No, but its position depends upon which church you mean.
Some did and some did not.
Hitler wasn't keen on the Catholic church as he believed that anyone who was loyal to the pope couldn't be loyal to him. That said, many senior officers and Nazis were at least nominal Catholics and there is no evidence that anyone was killed JUST for being a Catholic. The main resistance movement in Austria was the Catholic Resistance, and members were shot, but it was because of their resistance rather than their faith.
Anne Frank did not fight the Nazis, she hid from them.
They were fighting against Mussolini and also against the Nazis.
5 years
Communists were against Nazis.
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.
Fighters against Nazis Medal was created in 1967.
Some did and some did not.
They were working together against the Nazis
Hitler wasn't keen on the Catholic church as he believed that anyone who was loyal to the pope couldn't be loyal to him. That said, many senior officers and Nazis were at least nominal Catholics and there is no evidence that anyone was killed JUST for being a Catholic. The main resistance movement in Austria was the Catholic Resistance, and members were shot, but it was because of their resistance rather than their faith.
They were against the Nazis.
they are against all world
Anne Frank did not fight the Nazis, she hid from them.
the allies (britain, america, russia)
Holocaust.
cuffy