Dietrich Bonhoeffer war einer der letzten NS-Gegner der auf Befehl Adolf Hitlers hingerichtet wurde. Weder Rede- noch Schreibverbot konnten ihn stoppen sich gegen die nationalsozialistische
Judenverfolgung zu engagieren. Er schrieb ein beeindruckendes Gedicht im KZ, dass bis heute als christliches Lied gesungen wird.
The Holocaust was the systematic murder of approximately 6 million European Jews and millions of others by the Nazi regime and its collaborators between 1933-1945. Key events included the rise of Hitler and the Nazis to power in Germany in 1933, the establishment of concentration camps starting with Dachau in 1933, and the mass killings of Jews that began in 1941 with mobile killing units in Germany and Poland. By 1945, around two-thirds of the Jewish population in Europe had been murdered in ghettos and extermination camps like Auschwitz.
Anne Frank was born in 1929 in Germany and died in 1945 at the age of 15 after being captured by the Nazis while hiding from them in an attic in Amsterdam. From 1942-1944, she kept a diary documenting her experiences in hiding. She went into hiding in late 1939 at the start of World War 2 and remained hidden for over two years in the secret annex of her father Otto Frank's business building. In 1945, Anne and her family were captured and transported to concentration camps, where they died or were killed. Her diary was published in 1947 and became widely read, documenting her life in hiding during the Holocaust.
Anne frank and her life
Characters in Anne Frank.
- Family of Anne Frank.
-Members in Secret Annexe.
-Other Important Characters.
An Overview.
Secret Annexe.
Important Timeline.
The document summarizes key aspects of Nazi ideology in Germany in the 1920s-1930s. It describes Hitler taking over the German Workers' Party and changing its name to the Nazi party. The party developed a 25-point program outlining Nazi beliefs, including that Germany should be led by a single Führer with total power, be economically self-sufficient, unite all German-speaking people, and view Jews and Communists as threats. It also promoted the ideas of Lebensraum and Aryan racial superiority. The Nazis appealed to different groups through propaganda posters targeting unemployed people, mothers, racists appealing to anti-Semitism, and the wealthy appealing to fears of Communism.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer war einer der letzten NS-Gegner der auf Befehl Adolf Hitlers hingerichtet wurde. Weder Rede- noch Schreibverbot konnten ihn stoppen sich gegen die nationalsozialistische
Judenverfolgung zu engagieren. Er schrieb ein beeindruckendes Gedicht im KZ, dass bis heute als christliches Lied gesungen wird.
The Holocaust was the systematic murder of approximately 6 million European Jews and millions of others by the Nazi regime and its collaborators between 1933-1945. Key events included the rise of Hitler and the Nazis to power in Germany in 1933, the establishment of concentration camps starting with Dachau in 1933, and the mass killings of Jews that began in 1941 with mobile killing units in Germany and Poland. By 1945, around two-thirds of the Jewish population in Europe had been murdered in ghettos and extermination camps like Auschwitz.
Anne Frank was born in 1929 in Germany and died in 1945 at the age of 15 after being captured by the Nazis while hiding from them in an attic in Amsterdam. From 1942-1944, she kept a diary documenting her experiences in hiding. She went into hiding in late 1939 at the start of World War 2 and remained hidden for over two years in the secret annex of her father Otto Frank's business building. In 1945, Anne and her family were captured and transported to concentration camps, where they died or were killed. Her diary was published in 1947 and became widely read, documenting her life in hiding during the Holocaust.
Anne frank and her life
Characters in Anne Frank.
- Family of Anne Frank.
-Members in Secret Annexe.
-Other Important Characters.
An Overview.
Secret Annexe.
Important Timeline.
The document summarizes key aspects of Nazi ideology in Germany in the 1920s-1930s. It describes Hitler taking over the German Workers' Party and changing its name to the Nazi party. The party developed a 25-point program outlining Nazi beliefs, including that Germany should be led by a single Führer with total power, be economically self-sufficient, unite all German-speaking people, and view Jews and Communists as threats. It also promoted the ideas of Lebensraum and Aryan racial superiority. The Nazis appealed to different groups through propaganda posters targeting unemployed people, mothers, racists appealing to anti-Semitism, and the wealthy appealing to fears of Communism.
The document provides biographical details about Anne Frank, including key events in her life from her birth in Germany in 1929 to her death at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1945 at the age of 15. It discusses how Anne and her family hid from the Nazis for over two years in an secret annex in Amsterdam before being arrested in 1944. It also provides context about Anne's diary, which she wrote in while in hiding and was published after her death.
