Adolf
Hitler was born on 20th April, 1889, in the small Austrian
town of Braunau near the German border. Both Hitler's parents had come
from poor peasant families. His father Alois
Hitler, the illegitimate son of a housemaid, was an intelligent and
ambitious man and later became a senior customs official.
Klara
Hitler was Alois' third wife. Alois was twenty-three years older
than Klara and already had two children from his previous marriages.
Klara and Alois had five children but only Adolf and a younger sister,
Paula, survived to become adults.
Alois,
who was fifty-one when Adolf was born, was extremely keen for his son to
do well in life. Alois did have another son by an earlier marriage but
he had been a big disappointment to him and eventually ended up in
prison for theft. Alois was a strict father and savagely beat his son if
he did not do as he was told.
Hitler
did extremely well at primary school and it appeared he had a bright
academic future in front of him. He was also popular with other pupils
and was much admired for his leadership qualities. He was also a deeply
religious child and for a while considered the possibility of becoming a
monk.
Competition was much tougher in the larger secondary school and
his reaction to not being top of the class was to stop trying. His
father was furious as he had high hopes that Hitler would follow his
example and join the Austrian civil service when he left school.
However, Hitler was a stubborn child and attempts by his parents and
teachers to change his attitude towards his studies were
unsuccessful.
Hitler
also lost his popularity with his fellow pupils. They were no longer
willing to accept him as one of their leaders. As Hitler liked giving
orders he spent his time with younger pupils. He enjoyed games that
involved fighting and he loved re-enacting battles from the Boer War.
His favourite game was playing the role of a commando rescuing Boers
from English concentration camps.
The
only teacher Hitler appeared to like at secondary school was Leopold
Potsch, his history master. Potsch, like many people living in Upper
Austria, was a German
Nationalist. Potsch told Hitler and his fellow pupils of the German
victories over France in 1870 and 1871 and attacked the Austrians for
not becoming involved in these triumphs. Otto von
Bismarck, the first chancellor of the German Empire, was one of
Hitler's early historical heroes.
Hitler's other main interest at school was art. His father was
incensed when Hitler told him that instead of joining the civil service
he was going to become an artist. The relationship between Hitler and
his father deteriorated and the conflict only ended with the death of Alois
Hitler in 1903.
Hitler
was thirteen when his father died. His death did not cause the family
financial hardships. The Hitler family owned their own home and they
also received a lump sum and a generous civil service
pension.
Klara
Hitler, a kind and gentle woman, tended to spoil her son. Like her
husband she was keen for Adolf to do well at school. Her attempts at
persuasion achieved no more success than her husband's threats and he
continued to obtain poor grades.
At the
age of fifteen he did so badly in his examinations that he was told he
would have to repeat the whole year's work again. Hitler hated the idea
and managed to persuade his mother to allow him to leave school without
a secondary education qualification. He celebrated by getting drunk.
However, he found it an humiliating experience and vowed never to get
drunk again. He kept his promise and by the time he reached his thirties
he had given up alcohol completely.
When
he was eighteen Hitler received an inheritance from his father's will.
With the money he moved to Vienna where he planned to become an art
student. Hitler had a high opinion of his artistic abilities and was
shattered when the Vienna Academy of Art rejected his application. He
also applied to the Vienna School of Architecture but was not admitted
because he did not have a school leaving certificate.
Hitler
was humiliated by these two rejections and could not bring himself to
tell his mother what had happened. Instead he continued to live in
Vienna pretending he was an art student.
In
1907 Klara
Hitler died from cancer. Her death affected him far more deeply than
the death of his father. He had fond memories of his mother, carried her
photograph wherever he went and, it is claimed, had it in his hand when
he died in 1945.
As the
eldest child, Hitler now received his father's civil service pension. It
was more money than many people received in wages and meant that Hitler
did not have to find employment. He spent most of the morning in bed
reading and in the afternoon he walked around Vienna studying buildings,
visiting museums, and making sketches.
In
1909 Hitler should have registered for military service. He was
unwilling to serve Austria,
which he despised, so he ignored his call-up papers. It took four years
for the authorities to catch up with him. When he had his medical for
the Austro-Hungarian
Army in 1914 he was rejected as being: "Unfit for combatant and
auxiliary duty - too weak. Unable to bear arms."
The
outbreak of the First World War
provided him with an opportunity for a fresh start. It was a chance for
him to become involved in proving that Germany
was superior to other European countries. Hitler claimed that when he
heard the news of war: "I was overcome with impetuous enthusiasm, and
falling on my knees, wholeheartedly thanked Heaven that I had been
granted the happiness to live live at this time. Rejecting the idea of
fighting for Austria,
Hitler volunteered for the German
Army. In times of war medical examinations are not so
rigorous.
Hitler
liked being in the army. For the first time he was part of a group that
was fighting for a common goal. Hitler also liked the excitement of
fighting in a war. Although fairly cautious in his actions, he did not
mind risking his life and impressed his commanding officers for
volunteering for dangerous missions.
His
fellow soldiers described him as "odd" and "peculiar". One soldier from
his regiment, Hans Mend, claimed that Hitler was an isolated figure who
spent long periods of time sitting in the corner holding his head in
silence. Then all of a sudden, Mend claimed, he would jump up and make a
speech. These outbursts were usually attacks on Jews and Marxists who
Hitler claimed were undermining the war effort.
Hitler
was given the job of despatch-runner. It was a dangerous job as it
involved carrying messages from regimental headquarters to the
front-line. On one day alone, three out of eight of the regiment's
despatch-runners were killed. For the first time since he was at primary
school Hitler was a success.
Hitler
won five medals including the prestigious Iron Cross
during the First
World War. His commanding officer wrote: "As a dispatch-runner, he
has shown cold-blooded courage and exemplary boldness. Under conditions
of great peril, when all the communication lines were cut, the untiring
and fearless activity of Hitler made it possible for important messages
to go through".
Although much decorated in the war, Hitler only reached the rank
of corporal. This was probably due to his eccentric behaviour and the
fear that the other soldiers might not obey the man they considered so
strange.
In
October 1918, Hitler was blinded in a British chlorine gas
attack. He was sent to a military hospital and gradually recovered his
sight. While he was in hospital Germany surrendered. Hitler went into a
state of deep depression, and had periods when he could not stop crying.
He spent most of his time turned towards the hospital wall refusing to
talk to anyone. Once again Hitler's efforts had ended in failure.
After
the war Hitler was stationed in Munich, the capital of Bavaria. While
Hitler was in Munich, the capital of Bavaria, Kurt
Eisner, leader of the Independent
Socialist Party, declared Bavaria a Socialist Republic. Hitler was
appalled by the revolution. As a German Nationalist he disagreed with
the socialist belief in equality.
Hitler
saw socialism as part of a Jewish conspiracy. Many of the socialist
leaders in Germany, including Kurt
Eisner, Rosa
Luxemburg, Ernst
Toller and Eugen
Levine were Jews. So also were many of the leaders of the October
Revolution in Russia. This
included Leon
Trotsky, Gregory
Zinoviev, Lev
Kamenev, Dimitri
Bogrov, Karl Radek,
Yakov
Sverdlov, Maxim
Litvinov, Adolf
Joffe, and Moisei
Uritsky. It had not escaped Hitler's notice that Karl Marx,
the prophet of socialism, had also been a Jew.
It was
no coincidence that Jews had joined socialist and communist parties in
Europe. Jews had been persecuted for centuries and therefore were
attracted to a movement that proclaimed that all men and women deserved
to be treated as equals. This message was reinforced when on 10th July,
1918, the Bolshevik
government in Russia passed
a law that abolished all discrimination
between Jews and non-Jews.
It was
not until May, 1919 that the German
Army entered Munich and overthrew the Bavarian
Socialist Republic. Hitler was arrested with other soldiers in
Munich and was accused of being a socialist. Hundreds of socialists were
executed without trial but Hitler was able to convince them that he had
been an opponent of the regime. To prove this he volunteered to help to
identify soldiers who had supported the Socialist Republic. The
authorities agreed to this proposal and Hitler was transferred to the
commission investigating the revolution.
Information supplied by Hitler helped to track down several
soldiers involved in the uprising. His officers were impressed by his
hostility to left-wing ideas and he was recruited as a political
officer. Hitler's new job was to lecture soldiers on politics. The main
aim was to promote his political philosophy favoured by the army and
help to combat the influence of the Russian
Revolution on the German soldiers.
Hitler, who had for years been ignored when he made political
speeches, now had a captive audience. The political climate had also
changed. Germany was a defeated and disillusioned country. At Versailles
the German government had been forced to sign a peace treaty that gave
away 13% of her territory. This meant the loss of 6 million people, a
large percentage of her raw materials (65% of iron ore reserves, 45% of
her coal, 72% of her zinc) and 10% of her factories. Germany also lost
all her overseas colonies.
Under
the terms of the Versailles
Treaty Germany also had to pay for damage caused by the war. These
reparations amounted to 38% of her national wealth.
