zagreb
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American Christians, Nazi Germany, and the Holocaust
Americans and the HolocaustLouise Kleuser to J. L. McEhlany
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustMemoir of Calel Perechodnik
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustPassover Haggadah from the Gurs Camp
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustPassover Prayer from Bergen-Belsen
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Jehovah's Witnesses in Nazi Germany
Belonging and Exclusion: Reshaping Society under Nazi RulePrisoner Badges Worn by Jehovah's Witnesses in a Concentration Camp
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Jewish Religious Life and the Holocaust
Jewish Perspectives on the HolocaustRabbi Shimon Huberband, "On Religious Life"