CONCEPTS:
BIRTH OF THE WEIMER REPUBLIC: Germany fought the First World War
(1914–1918) along with the Austrian empire and against the Allies (England,
France and Russia).
Germany initially made gains by occupying
France and Belgium. However, the Allies won defeating Germany and the Central
Powers in 1918.A National Assembly met at Weimer and established a democratic
constitution with a federal structure. The republic, however, was not received
well by its own people largely because of the terms it was forced to accept
after Germany’s defeat at the end of the First World War. Many Germans held the
new Weimer Republic responsible for not only the defeat in the war but the
disgrace at Versailles.
The Effects of the War- The war had a devastating impact on the
entire continent both psychologically and financially. From being a creditor,
Europe became a debtor. The supporters of the Weimer Republic were criticised
and became easy targets of attack in the conservative nationalist circles.
Soldiers came to be placed above civilians. Aggressive war propaganda and
national honour became important.
Political Radicalism and Economic Crisis: The birth of the Weimer Republic coincided
with the uprising of the Spartacist League on the pattern of the Bolshevik
Revolution in Russia. The Sparta cists founded the Communist Party of Germany.
Political radicalisation was heightened by the economic crisis of 1923. As Germany refused to pay the war
reparations, France occupied its leading industrial area, Ruhr. Germany
retaliated with printing paper currency recklessly. The value of the mark
collapsed. Prices of goods soared. There was hyperinflation.
The Years of Depression
1924–1928 saw some stability, yet it was
built on sand. Germany was totally dependent on short term loans, largely from
the USA. This support was withdrawn with the crash in 1929 of the Wall Street
Exchange. German economy was hit badly. The middle class and working population
were filled with the fear of Proletarianisation. The Weimer Republic had some
inherent defects:
1. Proportional Representation
2. Article 48 which gave the President the powers to impose
emergency, suspend civil rights and rule by decree.
HITLER’S RISE TO POWER
Hitler was born in Austria in 1889. He earned
many medals for bravery in the First World War.The German defeat horrified him.
The Treaty of Versailles made him furious. He joined theGerman Workers Party
and renamed it National Socialist German Workers’ Party. This later came to be
known as the Nazi Party. Nazism became a mass movement only during the Great
Depression. The Nazi propaganda stirred hopes of a better future. Hitler was a
powerful and effective speaker. He promised the people a strong nation where
all would get employment.
The Destruction of Democracy — Hitler achieved the highest position in the
cabinet of ministries on 30 January 1933. Hitler now set out to dismantle the
structures of democratic rule. The Fire Decree of 28 February 1933 suspended
civic rights like freedom of speech, press and assembly. Communists were
hurriedly packed off to new established concentration camps. All political
parties were banned. Special surveillance and security forces were created to
control the people and rule with impunity.
Reconstruction: Economist Hjalmar Schacht was given the responsibility of
economic recovery. This was to be done through a state funded work creation
programme. Hitler pulled out of the League of Nations in 1933, reoccupied the
Rhineland in 1936 and integrated Austria and Germany in 1938 under the slogan:
One people, one empire, one leader. He then took Sudetenland from
Czechoslovakia. Hitler had the unspoken support of England. Hitler did not stop
here. He chose war as a way out of the Economic Crisis .Resources were to be
accumulated through expansion of territory. In September 1940 Germany invaded
Poland. This started a war with France and England. USA resisted involvement in
the war. But when Japan extended its support to Hitler and bombarded Pearl
Harbour, the USA entered the war. The war ended in 1945 with Hitler’s defeat
and the US bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in Japan.
THE NAZI WORLD VIEW
According to Nazi ideology there was no
equality among the people, but only racial hierarchy. TheNazis quickly began to
implement their dream of creating an exclusive racial community of pure Germans
by physically eliminating all those who were considered undesirable. They
wanted a society of pure and healthy Nordic Aryans. Jews, gypsies, blacks,
Russian, Poles, even certain Germans and abnormal were considered undesirable.
The other aspect of Hitler’s ideology related
to the geopolitical concept of Lebensraum, or living space. Jews were
the worst sufferers in Nazi Germany. Hitler believed in pseudoscientific
theories of race which said that conversion was no solution to the Jewish
problem. It had to be solved through their total elimination. From 1933–1938 —
the Nazis terrorised, pauperised and segregated the Jews, compelling them to
leave the country. The next phase, 1939–1945, aimed at concentrating them in
certain areas and then killing them in gas chambers in Poland.
The Racial Utopia
Genocide and war became two sides of the same
coin. Occupied Poland was divided. Poles were forced to leave their homes and
properties behind to be occupied by ethnic Germans brought in from occupied
Europe.
YOUTH IN NAZI GERMANY
Hitler felt that a strong Nazi society could
be established by teaching Nazi ideology to children.All schools were given
German teachers. Children were divided into two groups — desirable and 3undesirable.
Textbooks were rewritten, functions of sports in schools was to nurture the
spirit of violence and aggression. Ten-year-olds had to enter Jungvolk. At 14,
all boys joined ‘HitlerYouth’, they joined the Labour Service at 18.
The Nazi Cult of Motherhood — Women were told to be good mothers and rear
pure blooded Aryan children. They were encouraged to produce many children.
The Art of Propaganda —the Nazi regime used language and media with
care and often to great effect. They used films, pictures, radio, posters, etc.
to spread hatred for Jews
Crimes against Humanity — People saw the world through Nazi eyes and
spoke the Nazi language. At times even the Jews began to believe in the Nazi
stereotypes about them.
Knowledge
about the Holocaust —It was only after the war ended that people came to know
about what had happened. The Jews wanted the world to know about the atrocities
and sufferings they had endured during the Nazi killing operations. They just
wanted to live, even if it was for a few hours, to tell the world about the
Holocaust. SUMMATIVE
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