Following their rise to power in 1933, Hitler and the Nazi Party started to infiltrate almost all aspects of everyday life in Germany.
This section will explore exactly how and where the Nazis attempted and carried out this process of Nazification.
The Nazis’ antisemitic beliefs were filtered into all aspects of life in the Third Reich. This drawing was created by a young girl, Gerda Nabe, in one of her school textbooks. The drawing shows the infamous Nuremberg Laws, explaining how to define if a person is a Jew.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
The League of German Girls had a large focus on outdoor pursuits and sports. Here, members of the group practice gymnastics in the mid-1930s.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
As well as taking part in sports and learning Nazi ideology, the Hitler Youth carried out camping trips.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
This book, published in 1937, gives a report of a Hitler Youth trip to Norway.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
This children’s game was produced in Nazi Germany. The blocks can either be arranged to spell ‘Hitler’ or to form a swastika.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
This book Der Pudelmopsdackelpinscher was published in 1940 by Ernst Hiemer. Hiemer was the author of several other antisemitic children’s books from Nazi Germany, including the infamous Der Giftpilz (The Poisonous Mushroom). This book aimed to encourage racism by comparing Jews to other supposedly ‘inferior’ races.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
An inside page from the children’s book Der Pudelmopsdackelpinscher, showing an antisemitic drawing of a stereotypical Jew hiding behind a mask.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Members of the Hitler Youth marching in the 1930s.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Young people in Germany were also encouraged to resist the Nazis by resistance groups or opposition parties in exile. This pamphlet is an example of Tarnschriften (hidden writings). While it appears to be a pamphlet by Hermann Kuhr, an German Olympic gymnast, entitled ‘Name and Essence of Athletics’, it actually conceals anti-fascist communist material aimed at young people in Germany by Vasili Chemodanov, a member of the Executive Committee of the Young Communist International, entitled ‘We Fight for the United Front of the Youth’. c.1934.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
The Nazis used children’s leisure organisations to indoctrinate young people in their National Socialist ideology.
The two main Nazi youth organisations were the Hitlerjugend ( Hitler Youth ) and the Bund Deutscher Mädel ( League of German Girls ). In 1936, membership of these groups became compulsory.
The Hitler Youth was for boys aged between ten and eighteen. By 1932, it had just over 100,000 members. By 1934, this number would rise to over three and a half million.
The Hitler Youth took part in a range of activities, focusing on sports and physical ability. Examples of their activities include boxing and camping trips, instruction in National Socialist ideology, such as antisemitism and commitment to Hitler, and military training, such as shooting.
The League of German Girls was split into two divisions. The Jungmädel (Young Girls League) was for girls aged fourteen and under, and the Gluabe und Schönheit (Faith and Beauty) was for young women aged seventeen to twenty-one.
The Young Girls League focused on similar activities to the Hitler Youth, with activities such as camping, sports, and instruction in National Socialist ideology. In contrast to the Hitler Youth, girls were also instructed in chores such as making beds, in line with the Nazis views on women’s place in society.
The Faith and Beauty organisation followed a similar agenda, but also emphasised the Nazi ideal image of a woman.
All youth organisations under the Nazi Party were anti-intellectual. Whilst they did not replace school, they reduced the influence and importance of education to children.
A pamphlet published by the National Socialist Women’s League (Nationalsozialistische Frauenschaft) in 1933.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
The pamphlet, entitled Songbook for the National Socialist Women’s League, contains various pro-Nazi, nationalist songs. The song in the left of the photograph is entitled ‘New Germany’.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Gertrud Scholtz-Klink, the leader of the National Socialist Women’s League, c.1930s.
Courtesy of Bundesarchiv, Bild 146II-104 / CC-BY-SA 3.0.
This pamphlet, entitled Obligations and Tasks of Women in the National Socialist State contains a copy of a speech given by Gertrud Scholtz-Klink at the Nazi Reich Party Congress in Munich in October 1936.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
In Nazi ideology, cooking was one of the main activities for women, in line with their focus on Küche, Kinder and Kirche. This popular cookbook, entitled Basic Recipes as a Key to the Art of Cooking, was published by Otto Beyer in 1931 and belonged to Jeanette Herz, a German Jewish woman who emigrate to England shortly before the Second World War.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
An example of some of the recipes from the Basic Recipes as a Key to the Art of Cooking 1931 cookbook.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
A pamphlet comparing the fate and social conditions of women under fascism in Germany and communism in the Soviet Union, entitled Women Under Fascism and Communism, and published in London by Hilda Browning in 1934.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
An extract from Browning’s pamphlet, discussing the Nazis’ approach to women in industry and social life in 1934 and highlighting the Nazis’ attempts to reduce female employment.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
To manipulate the public’s, and more specifically, women’s attitudes towards Hitler, Joseph Goebbels (a high-ranking Nazi who worked as the Nazi Minister of Propaganda) used propaganda such as this photograph to make Hitler appear kind-hearted, friendly and family-orientated.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Women were central to the Nazis’ vision of the Third Reich and their future Volksgemeinschaft .
