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Hitler

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Though the goal was to have one such school in every Gau, ... Church Policy Raised a Catholic, Hitler did not grasp Christian ideals. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Hitler


1
Hitlers Germany
  • Kevin J. Benoy

2
A Totalitarian State
  • Hitler began to establish a totalitarian state
    immediately upon assuming power in 1933.
  • He was helped by having gullible conservative
    allies and an aging President who would soon
    die in office.

3
A Totalitarian State
  • Trade unions were abolished.
  • The KPD (Communist Party) was abolished.
  • Non-Aryans were dismissed from government jobs.
  • Opponents and suspected opponents were harrassed.

4
A Totalitarian State
  • Media were censored.
  • The legal system now took orders from the
    government.
  • Nazis were appointed judges and Chiefs of police.
  • The Gestapo (Secret State Police) was ordered to
    identify and eliminate opponents of the Nazis.
  • Anyone could be arrested on mere suspicion and
    held in protective custody.
  • The first concentration camp Dachau was
    established.

5
A Totalitarian State
  • Party members were slotted into government
    positions, so that party and state became
    indistinguishable.
  • The federal system was replaced by a unitary one
    divided into districts controlled by Gauleiters,
    appointed by Hitler.

6
A Totalitarian State
  • In the Night of the Long Knives Hitler
    destroyed the left wing of his own party to
  • eliminate opposition within the Party.
  • guarantee that the army not interfere in national
    politics.

7
A Totalitarian State
  • The aim of the Nazis was Gleichaltung
    coordination or subordination of the state.
  • All power resided in the Fuhrer (leader).
  • Private life apart from the state was not
    tolerated the motto being what benefits the
    state is right.
  • Individuals had duties to the state, but the
    state was not responsible to individuals.

8
Youth Policy
  • Totalitarian states understand that their hold on
    power relies on the unquestioning support of a
    fervent core of supporters.
  • Nazi youth groups were formed to ensure a
    continuing supply of fanatical followers.

9
Youth Policy
  • Young boys joined the Pimpfen (Little Fellows) at
    the age of 5 or 6.
  • Activities included hiking, camping and physical
    activity along with political indoctrination.

10
Youth Policy
  • At 10, boys wrote a test, moving on to the
    Deutsche Jungvolk (Young Folk), if they passed.
  • Earlier activities continued, but military
    discipline was stressed and each boy swore an
    oath to Hitler.

11
Youth Policy
  • At 14, boys could join the Hitler Youth.
  • Here, advanced military training was given.

12
Youth Policy
  • Between 18 and 25, young men had to serve a year
    of Labour Service in the Reichsarbeitsdiens
    the RAD.
  • After 1935, 2 years of military service was
    required.

13
Youth Policy
  • Girls organizations began a little later in age.
  • At 10, girls could join the Jungmadelbund (Young
    Maidens). They engaged in physical activities
    and health training.

14
Youth Policy
  • Older girls, at 14, joined the Bund Deutscher
    Madel (League of German Maidents).
  • Physical fitness was stressed
  • They had to run 60 meters in 14 seconds, throw a
    ball 12 meters, march for 2 hours, swim 100
    meters and make a bed perfectly.
  • Motherhood training was important.
  • The duty of German girls, to Hitler, was to stay
    home, marry and produce offspring for the service
    of the state.

15
Youth Policy
  • Education was carefully controlled.
  • Biology and History were given special attention
  • Biology taught the superiority of Aryans.
  • History taught the virtues of Nazi ideas.
  • All lessons began and ended with a Nazi salute
    and Heil Hitler.

16
Youth Policy
  • The brightest children were hand-picked to attend
    special Adolf Hitler Schools and trained to be
    future leaders.
  • Though the goal was to have one such school in
    every Gau, the expense to the Party was
    prohibitive and only 10 such schools existed in
    1939.

17
The Churches
  • In 1937, Pope Pius XI condemned Nazism as
    anti-Christian.
  • Priests and nuns who spoke out were arrested and
    sent to concentration camps.
  • However, the Church could not count on the
    support of its own followers as Nazi ideology
    often took precedence over Church teachings.

18
Youth Policy
  • Marches, rallies, party hikes and Nazi youth
    camps fostered great enthusiasm on the part of
    youngsters and children were encouraged to look
    carefully at what their elders did reporting
    anything that might be considered anti-Nazi.
  • Children were turned into informants, even
    against their parents.

19
The Churches
  • Hitler first seemed to wish to avoid
    confrontation with the Churches.
  • In 1933 he signed a Concordat (agreement) with
    the Roman Catholic Church, promising not to
    interfere in church affairs in return for the
    church staying out of politics.
  • He did not honour his part of the bargain
    banning the Catholic Youth League because it
    competed for membership with Nazi youth
    organizations.

20
The Churches
  • The Protestant Churches, under Pastor Niemoller
    once a supporter of Hitler, also resisted, with
    Niemoller and 800 followers arrested.

21
The Churches
  • In 1935 Hitler created a Reich Ministry for
    Church Affairs to control the Protestant
    Churches.
  • Hanns Kerrl, the Minister, was given the power to
    grant or withhold funds, confiscate church
    property, imprison ministers and issue binding
    orders.

22
Church Policy
  • Children learned a new creed
  • Jesus freed men from sin just as Hitler saved
    Germany from ruin.
  • And Jesus worked for heaven while Hitler works
    for the German earth.
  • Jesus became a martyr sacrificed by the Jews and
    avenged by the Fuhrer.