Hitler
was no longer isolated. The German soldiers who attended his lectures
shared his sense of failure. They found his message that they were not
to blame attractive. He told them that Germany had not been beaten on
the battlefield but had been betrayed by Jews and Marxists who had
preached revolution and undermined the war effort.
The German
Army also began using Hitler as a spy. In September 1919, he was
instructed to attend a meeting of the German Worker's
Party (GWP). The army feared that this new party, led by Anton
Drexler, might be advocating communist revolution. Hitler discovered
that the party's political ideas were similar to his own. He approved of
Drexler's German nationalism and anti-Semitism but was unimpressed with
the way the party was organized. Although there as a spy, Hitler could
not restrain himself when a member made a point he disagreed with, and
he stood up and made a passionate speech on the subject.
Drexler was impressed with Hitler's abilities as an orator and
invited him to join the party. At first Hitler was reluctant, but urged
on by his commanding officer, Captain Karl Mayr, he eventually agreed.
He was only the fifty-fourth person to join the GWP. Hitler was
immediately asked to join the executive committee and was later
appointed the party's propaganda manager.
In the
next few weeks Hitler brought several members of his army into the
party, including one of his commanding officers, Captain Ernst
Roehm. The arrival of Roehm was an important development as he had
access to the army political fund and was able to transfer some of the
money into the GWP.
The German Worker's
Party used some of this money to advertise their meetings. Hitler
was often the main speaker and it was during this period that he
developed the techniques that made him into such a persuasive
orator.
Hitler
always arrived late which helped to develop tension and a sense of
expectation. He took the stage, stood to attention and waited until
there was complete silence before he started his speech. For the first
few months Hitler appeared nervous and spoke haltingly. Slowly he would
begin to relax and his style of delivery would change. He would start to
rock from side to side and begin to gesticulate with his hands. His
voice would get louder and become more passionate. Sweat poured of him,
his face turned white, his eyes bulged and his voice cracked with
emotion. He ranted and raved about the injustices done to Germany and
played on his audience's emotions of hatred and envy. By the end of the
speech the audience would be in a state of near hysteria and were
willing to do whatever Hitler suggested.
As
soon as his speech finished Hitler would quickly leave the stage and
disappear from view. Refusing to be photographed, Hitler's aim was to
create an air of mystery about himself, hoping that it would encourage
others to come and hear the man who was now being described as "the new
Messiah".
Hitler's reputation as an orator grew and it soon became clear
that he was the main reason why people were joining the party. This gave
Hitler tremendous power within the organization as they knew they could
not afford to lose him. One change suggested by Hitler concerned adding
"Socialist" to the name of the party. Hitler had always been hostile to
socialist ideas, especially those that involved racial or sexual
equality. However, socialism was a popular political philosophy in
Germany after the First World War.
This was reflected in the growth in the German Social
Democrat Party (SDP), the largest political party in
Germany.
Hitler, therefore redefined socialism by placing the word
'National' before it. He claimed he was only in favour of equality for
those who had "German blood". Jews and other "aliens" would lose their
rights of citizenship, and immigration of non-Germans should be brought
to an end.
In
February 1920, the National
Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP) published its first programme
which became known as the "25 Points". In the programme the party
refused to accept the terms of the Versailles
Treaty and called for the reunification of all German people. To
reinforce their ideas on nationalism, equal rights were only to be given
to German citizens. "Foreigners" and "aliens" would be denied these
rights.
To
appeal to the working class and socialists, the programme included
several measures that would redistribute income and war profits,
profit-sharing in large industries, nationalization of trusts, increases
in old-age pensions and free education.
On
24th February, 1920, the NSDAP (later nicknamed the Nazi Party)
held a mass rally where it announced its new programme. The rally was
attended by over 2,000 people, a great improvement on the 25 people who
were at Hitler's first party meeting.
Hitler
knew that the growth in the party was mainly due to his skills as an
orator and in the autumn of 1921 he challenged Anton
Drexler for the leadership of the party. After brief resistance
Drexler accepted the inevitable, and Hitler became the new leader of the
Nazi
Party.
Hitler's ability to arouse in his supporters emotions of anger
and hate often resulted in their committing acts of violence. In
September 1921, Hitler was sent to prison for three months for being
part of a mob who beat up a rival politician.
When
Hitler was released, he formed his own private army called Sturm
Abteilung (Storm Section). The SA (also known as stormtroopers or
brownshirts) were instructed to disrupt the meetings of political
opponents and to protect Hitler from revenge attacks. Captain Ernst Roehm
of the Bavarian Army played an important role in recruiting these men,
and Hermann
Goering, a former air-force pilot, became their leader.
Hitler's stormtroopers were often former members of the Freikorps
(right-wing private armies who flourished during the period that
followed the First World War)
and had considerable experience in using violence against their rivals.
The SA wore grey
jackets, brown shirts (khaki shirts originally intended for soldiers in
Africa but purchased in bulk from the German
Army by the Nazi Party),
swastika armbands, ski-caps, knee-breeches, thick woolen socks and
combat boots. Accompanied by bands of musicians and carrying swastika
flags, they would parade through the streets of Munich. At the end of
the march Hitler would make one of his passionate speeches that
encouraged his supporters to carry out acts of violence against Jews and
his left-wing political opponents.
As
this violence was often directed against Socialists and Communists, the
local right-wing Bavarian government did not take action against the Nazi Party.
However, the national government in Berlin were concerned and passed a
"Law for the Protection of the Republic". Hitler's response was to
organize a rally attended by 40,000 people. At the meeting Hitler called
for the overthrow of the German government and even suggested that its
leaders should be executed.
In
1923 the German Government had to deal with a series of difficult
problems. In January the French
Army occupied the Ruhr because
they claimed Germany was falling behind with her reparations. Workers in
the Ruhr responded by going on strike which badly hurt the German
economy. One of the consequences of this was rapid
inflation. As people found their savings becoming worthless, they
turned against their government.
On
13th August, Gustav
Stresemann became the new Chancellor of Germany. When Stresemann
decided to call off resistance to the French occupation of the Ruhr and
to start paying reparations to the Allies again, Hitler decided it was
time for him to become the new leader of Germany.
On 8th
November, 1923, the Bavarian government held a meeting of about 3,000
officials. While Gustav von
Kahr, the leader of the Bavarian government was making a speech,
Hitler and armed stormtroopers entering the building. Hitler jumped onto
a table, fired two shots in the air and told the audience that the Munich
Putsch was taking place and the National Revolution had began.
Leaving Hermann
Goering and the SA to guard
the 3,000 officials, Hitler took Gustav von
Kahr, Otto von Lossow, the commander of the Bavarian Army and Hans
von Seisser, the commandant of the Bavarian State Police into an
adjoining room. Hitler told the men that he was to be the new leader of
Germany and offered them posts in his new government. Aware that this
would be an act of high treason, the three men were initially reluctant
to agree to this offer. Hitler was furious and threatened to shoot them
and then commit suicide: "I have three bullets for you, gentlemen, and
one for me!" After this the three men agreed.
Soon
afterwards Eric
Ludendorff arrived. Ludendorff had been leader of the German
Army at the end of the First World War.
He had therefore found Hitler's claim that the war had not been lost by
the army but by Jews, Socialists, Communists and the German government,
attractive, and was a strong supporter of the Nazi Party.
Ludendorff agreed to become head of the the German Army in Hitler's
government.
While
Hitler had been appointing government ministers, Ernst
Roehm, leading a group of stormtroopers, had seized the War Ministry
and Rudolf
Hess was arranging the arrest of Jews and left-wing political
leaders in Bavaria.
Hitler
now planned to march on Berlin and remove the national government.
Surprisingly, Hitler had not arranged for the stormtroopers to take
control of the radio stations and the telegraph offices. This meant that
the national government in Berlin soon heard about Hitler's putsch and
gave orders for it to be crushed.
The
next day Hitler, Eric
Ludendorff, Hermann
Goering and 3,000 armed supporters of the Nazi Party
marched through Munich in an attempt to join up with Roehm's forces at
the War Ministry. At Odensplatz they found the road blocked by the
Munich police. As they refused to stop, the police fired into the ground
in front of the marchers. The stormtroopers returned the fire and during
the next few minutes 21 people were killed and another hundred were
wounded, included Goering.
When
the firing started Hitler threw himself to the ground dislocating his
shoulder. Hitler lost his nerve and ran to a nearby car. Although the
police were outnumbered, the Nazis followed their leader's example and
ran away. Only Eric
Ludendorff and his adjutant continued walking towards the police.
Later Nazi historians were to claim that the reason Hitler left the
scene so quickly was because he had to rush an injured young boy to the
local hospital.
After
hiding in a friend's house for several days, Hitler was arrested and put
on trial for his role in the Beer Hall
Putsch. If found guilty, Hitler faced the death penalty. While in
prison Hitler suffered from depression and talked of committing suicide.
However, it soon became clear that the Nazi sympathizers in the Bavarian
government were going to make sure that Hitler would not be punished
severely.
At his
trial Hitler was allowed to turn the proceedings into a political rally,
and although he was found guilty he only received the minimum sentence
of five years. Other members of the Nazi Party
also received light sentences and Eric
Ludendorff was acquitted.