Küche, Kinder and Kirche
According to Nazi ideology, a woman’s place was in the home. In their approach to German women, the Nazis’ emphasised three traditional guiding principles: Küche, Kinder and Kirche (kitchen, children and church).
Of these, Kinder was of particular importance and women in Nazi Germany were encouraged to marry and have as many children as possible to further the Nazis’ eugenic goals of building a strong German ‘ Aryan ’ race. To promote this, a law was passed in June 1933 allowing newly married couples to claim interest free loans of 1000 Reichsmarks . Each time the couple then had a child, 25% of the loan was written off. Childbirth and pregnancy were further encouraged by bans on abortions (which were made punishable by death), sterilisations (for ‘ Aryan ‘ women), and contraception .
Work
The First World War had increased the number of women in employment, and the postwar economic difficulties in Germany meant that many German women continued to work throughout the 1920s. In line with their belief that women’s lives should revolve around family and home, the Nazis actively discouraged women from having a profession and working. During a reform of the Civil Service shortly after the Nazis rose to power in 1933, 19,000 women lost their jobs.
However, the Nazis’ ideology towards women did not reflect the needs of the economy, and between 1937 and 1939 female employment rose from 5.7 million to 7.1 million. By 1939, the demands of the Second World War forced the Nazis to promote female employment. By 1945, as many as 500,000 women worked in a variety of roles for the German armed forces – ranging from secretaries to concentration camp guards.
Participation and resistance
Many women played an active role in supporting the Nazis’ ideology and activities. Of the approximately forty million German women in the Third Reich, thirteen million were actively involved in Nazi Party organisations, such as the National Socialist Women’s League .
Other women opposed the Nazis’ beliefs and actions and took part in activities to resist and undermine the regime. Sophie Scholl , for example, a student at the University of Munich, was a member of the anti-Nazi resistance group the White Rose. In 1943, Scholl was arrested alongside her brother Hans Scholl, imprisoned and then executed by the Nazis for her resistance to the regime.
The National Socialist Women’s League (Nationalsozialistische Frauenschaft) was a Nazi organisation for women led by Gertrud Scholtz-Klink and founded in October 1931.
The league organised a variety of activities, including educational classes on subjects such as cookery, motherhood and using German products. The league also published a bi-weekly magazine, NS Frauenwarte.
In total, approximately 2.3 million German women were members of the league.
Antisemitism underpinned all aspects of education under the Nazis. As a result of this, many children drew stereotypical drawings such as this one, showing a Jew under the title ‘Itzig’, a common German antisemitic slur. The caption reads ‘made himself a good deal again’, referring to the antisemitic story that Jews conducted dishonest business.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Following the Nazi rise to power, new textbooks, written and approved by the Nazis, were introduced for use in schools. This textbook, from 1938, was used to teach racial science.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
A mathematics exercise from a Nazi school textbook discriminating against disabled people. The exercise is titled ‘what is the cost of care for the hereditary sick?’. The exercise aimed to show schoolchildren in Nazi Germany that disabled people were a financial burden on the state.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
This image, taken from an antisemitic child’s book, shows a Jew with stereotypical features trying to trick a woman into buying new dress material. The caption reads ‘in this you will look like a princess, like a queen’.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Another way in which the Nazis aimed to indoctrinate the younger population was through reforming the education system.
They aimed to de-intellectualise education: they did not want education to provoke people to ask questions or think for themselves. They believed this approach would instill obedience and belief in the Nazi worldview, creating the ideal future generation.
The Nazis first focused on changing what students learned. They changed the core curriculum to emphasise sports, history and racial science as the most important subjects. In 1936, sport was taught for a minimum of two to three hours every school day. By 1938, this had been increased to five hours every day. Subjects such as religion became less important, and were eventually removed from the curriculum altogether.
The Nazis also adapted where the students learned from. They introduced new textbooks which were often racist, and promoted ideas such the need for Lebensraum . Any textbooks used to educate students had to be approved by the party.
The Nazis also placed great emphasis on who the teachers were. Under the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service Act of 7 April 1933, just three months after Hitler became chancellor, all Jewish teachers, and teachers with undesirable political beliefs (such as communists), were dismissed.
This act also made membership of the Nazi Party compulsory for all teachers. The National Socialist Teachers League, creation in 1929, became responsible for the control and education of teachers following the Nazi rise to power. All teachers were required to attend a one-month compulsory Nazi training course, which emphasised Nazi ideology and the importance of advocating the regime’s ideas.
In universities, all Jewish professors were dismissed. This had a large impact, as these professors made up twelve percent of all German professors. This group also comprised 25% of Germany’s Nobel Prize winners.
In 1933, in addition to the dismissal of teachers, a quota was imposed on schools and universities, so that they could only accept a certain number of Jewish students. In 1938, these students were banned from attending public schools and universities entirely.