Anne Frank was a young German Jewish girl who received international fame after her death through her diary. She received the diary as a gift on her 13th birthday and used it to describe her family's life in hiding from the Nazis in Amsterdam during World War II. Her family was eventually discovered and arrested in 1944, with Anne and her sister later dying at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Her diary was published after the war and provided insights into the discrimination and horrors faced by Jews under Nazi rule.
Anne Frank was a Jewish girl who lived in Germany and the Netherlands during World War II. To hide from the Nazis, Anne and her family went into hiding in a secret annex in Amsterdam for over two years. Anne chronicled her experiences in her diary during this time. She was eventually captured and sent to a concentration camp, where she died at age 15. After the war, Anne's father Otto published her diary to share her story with the world.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a German Lutheran pastor, theologian, and spy who opposed the Nazi regime. He was born in 1906 to a middle-class family in Germany and studied theology, becoming a pastor and professor. As the Nazis rose to power in 1933, Bonhoeffer helped form the Confessing Church to oppose the Nazi-controlled German Evangelical Church. He established an underground seminary and was involved in plots to overthrow Hitler. Arrested in 1943, he was imprisoned until 1945 when he was executed by hanging shortly before the war ended. Bonhoeffer's writings on Christianity's role in the secular world and his opposition to the Nazis made him a renowned theologian and martyr for faith
Adolf Hitler was born in 1889 in Austria and showed early interest in becoming a priest but was rejected from art school. After his parents died, he lived homeless in Vienna where he was influenced by anti-Semitism. During World War I he served in the German army and was decorated for bravery. After the war, he joined the Nazi party and rose to leadership with emotional speeches attacking Jews. In 1923 he attempted to overthrow the German government but was imprisoned for five years where he wrote his book Mein Kampf outlining his plans. He became Chancellor in 1933 and built Germany's industry and military, gaining control of Europe by 1941.
HISTORY OF THE WORLD: ANNE FRANK - A VICTIM OF THE HOLOCAUSTGeorge Dumitrache
HISTORY OF THE WORLD: ANNE FRANK - A VICTIM OF THE HOLOCAUST. It contains: who was Anne Frank, early life, persecutions, arrest and death, the diary, the journal, life before hiding, Achterhuis, the Annex, the arrest, Auschwitz deportation, death, the diary of a young girl, Anne's legacy.
The Holocaust was the systematic persecution and murder of approximately 6 million Jews by the Nazi regime from 1933 to 1945. By 1945, two-thirds of European Jews had been killed. Jews were targeted by the Nazis due to long-standing anti-Semitism and Nazi beliefs about Aryan racial supremacy. The Nazis used concentration camps and death camps to carry out mass killings of Jews and other groups deemed "undesirable", with Auschwitz being the largest such camp where thousands died daily. After the war, the Nuremberg trials held Nazi leaders accountable for their war crimes and genocide.
Adolf Hitler was born in 1889 in Austria-Hungary and showed an early interest in art but was rejected from art school. He moved to Munich in 1913 and served in the German army during World War 1. After the war, he joined the German Workers' Party and renamed it the Nazi Party, taking control in 1921. As Chancellor of Germany from 1933, he grew the party rapidly and abolished democracy, becoming a dictator. He violated the Treaty of Versailles and invaded several countries, plunging Europe into World War 2. In 1945, with the Soviet army advancing on Berlin, Hitler committed suicide in his bunker.
Charles Spurgeon was a prolific and influential preacher in the 19th century known as the "Prince of Preachers." He preached over 600 times before age 20 and his collected sermons fill 63 volumes, equivalent to 27 volumes of the 9th edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, making it the largest set of books by a single Christian author. Spurgeon faced difficulties like the tragic fire at his church that killed people and depression, as well as physical ailments like gout that caused him pain and missed sermons. However, he remained devoted to Scripture and Calvinist theology, loved children by founding orphanages, and sought to glorify God in both his words and deeds until his death in 1892.
The document provides biographical information on the key people involved in Anne Frank's story. It describes that Anne and Margot Frank died of typhus in Bergen-Belsen in February or March 1945. Their mother Edith died in Auschwitz in January 1945 from despair after being separated from her daughters. Otto Frank was the only family member to survive, though he remained imprisoned until liberation. The document also provides details on the deaths of other members of the Secret Annex group in Nazi concentration camps between 1944-1945.
The document provides background information on Adolf Hitler's rise to power in Germany. It discusses his early life, time in WWI, formation of the Nazi party, and key events that allowed him to consolidate power such as the Reichstag fire and passage of the Enabling Act. It also summarizes Nazi party organizations like the SA, SS, Gestapo, and Hitler Youth that helped enforce Hitler's dictatorship. In the end, the document dispels the myths that Hitler's rise was inevitable or that he was democratically elected, noting he never received over 37% of the vote and only came to power due to flaws in the German political system.
