The Nazis were not a religion, though they presented themselves to the public in Germany as national salvation movement, complete with some pseudo-religious trappings.
No one knows for sure but they were many of them....
The Holocaust ended in 1945, which is 65 years ago!
Genocide. However, what bothered the Nazis about the Jews were race, not religion.
There seems to be a lot of confusion about this. The Nazis persecuted the Jews on grounds of race, not religion. In some cases, for example Jehovah's Witnesses, people's religion brought them into conflict with the Nazis.
there is about 6,000 Neo-Nazis existing today, I know this because I am a Neo-Nazi. I still beileve that what the Führer was doing was right. Even tho we do try to spread the word and beliefs of the Führer but it hurts me to say but we can proably never again get to the amount of people we had believing Hitler.
A:Animism is the oldest known religion and is still practised even today.
That is like asking why do we have still have gravity today. Truth is not a popularity contest.
No one knows for sure but they were many of them....
Hinduism
no
Islam today is a fast-growing religion.... islam is still being spread today...it is the second largest religion .. .. it is in every nation and still spreading.
the answer to the people who were persecuted by the Nazis because of their religion is the JEWS no need to thank me <3 =)
Yes.
The Holocaust ended in 1945, which is 65 years ago!
Answer: Nazis never disappeared. In fact, there are still Nazis today. But the decline of Nazism started after the Germans lost World War II, which ended in 1944.
Afterlife and the purpose of existence are the main two themes of religion. They still remain the same themes of religions today, but much of todays world do not rely on religion to feel a purpose and find satisfaction elsewhere. Religions today still provide hope and reason for living and hope after death.
the holocaust- he killed milions of Jews and wrecked families - some of them are still alive today and remember the cruelity of the Nazis