NAZI GERMANY

HITLER AS DICTATOR

Dictatorship

  • sought to have complete power
  • every aspect of people’s lives controlled

Political

  • New Elections in the Reichstag
  • Hitler wanted to have overall majority
  • Nazi Party gained 51% of votes (majority)
  • Nazi Party = only legal party
  • dismissed officials who opposed him
  • opponents all arrested, killed, imprisoned or sent to concentration camps
  • used SA (Brownshirts or Stormtroopers) to beat up opponents
  • Blackshirts / Protection Squads – Hitler’s private army
  • Gestapo – Secret State Police
  • violence against Communists and against Jews (“The Final Solution)

Economic

  • trade unions taken over by Nazis

Social

  • freedom of press and speech curtailed
  • stopped newspapers from writing hostile comments about Nazis
  • media as propaganda machine
  • press, radio and cinema films were plazed under total Nazi control
  • plays, films, art, music fell under strict censorship
  • people carefully watched by Gestapo – homes, schools, universities, churches, etc.

Significant Events/Policies

  • 17 Feb 1933: Reichstag Fire
  • arson attack on Reichstag building Communists blamed
  • excuse for Hitler to issue emergency law removing people’s freedom
  • incl. freedom of press and fair trial
  • March 1933: Enabling Act
  • Hitler could govern Germany without Reichstag for 4 years
  • could also pass laws  able to rule as dictator
  • ended democracy in Germany  ushered in era of dictatorship
  • banned communists from entering Reichstag so they could not exercise votes
  • persuaded Center Party to vote for Enabling Act by making vague + empty promises
  • using votes of his allies (Nationalists)
  • 1934: Night of the Long Knives
  • clamped down on SA, murdered Ernst Rohm (leader of SA) + 200 other members
  • 1934: Death of President Hindenburg
  • Hitler combined posts of Chancellor and President for himself

LEISURE

Strength through Joy (Kraft Durch Freude – KDF)

  • had job of organising leisure activities of people
  • run by Doctor Robert Ley, leader of German Leader Front
  • worked out that there are 8,760 hours per year
  • ⅓ spent sleeping
  • ¼ spent at work
  • ½ (3,740h) free for leisure
  • wanted to ensure these leisure hours were not wasted
  • happy people with plenty to do in free time  more likely to work hard to jobs
  • people with nothing to do in free time  bored and frustrated  bored and frustrated workers

Leisure Programmes

  • Dr Ley and KDF drew up massive leisure programmes for working people
  • e.g. biggest programme provided workers with cheap holidays
  • two 25,000 tonne liners built to take workers on ocean cruises at bargain prices
  • cruise to Canary Islands cost 62 marks (equivalent to 2 weeks’ wages)
  • most workers could afford this, but it was only loyal and hardworking members of the Nazi Party who were given places on cruise liners
  • walking holidays in mountains for 28 marks a week
  • skiing holidays in Bavaria in winter
  • 28 marks = travel, board and lodging, hire of skis, and lessons from instructor
  • foreign travel
  • 2 weeks in Switzerland (65 marks)
  • tour of Italy (155 marks)

Control of Entertainment

  • KDF controlled most forms of entertainment
  • ~7mil people took part in KDF sports matches
  • KDF arranged mass outings to theatre and opera
  • had its own symphony orchestra which toured the country playing music in areas not usually visited by orchestras
  • laid on evening classes for adults

Volkswagen

  • KDF involved in plan to provide workers with cheap cars
  • Hitler ordered that a “People’s Car” (Volkswagen) must be built at price that anyone could afford
  • designed by Austrain engineer, Ferdinand Porsche
  • “told by Hitler it should look like a beetle”
  • 990 marks (equivalent to 35 weeks wages)
  • hire-purchase scheme started
  • workers paid 5 marks per week until 750 marks were in bank
  • given order number entitling them to car as soon as it was made
  • HOWEVER: swindle
  • no Volkswagen was made for a German customer
  • millions of marks paid into hire-purchase scheme
  • WW2 1939: Volkswagen factory turned into weapons factory

