Brian Gregory

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On the eve of war most Germans belonged to both an established Christian denomination and a Nazi Party organisation; far more of them – 94 per cent – remained members of a Catholic or Protestant church than the two-thirds who belonged to Nazi organisations. The churches were the most important independent civic institutions in Germany, and a number of obdurate priests and pastors were sent to concentration camps for criticising Nazi actions from the pulpit.
The German War: A Nation Under Arms, 1939-1945
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