In 1935 he was arrested by the Gestapo, spending six weeks in prison before being released. Leaving Germany in 1938, Maybaum was given work in the United Synagogue by the British Chief Rabbi, Joseph Hertz. His mother and sisters were killed in the Holocaust.
Maybaum wrote many reflections on Judaism, Christianity, the Holocaust and Zionism. He also wrote on Islam. He is most frequently remembered for his controversial view in The Face of God After Auschwitz (1965) that the suffering of Jews in the Holocaust was vicarious atonement for the sins of the rest of the world. He was connecting the Jewish people to the figure of the "suffering servant" of Isaiah 52 and 53 in the Tanakh (the Christian Old Testament). In the same work he employed Christian imagery, speaking of Auschwitz as the new Golgotha and the gas chambers as replacing the cross.
Works
Parteibefreites Judentum (1935)
Neue Jugend und Alter Glaube (1936)
Man and Catastrophe (1941)
Synagogue and Society: Jewish-Christian Collaboration in the Defence of Western Civilization (1944)
The Jewish Home (1945)
The Jewish Mission (1949)
Jewish Existence (1960)
The Faith of the Jewish Diaspora (1962)
The Face of God After Auschwitz (1965)
Trialogue Between Jew, Christian, and Muslim (1973)