Hitler
was sent to Landsberg Castle in Munich to serve his prison sentence. He
was treated well and was allowed to walk in the castle grounds, wear his
own clothes and receive gifts. Officially there were restrictions on
visitors but this did not apply to Hitler, and a steady flow of friends,
party members and journalists spent long spells with him. He was even
allowed to have visits from his pet Alsatian dog.
While
in Landsberg he read a lot of books. Most of these dealt with German
history and political philosophy. Later he was to describe his spell in
prison as a "free education at the state's expense." One writer who
influenced Hitler while in prison was Henry Ford,
the American car-manufacturer. Hitler read Ford's autobiography,
My Life and Work, and a book of his
called The International Jew. In the
latter Ford claimed that there was a Jewish conspiracy to take over the
world. Hitler also approved of Ford's hostile views towards communism
and trade unions.
Max Amnan,
his business manager, proposed that Hitler should spend his time in
prison writing his autobiography. Hitler, who had never fully mastered
writing, was at first not keen on the idea. However, he agreed when it
was suggested that he should dictate his thoughts to a ghostwriter. The
prison authorities surprisingly agreed that Hitler's chauffeur, Emil
Maurice, could live in the prison to carry out this task.
Maurice, whose main talent was as a street fighter, was a poor
writer and the job was eventually taken over by Rudolf Hess,
a student at Munich University. Hess made a valiant attempt at turning
Hitler's spoken ideas into prose. However, the book that Hitler wrote in
prison was repetitive, confused, turgid and therefore, extremely
difficult to read. In his writing, Hitler was unable to use the
passionate voice and dramatic bodily gestures which he had used so
effectively in his speeches, to convey his message.
The
book was originally entitled Four Years of
Struggle against Lies, Stupidity, and Cowardice. Hitler's
publisher reduced it to My Struggle
(Mein
Kampf). The book is a mixture of autobiography, political ideas
and an explanation of the techniques of propaganda. The autobiographical
details in Mein Kampf are often inaccurate, and the main purpose
of this part of the book appears to be to provide a positive image of
Hitler. For example, when Hitler was living a life of leisure in Vienna
he claims he was working hard as a labourer.
In
Mein Kampf Hitler outlined his political philosophy. He argued
that the German (he wrongly described them as the Aryan race) was
superior to all others. "Every manifestation of human culture, every
product of art, science and technical skill, which we see before our
eyes today, is almost exclusively the product of Aryan creative
power."
Hitler
warned that the Aryan's superiority was being threatened by
intermarriage. If this happened world civilization would decline: "On
this planet of ours human culture and civilization are indissolubly
bound up with the presence of the Aryan. If he should be exterminated or
subjugated, then the dark shroud of a new barbarian era would enfold the
earth."
Although other races would resist this process, the Aryan race
had a duty to control the world. This would be difficult and force would
have to be used, but it could be done. To support this view he gave the
example of how the British Empire had controlled a quarter of the world
by being well-organised and having well-timed soldiers and
sailors.
Hitler
believed that Aryan superiority was being threatened particularly by the
Jewish race who, he argued, were lazy and had contributed little to
world civilization. (Hitler ignored the fact that some of his favourite
composers and musicians were Jewish). He claimed that the "Jewish youth
lies in wait for hours on end satanically glaring at and spying on the
unconscious girl whom he plans to seduce, adulterating her blood with
the ultimate idea of bastardizing the white race which they hate and
thus lowering its cultural and political level so that the Jew might
dominate."
According to Hitler, Jews were responsible for everything he did
not like, including modern art, pornography and prostitution. Hitler
also alleged that the Jews had been responsible for losing the First World War.
Hitler also claimed that Jews, who were only about 1% of the population,
were slowly taking over the country. They were doing this by controlling
the largest political party in Germany, the German Social
Democrat Party, many of the leading companies and several of the
country's newspapers. The fact that Jews had achieved prominent
positions in a democratic society was, according to Hitler, an argument
against democracy: "a hundred blockheads do not equal one man in
wisdom."
Hitler
believed that the Jews were involved with Communists in a joint
conspiracy to take over the world. Like Henry Ford,
Hitler claimed that 75% of all Communists were Jews. Hitler argued that
the combination of Jews and Marxists had already been successful in
Russia and now threatened the rest of Europe. He argued that the
communist revolution was an act of revenge that attempted to disguise
the inferiority of the Jews.
In Mein
Kampf Hitler declared that: "The external security of a people
in largely determined by the size of its territory. If he won power
Hitler promised to occupy Russian land that would provide protection and
lebensraum
(living space) for the German people. This action would help to destroy
the Jewish/Marxist attempt to control the world: "The Russian Empire in
the East is ripe for collapse; and the end of the Jewish domination of
Russia will also be the end of Russia as a state."
To
achieve this expansion in the East and to win back land lost during the
First World
War, Hitler claimed that it might be necessary to form an alliance
with Britain and Italy. An alliance with Britain was vitally important
because it would prevent Germany fighting a war in the East and West at
the same time.
Hitler
was released from prison on 20th December, 1924, after serving just over
a year of his sentence. The Germany of 1924 was dramatically different
from the Germany of 1923. The economic policies of the German government
had proved successful. Inflation
had been brought under control and the economy began to improve. The
German people gradually gained a new faith in their democratic system
and began to find the extremist solutions proposed by people such as
Hitler unattractive.
Hitler
attempted to play down his extremist image, and claimed that he was no
longer in favour of revolution but was willing to compete with other
parties in democratic elections. This policy was unsuccessful and in the
elections of December 1924 the NSDAP could only win 14 seats compared
with the the 131 obtained by the Socialists (German Social
Democrat Party) and the 45 of the German Communist
Party (KPD).
Hitler went to live in
Berchtesgaden in the Bavarian Alps. Later he was to say this was the
happiest time of his life. He spent his time reading, walking and being
driven fast around the countryside in his new supercharged Mercedes. For
the first time in his life he began to take a serious interest in
women.
Hitler liked the company of
beautiful and frivolous women and avoided women who wanted to discuss
political issues. His attitude towards women is reflected in his comment
that: "A highly intelligent man should take a primitive and stupid
woman." On another occasion he said: "I detest women who dabble in
politics."
This was one of the reasons
Hitler tended to be attracted to women much younger than himself, and
there was a scandal when Maria Reiter, a sixteen-year-old girl he was
involved with, tried to commit suicide.
In 1928 Hitler asked his
half-sister, Angela Raubal, to be his housekeeper. She agreed and
arrived with her twenty-year old daughter, Geli
Raubal. Hitler, who had now turned forty, became infatuated with
Geli and rumours soon spread that he was having an affair with his young
niece. Hitler became extremely possessive and Emil
Maurice, his
chauffeur, who also showed interest in Geli, was sacked.
The couple lived together
for over two years. The relationship with Geli was stormy and they began
to accuse each other of being unfaithful. Geli was particularly
concerned about Eva
Braun, a
seventeen-year-old girl who Hitler took for rides in his Mercedes
car.
Geli also complained about
the way Hitler controlled her life On September 8, 1931, Hitler left for
Hamburg after having a blazing row with Geli over her desire to spend
some time in Vienna. Hitler was heard to shout at Geli as he was about
to get into his car:
"For the last time, no!" After he left Geli shot herself through the
heart with a revolver.
When he heard the news
Hitler threatened to take his own life but was talked out of it by
senior members of the Nazi
Party. One
consequence of Geli's suicide was that Hitler became a vegetarian. He
claimed that meat now reminded him of Geli's corpse.
Rumours about Geli's death
spread quickly amongst Hitler's enemies. It was claimed
that Geli had been badly beaten up by Hitler before she shot
herself. Another story involved Geli committing suicide
because she was expecting Hitler's child. Some people claimed
she was murdered by Heinrich
Himmler because she
was threatening to blackmail Hitler. Little evidence has been provided to
support these suggestions and the reasons for her death remain
a mystery
After the death of Geli
Raubal, Hitler began to see more of Eva
Braun. However he
still had relationships with other women Hitler was especially fond of
film-stars and one girlfriend the actress Renate
Mueller, committed suicide by throwing herself out of a hotel window
in Berlin.
Eva was extremely jealous
of Hitler's other girlfriends and in 1932 she also attempted suicide by
shooting herself in the neck. Doctors managed to save her life, and
after this incident Hitler seemed to become more attached to Eva and saw
less of other women.
Hitler had no
desire to have children. He told several people that if he had children
they were certain to disappoint
him as they would never match his own
genius.
The Nazi
Party always attempted to keep Hitler's
love life secret. In his speeches Hitler claimed that he had never
married because he was "married to the German people." The severe
casualties suffered during the First World War
meant that there was a large number of widows and spinsters in Germany.
Women in Germany found Hitler's bachelor image attractive and this
helped win him votes during elections. It was for this reason that Eva
Braun was never seen in public with Hitler.
Emil
Kirdorf, a very wealthy industrialist met Hitler in 1927. Although
Kirdorf agreed with most of Hitler's views he was concerned about some
of the policies of the Nazi Party.
