Eran of Arcadia said:
yeah, PCH is right. Renouncing Judaism, and converting to Christianity or becoming an atheist or whatever, wouldn't help you against the Nazis (unless you managed to pretend not to be Jewish). Their hatred of Jews was entirely ethnic and cultural, not religious at all, and their hatred of homosexuals was the same. Even persecution of Jehovah's Witnesses wasn't completely religious - they objected to the JW policy of distrusting all governments and not being nationalistic, because a good Aryan would do no such thing.
I will make as few presumptions about my fellow posters as possible in this response, but I think it only fair that you know exactly where I am coming from in this response:
I may be an atheist now, but I was raised jewish.
I had family live through or, (more often) fail to live through the holocaust.
I've been to the camps.
what's the point? the point is, I WAS indoctrinated from a very early age about the holocaust. I then decided to look into it myself from a position of intellectual curiosity after having moved beyond my religious upbringing at around 19.
not that it neccessarily matters, but I'm almost 30 (holy **** really?

)
now that that is out of the way a couple things:
1) to say that the nazi objection to jews was "entirely ethnic and cultural, not religious at all" is like saying "my objection to getting splashed has nothing to do with being wet, I just like being dry." Most informed people who know anything about world religion will tell you that you cannot separate judaism the religion from judaism the culture and the ethnicity. It is for this VERY reason that jews who might have been 10 generations german, 5 of which no one in the family ever set foot in a temple were not safe from the nazi genocide.
2) if we take the WORD religion out of the discussion and instead focus on belief structure we begin to approach the point: fanatical belief systems, when institutionalized are dangerous. I would question the reasoning skills of anyone who thinks that nazism was not closer to a religion than a political system. Right wrong or indifferent, you cannot mobilize an entire country to either assist in mass murder or look the other way without tapping into a certain type of fundamentalism. call it the "religion of national socialism" if you like. Hitler called it the final solution. If you want a more recent example, it's right in front of you. If I, an atheist, was on one of the 9/11 planes would the hijackers have just let me off because I'm not christian? of course not. I'm still part of the "western infidel" as far as they are concerned because american culture IS the religion they are fighting against.
3) just because your "group" is not "religious" in name (aryan), if you single out other based on their religion, whether by genetic history (jews) or currently held beliefs (jehovah's witnesses) you ARE engaged in a religious war. period. arguing that converting wouldn't change your standing merely shows that the nazi's were a special, more unwavering and steadfast kind of crazy, not that they are somehow now exempt from being the executors of religious persecution.
I do understand that the lines blur a bit when you start talking about jingoistic nationalism but we ARE talking about religious conflict here, albeit in a slightly different guise. and I know some people would argue that the war on terror is not a religious conflict. those people would be wrong in exactly the same way. Neither the fact that the aryan nation wasn't a "religious" group per se, nor that "americans" aren't does not change the fact that RELIGION is at the very core of these conflicts.