The Holocaust was an action of Christians against Jews. Though it has to be said that they did not kill because they thought it their Christian duty. They did spread accusations like 'Jews killed Christ', they even came up with an explanation of how Christ was not a Jew.
Jews, whether practicing or not religious at all, were persecuted and murdered during the Holocaust.
The Holocaust left a huge imprint on the Jewish religion in the sense that Hitler took the anti-semitic sentiment to the extreme with the extermination of Jews in Europe.
The Torah remains the same.
the Holocaust could make us aware that assimilation is not helpful.
That is a theological question in Judaism and is controversial.
Germany was defeated. Judaism survived.
The greatest number (six million) of victims of the Holocaust were the Jews of Europe, but there were also Gypsies, communists, homosexuals, Jehovah's Witnesses, the mentally ill, and anyone else whom the Nazis didn't like.Your grammar is awful. Anyway, I think you meant to ask, "What type of people were victims in the Holocaust?"Jewish people were the main target of Hitler's extermination, or "genocide."Gypsies were also targeted.
The Jewish community has been a part of Georgia history since its founding in 1733 so the impact of the Holocaust on Georgians during WWII was minimal.
* There about 15 million Jews (adherents of Judaism) in the world. * By no means all of them are Holocaust survivors or descended from Holocaust survivors.
Edward Feld has written: 'The spirit of renewal' -- subject(s): Doctrines, Holocaust (Jewish theology), Holocaust, Jewish (1939-1945), Influence, Judaism, Religious aspects, Religious aspects of Suffering, Suffering
The people who died in the Holocaust were mostly Jews. They died only because they were Jews; i.e. followers of Judaism or just had a Jewish parent or grandparent. If they were religious , they practiced the normal rituals of Judaism, though there was little ability to do it in the concentration and work camps since individual survival was uppermost in their minds.
Judaism. A Jew is a follower of Judaism. Jewish is NOT a race.
Judaism has not had one central religious leader in almost 2,000 years.
The struggles are the Holocaust
The US Constitution was not affected by Holocaust.
because the followers of Judaism were singled out for especially murderous treatment.
it added theological debates.
That is a theological question in Judaism and is controversial.
There hasn't been a religious leader of all Judaism in roughly 1600 years.
Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism was created in 1961.
As part of a religious ceremony of the religion of Judaism.