Hitler and Nazi Germany - the nazi governmentmrmarr
Adolf Hitler took power in Germany in 1933 and established a totalitarian Nazi government, consolidating his control over time. He appointed key leaders to head major aspects of government, including Heinrich Himmler to oversee the SS and concentration camps, Joseph Goebbels as Minister of Propaganda, and Hermann Goering to head the secret police and air force. By 1936, Hitler had centralized power and aimed to prepare Germany for war within four years under the Office of the Four Year Plan. He abolished state governments, instead appointing his own regional governors to impose his rules across Germany.
Adolf Hitler was born in 1889 in Austria and showed an early interest in art that was denied by his rejection from the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts. He developed anti-Semitic beliefs and blamed Jews for Germany's defeat in WWI. In the 1920s he joined the Nazi party and became its leader, promoting German nationalism. In the 1930s he seized power legally through democratic elections and consolidated power through the Reichstag fire. As dictator, he established a totalitarian regime, withdrew Germany from the League of Nations, and began aggressively rearming Germany in violation of the Treaty of Versailles while improving the economy.
Adolf Hitler rose to power in Germany after World War I. As a young man, he was rejected from art school twice and became homeless in Vienna. He was inspired by German nationalism and anti-Semitism. During World War I, he fought for Germany and was decorated for his service. After the war, he joined the German Workers' Party and transformed it into the Nazi party. He was imprisoned after a failed coup but used his time to write Mein Kampf and spread his ideology. He then rose legally to power by gaining support and being appointed chancellor in 1933.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a German Lutheran pastor, theologian, and anti-Nazi dissident who was involved in plots to assassinate Adolf Hitler. He founded an anti-Nazi Confessional Church but had it closed when Germany invaded. During WWII, he worked closely with opponents of Hitler and took part in the failed 1944 plot to assassinate the dictator. Bonhoeffer was imprisoned and eventually hanged in 1945 at Flossenbürg concentration camp just before the end of the war in Europe. Though originally a pacifist, he came to believe Hitler had to be stopped by any means necessary. He is now seen as a martyr and inspiration for his resistance to Nazi tyranny.
The document provides biographical details about Anne Frank, including key events in her life from her birth in Germany in 1929 to her death at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp in 1945 at the age of 15. It discusses how Anne and her family hid from the Nazis for over two years in an secret annex in Amsterdam before being arrested in 1944. It also provides context about Anne's diary, which she wrote in while in hiding and was published after her death.
Anne Frank was a young German Jewish girl who received international fame after her death through her diary. She received the diary as a gift on her 13th birthday and used it to describe her family's life in hiding from the Nazis in Amsterdam during World War II. Her family was eventually discovered and arrested in 1944, with Anne and her sister later dying at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Her diary was published after the war and provided insights into the discrimination and horrors faced by Jews under Nazi rule.
Anne Frank was a Jewish girl who lived in Germany and the Netherlands during World War II. To hide from the Nazis, Anne and her family went into hiding in a secret annex in Amsterdam for over two years. Anne chronicled her experiences in her diary during this time. She was eventually captured and sent to a concentration camp, where she died at age 15. After the war, Anne's father Otto published her diary to share her story with the world.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a German Lutheran pastor, theologian, and spy who opposed the Nazi regime. He was born in 1906 to a middle-class family in Germany and studied theology, becoming a pastor and professor. As the Nazis rose to power in 1933, Bonhoeffer helped form the Confessing Church to oppose the Nazi-controlled German Evangelical Church. He established an underground seminary and was involved in plots to overthrow Hitler. Arrested in 1943, he was imprisoned until 1945 when he was executed by hanging shortly before the war ended. Bonhoeffer's writings on Christianity's role in the secular world and his opposition to the Nazis made him a renowned theologian and martyr for faith
Adolf Hitler was born in 1889 in Austria and showed early interest in becoming a priest but was rejected from art school. After his parents died, he lived homeless in Vienna where he was influenced by anti-Semitism. During World War I he served in the German army and was decorated for bravery. After the war, he joined the Nazi party and rose to leadership with emotional speeches attacking Jews. In 1923 he attempted to overthrow the German government but was imprisoned for five years where he wrote his book Mein Kampf outlining his plans. He became Chancellor in 1933 and built Germany's industry and military, gaining control of Europe by 1941.
