@Loukas already reserved for a tank destroyer
@Loukas yeah. A protestant friend of mine made drunk a positive reference about him once. Growing up Catholic I didn't believe that such a thing was possible...
But it is a different than NI since no side did really win.
But mixed marriages were still fround opon in my grandparents generation.
@Loukas it is not. You have similar divisions in the Netherlands and especially Switzerland.
In NL, Switzerland and Germany there is a strong regional component to it.
It is not so relevant in the former DDR/GDR. One the one hand these regions were protestant. And on the other they are now irreligious. It nowadays works maybe as a further difference between GDR and western Germany.
@Loukas dealing with people from GDR always felt strange to me since they often had no religious background or cultural reference in this direction whatsoever.
This is in contrast to the community I was brought up in (dominantly Turkish and Polish, Catholics, Protestants and Muslim; even the Atheist had the same cultural references).
@Loukas there is a bible belt in Saxony. I believe it is evangelical Lutherans that stuck to their faith through communism. As far as I recall they play a role in the Saxon CDU.
There were probably some attempts at religious revival. But they weren't overly successful.
@Loukas Probably. They need to fill a niche and demand.
Jehovas Witnesses and some evangelicals were quite "successful" in some communities (I recall russo-Germans flocking to them in the late nineties). Latter Day Saints not so much (though they are quite visible sometimes).
@Loukas yes. And it seems a mixed picture with the others.
But I know only two personally. My colleague from work is against Putin. And the other one I don't know what her views are. Her german-German husband is into conspiracy theories though. So maybe.
@Loukas yes. There are especially the Reichsbürger.
They can be encountered everywhere in Germany. But especially in the East and Bavaria.