He was particularly worried about the opinions of some people in the
party such as Gregor
Strasser who talked about the need to redistribute wealth in
Germany.
Hitler
tried to reassure Kirdorf that these policies were just an attempt to
gain the support of the working-class in Germany and would not be
implemented once he gained power. Kirdorf suggested that Hitler should
write a pamphlet for private distribution amongst Germany's leading
industrialists that clearly expressed his views on economic
policy.
Hitler
agreed and The Road to Resurgence was
published in the summer of 1927. In the pamphlet distributed by Kirdorf
to Germany's leading industrialists, Hitler tried to reassure his
readers that he was a supporter of private enterprise and was opposed to
any real transformation of Germany's economic and social structure.
Emil
Kirdorf and his wealthy right-wing friends were particularly
attracted to Hitler's idea of winning the working class away from
left-wing political groups such as the Social Democratic
Party and the Communist
Party. Kirdorf and other business leaders were also impressed with
the news that Hitler planned to suppress the trade union
movement once he gained power. Kirdorf joined the Nazi Party
and immediately began to try and persuade other leading industrialists
to supply Hitler with the necessary funds to win control of the Reichstag.
Kirdorf expected Adolf
Hitler to remove left-wing members of the Nazi Party
such as Gregor
Strasser, Ernst Roehm
and Gottfried
Feder to be removed from power. When this did not happen, Kirdorf
switched his support to the German
Nationalist Party (DNVP) led by Alfred
Hugenberg.
In the
1928 German elections, less than 3% of the people voted for the Nazi
Party. This gave them only twelve seats, twenty fewer than they achieved
in the May, 1924 election. However, the party was well organized and
membership had grown from 27,000 in 1925 to 108,000 in 1928.
One of
the new members was Joseph
Goebbels. Hitler first met him in 1925. Both men were impressed with
each other. Goebbels described one of their first meetings in his diary:
"Shakes my hand. Like an old friend. And those big blue eyes. Like
stars. He is glad to see me. I am in heaven. That man has everything to
be king."
Hitler
admired Goebbels' abilities as a writer and speaker. They shared an
interest in propaganda and together they planned how the NSDAP would win
the support of the German people.
Propaganda cost money and this was something that the Nazi Party
was very short of. Whereas the German Social
Democratic Party was funded by the trade unions and the
pro-capitalist parties by industrialists, the NSDAP had to rely on
contributions from party members. When Hitler approached rich
industrialists for help he was told that his economic policies
(profit-sharing, nationalization of trusts) were too left-wing.
In an
attempt to obtain financial contributions from industrialists, Hitler
wrote a pamphlet in 1927 entitled The Road to
Resurgence. Only a small number of these pamphlets were
printed and they were only meant for the eyes of the top industrialists
in Germany. The reason that the pamphlet was kept secret was that it
contained information that would have upset Hitler's working-class
supporters. In the pamphlet Hitler implied that the anti-capitalist
measures included in the original twenty-five points of the NSDAP
programme would not be implemented if he gained power.
Hitler
began to argue that "capitalists had worked their way to the top through
their capacity, and on the basis of this selection they have the right
to lead." Hitler claimed that national socialism meant all people doing
their best for society and posed no threat to the wealth of the rich.
Some prosperous industrialists were convinced by these arguments and
gave donations to the Nazi Party, however, the vast majority continued
to support other parties, especially the right-wing German
Nationalist Peoples Party (DNVP).
Another new member of the NSDAP was Heinrich
Himmler. Hitler was impressed by Himmler's fanatical nationalism and
his deep hatred of the Jews.
Himmler believed Hitler was the Messiah that was destined to lead
Germany to greatness. Hitler, who was always vulnerable to flattery,
decided that Himmler should become the new leader of his personal
bodyguard, the Schutzstaffeinel
(SS).
The
German economy continued to improve and as unemployment fell, so did the
support for extremist political parties such as the NSDAP. In the
General Election held in May, 1928, the Nazi Party won only 14 seats,
while the left-wing parties, the German Social
Democrat Party (153) and the German Communist
Party (54) still continued to grow in popularity.
The
fortunes of the NSDAP changed with the Wall
Street Crash in October 1929. Desperate for capital, the United
States began to recall loans from Europe. One of the consequences of
this was a rapid increase in unemployment. Germany, whose economy relied
heavily on investment from the United States, suffered more than any
other country in Europe.
Before
the crash, 1.25 million people were unemployed
in Germany. By the end of 1930 the figure had reached nearly 4 million.
Even those in work suffered as many were only working part-time. With
the drop in demand for labour, wages also fell and those with full-time
work had to survive on lower incomes. Hitler, who was considered a fool
in 1928 when he predicted economic disaster, was now seen in a different
light. People began to say that if he was clever enough to predict the
depression maybe he also knew how to solve it.
In the
General Election that took place in September 1930, the Nazi Party
increased its number of representatives in parliament from 14 to 107.
Hitler was now the leader of the second largest party in Germany.
The German Social
Democrat Party was the largest party in the Reichstag,
it did not have a majority over all the other parties, and the SPD
leader, Hermann
Muller, had to rely on the support of others to rule Germany. After
the SPD refused to reduce unemployment benefits, Mueller was replaced as
Chancellor by Heinrich
Bruening. However, with his party only having 87 representatives out
of 577 in the Reichstag, he also found it extremely difficult to gain
agreement for his policies.
Hitler
used this situation to his advantage, claiming that parliamentary
democracy did not work. The NSDAP argued
that only Hitler could provide the strong government that Germany
needed. Hitler and other Nazi leaders travelled round the country giving
speeches putting over this point of view.
What
Hitler said depended very much on the audience. In rural areas he
promised tax cuts for farmers and government actin to protect food
prices. In working class areas he spoke of redistribution of wealth and
attacked the high profits made by the large chain stores. When he spoke
to industrialists, Hitler concentrated on his plans to destroy communism
and to reduce the power of the trade union movement. Hitler's main
message was that Germany's economic recession was due to the Treaty of
Versailles. Other than refusing to pay reparations, Hitler avoided
explaining how he would improve the German economy.
With a
divided Reichstag,
the power of the German President became more important. In 1931 Hitler
challenged Paul von
Hindenburg for the presidency. Hindenburg was now 84 years old and
showing signs of senility. However, a large percentage of the German
population still feared Hitler and in the election Hindenburg had a
comfortable majority.
Heinrich
Bruening and other senior politicians were worried that Hitler would
use his stormtroopers
to take power by force. Led by Ernst
Roehm, it now contained over 400,000 men. Under the terms of the Treaty of
Versailles the official German Army was restricted to 100,000 men
and was therefore outnumbered by the SA. In the past, those who feared
communism were willing to put up with the SA as they provided a useful
barrier against the possibility of revolution. However, with the growth
in SA violence and fearing a Nazi coup, Bruening banned the
organization.
In May
1932, Paul von
Hindenburg sacked Bruening and replaced him with Franz von
Papen. The new chancellor was also a member of the Catholic
Centre Party and, being more sympathetic to the Nazis, he removed
the ban on the SA. The next few weeks saw open warfare on the streets
between the Nazis and the Communists during which 86 people were
killed.
In an
attempt to gain support for his new government, in July Franz von
Papen called another election. Hitler now had the support of the
upper and middle classes and the NSDAP did well winning 230 seats,
making it the largest party in the Reichstag. However the German Social
Democrat Party (133) and the German Communist
Party (89) still had the support of the urban working class and
Hitler was deprived of an overall majority in parliament.
Hitler
demanded that he should be made Chancellor but Paul von
Hindenburg refused and instead gave the position to Major-General Kurt von
Schleicher. Hitler was furious and began to abandon his strategy of
disguising his extremist views. In one speech he called for the end of
democracy a system which he described as being the "rule of stupidity,
of mediocrity, of half-heartedness, of cowardice, of weakness, and of
inadequacy."
The
behaviour of the NSDAP became more violent. On one occasion 167 Nazis
beat up 57 members of the German Communist
Party in the Reichstag.
They were then physically thrown out of the building.
The stormtroopers
also carried out terrible acts of violence against socialists and
communists. In one incident in Silesia, a young member of the KPD had
his eyes poked out with a billiard cue and was then stabbed to death in
front of his mother. Four members of the SA were convicted of the rime.
Many people were shocked when Hitler sent a letter of support for the
four men and promised to do what he could to get them
released.
Incidents such as these worried many Germans, and in the
elections that took place in November 1932 the support for the Nazi
Party fell. The German Communist
Party made substantial gains in the election winning 100 seats.
Hitler used this to create a sense of panic by claiming that German was
on the verge of a Bolshevik
Revolution and only the NSDAP could prevent this happening.
A
group of prominent industrialists who feared such a revolution sent a
petition to Paul von
Hindenburg asking for Hitler to become Chancellor. Hindenberg
reluctantly agreed to their request and at the age of forty-three,
Hitler became the new Chancellor of Germany.
Although Hitler had the support of certain sections of the German
population he never gained an elected majority. The best the National
Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP) could do in a election was
37.3 per cent of the vote they gained in July 1932. When Hitler became
chancellor in January 1933, the Nazis only had a third of the seats in
the Reichstag.