In addition to these changes, the Nazis also created several new schools which aimed to train the future Nazi elite.
Napolas were for students hoping to become future political and military leaders, and Adolf Hitler Schools were solely to train those hoping to go into Nazi politics.
The Nazis also created another school called Order Castles. Order Castles were the pinnacle of Nazi education, aimed at young adults who aspired to the highest ranks of the Nazi party. To be considered for entry, applicants had to have attended an Adolf Hitler School for six years, undertaken state labour for two and a half years, and spent four years in full-time work. Only four Order Castles were ever established.
All three of these new types of schools focused on indoctrinating pupils in Nazi policies and beliefs to the highest possible degree.
This pamphlet, published in the 1930s, is called ‘The Song of the German Labor Front’ and shows the lyrics to songs created by the Nazis and sang by German Labour Front workers.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
The Nazis’ employment policy and ‘Strength Through Joy’ programme was highly criticised by political parties in exile and other resistance groups. This pamphlet is an example of Tarnschriften (hidden writings). While appearing to be an official publication entitled ‘Exercise with Strength Through Joy’ it in fact conceals anti-Nazi material entitled ‘The Olympics are over. The Nazi Betrayal of Workers Sport’. C.1936.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
When the Nazis rose to power in 1933, there was an unemployment crisis with over six million people unemployed. In their election campaign the Nazis had promised to reduce unemployment. After in year in power, by 1934, unemployment had dropped to 3.3 million. By 1938, the Nazis claimed to have no unemployment.
On the surface, these figures suggest that the Nazis were able to successfully control and boost the employment for workers in the Third Reich.
Controlling work: The German Labour Front and Strength Through Joy Programme
On the 2 May 1933, the Nazis banned trade unions and arrested their leaders. As part of Gleichschaltung , a new centralised Nazi ‘trade union’ was created. This was called the German Labour Front. The German Labour Front took control over workers’ rights, setting the conditions of work, such as hours of work and rate of pay.
The German Labour Front also had other initiatives, such as the popular ‘Strength Through Joy’ programme. This programme aimed to give opportunities to working class people for leisure activities usually reserved for the middle classes, such as sports facilities or holidays. The programme was relatively popular, and some groups, such as the 28,500 workers from Siemens in Berlin, were able to take a holiday. However, smaller incentives such as free theatre tickets or subsidized day trips were much more common.
This programme helped to convince workers to believe in the benefits of the Nazi ideal of working towards the greater Volksgemeinschaft, or people’s community, in spite of the growing control.
Reducing Unemployment: The Reich Labour Service
The Reich Labour Service was an organisation that used unskilled or unemployed workers to complete large-scale government projects. This was part of the government’s policy to reduce unemployment. Examples of these projects include the building of the Autobahn , and the 1936 Olympic stadium. The service primarily employed men between the ages of 18-25. In 1935, the service became compulsory for men, as Germany adopted a rearmament policy.
Whilst these schemes helped Germany’s unemployment numbers to drop, conditions for workers did not necessarily improve. Whilst most people were now employed, wages were fixed at a lower level than they had been prior to the Wall Street Crash and were not up for negotiation. The maximum working hours per week were increased from 60 to 72.
The Nazis’ claim that unemployment no longer existed in Germany was false, as this did not include those who had been forced out of work, such as political opponents, Jews, and women, or take into consideration those in part-time work.
The schemes also limited the choice of profession open to workers in Germany. Many were forced to work as laborers or in factories for the war effort. Those who refused were listed as ‘work-shy’ and were subject to horrific treatment by the Gestapo, or inhumane conditions in concentration camps.
The Nazis soon broke their Concordat agreement with the Vatican and interfered with the practice and activities of Catholics in Germany. This poster, likely used by the Nazis in the late 1930s, aimed to persuade Catholic boys and girls to leave their Catholic youth clubs and join the Hitler Youth.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Ludwig Müller, pictured here giving a speech at a Nazi event, was the leader of the Reich Church. The Reich Church was founded by the Nazis with the support of ‘German Christians’, protestant supporters of the Nazi Party who had been hostile to the Weimar Republic.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
A portrait of Martin Niemöller, founder of the Confessing Church. The Confessing Church opposed the Nazi regime, its activities, and specifically its interference in religion.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
In response to the Nazis’ persecution of Catholics, a group of Catholic anti-fascists produced this pamphlet. While appearing to be a medical leaflet giving advice on first aid entitled ‘The Good Samaritan: Practical Advice for First Aid in the Event of An Accident’, the pamphlet actually contains material describing the persecution of political victims, including a (incomplete) list of pastors who had been arrested, persecuted or imprisoned, and an appeal to the reader to help all those being politically persecuted. C. 1936. This pamphlet is an example of Tarnschriften (hidden writings).
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Germany, like the rest of Europe, was primarily Christian when the Nazis rose to power. In 1933 the country had approximately 45 million Protestant Christians, 22 million Catholic Christians, 500,000 Jews and 25,000 Jehovah’s Witnesses. Religion was a huge part of people’s everyday life and culture.
