Health Reform and Race Hygiene: Adventists and the Biomedical Vision of the Third Reich

German Seventh-day Adventists entered the Nazi era with apprehension. As a foreign sect which resembled Judaism in many respects, Adventists were particularly threatened by a society based on the principle of völkisch racism. Yet the new state also had much to offer them, for it held the prospect of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Church history 1996-09, Vol.65 (3), p.425-440
1. Verfasser: Blaich, Roland
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:German Seventh-day Adventists entered the Nazi era with apprehension. As a foreign sect which resembled Judaism in many respects, Adventists were particularly threatened by a society based on the principle of völkisch racism. Yet the new state also had much to offer them, for it held the prospect of new opportunities for the church. The Nazi state banished the scourge of liberalism and godless Bolshevism, it restored conservative standards in the domestic sphere, and it took effective steps to return German society to a life in harmony with nature—a life Adventists had long championed.
ISSN:0009-6407
1755-2613
DOI:10.2307/3169939