HISTORY OF THE WORLD: ANNE FRANK - A VICTIM OF THE HOLOCAUSTGeorge Dumitrache
HISTORY OF THE WORLD: ANNE FRANK - A VICTIM OF THE HOLOCAUST. It contains: who was Anne Frank, early life, persecutions, arrest and death, the diary, the journal, life before hiding, Achterhuis, the Annex, the arrest, Auschwitz deportation, death, the diary of a young girl, Anne's legacy.
The Holocaust was the systematic persecution and murder of approximately 6 million Jews by the Nazi regime from 1933 to 1945. By 1945, two-thirds of European Jews had been killed. Jews were targeted by the Nazis due to long-standing anti-Semitism and Nazi beliefs about Aryan racial supremacy. The Nazis used concentration camps and death camps to carry out mass killings of Jews and other groups deemed "undesirable", with Auschwitz being the largest such camp where thousands died daily. After the war, the Nuremberg trials held Nazi leaders accountable for their war crimes and genocide.
Adolf Hitler was born in 1889 in Austria-Hungary and showed an early interest in art but was rejected from art school. He moved to Munich in 1913 and served in the German army during World War 1. After the war, he joined the German Workers' Party and renamed it the Nazi Party, taking control in 1921. As Chancellor of Germany from 1933, he grew the party rapidly and abolished democracy, becoming a dictator. He violated the Treaty of Versailles and invaded several countries, plunging Europe into World War 2. In 1945, with the Soviet army advancing on Berlin, Hitler committed suicide in his bunker.
Charles Spurgeon was a prolific and influential preacher in the 19th century known as the "Prince of Preachers." He preached over 600 times before age 20 and his collected sermons fill 63 volumes, equivalent to 27 volumes of the 9th edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica, making it the largest set of books by a single Christian author. Spurgeon faced difficulties like the tragic fire at his church that killed people and depression, as well as physical ailments like gout that caused him pain and missed sermons. However, he remained devoted to Scripture and Calvinist theology, loved children by founding orphanages, and sought to glorify God in both his words and deeds until his death in 1892.
The document provides biographical information on the key people involved in Anne Frank's story. It describes that Anne and Margot Frank died of typhus in Bergen-Belsen in February or March 1945. Their mother Edith died in Auschwitz in January 1945 from despair after being separated from her daughters. Otto Frank was the only family member to survive, though he remained imprisoned until liberation. The document also provides details on the deaths of other members of the Secret Annex group in Nazi concentration camps between 1944-1945.
The document provides background information on Adolf Hitler's rise to power in Germany. It discusses his early life, time in WWI, formation of the Nazi party, and key events that allowed him to consolidate power such as the Reichstag fire and passage of the Enabling Act. It also summarizes Nazi party organizations like the SA, SS, Gestapo, and Hitler Youth that helped enforce Hitler's dictatorship. In the end, the document dispels the myths that Hitler's rise was inevitable or that he was democratically elected, noting he never received over 37% of the vote and only came to power due to flaws in the German political system.
Hitler and Nazi Germany - the nazi governmentmrmarr
Adolf Hitler took power in Germany in 1933 and established a totalitarian Nazi government, consolidating his control over time. He appointed key leaders to head major aspects of government, including Heinrich Himmler to oversee the SS and concentration camps, Joseph Goebbels as Minister of Propaganda, and Hermann Goering to head the secret police and air force. By 1936, Hitler had centralized power and aimed to prepare Germany for war within four years under the Office of the Four Year Plan. He abolished state governments, instead appointing his own regional governors to impose his rules across Germany.
Adolf Hitler was born in 1889 in Austria and showed an early interest in art that was denied by his rejection from the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts. He developed anti-Semitic beliefs and blamed Jews for Germany's defeat in WWI. In the 1920s he joined the Nazi party and became its leader, promoting German nationalism. In the 1930s he seized power legally through democratic elections and consolidated power through the Reichstag fire. As dictator, he established a totalitarian regime, withdrew Germany from the League of Nations, and began aggressively rearming Germany in violation of the Treaty of Versailles while improving the economy.
Adolf Hitler rose to power in Germany after World War I. As a young man, he was rejected from art school twice and became homeless in Vienna. He was inspired by German nationalism and anti-Semitism. During World War I, he fought for Germany and was decorated for his service. After the war, he joined the German Workers' Party and transformed it into the Nazi party. He was imprisoned after a failed coup but used his time to write Mein Kampf and spread his ideology. He then rose legally to power by gaining support and being appointed chancellor in 1933.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer was a German Lutheran pastor, theologian, and anti-Nazi dissident who was involved in plots to assassinate Adolf Hitler. He founded an anti-Nazi Confessional Church but had it closed when Germany invaded. During WWII, he worked closely with opponents of Hitler and took part in the failed 1944 plot to assassinate the dictator. Bonhoeffer was imprisoned and eventually hanged in 1945 at Flossenbürg concentration camp just before the end of the war in Europe. Though originally a pacifist, he came to believe Hitler had to be stopped by any means necessary. He is now seen as a martyr and inspiration for his resistance to Nazi tyranny.