As with trade unions and other group organisations, the Nazis saw religion as a threat to their total power.
Jews and Jehovah’s Witnesses were the major religious minorities in Germany in the 1930s. Hitler and the Nazis oppressed and persecuted all Jews. Jehovah’s Witnesses faced similar persecution and oppression for their disobedience to the regime.
As the majority religion, the Nazis approached the complex ‘problem’ of Christianity differently. Whilst the Nazis believed that Christianity and Nazism were ideologically incompatible, they were not initially openly hostile to the Protestant and Catholic Churches.
In his first speech as chancellor, Hitler acknowledged the ‘central’ role that Christianity played in Germany. However, this approach did not last long.
Treatment of Catholicism
Catholics made up a smaller faction of the population than Protestants, but still made up approximately one third of the population.
As Catholics had a single, central leader in the Pope, infiltrating and taking control of the religion was extremely difficult. Instead, Hitler opted for a policy of conciliation towards Catholics.
In July 1933, the Nazis signed a Concordat with the Vatican . The Concordat agreed that the Nazis would not interfere in the Catholic Church. In return, the Vatican would diplomatically recognise the Nazi regime.
The Nazis soon broke their Concordat with the Vatican. The Ministry for Church Affairs was established in 1935 with a range of anti-religious policies aimed at undermining the influence of religion on the German people.
Catholic schools were gradually shut. As the regime intensified its oppressive policies in the late 1930s, members of the Catholic Clergy were killed and imprisoned for opposing the Nazi regime. Johannes Neuhäusler is just one example of a Catholic priest who was imprisoned at the hands of the Nazis.
Treatment of Protestantism
Protestantism was the primary religion in Germany and the Protestant Church was viewed as one of the main pillars of society. There were many different factions of Protestantism in Germany. These different factions, and lack of a single central leader, made Protestantism easier for the Nazis to infiltrate than Catholicism.
Some Protestants supported the Nazis during their rise to power. They had been hostile to the Weimar Republic, and agreed with some of the Nazis policies. These protestants were known as ‘German Christians’.
As part of the Gleichschaltung process, the Nazis’, with the support of the German Christians, established the Reich Church under the leadership of Ludwig Müller in 1933. The Reich Church aimed to be a new national church which advocated a form of Nazi Christianity. It instructed preachers to exclude any teaching from the Old Testament, as this was considered a Jewish document.
However, not everyone was willing to accept this new church. In 1934, the Confessing Church was founded by Martin Niemöller . The Confessing Church openly opposed the Nazi regime, and stressed the church’s autonomy from political interference. Many of the pastors from the Confessing Church, such as Niemöller, were imprisoned in concentration camps for their views.
A copy of Das Kapital by Karl Marx, published in 1932. As a communist from a previously prominent Jewish family (although his father had converted to Christianity, his grandfather and uncle were Rabbis) Marx was one of the many authors blacklisted by the Nazis and many of his works were burned and destroyed.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Professor Arno Breker, a Nazi-approved artist, in his studio creating his sculpture Prometheus. Prometheus was created for the garden of the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda in 1935.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
This poster, entitled ‘Degenerate Music, an Account of the State Council’ was used to advertise the ‘Exhibition of Degenerate Music’, which opened in Düsseldorf in 1938. This exhibition intended to evidence how music not approved of by the Nazis, such as music by Jewish or black artists or Jazz, was corrupt.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
This poster was used to advertise The Eternal Jew; the title of the 1937 exhibition of ‘degenerate’ art. The exhibition ran from the 8 November 1937 to the 31 January 1938, attracting over 400,000 visitors.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Culture was integral to the Nazis’ aim to infiltrate and control all areas of life. In 1933, the Reich Chamber of Culture was established under the leadership of Joseph Goebbels . The department was split into seven different sections aiming to cover all areas of cultural life: the press, art, theatre, radio, music, films and literature.
This topic will use three of these sections, art, literature and music, to evidence how Goebbels used culture to achieve control over the German public.
Art
The Nazis promoted traditional forms of German art and photography, such as landscapes. They despised any art in the modernist style , believing it to be ‘degenerate’ and communist.
In 1936, the Nazis carried out a review of all art in Germany’s museums and galleries. As a result of this review, 13,000 paintings that the Nazis considered ‘degenerate’ were confiscated and removed.
Some of these paintings were used in the Entartete Kunst or Degenerate Art Exhibition. This exhibition was organised by the Nazi Party to show how modern art was corroding traditional German ‘ Aryan ‘ culture.
The exhibition ran from the 19 July 1937 to the 30 November 1937.
The exhibition was created to contrast with the Great German Art exhibition, an exhibition put on by the Nazis to exemplify what good German art was. This exhibition was held nearby to the Degenerate Art exhibition in the House of German Art in Munich.
As a result of these oppressive actions, many artists fled Germany to try and escape persecution and find creative freedom.
Literature
As a primary source of education and enjoyment, literature was a key target for Nazi reform.
