Wednesday, 25 January 2017

Germany Depth Studies: The Nazi's


    HOW DID HITLER GAIN POWER…

1.       Long term Bitterness

Deep anger about the First World War and the Treaty of Versailles created an underlying bitterness to which Hitler’s viciousness and expansionism appealed, so they gave him support.

2.       Ineffective Constitution

Weaknesses in the Constitution crippled the government.   In fact, there were many people in Germany who wanted a return to dictatorship.   When the crisis came in 1929–1933 – there was no one who was prepared or able to fight to stop Hitler.  

3.       Money

The financial support of wealthy businessmen gave Hitler the money to run his propaganda and election campaigns.

4.       Propaganda

Nazi propaganda persuaded the German masses to believe that the Jews were to blame and that Hitler was their last hope.

5.      Programme

Hitler promised everybody something, so they supported him.

6.       Attacks on other parties

The Stormtroopers attacked Jews and people who opposed Hitler.   Many opponents kept quiet simply because they were scared of being murdered – and, if they were, the judges simply let the Stormtroopers go free (see point 2).

7.       Personal Qualities

Hitler was a brilliant speaker, and his eyes had a peculiar power over people.   He was a good organiser and politician.   He was a driven, unstable man, who believed that he had been called by God to become dictator of Germany and rule the world.   This kept him going when other people might have given up.   His self-belief persuaded people to believe in him.


CONSOLIDATION OF POWER

1     Reichstag Fire - 27 Feb 1933
The Reichstag (the German Parliament) burned down.  A Dutch Communist named van der Lubbe was caught red-handed with matches and fire-lighting materials.    Hitler used it as an excuse to arrest many of his Communist opponents, and as a major platform in his election campaign of March 1933.   The fire was so convenient that many people at the time claimed that the Nazis had burned it down, and then just blamed the Communists.   Modern historians, however, tend to believe that van der Lubbe did cause the fire, and that Hitler just took advantage of it.

2    General Election - 5 March 1933
Hitler held a general election, appealing to the German people to give him a clear mandate.   Only 44% of the people voted Nazi, which did not give him a majority in the Reichstag, so Hitler arrested the 81 Communist deputies (which did give him a majority). 
Goering become Speaker of the Reichstag.

  
3    Enabling Act - 23 March 1933
The Reichstag voted to give Hitler the power to make his own laws.   Nazi stormtroopers stopped opposition deputies going in, and beat up anyone who dared to speak against it.    
     The Enabling Act made Hitler the dictator of Germany, with power to do anything he liked - legally.

  
4    Local government - 26 April 1933
The Nazis took over local government and the police.   The Nazis started to replace anti-Nazi teachers and University professors.   Hitler set up the Gestapo (the secret police) and encouraged Germans to report opponents and 'grumblers'.   Tens of thousands of Jews, Communists, Protestants, Jehovah's Witnesses, gypsies, homosexuals, alcoholics and prostitutes were arrested and sent to concentration camps for 'crimes' as small as writing anti-Nazi graffiti, possessing a banned book, or saying that business was bad. 

  
5    Trade Unions banned  - 2 May 1933
The Trade Unions offices were closed, their money confiscated, and their leaders put in prison.   In their place, Hitler put the German Labour Front which reduced workers' pay and took away the right to strike. 

   
6    Political Parties banned - 14 July 1933
The Law against the Formation of Parties declared the Nazi Party the only political party in Germany.   All other parties were banned, and their leaders were put in prison. 

  
7    Night of the Long Knives - 30 June 1934
The SA were the thugs who Hitler had used to help him come to power.   They had defended his meetings, and attacked opponents.   By 1934 there were more than a million of them.
     Historians have often wondered why Hitler turned on the SA.   But Hitler was in power in 1934, and there was no opposition left - the SA were an embarrassment, not an advantage.   Also, Rohm, the leader of the SA, was talking about a Socialist revolution and about taking over the army.   On the night of 30 June 1934 - codeword 'Hummingbird - Hitler ordered the SS to kill more than 400 SA men.




LIFE UNDER THE NAZI’S
  
 1  .  Nazi Party members
were especially happy - they got all the best houses, preferential treatment, good jobs in the government and power over other people.