Dietrich Bonnhoeffer was a Lutheran pastor and theologian born in 1906 in Germany who strongly opposed the Nazi regime. He criticized the Nazis in radio broadcasts in 1933 and went on to join resistance groups working against the Nazi government from 1940-1943. Arrested in 1943 for his involvement in plots to overthrow Hitler, Bonnhoeffer was imprisoned until he was executed just days before the end of World War II in 1945 for his role in conspiracies against the Nazi leader.
AMK Arnold Müller GmbH & Co. KG is an automation engineering company founded in 1963 in Kirchheim unter Teck, Germany that employs 900 people. It produces drive and control technology products including servo motors, centralized and decentralized drive systems, and control technology. It also manufactures automotive components such as air compressors, electric power steering systems, and e-powertrain systems. Over the decades, AMK has expanded its employee base and sales, operating additional locations in Europe and aiming to increase expected annual sales to 150-170 million euros.
The Confessing Church of the 21st Century - Christopher Gornold-Smith (SALT 2...John Deisher
This document discusses the Confessing Church of the 21st century, drawing comparisons to the Confessing Church movement in Nazi Germany led by figures like Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Karl Barth, and Martin Niemöller. It examines different views of how Christians should engage in the public sphere and influence society. It also references modern works discussing the lessons of Nazi Germany and the global persecution of Christians today. The overall theme is how the church should respond and bear witness to its faith in the current cultural context.
The German Christians wanted to align Protestantism more closely with Nazi ideology by removing Jewish elements from the Bible and adopting Nazi rituals and symbols. The Confessional Church broke away in 1934 to oppose Nazi interference in theology. Some groups, like the German Faith Movement, sought to replace Christianity entirely with a new Nazi pagan religion. Initially many Protestants supported the Nazis due to shared social conservatism, but tensions grew as the Nazis attempted to coordinate the churches under the Reich Bishop. The Confessional Church resisted this Gleichschaltung and grew in opposition to Nazi policies on Jews and euthanasia. However, most churches avoided open confrontation with Hitler for fear of starting a Kulturkampf.
Primeiro: O documento descreve a importância da comunhão cristã e como ela é uma dádiva de Deus, ainda que nem todos os cristãos possam desfrutá-la visivelmente. Segundo: Um cristão vive inteiramente da Palavra de Deus e não de si mesmo, dependendo exclusivamente da justificação por Cristo. Terceiro: Há diversas formas de comunhão cristã, desde uma visita até a vida em comunidade, e todas são graças concedidas por Deus.
El documento presenta un resumen gráfico de la Biblia dividida en cuatro secciones principales: 1) la historia antigua del mundo desde Adán hasta Noé, 2) la historia de Israel desde Abraham hasta Esdras, 3) la historia de Jesús y los evangelios, y 4) la historia de la iglesia apostólica en los Hechos y Apocalipsis. Cubre los principales eventos, personas, libros y temas a lo largo de la Biblia.
Dietrich Bonhoeffer - resumen de su vida y obrapbornhardtd
Este documento presenta información biográfica y teológica sobre Dietrich Bonhoeffer, un pastor y teólogo alemán que se opuso activamente al régimen nazi y murió ejecutado en 1945. Bonhoeffer enseñó una teología cristocéntrica y ética basada en el seguimiento de Cristo, y participó en la resistencia contra Hitler. Fue miembro fundador de la Iglesia Confesante y defendió la responsabilidad de la iglesia ante las injusticias del estado.
The document is a meditation on a prayer by Dietrich Bonhoeffer, in which he acknowledges his own darkness, loneliness, weakness, restlessness, and bitterness, but finds help, light, companionship, strength, peace, patience, guidance, freedom, and purpose through God, who he asks to restore and enable him so that he may live for and praise God each day, no matter what it may bring.
El documento resume la Biblia como una colección de 73 libros sagrados para millones de personas que contiene el mensaje de Dios. Está compuesta por el Antiguo Testamento con 46 libros divididos en Pentateuco, Históricos, Didácticos, Proféticos y Poéticos, y el Nuevo Testamento con 27 libros que incluyen los Evangelios, Hechos, Cartas de Pablo y otros libros. La Biblia comenzó a escribirse hace unos 3,000 años y contiene diferentes géneros literarios para comunicar su mensaje.
