IRA
Irish republican army
UK Resistance was created in 1996.
The resistance groups during the Spanish American war were not well organized. Not long after these resistance groups formed, the resistance groups started collapsing, causing the end of the war.
In the context of World War 2 resistance groups resisted the Nazis.
Collective resistance is when a group of individuals come together to oppose or challenge a common issue or oppressor. It involves solidarity, shared goals, and unified action to bring about social change or protect the interests and rights of the group.
There are 4 groups in the UK- Northern Ireland, Scotland, England, and Wales.
Over 7000 pressure groups are thought to operate in the UK.
Jewish people were the main target of the Holocaust although there were other groups of people that were victims of the Nazi. The other types of people that were non Jewish in the resistance were Gypsies from Sinti and Roma, Soviet prisoners of war, homosexuals, and resistance fighters from Europe. It is worth noting that there is no such thing as the "Non-Jewish Resistance" as all of the various resistance groups were identified by their unifying element, i.e. the Yugoslav Resistance, French Resistance, Russian Partisans, etc. As for who fought in resistance groups other than the Jews, you had individuals from nearly all of the occupied countries fighting in nationalist organized groups and you had some ethnically motivated groups. However, most of the Non-Jewish victim groups (such as Roma, Soviet POWs, homosexuals, etc.) were not able to effectively coalesce into resistance group.
There were some Jews in most of the main resistance groups in Nazi occupied countries.
All Axis occupied countries had a resistance movement
There were no religious resistance groups that fought against the Nazis. Leaders of most major religions not directly targeted by the Nazis were actually pro-Nazi, such as the Catholic Church and numerous Imams and Muftis in the Middle East and the Balkans. The Orthodox Church opposed the Nazis in principle (since they had defeated Greece and attacked Russia), but did not advocate resistance to the Nazis and did not defend the minorities attacked in the Holocaust. The resistance groups that did organize were nationalists, socialists, and partisans in any given occupied area.
All countries occupied by the Nazis in WW2 had groups of resistance fighters. They were particularly effective in some parts of the former Yugoslavia - I mean those headed by Tito. Norway, France and the Netherlands also had effective resistance movements.
it is so fat and ugly and so stupid AND YOU ARE TOO