Soon
after Hitler became chancellor he announced new elections. Hermann
Goering called a meeting of important industrialists where he told
them that the 1933 General
Election could be the last in Germany for a very long time. Goering
added that the NSDAP would need a considerable amount of of money to
ensure victory. Those present responded by donating 3 million
Reichmarks. As Joseph
Goebbels wrote in his diary after the meeting: "Radio and press are
at our disposal. Even money is not lacking this time."
Behind
the scenes Goering, who was minister of the interior in Hitler's
government, was busily sacking senior police officers and replacing them
with Nazi supporters. These men were later to become known as the Gestapo.
Goering also recruited 50,000 members of the Sturm Abteilung
(SA) to work as police auxiliaries.
Hermann
Goering then raided the headquarters of the Communist
Party (KPD) in Berlin and claimed that he had uncovered a plot to
overthrow the government. Leaders of the KPD were arrested but no
evidence was ever produced to support Goering's accusations. He also
announced he had discovered a communist plot to poison German milk
supplies.
On
27th February, 1933, someone set fire to the Reichstag.
Several people were arrested including a leading, Georgi
Dimitrov, general secretary of the Comintern,
the international communist organization. Dimitrov was eventually
acquitted but a young man from the Netherlands, Marianus van
der Lubbe, was eventually executed for the crime. As a teenager
Lubbe had been a communist and Hermann
Goering used this information to claim that the Reichstag
Fire was part of a KPD plot to overthrow the government.
Hitler
gave orders that all leaders of the German Communist
Party should "be hanged that very night." Paul von
Hindenburg vetoed this decision but did agree that Hitler should
take "dictatorial powers". KPD
candidates in the election were arrested and Hermann
Goering announced that the Nazi Party planned "to exterminate"
German communists.
Thousands of members of the Social Democrat
Party and Communist
Party were arrested and sent to recently opened to concentration
camp. They were called this because they "concentrated" the enemy
into a restricted area. Hitler named these camps after those used by the
British during the Boer War.
Left-wing election meetings were broken up by the Sturm Abteilung
(SA) and several candidates were murdered. Newspapers that supported
these political parties were closed down during the 1933 General
Election.
Although it was extremely difficult for the opposition parties to
campaign properly, Hitler and the Nazi party still failed to win an
overall victory in the election on 5th March, 1933. The NSDAP received
43.9% of the vote and only 288 seats out of the available 647. The
increase in the Nazi vote had mainly come from the Catholic rural areas
who feared the possibility of an atheistic Communist
government.
After
the 1933
General Election Hitler proposed an Enabling
Bill that would give him dictatorial powers. Such an act needed
three-quarters of the members of the Reichstag
to vote in its favour.
All
the active members of the Communist
Party, were in concentration camps, in hiding, or had left the
country (an estimated 60,000 people left Germany during the first few
weeks after the election). This was also true of most of the leaders of
the other left-wing party, Social Democrat
Party (SDP). However, Hitler still needed the support of the Catholic
Centre Party (BVP) to pass this legislation. Hitler therefore
offered the BVP a deal: vote for the bill and the Nazi government would
guarantee the rights of the Catholic Church. The BVP agreed and when the
vote was taken, only 94 members of the SDP voted against the Enabling
Bill.
Hitler
was now dictator of Germany. His first move was to take over the trade unions.
Its leaders were sent to concentration camps and the organization was
put under the control of the Nazi Party. The trade union movement now
became known as the Labour Front.
Soon
afterwards the Communist
Party and the Social Democrat
Party were banned. Party activists still in the country were
arrested. A month later Hitler announced that the Catholic
Centre Party, the Nationalist
Party and all other political parties other than the NSDAP were
illegal, and by the end of 1933 over 150,000 political prisoners were in
concentration camps. Hitler was aware that people have a great fear of
the unknown, and if prisoners were released, they were warned that if
they told anyone of their experiences they would be sent back to the
camp.
It was
not only left-wing politicians and trade union activists who were sent
to concentration
camp. The Gestapo also began arresting beggars, prostitutes,
homosexuals, alcoholics and anyone who was incapable of working.
Although some inmates were tortured, the only people killed during this
period were prisoners who tried to escape and those classed as
"incurably insane".
Hitler's Germany became known as a fascist
state. Fascist was originally used to describe the government of Benito
Mussolini in Italy. Mussolini's fascist one-party state emphasized
patriotism, national unity, hatred of communism, admiration of military
values and unquestioning obedience. Hitler was deeply influenced by
Mussolini's Italy and his Germany shared many of the same
characteristics.
The
German economic system remained capitalistic but the state played a more
prominent role in managing the economy. Industrialists were sometimes
told what to produce and what price they should charge for the goods
that they made. The government also had the power to order workers to
move to where they were required.
By
taking these powers Hitler's government was able to control factors such
as inflation
and unemployment
that had caused considerable distress in previous years. As the
government generally allowed companies to maintain their profit margins,
industrialists tended to accept the loss of some of their
freedoms.
Under
fascism,
most potential sources of opposition were removed. This included
political parties and the trade union
movement. However, Hitler never felt strong enough to take complete
control of the German
Army, and before taking important decisions he always had to take
into consideration how the armed forces would react.
By the
time Hitler gained power he had ceased to be a practising Christian. He
did not have the confidence to abolish Christianity
in Germany. In 1934 Hitler signed an agreement with Pope Pius
XI in which he promised not to interfere in religion if the Catholic
Church agreed not to become involved in politics in Germany.
The
individual had no freedom to protest in Hitler's Germany. All political
organizations were either banned or under the control of the Nazis.
Except for the occasional referendum, all elections, local and national,
were abolished.
All
information that people in Germany received was selected and organized
to support fascist beliefs. As Minister of Propaganda, Joseph
Goebbels kept a close check on the information provided by
newspapers, magazines, books, radio broadcasts, plays and
films.
Hitler, who had been deeply influenced by his own history
teacher, was fully aware that schools posed a potential threat to the
dominant fascist ideology. Teachers who were critical of Hitler's
Germany were sacked and the rest were sent away to be trained to become
good fascists. Members of the Nazi youth organizations such as the Hitler
Youth, were also asked to report teachers who questioned fascism.
As a
further precaution against young people coming into contact with
information and the government disapproved of, textbooks were withdrawn
and rewritten by Nazis.
By
1934 Hitler appeared to have complete control over Germany, but like
most dictators, he constantly feared that he might be ousted by others
who wanted his power. To protect himself from a possible coup, Hitler
used the tactic of divide and rule and encouraged other leaders such as
Hermann
Goering, Joseph
Goebbels, Heinrich
Himmler and Ernst Roehm
to compete with each other for senior positions.
One of
the consequences of this policy was that these men developed a dislike
for each other. Roehm was particularly hated because as leader of the Sturm
Abteilung (SA) he had tremendous power and had the potential to
remove any one of his competitors. Goering and Himmler asked Reinhard
Heydrich to assemble a dossier on Roehm. Heydrich, who also feared
him, manufactured evidence that suggested that Roehm had been paid 12
million marks by the French to overthrow Hitler.
Hitler
liked Ernst
Roehm and initially refused to believe the dossier provided by
Heydrich. Roehm had been one of his first supporters and, without his
ability to obtain army funds in the early days of the movement, it is
unlikely that the Nazis would
have ever become established. The SA under Roehm's leadership had also
played a vital role in destroying the opposition during the elections of
1932 and 1933.
However, Hitler had his own reasons for wanting Roehm removed.
Powerful supporters of Hitler had been complaining about Roehm for some
time. Generals were afraid that the Sturm
Abteilung (SA), a force of over 3 million men, would absorb the much
smaller German
Army into its ranks and Roehm would become its overall
leader.
Industrialists such as Albert
Voegler, Gustav
Krupp, Alfried
Krupp, Fritz
Thyssen and Emile
Kirdorf, who had provided the funds for the Nazi victory, were
unhappy with Roehm's socialistic views on the economy and his claims
that the real revolution had still to take place. Many people in the
party also disapproved of the fact that Roehm and many other leaders of
the SA were homosexuals.
Hitler
was also aware that Roehm and the SA had the power to remove him. Hermann
Goering and Heinrich
Himmler played on this fear by constantly feeding him with new
information on Roehm's proposed coup. Their masterstroke was to claim
that Gregor
Strasser, whom Hitler hated, was part of the planned conspiracy
against him. With this news Hitler ordered all the SA leaders to attend
a meeting in the Hanselbauer Hotel in Wiesse.
Meanwhile Goering and Himmler were drawing up a list of people
outside the SA that they wanted killed. The list included Strasser, Kurt von
Schleicher, Hitler's predecessor as chancellor, and Gustav von
Kahr, who crushed the Beer Hall
Putsch in 1923.