The Nazis initially blacklisted authors they did not like or approve of. Many of the authors targeted were Jewish, such as Max Brod, but the Nazis had a range of other opponents who were also targeted, from communists, such as Karl Marx, to socialists, to foreign influences.
This blacklisting led to a series of book burnings led by the National Socialist German Students Association, a group of university students who strongly supported the Nazis.
The majority of the book burnings took place on the 10 May 1933 after a call for suggestions of books to blacklist a month before. Students led parades and threw blacklisted books onto huge bonfires in towns throughout Germany. Over 25,000 books were burned in a single night.
Opponents of the Nazi regime were soon persecuted physically as well as having their works shunned, and many of them, such as the philosopher Ernst Bloch, attempted to flee to more liberal countries.
Music
The Reich Music Chamber was established in 1933. The chamber had two main aims.
The first was to promote ‘good’ German music, created by ‘Aryan’ composers in a traditional genre, such as the classical music of Wagner and Beethoven.
The second was to suppress any music that was considered ‘bad’ or ‘degenerate’, such as jazz, swing, or music composed by Jews. Music and composers that were not approved of were slowly repressed, and then banned entirely.
The chamber also functioned as a membership organisation, so anyone wanting to pursue a career in the industry had to be a member of the Reich Music Chamber. Membership was subject to a variety of conditions and was often refused on the basis of race or political views.
Summary
The case studies above emphasise the Nazis anti-intellectual approach to culture. They focused on promoting simple and traditional aspects of German culture whilst removing any new ideas, or opposition, to the Nazi ideal. The process was widespread and highly bureaucratic .
Whilst some aspects of banned or suppressed culture survived, none were able to thrive under the Third Reich.
Those who resisted the suppression of culture found themselves victims of the new Nazi terror.
The Editorship Law, a copy of which shown in the image here, was passed on the 4 October 1933. This law stated that all editors must be ‘Aryan’, dismissing hundreds of ‘non-Aryan’ Jewish editors on purely racial grounds.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
This excerpt is taken from a confidential report made by a Jewish couple who had escaped Nazi Germany through Russia and Japan in September 1940. The report details how, despite the severe restrictions implemented by the Nazis, many people were still attempting to receive outside news.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
The media played a vital role in producing and sharing the Nazis’ propaganda . Under Goebbels’ new Chamber of Culture, all aspects of the media were Nazified and controlled.
In 1933, prior to the Nazi rise to power, over 4700 newspapers freely operated across Germany. Shortly after Hitler became chancellor, all opposition newspapers were banned. Those that remained were subject to strict censorship laws, so open opposition to the regime became increasingly difficult. On the 4 October 1933 the Editorship Law, the Schriftleitergesetz, was passed. This law stated that all editors must be ‘Aryan’, dismissing hundreds of non-‘Aryan’ editors on purely racial grounds.
The Nazis also focused on using more modern and innovative methods of media. Goebbels in particular was keen to spread propaganda through radio and film.
The Nazis created discount schemes where people could buy radios cheaply or pay for them via monthly installments. By 1939, 70% of all German households possessed a radio, providing the Nazis with an outlet straight into people’s homes. The Nazi programmes featured a range of different content, from speeches, to party news, to traditional music and readings.
Film and cinema were seen by senior Nazis as key to consolidating , and then maintaining, people’s faith in the Nazi vision. Goebbels was particularly keen on developing films, as was Hitler. Between 1933 to 1945, 1361 films were produced by Goebbels. The content of the films varied, from the antisemitic The Eternal Jew to idealistic films intended to raise the moral of citizens during the war.
