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Jehovah's Witnesses
Jehovah's Witnesses were subject to persecution in Germany prior to the January 1933 National Socialist seizure of power, but following Hitler's takeover, measures against the group intensified. Initially these measures, including the ransacking of Witness offices and subsequent expropriation of that space, occurred at the regional level. However, by April 1, 1935, both the Reich and the Prussian Ministry of the Interior ordered local officials to dissolve the Watchtower Society. A special unit of the Gestapo subsequently compiled a registry of all persons believed to be Jehovah's Witnesses.
While Jehovah's Witnesses as such were not banned, many activities integral to their faith were refuted. National Socialist persecution of Jehovah's Witnesses lay in their refusal to swear loyalty to a worldly government or serve in its armed forces. Furthermore, the Watchtower Society's missionary activities and international connections were deemed as overtly political and subversive acts against the National Socialist regime. Despite the intensified persecution of their group, approximately 20,000 of the estimated original 25,000-30,000 Jehovah's Witnesses in Germany continued to practice their faith.
The first arrests of Jehovah's Witnesses followed the establishment of compulsory military service in March 1935. Many Witnesses refused to be drafted or perform military-related work out of religious conviction. In addition, countless other Jehovah's Witnesses were arrested, tried and incarcerated at prisons and concentration camps, many for continuing to meet illegally.
By 1939, approximately 6,000 Jehovah's Witnesses from the Reich (including Austria and the Protectorate) were incarcerated in prisons or camps. Of those 20,000 German Witnesses who remained active throughout the Nazi period, approximately one-half were convicted at some juncture during that time. Between 2,000 and 2,500 German Witnesses and 700-800 non-German Witnesses were interned in concentration camps. The number of Jehovah's Witness deaths in the camps totaled approximately 1000 German Witnesses and 400 non-German Witnesses (including 90 Austrians and 120 Dutch). It is worth noting that non-German Jehovah's Witnesses suffered a considerably higher death rate than German Witnesses. In addition to the above number, approximately 250 Germans were executed, mostly following military tribunals for refusal to commit to military service.
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