On
29th June, 1934. Hitler, accompanied by the Schutz Staffeinel
(SS), arrived at Wiesse, where he personally arrested Ernst
Roehm. During the next 24 hours 200 other senior SA officers were
arrested on the way to Wiesse. Many were shot as soon as they were
captured but Hitler decided to pardon Roehm because of his past services
to the movement. However, after much pressure from Hermann
Goering and Heinrich
Himmler, Hitler agreed that Roehm should die. At first Hitler
insisted that Roehm should be allowed to commit suicide but, when he
refused, Roehm was shot by two SS men.
Roehm
was replaced by Victor
Lutze as head of the SA. Lutze was a weak man and the SA gradually
lost its power in Hitler's Germany. The Schutz Staffeinel
(SS) under the leadership of Himmler grew rapidly during the next
few years, replacing the SA as the dominant force in Germany.
The
purge of the SA was kept secret until it was announced by Hitler on 13th
July. It was during this speech that Hitler gave the purge its name: Night of the
Long Knives (a phrase from a popular Nazi song). Hitler claimed that
61 had been executed while 13 had been shot resisting arrest and three
had committed suicide. Others have argued that as many as 400 people
were killed during the purge. In his speech Hitler explained why he had
not relied on the courts to deal with the conspirators: "In this hour I
was responsible for the fate of the German people, and thereby I become
the supreme judge of the German people. I gave the order to shoot the
ringleaders in this treason."
The Night of the
Long Knives was a turning point in the history of Hitler's Germany.
Hitler had made it clear that he was the supreme ruler of Germany who
had the right to be judge and jury, and had the power to decide whether
people lived or died.
In the
1933
Election campaign, Hitler had promised that if he gained power he
would abolish unemployment.
He was lucky in that the German economy was just beginning to recover
when he came into office. However, the policies that Hitler introduced
did help to reduce the number of people unemployed in
Germany.
These
policies often involved taking away certain freedoms from employers. The
government banned the introduction of some labour-saving machinery.
Employers also had to get government permission before reducing their
labour force. The government also tended to give work contracts to those
companies that relied on manual labour rather than machines. This was
especially true of the government's massive motorway programme. As a
result of this scheme Germany developed the most efficient road system
in Europe.
Hitler
also abolished taxation on new cars. A great lover of cars himself, and
influenced by the ideas of Henry Ford,
Hitler wanted every family in Germany to own a car. He even became
involved in designing the Volkswagen (The People's Car).
Hitler
also encouraged the mass production of radios. In this case he was not
only concerned with reducing unemployment but saw them as a means of
supplying a steady stream of Nazi propaganda to the German
people.
Youth
unemployment was dealt with by the forming of the Voluntary Labour
Service (VLS) and the Voluntary Youth Service (VYS), a scheme similar to
the Civilian
Conservation Corps introduced by Franklin
D. Roosevelt in the United States. The VYS planted forests, repaired
river banks and helped reclaim wasteland.
Hitler
also reduced unemployment by introducing measures that would encourage
women to leave the labour market. Women in certain professions such as
doctors and civil servants were dismissed, while other married women
were paid a lump sum of 1000 marks to stay at home.
By
1937 German unemployment
had fallen from six million to one million. However, the standard of
living for those in employment did not improve in the same way that it
had done during the 1920s. With the Nazis controlling the trade unions,
wage-rates did not increase with productivity, and after a few years of
Hitler's rule workers began to privately question his economic
policies.
In Mein
Kampf Hitler made it absolutely clear that he had a deep hatred
of the Jewish race.
However, anti-Semitism
did cause difficulties for Hitler when he was trying to gain power in
Germany. Jewish businessmen in Germany and the rest of the world were
occasionally able to use their influence to prevent anti-Semitic ideas
being promoted.
Henry Ford
was forced to stop publishing anti-Semitic attacks in the United States
after the Jewish community organized a boycott of Ford cars in the late
1920s. Lord
Rothermere, who used his newspaper, The Daily
Mail, to argue for Hitler's policies abruptly withdrew his
support in 1930. Later that year, Rothermere told Hitler that Jewish
businessmen had withdrawn advertising from the newspaper and he had been
forced to "toe the line".
Aware
of the power of Jewish money, Hitler began to leave out anti-Semitic
comments from his speeches during elections. This was one of the major
factors in the increase in financial contributions from German
industrialists in the 1933 General
Election. His change in tactics was so successful that even Jewish
businessmen began contributing money to the National
Socialist German Workers Party.
Once
in power Hitler began to express anti-Semitic ideas again. Based on his
readings of how blacks were denied civil
rights in the southern states in America, Hitler attempted to make
life so unpleasant for Jews in Germany that they would emigrate. The
campaign started on 1st April, 1933, when a one-day boycott of
Jewish-owned shops took place. Members of the Sturm Abteilung
(SA) picketed the shops to ensure the boycott was
successful.
The
hostility of towards Jews
increased in Germany. This was reflected in the decision by many shops
and restaurants not to serve the Jewish population. Placards saying
"Jews not admitted" and "Jews enter this place at their own risk" began
to appear all over Germany. In some parts of the country Jews were
banned from public parks, swimming-pools and public
transport.
Germans were also encouraged not to use Jewish doctors and
lawyers. Jewish civil servants, teachers and those employed by the mass
media were sacked. Members of the SA put pressure on people not to buy
goods produced by Jewish companies. For example, the Ullstein Press, the
largest publisher of newspapers, books and magazines in Germany, was
forced to sell the company to the NSDAP in
1934 after the actions of the SA had made it impossible for them to make
a profit.
Many
Jewish people who could no longer earn a living left the country. The
number of Jews emigrating increased after the passing of the Nuremberg Laws
on Citizenship and Race in 1935. Under this new law Jews could no
longer be citizens of Germany. It was also made illegal for Jews to
marry Aryans.
The
pressure on Jews to leave Germany intensified. Hitler, Joseph
Goebbels and Reinhard
Heydrich organized a new programme designed to encourage Jews to
emigrate. Crystal
Night took place on 9th-10th November, 1938. Presented as a
spontaneous reaction of the German people to the news that a German
diplomat had been murdered by a young Jewish refugee in Paris, the whole
event was in fact organized by the NSDAP.
During
Crystal Night over 7,500 Jewish shops were destroyed and 400 synagogues
were burnt down. Ninety-one Jews were killed and an estimated 20,000
were sent to concentration
camps. Up until this time these camps had been mainly for political
prisoners. The only people who were punished for the crimes committed on
Crystal Night were members of the Sturm Abteilung
(SA) who had raped Jewish women (they had broken the Nuremberg
Laws on sexual intercourse between Aryans and Jews).
After
Crystal
Night the numbers of Jews wishing to leave Germany increased
dramatically. It has been calculated that between 1933 and 1939,
approximately half the Jewish population of Germany (250,000) left the
country. This included several Jewish scientists who were to play an
important role in the fight against fascism during the war. A higher
number of Jews would have left but anti-Semitism
was not restricted to Germany and many countries were reluctant to take
them.
Once
in power Hitler began to consider how he could expand the territory he
controlled. Hitler's reading of history convinced him that Britain posed
the main threat to his dream of a Germany that
dominated Europe.
In the
1930s Britain
still had an empire that covered a quarter of the world. In the past
Britain had reacted swiftly to any country that had threatened her
empire or attempted to become the main power in mainland
Europe.
Hitler
respected the British and considered them to share many of the qualities
possessed by Germans. In Mein
Kampf he argued that to achieve his foreign policy objectives,
Germany would probably have to form an alliance with Britain. "No
sacrifice," Hitler wrote, was "too great if it was a necessary means of
gaining England's friendship."
In his
first few years in power Hitler had meetings with several British
politicians and diplomats. He discovered that the British now tended to
believe that the terms of the Treaty of
Versailles were too harsh on the defeated countries and that Britain
was unlikely to declare war if Germany ignored them. Hitler also became
aware that the British had a strong dislike of communism and feared a
Europe dominated by the Soviet
Union.
France
was more committed to the Treaty of Versailles but Hitler guessed she
would be unwilling to take action against Germany without support of the
British. Hitler therefore felt he was in a strong position. With Franklin
D. Roosevelt, the president of the United States,
making it clear that he would not interfere in European disputes and
both Italy and Japan having right-wing governments sympathetic to
Germany, Hitler felt he was in a position to make a move.
In
October 1933, Hitler withdrew from the League of
Nations and claimed that he had done so because of the failure of
the disarmament talks. Hitler argued that under the Treaty of
Versailles Germany was militarily weak. He said that Germany had
been willing to keep to this state of affairs if other countries
disarmed. As this had not happened, Germany now had to take measures to
protect herself.
In the
months that followed, Hitler trebled the size of the German
Army and completely ignored the restrictions on weapons that had
been imposed by the Treaty of Versailles. By 1935, when it was clear
that no action was going to be taken against Germany for breaking the
Treaty of Versailles, Hitler felt strong enough to introduce military
conscription.
Hitler
was not sure how far he could go and was constantly looking for clues
that would reveal at what point Britain and France would go to war with
Germany. Hitler was heartened when Benito
Mussolini was allowed to send his army Ethiopia in October 1935
without any serious political reaction.
Hitler
knew that both France and Britain were militarily stronger than Germany.