A Nazi Party election poster showing how the Nazis tailored their propaganda to specific groups. This poster was aimed at workers within Germany and produced in the early 1930s. It shows members of the Nazi party offering tools and food to civilians in a period of mass unemployment and economic hardship in Germany following the Wall Street Crash.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
The cover of the Der Giftpilz, an example of the Nazis’ anti-Jewish, antisemitic propaganda, written by Ernst Hiemer and published by Julius Streicher, a leading Nazi and the founder and publisher of the virulently antisemitic newspaper Der Stürmer. Meaning ‘The Poisonous Mushroom’, this book is aimed at ‘Aryan’ German children and alludes to how, just as it is difficult to tell a poisonous mushroom from an edible mushroom, it is difficult to tell a Jew apart from a Gentile.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
To manipulate the public’s attitude towards Hitler, Goebbels engineered a propaganda campaign (now known as the ‘Hitler Myth’) to make Hitler appear heroic and also kind-hearted, family-orientated and friendly. As part of this campaign, Hitler was often pictured playing or talking with children and mothers. This illustrated photobook, with a number of Adolf Hitler portraits, was compiled in 1935 and edited by Heinrich Hoffmann, Reich reporter of the NSDAP, with forewords by Baldur von Schirach, youth leader of the Third Reich.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
A Nazi propaganda poster encouraging Christians to support the Nazi Party. The poster begins by stating that ‘the great sin is the abuse of religion for political purposes’ but paradoxically goes on to assert ‘The German Christian only chooses National Socialist! Don’t believe the lies and twists of the central press. Jewish money is behind it’.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
As well as using more traditional methods of propaganda, such as posters and pamphlets, the Nazis also utilised everyday objects such as stamps to spread their messages. This stamp, showing a German Wehrmacht soldier with the caption ‘Victory will be ours!’, was likely produced during the Second World War to encourage support for the war.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
The Nazis used the swastika, the official symbol of the party, to reinforce their propaganda and messaging. The extent of the Nazis’ use of swastikas can be seen in this photograph, which shows Hitler at the Reich Party Day (an annual mass rally) in 1934, with swastikas clearly visible on armbands, flags and other military accessories.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
This card game was produced in 1935 and features 60 cards showing idealised images of Hitler and other high ranking Nazi functionaries. Each card is labelled with a number and letter (1A, 2A, 3A, 4A, IB, 2B, 3B etc.). After the cards had been shuffled and dealt, the aim of the game was to assemble each of these quartets.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
Propaganda is information (often misleading, one-sided or false) that is used to promote a political cause or point of view. The Nazis used propaganda to encourage popular support for National Socialism and its ideas. They did this through a variety of different media, including radio, print (newspapers, magazines, posters, literature), popular culture (music, theatre), and film.
The Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda was founded on 14 March 1933, just six weeks after the Nazi rise to power. It was spearheaded by Joseph Goebbels , a former journalist and leading Nazi who served as the Minister of Propaganda until 1945. The Ministry’s aim was to encourage popular support for the regime and its actions by centralising and controlling all means of public information and entertainment.
To make their propaganda more effective, the Nazis tailored messages to different sections of society to appeal to them more specifically. For example, the Nazis believed that the youth of Germany were the future of both the country and of the party, and as such they were a key target group for propaganda advocating the Nazis’ ideological beliefs. To achieve their aim of indoctrinating children, the Nazis infiltrated both their formal education and their leisure time. Examples of the Nazis’ youth propaganda campaign include: editing and producing new, Nazi approved school textbooks, authorising Nazi writers to produce literature based on the Nazis’ values and ideas, and creating and distributing films on Nazi approved subjects, such as the heroic history of Germany, the future of the Third Reich, or current political issues.
As well as targeting propaganda throughout their time in power to specific groups of people, the Nazis also targeted their propaganda to encourage obedience towards specific political policies at certain points. For example, during the mid-1930s, the Nazis used propaganda to promote their new policy of Autarky (economic self-sufficiency). Much of this propaganda was particularly aimed at female housewives. The outpouring of propaganda aimed at women included exhibitions, adverts, posters, leaflets, radio shows, films, and brochures – all with the aim of encouraging responsible patterns of spending, preferably on German products which were marketed as being superior.
In summary, the Nazis’ propaganda was intended to manipulate civilians into not just understanding but actively supporting the government’s actions, ideas and policies. Those who did not conform this were threatened by the regime’s terror apparatus, the SA and SS.
Despite the Nazis’ extensive use of propaganda, its effectiveness was, in some ways, limited.
The historian Richard Evans has highlighted how the Nazis’ propaganda was most effective when it built upon pre-existing ideas. For example, many Germans believed that after the failures of the First World War and Weimar Republic, Germany needed a strong, decisive, leader. As such, propaganda presenting Hitler as a dynamic and formidable politician was particularly persuasive amongst the German public.
In contrast, propaganda advocating the Nazis’ more extreme eugenic and racial ideas, such as the propaganda which advocated boycotting German Jewish businesses in 1933, was not immediately as successful, with many ignoring the boycott altogether.
The public’s condemnation of the T4 euthanasia programme in 1940 reinforced the difficulties the Nazis faced in manipulating the German public to openly support some of their more extreme, racist, ideas. Similarly, Nazi propaganda also struggled to maintain public support and morale for the war from 1941 onwards, despite the barrage of radio shows, newspapers and films promoting the Nazis’ so-called military successes.
Thus, while certain aspects of the Nazis’ extensive and diverse propaganda campaign were highly successful, other aspects had less impact.
This image shows the front page of the Berliner Illustrirte Zeitung, a weekly magazine published in Berlin from 1892-1945. This issue was dedicated to the Berlin 1936 Olympics.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library Collections.
In 1936 Germany hosted the Olympic games. Hitler and the Nazis used the worldwide sporting event to showcase their regime to the world, and smooth over international relations following the reoccupation of the Rhineland three months prior.
Germany was awarded the Olympics prior to the Nazi rise to power in 1931. As the Olympics drew closer, several boycott movements appeared across the world in response to the increasing Nazi persecution of the Jews.
Prior to the event, many international Jewish athletes chose not to compete at the games, and almost all Jewish athletes in Germany were not selected to compete.