2   .  Ordinary people
For ordinary people, life was good:
1.   Nazi economic policies gave full employment (work programmes/ Strength through Joy), prosperity and financial security - many observers stated that there seemed to be no poverty in Germany
2.   the Strength through Joy programme   (KdF) gave some people fun and holidays.
3.   the 'Beauty of Work' movement (SdA) gave people pride in what they were doing.
4.   law and order (few people locked their doors),
5.   autobahns improved transport,
6.   frequent ceremonies, rallies, colour and excitement,
7.   Nazi propaganda gave people hope,
8.   Nazi racial philosophy gave people self-belief
9.   Trust in Adolf Hitler gave a sense of security
 
There were few drawbacks:
1. Wages fell, and strikers could be shot - the Nazis worked closely with the businessmen to make sure that the workforce were as controlled as possible.
2. Loss of personal freedoms (eg freedom of speech).
3. All culture had to be German - eg music had to be Beethoven or Wagner or German folk songs - or Nazi - eg all actors had to be members of the Nazi party/ only books by approved authors could be read.

3     Women
The Nazis were very male-dominated and anti-feminist.   Nazi philosophy idealised the role of women   as child-bearer and creator of the family:  
The Law for the Encouragement of Marriage gave newly-wed couples a loan of 1000 marks, and allowed them to keep 250 marks for each child they had.  
Mothers who had more than 8 children were given a gold medal.  
 
But not all women were happy with the Nazi regime:
Job-discrimination against women was encouraged.   Women doctors, teachers and civil servants were forced to give up their careers.
Women were never allowed to serve in the armed forces - even during the war.
      
     

4  .  Youth
Most German young people were happy:  
Nazi culture was very youth-oriented.  
The HJ provided exciting activities for young boys.  
The HJ and the BDM treated young men and women as though they were special, and told then they had knew more then their parents.  
Many parents were frightened that their children would report them to the Gestapo, which gave young people a power that they enjoyed.
 
But not all young people were happy with the Nazi regime:
SOME girls were unhappy with the emphasis on the three Cs (Church, children, cooker). 
Towards the end of the war, youth gangs such as the Eidelweiss Pirates grew up, rejecting the HJ and Nazi youth culture, drinking and dancing to American jazz and 'swing' music. 
In Cologne in 1944 they sheltered army deserters and even attacked the Gestapo. 
If they were caught, they were hanged.

5  .  Opponents
The Nazi's used 'fear and horror' against anyone who disapproved of their regime:
Hitler banned all Trade Unions on 2 May 1933.   Their offices were closed, their money confiscated, and their leaders put in prison.
Communists were put into concentration camps or killed.
Many Protestant pastors such as Dietrich Bonhoffer were persecuted and executed.
Each block of flats had a 'staircase ruler' who reported grumblers to the police - they were arrested and either murdered, or sent to concentration camps.
Children were encouraged to report their parents to the Gestapo if they criticized Hitler or the Nazi party.
 
But remember that:
Many Germans welcomed this because it brought political stability after the Weimar years.

6   . Untermensch
The Nazi regime despised many groups which it thought were racially or socially inferior (Untermensch = subhuman) - people they called the 'germs of destruction'.
 
Groups which were persecuted and killed included:
Jews, such as Anne Frank, whom the Germans systematically persecuted, were forced into walled ghettos, put into concentration camps, and used for medical experiments.   In the end the Nazis devised the Final Solution of genocide - it was the Holocaust.
Gypsies were treated almost as badly as the Jews - 85% of Germany's gypsies were killed.
Black people were sterilized and killed.
5000 mentally disabled babies were killed 1939-45.  
72,000 mentally ill patients were killed 1939-41.
Physically disabled people and families with hereditary illness were sometimes sterilized.   300,000 men and women were sterilized 1934-45.
Some deaf people were sterilised and put to death.
Beggars, homosexuals, prostitutes, alcoholics, pacifists, hooligans and criminals were also regarded as anti-social, and they were put in concentration camps.


Germany Depth Studies: WEIMAR YEARS

Germany Depth Studies: WEIMAR YEARS


At the end of October 1918, the German navy mutinied. Rebellion spread throughout the country. In November Germany was forced to drop out of the First World War. Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicated and fled the country.
A new Republic was declared. In January 1919, elections were held for a new Reichstag and in February 1919, in the town of Weimar, a new government was agreed.
Freidrich Ebert was elected President of the new Republic.

Germany did not just get a new government. The Allies made sure that Germany got a different kind of government. Before 1914, the government of Germany was almost a military autocracy; after 1919, it was a parliamentary democracy.

The Weimar constitution was designed to make sue that no one person accumaltes too much power but resulted in no one having sufficient power. Propotional representation became the reason why no party one an absolute majority and elections were held often and governments were built on flimsy political alliances.

