NewsPronto

 
The Times


.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

How a reading group helped young German students defy the Nazis and find their faith

  • Written by Peter Nguyen, SJ, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, College of the Holy Cross
imageA copy of the sentences against, left to right, Willi Graf, Kurt Huber, Alexander Schmorell, Hans Scholl, Sophie Scholl and Christoph Probst is displayed at the White Rose Memorial in Munich.Johannes Simon/Getty Images

For three weeks in April 2025, my “Theology of Christian Martyrdom” class studied how a group of German students and...

Read more: How a reading group helped young German students defy the Nazis and find their faith

More Articles ...

  1. ‘Agreeing to disagree’ is hurting your relationships – here’s what to do instead
  2. Young bats learn to be discriminating when listening for their next meal
  3. RFK Jr. said many autistic people will never write a poem − even though there’s a rich history of neurodivergent poets and writers
  4. Whooping cough is making a comeback, but the vaccine provides powerful protection
  5. No whistleblower is an island – why networks of allies are key to exposing corruption
  6. From cats and dogs to penguins and llamas, treating animals with acupuncture has become mainstream in veterinary medicine
  7. The ‘sacramental shame’ many LGBTQ+ conservative Christians wrestle with – and how they find healing
  8. Almost Zion: Remembering a short-lived Jewish state in New York
  9. Spider-Man’s lessons for us all on the responsibility to use our power, great or small, to do good
  10. Disinformation and other forms of ‘sharp power’ now sit alongside the ‘hard power’ of tanks and ‘soft power’ of ideas in policy handbook
  11. Florida panthers and black bears need a literal path for survival – here’s how the Florida Wildlife Corridor provides it in one of the fastest-growing US states
  12. How Trump promotes a radical, unscientific theory about sex and gender in the name of opposing ‘gender ideology extremism’
  13. Trump’s first 100 days show him dictating the terms of press coverage − following Hungarian strongman Viktor Orbán’s playbook for media control
  14. 50 years later, Vietnam’s environment still bears the scars of war – and signals a dark future for Gaza and Ukraine
  15. Trump administration’s attempt to nix the labor rights of thousands of federal workers on ‘national security’ grounds furthers the GOP’s long-held anti-union agenda
  16. Bureaucrats get a bad rap, but they deserve more credit − a sociologist of work explains why
  17. Italy’s Meloni is positioning herself as bridge between EU and Trump – but will it work?
  18. Pope Francis filled the College of Cardinals with a diverse group of men – and they’ll be picking his successor
  19. Granular systems, such as sandpiles or rockslides, are all around you − new research will help scientists describe how they work
  20. Cancer research in the US is world class because of its broad base of funding − with the government pulling out, its future is uncertain
  21. Detroit’s lack of affordable housing pushes families to the edge - and children sometime pay the price
  22. How does soap keep you clean? A chemist explains the science of soap
  23. Tensions over Kashmir and a warming planet have placed the Indus Waters Treaty on life support
  24. In talking with Tehran, Trump is reversing course on Iran – could a new nuclear deal be next?
  25. Colors are objective, according to two philosophers − even though the blue you see doesn’t match what I see
  26. Florida, once considered a swing state, is firmly Republican – a social anthropologist explains what caused this shift
  27. ‘Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence’ − an astronomer explains how much evidence scientists need to claim discoveries like extraterrestrial life
  28. Trump’s ‘Garden of American Heroes’ is a monument to celebrity and achievement – paid for with humanities funding that benefits everyday Americans
  29. Hotter and drier climate in Colorado’s San Luis Valley contributes to kidney disease in agriculture workers, new study shows
  30. Japanese women have long sacrificed their surnames in marriage − politics and demographics might change that
  31. ‘I were but little happy, if I could say how much’: Shakespeare’s insights on happiness have held up for more than 400 years
  32. Why predicting battery performance is like forecasting traffic − and how researchers are making progress
  33. These 4 tips can make screen time good for your kids and even help them learn to talk
  34. Trump’s aggressive actions against free speech speak a lot louder than his words defending it
  35. Memes and conflict: Study shows surge of imagery and fakes can precede international and political violence
  36. Pope Francis’ death right after Easter sounds miraculous – but patients and caregivers often work together to delay dying
  37. US colleges and universities have billions stashed away in endowments − a higher ed finance expert explains what they are
  38. Gratitude comes with benefits − a social psychologist explains how to practice it when times are stressful
  39. Alaska, rich in petroleum, faces an energy shortage
  40. How do children learn to read? This literacy expert says ‘there are as many ways as there are students’
  41. The hidden history of Philadelphia’s window-box gardens and their role in urban reform
  42. Is China the new cool? How Beijing is using pop culture to win the soft power war
  43. From Doing Business to B-READY: World Bank’s new rankings represent a rebrand, not a revamp
  44. Justice Department lawyers work for justice and the Constitution – not the White House
  45. Trump is stripping protections from marine protected areas – why that’s a problem for fishing’s future, and for whales, corals and other ocean life
  46. US universities lose millions of dollars chasing patents, research shows
  47. From help to harm: How the government is quietly repurposing everyone’s data for surveillance
  48. Trump administration pauses new mine safety regulation − here’s how those rules benefit companies as well as workers
  49. Controlled burns reduce wildfire risk, but they require trained staff and funding − this could be a rough year
  50. Stripping federal protection for clean water harms just about everyone, especially already vulnerable communities