However, he became convinced that they were unwilling to go to war. He
therefore decided to break another aspect of the Treaty of
Versailles by sending German troops into the Rhineland.
The
German generals were very much against the plan, claiming that the French
Army would win a victory in the military conflict that was bound to
follow this action. Hitler ignored their advice and on 1st March, 1936,
three German battalions marched into the Rhineland.
The
French government was horrified to find German troops on their border
but were unwilling to take action without the support of the British.
The British government argued against going to war over the issue and
justified its position by claiming that "Germany was only marching into
its own back yard.".
Hitler's gamble had come off and, full of confidence, he began to
make plans to make Austria part of Germany (Anschluss).
In February, 1938, Hitler invited Kurt von
Schuschnigg, the Austrian Chancellor, to meet him at Berchtesgarden.
Hitler demanded concessions for the Austrian Nazi Party. Schuschnigg
refused and after resigning was replaced by Arthur
Seyss-Inquart, the leader of the Austrian Nazi Party. On 13th March,
Seyss-Inquart invited the German
Army to occupy Austria and proclaimed union with Germany.
After
his success in Austria Hitler was now in a good position to take on Czechoslovakia.
The country had been created in 1918 from territory that had previously
been part of the Austro-Hungarian
Empire. As well as the seven million Czechs, two million Slovaks,
700,000 Hungarians and 450,000 Ruthenians there were three and a half
million German speaking people living in Czechoslovakia.
Although Czechoslovakia
had never been part of Germany, these people liked to call themselves
Germans because of their language. Most of these people lived in the Sudetenland,
an area on the Czechoslovakian border with Germany. The German speaking
people complained that the Czech-dominated government discriminated
against them. German's who had lost their jobs in the depression began
to argue that they might be better off under Hitler.
Hitler
wanted to march into Czechoslovakia but his generals warned him that
with its strong army and good mountain defences Czechoslovakia would be
a difficult country to overcome. They also added that if Britain, France
or the Soviet Union joined on the side of Czechoslovakia, Germany would
probably be badly defeated. One group of senior generals even made plans
to overthrow Hitler if he ignored their advice and declared war on
Czechoslovakia.
In
September 1938, Neville
Chamberlain, the British prime minister, met Hitler at his home in
Berchtesgaden in Germany. Hitler threatened to invade Czechoslovakia
unless Britain supported Germany's plans to takeover the Sudetenland.
After discussing the issue with the Edouard
Daladier (France) and Eduard
Benes (Czechoslovakia), Chamberlain informed Hitler that his
proposals were unacceptable.
Hitler
was in a difficult situation but he also knew that Britain and France
were unwilling to go to war. He also thought it unlikely that these two
countries would be keen to join up with the Soviet Union, whose
communist system the western democracies hated more that Hitler's
fascist dictatorship.
Benito
Mussolini suggested to Hitler that one way of solving this issue was
to hold a four-power conference of Germany, Britain, France and Italy.
This would exclude both Czechoslovakia and the Soviet Union, and
therefore increasing the possibility of reaching an agreement and
undermine the solidarity that was developing against Germany.
The
meeting took place in Munich on 29th September, 1938. Desperate to avoid
war, and anxious to avoid an alliance with Joseph
Stalin and the Soviet Union, Neville
Chamberlain and Edouard
Daladier agreed that Germany could have the Sudetenland. In return,
Hitler promised not to make any further territorial demands in
Europe.
On
29th September, 1938, Adolf
Hitler, Neville
Chamberlain, Edouard
Daladier and Benito
Mussolini signed the Munich
Agreement which transferred the Sudetenland
to Germany.
When
Eduard
Benes, Czechoslovakia's head of state, protested at this decision,
Neville
Chamberlain told him that Britain would be unwilling to go to war
over the issue of the Sudetenland.
The German
Army marched into the Sudetenland on 1st October, 1938. As this area
contained nearly all Czechoslovakia's mountain fortifications, she was
no longer able to defend herself against further aggression.
From
his meetings with Neville
Chamberlain, Hitler had discovered that this man would do anything
to avoid military conflict. Chamberlain was aware of the appalling
destruction that would take place during a modern war. He also feared
that a large-scale war in Western Europe would weaken the countries
involved to the point where they would be vulnerable to a communist
takeover.
Confident that Britain and France would not interfere as long as
Germany headed east towards the Soviet Union,
Hitler began to make plans for his next step. Poland was
the obvious choice as it was in the east and included areas of land
taken from Germany by the Treaty of Versailles. Hitler began to make
speeches demanding the return of Danzig, and German access to East
Prussia through Poland.
Chamberlain now changed tactics in an attempt to convince Hitler
that Britain would indeed go to war if Germany continued to invade other
countries. He made a speech in the House of
Commons promising to support Poland if it were attacked by Germany.
The British government also sent diplomats to the Soviet Union
to talk to Joseph
Stalin about the possibility of working together against
Germany.
The
British government were still uncertain about signing a military
agreement with the Soviet Union, and while they hesitated Germany
stepped in and signed one instead. The Nazi-Soviet
Pact took the world by surprise. Fascists and communists had always
been enemies. However, both Hitler and Stalin were opportunists who were
willing to compromise for short-term gain.
In
August 1939, a group of concentration camp prisoners were dressed in
Polish uniforms, shot and then placed just inside the German border.
Hitler claimed that Poland was
attempting to invade Germany. On 1st September, 1939, the German
Army was ordered into Poland.
Hitler, who wanted a series of localized wars, was surprised when
Neville
Chamberlain declared war on Germany.
Even after it happened he found it difficult to believe that during the
first few months of the war he genuinely believed that Britain
would still negotiate a peace settlement.
For
most of the war Hitler lived underground in a concrete shelter at his
headquarters in East Prussia. It was here that Hitler controlled the
German war effort. At first he was extremely successful. Employing
fast-moving tanks backed up with air support, Germany defeated Poland in
four weeks. This victory was followed by the occupation of Norway (four weeks),
Netherlands
(five days), Belgium (three weeks)
and France
(six weeks). The German Army was amazed at
how quickly they defeated these countries and they became convinced that
Hitler was a military genius.
The
English Channel meant that these Blitzkrieg
tactics
could not be continued against Britain. Hitler had great respect for
Britain's navy and airforce and feared that his forces would suffer
heavy casualties in any invasion attempt. Hitler, who had not seen the
sea until he was over forty, lacked confidence when it came to naval
warfare. As he told his naval
commander-in-chief: "On land I am a
hero. At sea I am a coward."
At
this stage Hitler still hoped that Britain would change sides or at
least accept German domination of Europe. His dreams of a large German
empire were based on the empire created by the British during the
nineteenth century. Although Hitler was often guilty of extreme
arrogance he lacked confidence and tended to hesitate when dealing with
Britain.
Immediately after the defeat of France in
June 1940, Adolf
Hitler ordered his generals to organize the invasion of Britain. The
invasion plan was given the code name Operation
Sealion. The objective was to land 160,000 German soldiers along a
forty-mile coastal stretch of south-east England.
Within
a few weeks the Germans had assembled a large armada of vessels,
including 2,000 barges in German, Belgian and French harbours. However,
Hitler's generals were very worried about the damage that the Royal Air
Force could inflict on the German
Army during the invasion. Hitler therefore agreed to their request
that the invasion should be postponed until the British airforce had
been destroyed.
On the
12th August the German airforce began its mass bomber attacks on British
radar stations, aircraft factories and fighter airfields. During these
raids radar stations and airfields were badly damaged and twenty-two RAF planes
were destroyed. This attack was followed by daily raids on Britain. This
was the beginning of what became known as the Battle of
Britain.
Although plans for an invasion of Britain were drawn up Hitler
was never very enthusiastic about them and they were
eventually
abandoned on October 12, 1940. Instead, Hitler attempted to batter
Britain into submission by organising a
sustained night-bombing
campaign.
Frustrated by his lack of immediate success over Britain. Hitler
began to concentrate his attentions on Eastern Europe. After taking over
Poland,
Germany now shared a frontier with the Soviet
Union.
In Mein
Kampf and in numerous speeches Hitler claimed that the
German population needed more living space. Hitler's Lebensraum policy
was mainly directed at the Soviet Union. He was especially interested in
the Ukraine where he planned to develop a German colony. The system
would be based on the British occupation of India: "What India was for
England the territories of Russia will be for us... The German colonists
ought to live on handsome, spacious farms. The German services will be
lodged in marvellous buildings, the governors in palaces... The Germans
- this is essential - will have to constitute amongst themselves a
closed society, like a fortress. The least of our stable-lads will be
superior to any native."
Hitler
intended to force Norwegians, Swedes and Danes to move to these
territories in the East. Hitler believed that the Blitzkrieg
tactics
employed against the other European countries could not be used as
successfully against the Soviet Union. He conceded that due to its
enormous size, the Soviet Union would take longer than other countries
to occupy.
Stalin's response to France's defeat in the summer of 1940 was to
send Vyacheslav
Molotov to Berlin for discussions. Molotov was instructed to draw
out these talks for as long as possible. Stalin knew that if Adolf
Hitler did not attack the Soviet Union in the summer of 1941 he
would have to wait until 1942. No one, not even someone as rash as
Hitler, would invade the Soviet Union in the winter, he
argued.