23
Church Policy
  • Raised a Catholic, Hitler did not grasp Christian
    ideals.
  • Privately he said that one is either a German or
    a Christian. One cannot be both and that
    Christian teachings were all the same Jewish
    swindle...In the end I will eradicate
    Christianity in Germany, root and branch.
  • Publicly he continued to use religious
    terminology in his speeches.

24
Jewish Policy
  • Of all the persecuted groups in Germany, none
    suffered more grievously than German Jews.
  • They were publicly accused of being at the root
    of almost all national problems.
  • One of the 25 basic party policies stated None
    but members of the nation may be citizens of the
    state. None but those of German blood may be
    members of the nation. No Jew, therefore, may be
    a member of the nation.
  • While other policies were discarded when it
    suited the Fuhrer, this was never modified.

25
Jewish Policy
  • In April 1933, the SA promoted a boycott of
    Jewish businesses and services.
  • Customers were harassed if they entered Jewish
    premises.

26
Jewish Policy
  • In 1935 Hitler passed the Nuremberg Laws,
    depriving Jews of their citizenship, voting
    rights, and the right to marry non-Jews.
  • Businesses were confiscated and Jews were
    encouraged to leave the country but other
    nations refused to accept them.

27
Jewish Policy
  • In 1938 a German diplomat in Paris was murdered
    by a French Jew.
  • The SS orchestrated a massive retaliation against
    German Jews Kristallnacht (Crystal night) so
    named because of the vast expanses of broken
    glass.

28
Jewish Policy
  • The damage was extensive,.
  • 814 shops were looted.
  • 191 synagogues were burned down.
  • Officially 36 Jews were beaten to death but the
    reality was worse.
  • 20,000 Jews were sent into protective custody
    in concentration camps.

29
Jewish Policy
  • Most Germans were numbed by the event but they
    accepted the increasing harassment of their
    neighbours without a murmur.
  • This silence also met the persecution of Gypsies
    and homosexuals.

30
Jewish Policy
  • Jews were barred from theatres, concerts, movies
    and other public performances.
  • They could not buy jewellery or gold.
  • They could not walk on certain streets.
  • Finally, they were forced to wear large yellow
    stars to make them stand out clearly and were
    banished to ghettos the last stage before the
    final solution, which would begin in 1942.

31
Race Theory
  • The Party philosopher, Rosenberg, took racial
    theory to absurd lengths.
  • He argued that race was the primordial force in
    society upon it language, art, beauty, progress
    and achievement were all based.
  • Germans were, naturally, superior to all others.
  • Blood and Soil together produc ed the folk
    soul. This made it blasphemous to allow German
    soil to be contaminated by an alien race.

32
Race Theory
  • This version of Social Darwinism encouraged
    imperial expansion.
  • Hitler spoke of Lebensraum, living space, at the
    cost of neighbouring countries.
  • In addition, the Auslandsdeutsche (Germans living
    abroad), were encouraged to return to the Reich.

33
Life in Hitlers Germany
  • For those not among the scapegoats, life was
    increasingly comfortable.
  • Hitler brought economic stability and relative
    prosperity (at a cost to the persecuted).
  • His reduction of unemployment and creation of a
    strong business climate endeared him to
    businesses and workers.

34
The Economy
  • Hitler was committed to a policy of autarky
    intending that Germany become economically
    self-sufficient.
  • Production targets were set by Hitlers Minister
    of Economics, Hjalmar Schacht, in the 1934 Four
    Year Plan.
  • Though the aim was for total self-sufficiency,
    the target was impossible.

35
The Economy
  • It was possible for coal, iron and light metals,
    but not for copper and tin.
  • Food supplies would continue to be imported.
  • A barter trade system allowed Germany to stand
    outside the world currency system. The mark
    could be maintained at an unrealistic level and
    barter allowed Hitler to wage economic warfare by
    buying crops at artificially high prices and
    drawing countries into economic dependence on the
    Reich as was done with Greece, Jugoslavia,
    Romania and Bulgaria.

36
The Economy
  • Unemployment was greatly reduced.
  • In January, 1933 it stood at 6 million.
  • By December, 1934 it stood at 2.6 million.
  • By 1937 it was 1 million.
  • In 1938 there was a labour shortage.

37
The Economy
  • Worker loyalty was ensured by full employment and
    by state administered welfare and social
    insurance plans.
  • Even holidays were planned by the Kraft durch
    Freude (Strength through Joy), which organized
    and supervised leisure activities.

38
Rearmament
  • The lions share of funding and production in
    this economic rebuilding was for armaments and
    military related work.
  • Hitler announced rearmament in 1934.
  • In 1935 conscription was introduced (which
    reduced unemployment).

39
Rearmament
  • An air force, the Luftwaffe, was openly created
    in 19354.
  • In 1936 a new, powerful, warship was launched
    the Graf Spee. Soon to be followed by the even
    more powerful Bismarck and Tirpitz.

40
Rearmament
  • In 1938 the army was shaken up, with the
    replacement of Fritsch, the Commander in-Chief
    and the War Minister.
  • Hitler assumed the position of War Minister
    personally.
  • By this time, the old high ranking leaders could
    no longer count on the support of those below
    them in a show-down with Hitler.
  • The conscripts and junior officers who gained
    rapid advancement in an era of rearmament were,
    for the most part, ardent Nazis.

41
Rearmament
  • By 1939 the army numbered 730,000 men, with a
    further 1 million reserves.
  • Germanys air-force had twice the numerical
    strength of Britains.
  • In 1939, Germans spent 16 times as much on
    armaments as in 1933.
  • Even autobahn (highway) construction projects had
    military purpose, allowing the swift deployment
    of troops.
  • New synthetic oils, rubber and wool were
    developed (with indifferent success) to avoid the
    strategic weaknesses noted in World War I.

42
finis
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