Doris L. Bergen is the Chancellor Rose and Ray Wolfe Professor of Holocaust Studies at the University of Toronto. Her research focuses on issues of religion, gender, and ethnicity in the Holocaust and World War II and comparatively in other cases of extreme violence. Her publications include War and Genocide: A Concise History of the Holocaust, now going into its fourth edition, with translations into Polish and Ukrainian. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Canada, and has taught in Canada, the USA, Germany, Poland, Bosnia, and Kosovo.
'Beautifully and absorbingly written, Between God and Hitler draws the reader in, to deliver the gut punch of the role of Wehrmacht chaplains, but also to compellingly explore that shifting role with broad perspective and extraordinary nuance, delivering fresh and important insight into the functioning of Nazism. Worthy of the widest readership.' Belinda Davis, Rutgers University 'Doris Bergen's eagerly-awaited magnum opus draws on searing testimony of Holocaust survivors and the banal homilies of German military chaplains to show us what it meant to preach Christian virtue to the soldiers waging their war of annihilation in the Soviet Union. Far from opening up a fault line between notions of 'just war' and genocide, sermons and spiritual guidance were an essential part of mobilizing Germans and the military chaplains were proud of their service to the very end. This is an extraordinary work. Bergen leads us through some of the most challenging moral issues raised by the Holocaust and she is the most historically and morally enriching of guides.' Nicholas Stargardt, author of The German War: A Nation Under Arms, 1939–45 'A powerful and sophisticated work by a gifted historian that expertly details how military chaplains embraced martial traditions and the ethics of 'warrior Christianity' to become moral enablers of the Nazi regime. Serving God and Hitler proved a fraught moral battlefield for chaplains whose fealty to their Führer overshadowed principles of faith and conscience.' Edward Westermann, author of Drunk on Genocide: Alcohol and Mass Murder in Nazi Germany 'Bergen conveys her findings with expertise and poignancy, in a way that contributes not only to the study of the history of religion in Nazi Germany, but also, perhaps more implicitly than explicitly, to the growing body of chaplaincy studies: of what it means to work within an organisation whose values are significantly different from the Christian message of peace and love.' Natalie K. Watson, Church Times '… the author's expertise … flows profitably into the work. What makes the book particularly appealing is that it combines various research fields in an extremely productive way; in addition to historical research into violence and genocide, this also includes the history of the Christian churches during National Socialism as well as women's and gender history.' Markus Thurau, H-Soz-Kult