Despite this pressure, when the year came, no action was taken. The games went ahead in Berlin as planned. 49 countries were represented, taking part in 129 events from the 1-16 of August 1936. The Nazis, desperate to ensure the event was a success that showcased their regime to the world, removed antisemitic signs and propaganda, and rounded up the 800 Roma who lived in Berlin.
The response to the games was overwhelmingly positive. Visitors found Germany clean, well-run and efficient. They didn’t respond to the antisemitic violence, because signs of it were extremely rare, having been removed by the Nazis from the public eye. Many felt that Germany had recovered its prestige as a world power.
The Olympics’ helped to give a positive worldwide impression of Germany, as a nation that was strong, welcoming, and committed to peace.
Schutzhaft permit issued by the Gestapo to Erich Walter, stating Walter was held in Schutzhaft, or ‘protective custody’ from 19 March 1939 to 1 July 1939. Walter was a socialist, stationed with the Czech Army during the Nazi German occupation of the Czech Republic. He was arrested by the Gestapo in March 1939 and placed in ‘protective custody’ in the Milovice military camp until July 1939. When he was released, he managed to obtain papers to emigrate to the UK from Prague three days before war was declared, moving to Manchester.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
A list drawn up by the Gestapo of Jews to be arrested in Düsseldorf on 21 September 1938. The names of Jewish men and women are listed, along with the reasons for their arrest: for example Polish Jewish woman Käthe Kartofel, née Bauer, was ‘to be searched thoroughly and provisionally detained on suspicion of capital transfer during attempted departure’.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
The cover of the Deutsche Arbeitsfront (DAF) membership book belonging to Theodor Biesen.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
The inside cover of Theodor Biesen’s DAF membership book, including a quote from Adolf Hitler that stated: ‘No matter how active a man is, wherever he is, he must never forget that the nation only lives through the work of all.’
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
This photo shows three SS men in Nuremberg in 1935, likely during one of the Nuremberg rallies or Reichsparteitag. To the left, a news kiosk displays the front page of Die Stürmer, one of the main German tabloids promoting Nazi propaganda, with an antisemitic cartoon of a Jewish man above the phrase ‘Murderer from the beginning’, underlining the everyday atmosphere of terror and oppression that the Nazis had created.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
The watchtower at Dachau, one of the first Nazi concentration camps which was operational from 1933.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
Ernst Geiduschek was an Austrian Jew who arrested on 10 November 1938 by the Gestapo in Vienna. He was then sent to Dachau.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
While imprisoned in Dachau, Geiduschek wrote a letter to his family sent on 27 November 1938.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
In the letter, he wrote: ‘Rest assured that I am fine’ (Mir geht es gut, so das Ihr unbesorgt sein konnt) and that he was detained in Dachau under ‘protective custody for Jews’ (Schutzhaftjude).
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
Geiduschek wrote a memoir detailing his experiences and the abuse he endured in Dachau.
Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.
The Nazi Terror State was a method through which the Nazis extended and maintained their power over German society.
After coming to power in 1933 through a combination of
pseudo-legal
means and intimidation, terror became one of the main ways that the Nazis consolidated their power, seeking to control and suppress their opposition, and Germans in general.
The threat and use of terror, and the fear that terror spread, was a defining feature of the Nazi regime. The Nazi Terror State relied on three main different elements of control: the removal of rights and freedoms and the ‘Nazification’ of German; the establishment of a police state; and the development of a concentration camp system.
Removal of rights and the ‘Nazification’ of Germany from 1933
To reinforce their control, the Nazis attempted to eliminate opposition through banning political parties, closing down trade unions and using the justice system and courts to oppress and imprison their perceived opponents.
The Nazis wanted to eliminate any possible opposition to them. In the early years they were in power, their main ‘enemies’ were other political parties, especially the communist KPD and socialist SPD parties, and trade unions.
The Nazis used the SA to intimidate and eradicate left wing parties and their supporters, breaking up SPD and KPD meetings, and arresting, imprisoning and at times murdering members of the parties. On 2 May 1933, armed SA officers seized control of trade union offices across Germany on 2 May 1933. The head of the Munich branch of the German Trade Union Association, Gustav Schiefer was beaten and imprisoned in Dachau. Instead of joining trade unions, German workers were forced to become members of the Nazi-controlled German Labour Front (Deutsche Arbeitsfront or DAF). The Nazis used the DAF to monitor workers and prevent them from organising anti-state activism. Workers were banned from striking or bargaining for wages.
In December 1934 the Nazis passed a law that made it illegal to criticise the Nazi party or political regime. On 27 March 1935 the Gestapo arrested the entire illegal leadership of the KPD in Berlin.
After four years of persecution, the underground organisation of the KPD and the SPD were more or less destroyed, meaning the Nazis could turn their attention to other ‘enemies of the state’.
The Nazis also used the courts as an instrument of terror. They did not completely change the Weimar legal code, but adapted parts of the law that were obstacles to their ideological goals. In 1934 the Nazis set up ‘People’s Courts’ designed to try those accused of ‘crimes against the state’. They also introduced the concept of ‘protective custody’ or Schutzhaft, meaning people could be arrested and imprisoned without having committed a crime. Many political opponents were placed under protective custody throughout the 1930s.
