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  • Table of Contents
  • Introduction
  • 1 – History of Jehovah’s Witnesses
  • 2 – Female Jehovah’s Witnesses in the Ravensbrück Concentration Camp
  • 3 – The Monastery of St. Lambrecht
  • 4 – The Concentration Camp for Women at St. Lambrecht
  • 5 – The Women of St. Lambrecht: Their Life Stories
  • 6 – Trauma From the Past
  • 7 – Results
  • Additional Information
  • Dutch

1 – History of Jehovah’s Witnesses

1.1 – On the Religious Community of Jehovah’s Witnesses

1.2 – Origins and Evolution of the Religious Community

1.3 – History of Persecution in Germany

1.4 – Persecution of Jehovah’s Witnesses in Europe

Besluit van de Gestapo in Wenen in 1941 waarin de activiteiten van de Bijbelonderzoekers verboden werden.

1.5 – Jehovah’s Witnesses’ Resistance

1.6 – Jehovah’s Witnesses in Concentration Camps

Table of Contents
  • Introduction
  • 1 - History of Jehovah’s Witnesses
  • 2 - Female Jehovah's Witnesses in the Ravensbrück Concentration Camp
  • 3 - The Monastery of St. Lambrecht
  • 4 - The Concentration Camp for Women at St. Lambrecht
  • 5 - The Women of St. Lambrecht: Their Life Stories
  • 6 - Trauma from the Past
  • 7 - Results
  • Additional Information
About

In May 1943, a women’s concentration camp was founded in the confiscated Benedictine monastery of St. Lambrecht. In this sub camp of the concentration camps Ravensbrück and Mauthausen, 23 Bible Students were forced to perform hard labour. For the women who came from Austria, Germany, Poland, Belgium and the Netherlands, this SS work camp was the last station of a long odyssey through several concentration camps of the Third Reich. Anita Farkas reconstructed the history of the St. Lambrecht women’s concentration camp, including the life stories of the women who were persecuted there for religious reasons.

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