A Guide to SlideShare Analytics - Excerpts from Hubspot's Step by Step Guide ...SlideShare
This document provides a summary of the analytics available through SlideShare for monitoring the performance of presentations. It outlines the key metrics that can be viewed such as total views, actions, and traffic sources over different time periods. The analytics help users identify topics and presentation styles that resonate best with audiences based on view and engagement numbers. They also allow users to calculate important metrics like view-to-contact conversion rates. Regular review of the analytics insights helps users improve future presentations and marketing strategies.
Investigadores citados por el Papa Benedictoclasesteologia
Se muestra algunos datos biográficos de teólogos y filósofos citados en el tomo segundo, Tomo II, de Jesús de Nazaret. Muchos son Biblistas alemanes. La mayor parte se ha recogido de Wikipedia.
Heiliger Pabst, Johannes Paul - Karol Wojtyla (1+2).pptxMartin M Flynn
Eine Biografie eines polnischen Waisenkindes, das mit der Nazi-Invasion und der kommunistischen Herrschaft aufwuchs und ein internationaler spiritueller Führer wurde – Reisen, Pastoralbesuche, Synoden, ökumenischer und weltweiter Einfluss, Schriften.
Sohn des Emslandes: Seelsorger, Lehrer und Sozialarbeiterolik88
Dr. theol. Wilhelm Berning, Bischof, Titularerzbischof, Päpstlicher Hausprälat und Thronassistent, Ehrenbürger von Lingen, Meppen und Osnabrück. Wie war seine Geschichte und sein Wirken? Der Volksbischof des Nordens in schwierigen Zeiten - von Thomas Friese, Immobilienexperte und Projektentwickler.
Una breve presentazione sul Nazismo e sul tempo in cui Hitler governava la Germania. Cinque brevi parti in cui si passa dalla crisi mondiale del 1929 al 1945 con l'instaurazione della dittatura, dagli oppositori interni e alla fine della guerra e del regime. Il tutto in lingua tedesca.
The history, economy, and culture of JENA, a university city in east-central Germany and one of the most important cities in the federal state of Thuringia.
Mexico has a long history with numerous indigenous civilizations. It gained independence from Spain in the early 19th century and is now a federal presidential republic. Mexico has experienced economic challenges in recent decades due to the global financial crisis and drug violence. It has a population of over 125 million people and its largest ethnic group is Mestizo.
The major events of the RUSSIAN REVOLUTION, a series of two revolutions in RUSSIA in 1917. The first revolution in March (O.S. February) deposed TSAR NICHOLAS II. The second revolution in November (O.S. October) toppled the Provisional Government and handed power to the Bolsheviks, giving way to the rise of the SOVIET UNION (U.S.S.R.), the world's first communist state.
The history of trade unions, from the dawn of the labor movement in Great Britain, mainland Europe, and the United States in the 19th century to the successes and challenges in the 20th and 21st centuries.
A presentation about socialism, a political and economic theory of social organization that advocates that the means of production, distribution, and exchange should be owned or regulated by the community as a whole.
Eindhoven is a city in the southern Netherlands located along the Dommel River. It has a population of over 229,000, making it the fifth largest city in the Netherlands. Eindhoven emerged in the early 20th century as a major business center due to the founding of Philips electronics company in 1891. While Philips relocated its headquarters, Eindhoven remains an important technology center. Eindhoven also has factories for DAF trucks and is a rail and canal transportation hub connected to nearby Eindhoven Airport. The city has several institutions of higher education including Eindhoven University of Technology and museums such as the Van Abbemuseum.
Denmark is a Scandinavian country located in Northern Europe. It has a total area of 43,094 square km and a population of over 5.6 million people. Denmark joined NATO in 1949 and the European Union in 1973, but has opted out of adopting the euro currency or participating in the EU's defense cooperation. The country has a highly developed economy and ranks highly in quality of life, education, healthcare, civil liberties and human development.
Armenia has a long history of domination by foreign empires and was the first country to adopt Christianity. It declared independence in 1918 but was invaded by Soviet Russia in 1920. Armenia has ongoing territorial disputes with Azerbaijan over Nagorno-Karabakh. The country has a population of over 3 million people, most of whom are ethnic Armenian. Armenia has a unitary parliamentary republic government and became independent from the Soviet Union in 1991.
Debrecen is the second largest city in Hungary, located in the eastern part of the country. It has a long history as an important cultural and religious center, and was briefly the capital of Hungary during a revolution in the 19th century. Today, Debrecen remains an economic center with industries like pharmaceuticals and transportation links that support trade and development.
