he didn't like treating people like animals. even though Nazi were patriot ,they dehumanized too much.
because the reich church was a disgrace.
If I am correct, many/most of the liberals in Germany were Communists. If so, the liberals were indeed a prime target of the Nazis. ___ However, you are quite mistaken. At no time did the liberals make common cause with the Communists. The liberals were supporters of democracy, which the Nazis detested. (Incidentally, this zest for regarding liberals as Communists is something that hardline right-wingers in the US share with the Nazis).
The SS arrested, tortured, murdered, imprisoned, and put in forced labor.
Those people that opposed Adolf Hitler & the Nazis were threatened (by the Nazis) with beatings, torture, false accusations, loss of all property, death, prison, etc.
well, he promissed that if the Jews started another war, then it would lead to the destruction of the Jewish people. Which is implicitly saying that he will kill the Jews, there were many reasons given for wanting to kill the Jews. But the truth is often much more simple, attached is a long list giving reasons as to why the Nazis (and Hitler) hated/wanted to kill the Jews, but most of them are irrelevent: antisemitsm started before the Nazis and continued after the Nazis, if there was a global Jewish conspiracy, then they would have done something to help the Jews of Europe. Hitler knew that the Jews were defenceless and harmless, they were killed for political reasons, they were killed because that is what made the people happy and kept the Nazis in power.
The holocaust refers to the extermination of Jews. Christians certainly died at the hands of the Nazis, but there is no category I could place this in. Perhaps, people the Nazis wanted dead for various reasons.
Martin Niemoller was a prominent Protestant pastor in Germany who spoke out against the Nazis during World War II. He is best known for his quote "First they came for the socialists, and I did not speak out—because I was not a socialist..." which reflects the dangers of remaining silent in the face of injustice. Niemoller's writings often focused on the themes of responsibility, morality, and the need to stand up against oppression.
In the case of those independent nations that opposed the Nazis, they were called the Allied Powers. Those persons from Occupied Countries that opposed the Nazis called themselves the Resistance.
Generally, this was the practice of isolationists. If you want a specific group, the American Bund (pro-Nazis) would have argued against aid to the Allies for obvious reasons.
for power and to kill Jews
There are various reasons the Yugoslavia surrendered to the Nazis. For example, they surrendered because they knew that they could not win.
All who opposed the Nazis and their allies.
The reasons usually given are pity and sympathy - not moral or religious reasons.
The reasons for the Holocaust had nothing to do with religion.Please see the related questions.
Because, as along with other Nazis, All of them were indotrinared (Brainwashed) to believe that the nazis were powerful and they was right and that the allies were enimies.
If I am correct, many/most of the liberals in Germany were Communists. If so, the liberals were indeed a prime target of the Nazis. ___ However, you are quite mistaken. At no time did the liberals make common cause with the Communists. The liberals were supporters of democracy, which the Nazis detested. (Incidentally, this zest for regarding liberals as Communists is something that hardline right-wingers in the US share with the Nazis).
Space nazis, Presidents, Fascists, Martin Luther, Martin Luther King jr, Harriet Tubman...etc.
Yes, he and the Nazis were fiercely opposed to communism, and desired to eradicate it.