PROBLEMS OF THE WEIMAR GOVERNMENT

1. Ineffective Constitution

The Weimar Constitution did not create a strong government:
Article 48 of the constitution gave the President sole power in ‘times of emergency’ – something he took often.
The system of proportional voting led to 28 parties. This made it virtually impossible to establish a majority in the Reichstag, and led to frequent changes in the government. During 1919-33, there were twenty separate coalition governments and the longest government lasted only two years. This political chaos caused many to lose faith in the new democratic system.
The German states had too much power and often ignored the government.
The Army, led by the right-wing was not fully under the government’s control.  It failed to support government during the Kapp Putsch or the crisis of 1923.
Many government officials – especially judges – were right-wing and wanted to destroy the government.  After the Kapp Putsch, 700 rebels were tried for treason; only 1 went to prison.  After the Munich Putsch, Hitler went to prison for only 9 months.

2. Left-wing Rebellions

The Communist KPD hated the new government:
In Jan 1919, 50,000 Spartacists    rebelled in Berlin, led by Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Leibknecht.
In 1919, Communist Workers’ Councils seized power all over Germany, and a Communist ‘People’s Government’ took power in Bavaria. They were defeated by the freikorps a pramillitary organization consisting of soldiers who were a part of the army prior to the treaty of versailles
In 1920, after the failure of the Kapp Putsch, a paramilitary group called the Red Army rebelled in the Ruhr.

3. Right-wing terrorism

Many right-wing groups hated the new government for signing the Versailles Treaty (June 1919):
The Kapp Putsch: in March 1920, a Freikorps brigade rebelled against the Treaty, led by Dr Wolfgang Kapp.  It took over Berlin and tried to bring back the Kaiser.
Nationalist terrorist groups murdered 356 politicians.  In August 1921 Matthias Erzberger, the man who signed the armistice (and therefore a 'November criminal'), was shot.  In 1922, they assassinated Walter Rathenau, the SPD foreign minister, because he made a treaty with Russia.

4. Invasion-Inflation: the crisis of 1923

The cause of the trouble was Reparations – the government paid them by printing more money, causing inflation.  In January 1923, Germany failed to make a payment, and France invaded the Ruhr.  This humiliated the government, which ordered a general strike, and paid the strikers by printing more money, causing hyperinflation:
In Berlin on 1 October 1923, soldiers calling themselves Black Reichswehr rebelled, led by Bruno Buchrucker.
The Rhineland declared independence (21–22 October).
In Saxony and Thuringia the Communists took power.

5. Munich Putsch

On 8–9 November 1923, Hitler’s Nazis tried to take control of Bavaria (the Munich Putsch)




RECOVERY PERIOD

1.  Freikorps

Against the Communists, the SPD Defence Minister, Gustav Noske, used bands of Freikorps.  They were right-wing and enjoyed putting down the Communist revolts of 1919–1920.

2.  Army

The Army, led by von Seeckt, was also right-wing, and enjoyed putting down the Communist.

3.  Strikes

The Kapp Putsch was right-wing, so the Freikorps and Army refused to help the government.  However, Ebert appealed to the workers of Berlin (who were left-wing), who went on strike.  Berlin came to a standstill and the Putsch collapsed.

4.  Stresemann's Achievements  (DIFFERS)

a.  Dawes Plan, 1924
Stresemann called off the 1923 Ruhr strike and started to pay reparations again – but the American Dawes Plan gave Germany longer to make the payments (and the Young Plan of 1929 reduced the payments).
b.  Inflation controlled, November 1923
Stresemann called in all the old, worthless marks and burned them.  He replaced them with a new Rentenmark (worth 3,000 million old marks).
c.  French leave the Ruhr, April 1924
Stresemann persuaded the French to leave.
d.  Foreign Affairs
In 1925, Stresemann signed the Locarno Treaty, agreeing to the loss of Alsace-Lorraine.  In 1926, Germany was allowed to join the League of Nations.  Germany had become a world power again.
e.  Economic Growth
Germany borrowed 25,000 million gold marks, mainly from America.  This was used to build roads, railways and factories.  The economy boomed and led to prosperity.  Cultural life also boomed (the Roaring Twenties).


f.  Reforms
Stresemann introduced reforms to make life better for the working classes - Labour Exchanges (1927) and unemployment pay.  Also, 3 million new houses were built.
g.  Strength at the Centre
Stresemann arranged a 'Great Coalition' of the moderate pro-democracy parties (based around the SDP, the Centre party and Stresemann's own 'German people's Party', the DVP).  United together, they were able to resist the criticism from smaller extremist parties, and in this way, he overcame the effects of proportional representation - the government had enough members of the Reichstag supporting it to pass the laws it needed.