Hitler's Personal Prisoner : The Life of Martin Niemöller.
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Cover -- Hitler's Personal Prisoner: The Life of Martin Niemöller -- Copyright -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- List of Abbreviations -- Note on Terminology and Translations -- Introduction -- PART I: PROTESTANT NATIONALISM IN IMPERIAL GERMANY AND WEIMAR REPUBLIC -- 1: Childhood and Youth in a Parsonage -- A Childhood Under the Banner of National Protestantism -- The Fascination of the Great Naval Game -- 2: Officer Candidate in the Imperial Navy -- Service on the Training Vessel SMS Hertha -- A Wasted Year at the Mürwik Naval School -- The Issue of Marital Consent -- 3: 'May God Punish England': Nationalism and the Great War 1914-1918 -- The Long Wait for a Mission -- Service in the U-Boat Force -- Disappointed Hopes for Victory -- 4: Theological Studies and Counter-Revolution 1919-1923 -- Professional Alternatives -- Becoming a Pastor -- Radical Right-Wing Student Politician in Münster -- Studying Theology with Practical Relevance -- 5: Inner Mission and People's Community 1924-1931 -- Director of the Inner Mission in Westphalia -- Life of a Pastor's Family -- The Inner Mission as a Service to the People's Community -- 6: As a Parish Priest in Berlin Dahlem 1931-1932 -- Worries about Sermons and Number of Churchgoers -- The German Christians -- Rapid Shift to the Right in 1931-1932 -- PART II: CHURCH QUARRELS AND CRISIS OF FAITH IN THE THIRD REICH -- 7: The Nazi Seizure of Power in 1933 as a 'Protestant Experience' -- Sermons in the Spirit of National Awakening -- The Young Reformation Movement -- The Church Elections on 23 July 1933 -- 8: The Beginning of the Church Quarrel -- The Founding of the Pastors' Emergency League -- Ambivalences in Niemöller's Perception of the Jews -- Critique of Niemöller's Views -- The Chancellor's Reception on 25 January 1934 -- 9: Building the Confessing Church, 1934.
The 'gathering of Christians among Christians'-The Confessing Church -- The Theological Declaration of the Barmen Synod -- The Dahlem Synod and the Implementation of Church Emergency Law -- 10: The Split of the Confessing Church 1935-1936 -- A Wave of Repression from the Nazi State -- The 'Pacification' Policy of Reich Minister for Church Affairs Kerrl -- Persisting Anti-Jewish Stereotypes in the Confessing Church -- The Formal Split of the Confessing Church in Bad Oeynhausen -- The Memorandum of the Second VKL to Hitler -- 11: Arrest and Trial 1937-1938 -- The Decision to Arrest Niemöller -- Global Solidarity with the Imprisoned Pastor -- Indictment and Niemöller's Defence Strategy -- 12: 'Hitler's Personal Prisoner': Imprisoned in Concentration Camps -- Release through a Declaration to Cease and Desist? -- Wartestandsaffäre and Voluntary Application for Military Service -- The Planned Conversion to the Catholic Church -- Interned in Dachau Concentration Camp with Three Catholic Priests -- The Looming German Defeat as 'the Decline of the West' -- PART III: CHURCH POLITICS, PEACE ACTIVISM, AND ECUMENICAL WORK FROM 1945 -- 13: New Beginnings-Delayed -- The 'Historical' Niemöller and the Myth of the Resistance Fighter -- The Germans as Victims and Niemöller's Antisemitism -- 14: Rebuilding the Protestant Church -- The Treysa Conference -- The Question of Guilt and the Discourse of Victimization -- Church Politics in Hesse-Nassau and in the EKD -- 15: The Political Pastor: Niemöller as a Critic of the Federal Republic -- The Prophetic Guardianship of the Church -- Critic of German Rearmament -- Niemöller and the Neutralists -- 16: Pacifism: Niemöller and the Fight against Nuclear Armament -- Niemöller's Path to Pacifism -- 'Fight Atomic Death' -- President of the German Peace Society -- Pacifism for the 'Family of Humans'.
17: 'The World Is My Parish': Ecumenical Work -- Ecumenical Encounters in the Face of Death: Dachau Sermons -- Evangelization in the Superlative: Niemöller's Trip to the USA, 1946-1947 -- 18: Hopes and Disappointments in Old Age -- In Favour of the Revolution -- Life in the Crew 1910 -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Notes to Introduction -- Notes to Chapter 1 -- Notes to Chapter 2 -- Notes to Chapter 3 -- Notes to Chapter 4 -- Notes to Chapter 5 -- Notes to Chapter 6 -- Notes to Chapter 7 -- Notes to Chapter 8 -- Notes to Chapter 9 -- Notes to Chapter 10 -- Notes to Chapter 11 -- Notes to Chapter 12 -- Notes to Chapter 13 -- Notes to Chapter 14 -- Notes to Chapter 15 -- Notes to Chapter 16 -- Notes to Chapter 17 -- Notes to Chapter 18 -- Notes to Conclusion -- Bibliography -- 1. Primary Sources -- 2. Periodicals -- 3. Printed Primary Sources and Literature -- Index.
From 1938 to 1945, the Protestant church leader Martin Niemöller was detained as 'Hitler's Personal Prisoner' in Nazi concentration camps, and has been widely hailed as an icon of Christian resistance against the Nazis. Benjamin Ziemann uncovers a more problematic 'historical' Niemöller behind the legend of the resistance hero.
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