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30 Years a Watchtower Slave: The Confessions of a Converted Jehovah's Witness is unavailable, but you can change that!

At first, the Watchtower Society seemed harmless to William J. Schnell, even valuable as a way to develop his faith in God and pass it on to others. This book is Schnell's fascinating account of his involvement with the cult, which effectively enticed him in the 1920s and continues to lure countless individuals today. Readers will learn, as Schnell did, that the Jehovah's Witness religion he had...

At this time Storm Troopers of the National Socialist Party were beginning to appear here and there. They soon singled us out, proclaiming that we were American propagandists organized from the U.S.A. One of my meetings was broken up by Storm Troopers while I was speaking and I was hit over the head with a heavy oak chair. Many of us were arrested everywhere and mob action came into view here and there. The Protestant churches sued us for blasphemy of God. There ensued in the Supreme Court of Saxony