This presumable refers to resistance to the Nazis. In most occupied countries there was one or many organised resistance movements. Within Germany there were many resistance movements, the military being the largest.
Resistance organisations in Nazi-occupied Europe did different things. Actions ranged from the distribution of anti-Nazi propaganda and hiding of Allied personnel and refugees to espionage and armed uprisings in occupied areas and extermination camps.
They were a Nazi resistance group in Denmark. They became popular after a large scale evacuation of Jews and others running from the Nazi's that included a little under 8000 fugitives and saved ~7,3000
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.
Nazi rallies were like normal rallies but leaded by the Nazis and it use to spread Nazi Propagana.
nazi (nat zee) or (nah zee)
There were some Jews in most of the main resistance groups in Nazi occupied countries.
Reinhard Heydrich
Probably Yugoslvia. Incidentally, resistance in Germany was very difficult to organize and was weak.
The youth resistance movements that happened in Nazi Germany?
The White Rose, a non violent resistance group in Nazi Germany
The white rose was a non-violent resistance group in Nazi Germany, consisting of a number of students from the University of Munich and their philosophy professor.The white rose was a non-violent resistance group in Nazi Germany, consisting of a number of students from the University of Munich and their philosophy professor.
Some children had falsified papers, to show that they were Christian.
It was hard to communicate, people were isolated and travel was restricted.
They were ALL GERMANS and they had elected him to office. He wasn't an outsider.
Answer this question… Foreign Resistance Against Nazi Orders
The Dutch Resistance movement was a large anti-Nazi movement. The Movement was led by Johannes and Marinus Post. It started because of the German occupation of the Netherlands
The Dutch as a county, no. Some people who were afraid of the Nazi's, or perhaps, agreed with them, joined them. The Netherlands itself were defeated by the Nazi army in a matter of days. There was also a Dutch resistance network, which attempted to undermine the Nazi's attempts at fulfilling their objectives in the country.