A brief history of the formerly Hungarian city Cluj-Napoca (German: Klausenburg; Hungarian: Kolozsvár; Medieval Latin: Castrum Clus, Claudiopolis; Yiddish: קלויזנבורג, Kloiznburg), a Romanian city since 1920. Historic sites are also included in this presentation.
Australia was first settled by prehistoric migrants from Southeast Asia at least 40,000 years ago. Britain claimed the eastern coast in 1770 and the rest of the continent in 1829, establishing six colonies which federated in 1901 to form the nation of Australia. Today, Australia is a highly developed market economy and democratic constitutional monarchy located in Oceania between the Indian and South Pacific Oceans, with most of its population concentrated along the eastern and southeastern coasts.
Thailand was founded as a unified kingdom in the 14th century and is the only Southeast Asian country to have avoided European colonial rule. It transitioned to a constitutional monarchy after a peaceful revolution in 1932. Located in Southeast Asia, Thailand has a tropical climate and borders Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia and Malaysia. Most of the population of over 68 million is ethnically Thai and Buddhist. The country has experienced political turmoil in recent decades including multiple coups.
Tatarstan is a federal subject of Russia located along the Volga River. The capital and largest city is Kazan. The population is mostly Tatar, with Russians as a minority. Tatarstan has a diverse economy focused on oil production, industry, and agriculture. It has a long history as part of the Golden Horde and later the Khanate of Kazan before becoming part of Russia in the 16th century.
Morocco has been ruled by a series of Muslim dynasties since the 8th century. It gained independence from France in 1956 and is now a constitutional monarchy with the king as head of state. Morocco's government includes a bicameral parliament and constitutional monarchy. The country is located in North Africa and borders the North Atlantic Ocean and Mediterranean Sea. Morocco has a population of over 33 million people and its largest ethnic groups are Arab-Berber. The official languages are Arabic and Berber.
After World War I, the United Kingdom established the semi-autonomous state of Transjordan which gained independence in 1946 as the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. Jordan lost control of the West Bank to Israel after the 1967 Six-Day War and its long-time ruler King Hussein signed a peace treaty with Israel in 1994, permanently surrendering Jordanian claims to the West Bank. Jordan is a relatively small country located in the Middle East between Israel, Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Syria, and the West Bank, with a population of over 10 million people mostly concentrated in the capital of Amman in the northwest.
Iceland was originally settled by Norse and Celtic immigrants in the 9th-10th centuries AD. It established the world's oldest existing legislative assembly, the Althingi, in 930 AD. Iceland gained independence from Norway and Denmark in the early 20th century. The island's economy depends highly on industries like fishing and tourism. Iceland has a unitary parliamentary republic government and is known for its natural beauty, literacy rate, and Nordic social policies.
2. Kindheit, Jugend, und Ausbildung
• Dietrich Bonhoeffer wurde am 4. Februar 1906 in
Breslau geboren; war sechtes von acht Kindern.
• 1912 zog die Familie Bonhoeffer nach die Haupstadt
Berlin.
• Seine Kindheit war durch seine offene, warmed, aber
ouch strenge Erziehung geprägt.
• Nach dem Abitur, das Bonhoeffer mit 16 Jahren bestand,
begann er in Tübingen und Berlin mit dem Studium der
Theologie.
• Bereits mit 21 Jahren schreib Bonhoeffer seine
Docktorarbeit.
• 1930 wurde er Privatdozent für Theologie an der
Universität in Berlin.
3. Leben unter den Nationalsozialismus
• Als im Jahre 1933 die Kirsche in Deutschland dem
nationalsozialistichen Staat „gleichgeschaltet“ wurde,
ging Bonhoeffer nach London, um heir als Pastor in zwei
deutschen Gemeinden zu wirken.
• Nach seiner Rückkehr im Frühjahr 1935 schloss er sich der
Gemeinschaft der „Bekennenden Kirche“ an, der
protestantischen Widerstandsbewegung.
• Trotz des ständig stärker werdenden Druckes durch den NS-
Staat versuchte er, mit gleichgesinnten Menschen
Gottesdienste abzuhalten und die Ausbilding der Geistlichen
in den überlieferten Formen und gegen den Willen des Staates
durchzuführen.
• Bonhoeffers Weg in den Widerstand nahm erste konkrete
Formen an.
4. Leben unter den Nationalsozialismus –
weiter
• 1936 verboten ihm die Nationalsozialisten,
Vorlesungen zu halten; 1938 erhielt Bonhoeffer
sogar Aufenthaltsverbot für Berlin und 1941
untersagte man ihm jede schriftstellerische
Veröffentlichung.
• Er wurde nun ständig von der Geheimen
Staatspolizei (Gestapo) überwacht.
