"The Catholic Church and the Holocaust" (2001) by Michael Phayer (Holocaust and Genocide Studies).
p. 23: “Even members of the Gestapo, in conversation with the Volksdeutsch, were surprised that the pope had not yet spoken out.^^ Because of the pope's silence, it seemed to Polish Catholics that the Vatican was either in league with Hitler or unconcerned about their suffering. There was even talk of cutting off allegiance to Rome.^^”
p. 105: “Other historians, chiefly Randolph L. Braham, would add a fourth factor: the failure of the church to protest openly, which led to "the climate that made the unhindered implementation of the Final Solution possible.”
p.127: “When Cardinal Suhard failed to protest the forced removal of these families from their homes and their subsequent detention, Ribiere attempted, unsuccessfully, to gain support for the Jews by organizing a student prayer rally to protest the Nazi action. Disgusted, Ribiere quit Paris for Vichy France, where she became a motivating force behind the protest journal Cahiers du Temoignage Chretien and the organization Amitie Chretienne. Zofia KossakSzczucka, on the other hand, co-founded Zegota herself. Her call to action, clandestinely published and distributed in 1942, became the organization's principal inspiration.”
Demonstrations in the United States against the Nazi Persecution of Jews, (1933), The United States Holocaust Memorial Museum
“Other types of protests and demonstrations were also organized. More than five hundred organizations—Jewish and non-Jewish—from across the United States sent petitions to government officials demanding an official response to Nazi antisemitic actions. The Jewish War Veterans of the United States of America and the American League for the Defense of Jewish Rights (which soon became the Non-Sectarian Anti-Nazi League) advocated boycotting German-made goods and the US stores that carried them.”
The Silence of the Vatican And the Plight of the Jews (2001) H. Brand
“Addressing Cardinal Maglione, then the Vatican's secretary of state, another bishop wrote (in 1943), " I wonder just which bishops have asked the Holy Father to remain silent . . . According to Your Eminence, they did so out of fear of aggravating the persecution. But the facts prove that with the Pope being silent, each day sees the persecution becoming more cruel . . . [T]he inexplicable silence of the supreme head of the church becomes for those who do not know the reason . . . a cause for spiritual downfall."“
‘THE DEPUTY’ IS HERE; Rolf Hochhuth's Controversial Play Has Had an Embattled History’, Feb 23, 1964, New York Times
Bearing the Cross: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (1986) by David Garrow
MLK’s Letter from Birmingham Jail (1963), King Institute
"The White Church and the Civil Rights Movement" (The Atlantic, 2018)
The Anti-Apartheid Movement: A 40-Year Perspective* (2000) by Roger Fieldhouse
(Archival footage) 1981 Springbok Tour protests (New Zealand’s NZ On Screen)
Barclays’ divestment of South Africa in 1986
'How to Survive a Plague' (2016) by David France