In 1935, 5,000 people were convicted by courts for high treason, and the prisoner population in Germany increased by 53,000.
In 1937 part of the German Civil Service code was amended, imposing the retirement of any judges or legal officials who would not intervene in cases and rule in favour of Nazis.
Establishment of a police state
The Nazis established a ‘police state’ to control and survey German society. Different police groups were given disproportionate power to target anyone they deemed to be a potential enemy of the regime. The main organs of the police state were the SS , the SA , the Gestapo and the SD .
The Gestapo was the state’s secret police, established on 27 April 1933, and placed under the direction of Heinrich Himmler by 1934. The Gestapo carried out widespread surveillance of society in Germany and in Nazi-occupied states. Between 1933 and 1936, the Gestapo systematised its repression by introducing ‘protective detention’ in concentration camps as the harshest form of ‘standard’ punishment. The Gestapo had power to conduct arbitrary searches and ruthless interrogations of those they defined as opponents of the regime.
The Gestapo gathered incriminating material against individuals it deemed were ‘enemies of the state’ in a variety of ways. Gestapo agents used paid and unpaid spies and monitored the post. Though the Gestapo itself was not a large organisation, with only one secret police officer for about every 10,000 citizens of Nazi Germany, it made use of a network of informants to create an atmosphere of fear and pressure to denunciate. One of the major jobs of the Gestapo was to sift through denunciations of citizens forwarded to them by members of the public. Sentences for derogatory comments about the regime and its leaders could include being sent to a concentration camp and execution.
In the summer of 1936 the Gestapo was combined with the criminal police (Kripo) to form the Security Police (SiPo). From 1936 Himmler was also became in charge of the whole security network of the SS, SA and Gestapo. He centralised various criminal police departments in Germany into the Reich Criminal Police Office, which was also part of the SiPo. Himmler appointed Reinhard Heydrich as head of chief of the SD (Sicherheitsdienst), the intelligence-gathering branch of the SS.
In 1939 the Reich Security Head office (RSHA) was formed, amalgamating the Gestapo and the SD under the leadership of SS. The RSHA was later tasked with implementing the Holocaust. Later in the same year the Waffen SS was established as the combat branch of the SS.
During the first years of Nazi rule the Gestapo limited itself to isolated actions against Jewish individuals and focused instead on political opponents. Though a few laws were enacted limiting various areas of Jewish life, such as the banning Jews from working in the Civil Service, Jews who were detained in concentration camps between 1933 and 1935 were more often also members of the KPD or SPD.
From 1935 onwards, the Nazis escalated their oppression of Jews. The systematic and conceptual treatment of the ‘Jewish question’ was the domain of the SD, but the practical implementation of persecution was a matter for the Gestapo.
During wartime, penalties faced by perceived opponents of the regime escalated. On 5 September 1939, four days after Germany invaded Poland, the Nazis passed the Decree against Public Enemies (Volksschädlingsverordnung, literally translated to ‘Folk Pest Law’). The decree stated that any crime against a person, property, the community or public security could lead to a death sentence, if the person accused was seen as exploiting the conditions of war. In practice, the Decree against Public Enemies meant Nazi judges could impose the death penalty much more frequently, even for minor crimes. It led to approximately 15,000 death sentences between 1941 and 1945.
Development of concentration camp system
In 1933, up to 200,000 people were seized and imprisoned by the SA and the SS. Prisons and internment camps soon became stretched for space. The Nazis improvised. They used any space they could get their hands on to create temporary ‘camps’. The first concentration camp was established in Dachau outside Munich in 1933. Primarily political prisoners were imprisoned in Dachau.
Over the following year, between 150,000 and 200,000 people were imprisoned in concentration camps across Germany.
In the summer of 1934, Hitler authorised Himmler to centralise the concentration camp system under the leadership of SS. Six large camps were established by the start of the Second World War, including Buchenwald in November 1938. By 1939, over 600,000 individuals were detained in prisons or concentration camps.
The camps were brutal and had extremely unsanitary conditions. Many of the prisoners were tortured and abused. Many of those that were harassed by the SA and the SS or imprisoned in camps were terrified to speak out about their ordeal – fearing that they would be further abused or re-imprisoned.
On 24 February 1920, Hitler announced the new 25 point party programme for the German Worker's Party.
On 27 February 1933, the Reichstag building burned down. A Dutch communist, Van der Lubbe, was arrested for the crime.
On 28 February 1933, the day after the Reichstag Fire, President Hindenburg declared a state of emergency. This increased the Nazis power.
On 6 February 1943, Jews in Thessalonika, Greece, were forced into ghettos. One month later, 45,000 of them were deported to Auschwitz.
On 26 February 1943, the first large transport of Roma deported from Germany arrived at Auschwitz-Birkenau.