5. Leben unter den Nationalsozialismus –
weiter
• Wegen des drohenden Kreiges im Jahre 1939 verschafften
ihm seine Freunde in die Vereinigte Staaten die Einladung zu
einer Vorlesungsreise in die USA.
• Bonhoeffer blieb jedoch nur sechs Wochen dort und kehrte
unmittelbar vor Ausbruch des Kreiges wieder nach
Deutschland zurück.
• Seit dieser Zeit betätigte Bonhoeffer sich mit immer größerem
Einsatz an den Vorbereitungen zur Beseitigung des
nationalsozialistischen Regimes.
• Er schloss sich der Widerstandgruppe um Admiral Canaris an,
der Chef der militärischen Abwehr war.
• Er arbeite als Kurier der Abwehr und nutzte diese Tätigkeit
aus, um den Widerstand gegen den NS-Staat weiter
auszubauen.
6. Leben unter den Nationalsozialismus –
weiter
• Immer schweieriger gelang indes die
Geheimhaltung des Widerstandes.
• Am 5. April 1943 wurde Bonhoeffer verhaftet
und in das Militärgefängnis Berlin-Tegel
gebracht.
• Seine Verhaftung folgten häufige Drohungen der
Gewaltanwendung gegen ihn und Repressalien
gegen Bonhoeffers Eltern und seine Verlobte
Maria von Wedemeyer.
7. Attentat vom 20. July 1944, ende des
Krieges, und Hinrichtung
• Nach dem gescheiterten Attentat auf Hitler am 20. Juli 1944
verschlechterten sich die Haftbedingungen Bonhoeffers
gravierend.
• February 1945 wurde Bonhoeffer gemeinsam mit anderen
Häftlingen in das Konzentrationslager Buchenwald und im
April in das Konzentrationslager Flossenbürg verlegt.
• Ein SS-Standgericht verurteile ihm wegen Hoch- und
Landesverrates zum Tode durch den Strang.
• Für Bonhoeffers festen Wider aus christlicher Überzeugung
und sein Eintreten für die Werte der Demokratie bezahlte er
leider mit seinem Leben.
• Am 9. April, nur wenige Wochen vor der Kapitulation Nazi-
Deutschlands und den Nationalsozialistiche Regime, wurde
Bonhoeffer erhängt.
8. Bücher von Dietrich Bonhoeffer
• Sanctorum Communio.
• Akt und Sein. Transzendentalphilosophie und Ontologie in der
systematischen Theologie.
• Nachfolge.
• Ethik.
• Beten und Tun des Gerechten. Glaube und Verantwortung im
Widerstand.
• Schöpfung und Fall. Theologische Auslegung von Genesis 1–3.
• Schöpfung und Fall. Versuchung.
• Die Weisheit Gottes – Jesus Christus.
• Gemeinsames Leben.
• Widerstand und Ergebung. Briefe und Aufzeichnungen aus der
Haft.
9. Bücher von Dietrich Bonhoeffer –
weiter
• Brautbriefe Zelle 92. Dietrich Bonhoeffer – Maria von
Wedemeyer 1943–1945.
• Das Gebetbuch der Bibel. Eine Einführung in die Psalmen.
• Fragmente aus Tegel. Drama und Roman.
• Schweizer Korrespondenz 1941/42. Im Gespräch mit Karl
Barth.
• Christologie.
• Versuchung.
• Die Antwort auf unsere Fragen. Gedanken zur Bibel.
• Von guten Mächten wunderbar geborgen.
10. Bücher über Dietrich Bonhoeffer
• Josef Ackermann: Dietrich Bonhoeffer – Freiheit hat offene Augen.
Eine Biographie.
• Eberhard Bethge: Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Theologe – Christ –
Zeitgenosse. Eine Biographie.
• Eberhard Bethge: Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
• Renate Bethge: Dietrich Bonhoeffer: Eine Skizze seines Lebens.
• Carl-Jüngen Kaltenborn: Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
• Georg Kretschmar: Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
• Wilhelm Landgrebe: Dietrich Bonhoeffer. Wagnis der Nachfolge.
• Eric Metaxas: Bonhoeffer. Pastor, Agent, Märtyrer und Prophet
(original Bonhoeffer: Pastor, Agent, Martyr, and Prophet).
• Ferdinand Schlingensiepen: Dietrich Bonhoeffer 1906–1945. Eine
Biographie.
• Ilse Tödt: „Gute Mächte“. Bonhoeffer-Darstellungen.
• Renate Wind: Dem Rad in die Speichen fallen. Die Lebensgeschichte
des Dietrich Bonhoeffer.