The Jehovah's Witnesses and Nazi Germany
A Portrait of Courage
By sandra bell, published Sep 26, 2006
Published Content: 164 Total Views: 414,571 Favorited By: 7 CPs
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On Oct. 5, the United States Holocaust Museum has set aside a day to honor the Jehovah's Witnesses under Nazi Germany. This is in stark contrast to the recent buzz on the web accusing Jehovah's Witnesses of being a cult or even a murderous cult. On the contrary, Jehovah's Witnesses showed great courage during the Nazi's reign in Germany, standing up not only for themselves but for other groups as well. I am not a Jehovah's Witness; I am a Jew.According to historian Brian Dunn, Jehovah's Witnesses were persecuted by the Nazis for three main reasons. 1. They were an international organization, 2. They opposed racism and 3. They maintained a position of neutrality to the state. The Jehovah's witnesses refused to give the Nazi salute; they refused to join party organizations, they refused to let their children join the Hitler Youth; they refused to participate in sham elections; they refused to have Nazi flags in their homes.
Within months of the Nazi takeover, regional governments began attacks against the Jehovah's Witnesses by breaking up meetings and beating people up and by ransacking offices and then taking them over. The Gestapo compiled a list of all people they believed to be Jehovah's Witnesses and infiltrated Bible Study meetings. The Nazis tried to prevent the distribution of printed materials, both locally produced and that smuggled in from Switzerland because they believed these materials to be subversive. In March of 1935 the Nazis instituted a military draft and Jehovah's Witnesses refused to join the military or do military related work.
On April 1, 1935, the Nazis outlawed the Jehovah's Witnesses but the latter continued to meet illegally. The Nazis began to arrest them and put them in prisons or concentration camps. The children of Jehovah's witnesses were beaten up by classmates and ultimately barred from school. They were then taken from their parents and placed in reform school, orphanages, and private homes to be raised as Nazis.

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Takeaways
- The Jehovah's Witnesses stood up for the Jews.
- The Witnesses were banned in 1935.
- Children were taken from their parents.
Did You Know?
An estimated 2,000 to 5,000 Jehovah's Witnesses died in Nazi concentratiion camps.Today's Most Commented On
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