Yes it would be difficult because they are locked up in a room most of the time with basically nothing but they could still pray.
The Jewish people did their best to practice their religion in the concentration camps. Since they no longer knew what day of the week it was they would observe Sabbath one day a week and would recite the Torah from memory.
Many people in the death camps did not keep their faith. Of those that, did each had an individual story of what served to hold them to their faith.
I sometimes push my self to a position where I have to believe for extra ordinary things to happen. Experience, sense and knowledge will not be applicable by no chance. Only Faith that calls those things which are not as though there where. Faith that does not see the impossibilities. Faith that only germinates when all things look impossible. Faith that goes beyond all levels of academics and confined the informed and the wise.
No..... No..... The people who died in the concentration camps died because it was the intention of the Nazis that the people who were sent to the concentration camps were to die. They starved because those that imprisoned them did not feed them.
they would be worked or beaten to death. Later, when the extermination camps were established they would be shipped out for extermination.
A cousin, in all those difficult cases they are your cousins
He imprisoned them in concentration camps, he would simply kill them or make them suddenly disappear.
She was loved by those of the catholic faith and hated by those of the calvinist faith
To people of the Jewish faith, certainly. This is a question of faith and naturally those who have faith in God as described by Jewish teachings will claim Him to be True. Those who do not have faith in this God or have faith in a different god or gods will claim Him to be False. Only you can decide which is true.
Those who do not have "the gift of faith" would say, "none" - because God does not really exist. And Christians continue to be strangely silent on the topic...
When Jesus said he came to divide, he meant that his teachings would create divisions among people, separating those who believe in him from those who do not. This division would be based on faith and following his teachings.
furry, George, Faith, Fiona, or any name you could think of. i would name it one of those though.
Those who know, not believe the most.
The War Refuge Board was introduced in 1944 to help those individuals that had been persecuted for their faith.
The unwavering faith and commitment of those who believe in me is motivated by a deep sense of trust, conviction, and dedication to my teachings and principles.
That would be "Bahá'í Faith", rather than "bahaism". - Similarly to many other religions, there are claims in the Bahá'í Faith about their Holy Scriptures being revealed by God (the Bahá'í Faith is monotheistic), through special messengers. If you accept those claims, that would make the bearers of the message (i.e., the founders of the Bahá'í Faith) holy, as well as the books considered by Bahá'ís to be divinely inspired.
The Jewish people did their best to practice their religion in the concentration camps. Since they no longer knew what day of the week it was they would observe Sabbath one day a week and would recite the Torah from memory.