PROPAGANDA and CENSORSHIP

Propaganda

  • Doctor Joseph Gebbels
  • Minister of National Enlightenment and Propaganda
  • needed to make Germans believe in Nazi ideas and be loyal to Hitler + Party TOTALLY
  • winning people over to an idea so sincerely + vitally they succumb to it utterly and can never escape from it
  • Newspapers
  • printed only stories favourable to govt
  • every morning the editors of Berlin’s newspapers had to go to the Propaganda Ministry where Goebells told them what news to print and what the headlines shouldbe
  • newspapers which printed stories he had not approved were closed down
  • Radio
  • all Germany’s radio stations were under Goebbels’ control
  • used radio to hammer the Nazi message home
  • encouraged people to listen to radio by producing cheap radio sets which most people could afford
  • VE radio (the “People’s Receiver) = 76 marks
  • DKE (“German Mini Receiver”) = 35 marks (a week’s wages)
  • ensured people would hear radio when they were not at home
  • Goebbels had loudspeaker pillars built in streets
  • ordered all cafés to have radios turned on for important programmes
  • Mass Rally
  • most famous of mass rallies held in August each year at Nuremburd
  • Nuremburg rally
  • lasted a whole week
  • held in 4 specially built areas outside the town
  • one area could hold 400,000 people
  • watched army parades and gymnastic displays
  • listened to massed choirs, brass bands and to speeches
  • looked up at air force fly-pasts and firework displays
  • every event at a rally was staged to perfection
  • 1937 rally: 100,000 men, each exactly 0.75 metres apart marched past hitler carrying 32,000 flags and banners
  • above them in night sky, 140 vertical searchlights created a dome of light that could be seen stabbing into the sky from over 100km away
  • Censorship
  • could not trust propaganda alone to win people over
  • usedcensorship to stop other ideas from spreading
  • every kind of information and entertainment was censored
  • jazz music not allowed at dances  had origins among black people of America
  • 1933: “Tarzan” film banned  Tarzan and Jane were scantily dressed
  • war film about German navy not screened  showed a sailor drunk
  • Goebbels encouraged students to censor books written by Jews or communists by burning them
  • 1933: students in Berlin destroyed 20,000 books in a bonfire outside University of Berlin
  • Complaining about govt was agains the law
  • People could not say things against the Nazis even in private
  • Anti-Nazi jokes forbidden
  • penalty for anti-Hitler jokes was death
  • a priest who told a joke about Hitler to an electrician working in his church was reported to Gestapo  taken before court  sentenced to death

NAZI POLICE STATE

Nazi Police

  • arrested people before they committed crimes
  • All local police units had to draw up lists of people who might be “Enemies of the State”
  • Lists given to Gestapo (Secret State Police)
  • Branch of SS
  • had power to do exactly as it liked

“Enemies of State”

  • Likely situation:
  • Woken at 3 am in morning by violent knocking, told by 2 men in black uniforms to pack bag in 3 minutes
  • Afterwards taken to nearest police station and shut in a cell
  • Later (could be days, weeks, months) brought up from cells and made to sign Form D-11 (Order for Protective Custory)
  • signing form = agreeing to go to prison
  • taken to concentration camp without trial, stayed for as long as Gestapo pleased

Concentration Camps

  • run by another branch of SS, the “Death’s Head Units”
  • wore skull + crossbone badges on uniforms
  • 16 working hours per day (weekdays and Sundays alike)
  • Forbidden to drink even in hottest weather
  • Food was not bad but quite insufficient
  • weak coffee at dawn, half litre of soup at midday, bread allowance for the whole day 250 grammes
  • Sometimes: work of Jewish prisoners was doubled, rations halved
  • Work = moving of heavy stones (often far beyond strength of normal well-fed man)
  • Men kept standing to attention for many hours on end
  • Floggings were frequent for small offences (e.g. drinking water during working hours)
  • usual punishment = 25 strokes given alternatively by 2 guards
  • often produced unconsciousness
  • Jews were told that the Führer had himself given orders that Jews might receive up to 60 strokes
  • A case where one group of 480 men had only one tap at which to was + drink for a quarter of an hour on getting up (later even this was stopped)
  • No soap nor toothbrush
  • Deaths took place daily
  • Relatives informed by call, told they could have ashes on payment of 3 marks

Population of concentration camp
“politicals” / “work-shy” / “Bibelforscher” / homosexuals / professional criminals
e.g. Communist members of Reichstag
  • many have been in various concentration camps since 1933
  • many innocents accused of having spoken abusively of Führer
/ e.g. business employee who lost his position and applied for unemployment relief turned down offer he did not want  reported by Labour Exchange as “work-shy” / religious sect taking its doctrine from bible but proscribed (banned) by Gestapo since its members refuse military service / favourite tactic of secret police to charge those it dislikes with this offence