Germany was now in a strong negotiating position and found it
impossible to agree to Hitler's demands. As soon as talks broke-up,
Hitler ordered his military leaders to prepare for Operation
Barbarossa. The plan was for the invasion of the Soviet
Union to start on the 15th May, 1941. Hitler believed that this would
give the German Army enough time to take control of the country before
the harsh Soviet winter set in.
Hitler's plan was to attack the Soviet Union in three main army
groups: in the north towards Leningrad,
in the centre towards Moscow and in the south towards Kiev. The German
High Command argued that the attack should concentrate on Moscow, the
Soviet Union's main communication centre. Hitler rejected the suggestion
and was confident that the German army could achieve all three
objectives before the arrival of winter.
There
was also disagreement about Hitler's plans for the territory captured in
the Soviet Union. Himmler's SS
rather
than the army was to take control. The SS were
instructed to wipe out all aspects of communism in the Soviet
Union.
Communist officials should be executed and, as the Russians
were 'sub-human', ordinary conventions of behaviour
towards captured
soldiers did not apply. It is estimated that during the first year of
invasion, over a million communists
were executed by the SS. Senior
officers objected on tactical as well as humanitarian grounds. They
argued that knowledge that they faced death or torture would encourage
the Soviets to carry on fighting instead of surrendering.
Hitler, as always, was unwilling to listen to opposing arguments.
If his advisers persisted in disagreeing with him
they were
dismissed. Of the seventeen field-marshals only one managed to keep his
post throughout the war. Thirty-six
colonel-generals were also
involved in advising Hitler during the Second World
War. Of these, twenty-six were sacked or executed. As seven were
killed in action, only three managed to hold on to their positions
during the war.
Hitler's unwillingness to listen to information that might lead
him to change his desired goals constantly caused him problems during
the war. This was especially true of his attack on the Soviet Union,
when he ignored warnings concerning winter weather and poor road
conditions. Instead he relied on information that suggested that the
morale in the Red Army was
extremely low and that they would rather surrender than be involved in a
long drawn-out struggle with Germany.
Hitler was so confident of early success that the German
Army was sent into the Soviet Union with equipment for only a
summer campaign.
At
first the German forces made good progress and important cities such as
Riga and Kiev were taken. However, the heavy rains in October interfered
with the speed and efficiency of Germany's tanks. This was followed by
heavy snow in November and December that brought Germany's advance to a
halt. Hitler refused to accept his mistake and ignored suggestions that
the German army should make a tactical withdrawal.
After
taking over Poland
Hitler had another three and a half million Jews under
his control. For a time there was talk of deporting all Jews to
Madagascar or keeping them confined to a small area in
Poland.
The
number of Jews under Hitler's control grew as German forces advanced
deeper into the Soviet Union. Over two
million Jews lived
in the Soviet Union and most of them lived in the areas under German
occupation. It was while the
SS were rounding up the Jews in the
Soviet Union that Hitler decided on what became known as the Final
Solution.
In
1942, Joseph
Goebbels wrote in his diary about Hitler's plans: "The Fuehrer...
expressed his determination to clean up the Jews in Europe... Not much
will remain of the Jews. About sixty per cent of them will have to be
liquidated; only about forty per cent can be used for forced
labour."
Special units from the SS were set up under the control of Heinrich
Himmler to carry out this extermination programme. At first
the victims were shot but, with a high proportion of those involved in
the killings suffering from nervous breakdowns a more impersonal method
was developed.
By the
beginning of 1942 over 500,000 Jews in Poland and Russia had been killed
by the Schutz
Staffeinel (SS). At the Wannsee
Conference held in January 1942, Reinhard
Heydrich chaired a meeting to consider what to do with the large
number of Jews in Germany's concentration
camps. Also at the meeting were Heinrich
Muller, Adolf
Eichmann and Roland
Friesler.
Those
at the meeting eventually decided on what became known as the Final
Solution. From that date the extermination of the Jews became a
systematically organized operation. After this date extermination
camps were established in the east that had the capacity to kill
large numbers including Belzec (15,000 a day), Sobibor (20,000),
Treblinka (25,000) and Majdanek (25,000).
It was
decided to make the extermination of the Jews a
systematically organized operation. After this date extermination
camps were established in the east that had the capacity to kill
large numbers including Belzec (15,000 a day), Sobibor (20,000),
Treblinka (25,000) and Majdanek (25,000). It has been estimated that
between 1942 and 1945 around 18 million were sent to extermination
camps. Of these, historians have estimated that between five and eleven
million were killed.
Except
for the execution of Ernst
Roehm, Hitler never showed any signs of remorse when people died
because of his actions. It was reported that Hitler used to laugh when
Joseph
Goebbels described the sufferings of the Jews.
Hitler
also showed little concern over the numbers of Germans who died. Late in
the war, when all chance of victory had
disappeared, he gave orders
that resulted in thousands of German soldiers being unnecessarily
killed. When commanders refused to carry out these orders he had them
executed. Hitler never showed any signs of regret for these
actions.
He once remarked that a guilty conscience was a Jewish
invention.
At the
start of the Second World
War, President Franklin
D. Roosevelt announced the intention of the United States to
remain neutral. Roosevelt was personally hostile to Hitler's Nazi
dictatorship but he was aware that the American people had no desire to
become involved in the war. However, Roosevelt did arrange for Britain
to receive supplies and loans that enabled her to continue fighting the
war.
Hitler
believed that he would eventually be forced to fight the United States
but he wanted to make sure that he controlled Europe before that
happened. He gave strict instructions that German submarines should
avoid firing on ships that were likely to be carrying American
passengers. He also attempted to persuade his Japanese allies to attack
the Soviet Union and to leave the United States alone. They ignored
Hitler's advice and on December 7, 1941, the Japanese Air Force
attacked
Pearl
Harbor and declared war on the United States.
Hitler, who had not been told of Japanese plans, was furious at
first that the United States had been dragged into the war. Hitler, who
had previously called the Japanese "honorary Aryans" claimed that this
is what happens what your allies are not Anglo-Saxons.
President Franklin
D. Roosevelt declared war on Japan but did
not mention Germany in
his speech. It was still possible for Hitler to postpone the war with
the United States but he decided to honour his treaty obligations with
Japan, and on December 11 announced that Germany was at war with the
United States. Once again he became a victim of his own prejudice.
Hitler claimed that America had been "corrupted by Jewish and African
blood" and would be no match for Aryans.
In the
second campaign on the Soviet Union
Hitler concentrated his attack on Stalingrad.
During the winter of 1941-42 the Soviets had reorganised their defences
and were able to halt the German advances. In the autumn of 1942 they
counter-attacked and by November the German Sixth Army was surrounded.
The German Army commander in
the Soviet Union, Freidrich
Paulus, asked permission to break out, but Hitler, refusing to
believe the Soviets could beat Germany in battle, told Paulus to stand
and fight. On February 2, 1943, Paulus and the Sixth Army were forced to
surrender. Out of the 265,000 men, 100,000 had been killed, 34,000
wounded and 90,000 taken prisoner.
Once
again Hitler refused to accept responsibility and failed to learn from
the defeat. He blamed Hermann
Goering and the Luftwaffe for not
providing the Sixth Army with the necessary support. He also claimed
that he was travelling by train during an important stage of the battle
and was therefore not in a position to direct operations which would
have enabled the Sixth Army to defeat the Soviet forces.
The
German defeat at Stalingrad was the turning point in the war. The Soviet
army now began to advance from the East. For the rest of the war Germany
was on the retreat.
Hitler
had always found it difficult to cope with defeat. He refused to believe
he was guilty of mistakes and instead accused those around him of
betrayal. Hitler began to suffer from depression and his insomnia became
worse.
Hitler's health deteriorated rapidly. He was constantly ill with
stomach pains, headaches, nausea, shivering fits and diarrhoea and was
now completely dependent on drugs. In September 1944, Hitler suffered a
heart attack and was forced to spend several days in bed.
Hitler
was constantly tired. He rarely got out of bed before 11.00 a.m. At noon
he was informed of the latest military developments. After quickly
considering the news Hitler issued his orders to the relevant military
personnel. After Germany's defeat at Stalingrad,
Hitler was unwilling to discuss the war outside these conferences and
refused to read reports that gave bad news. His secretaries, for
example, were ordered not to mention the war in Hitler's
presence.
Hitler
would then have a long lunch followed by an afternoon nap. When Hitler
was asleep no one was allowed to
disturb him. Even when important
events were taking place, such as the allied landing in Normandy,
Hitler was left to carry on sleeping.
Whereas Winston
Churchill and Franklin
D. Roosevelt made use of radio broadcasts to raise the morale of
their people. Hitler remained virtually silent. After the German defeat
at Stalingrad, Hitler only made two public speeches and five radio
broadcasts. Nor did he make visits to bombed areas of Germany.
Hitler also avoided contact with injured German soldiers and rarely
visited the front.
By
1943, it became clear to many senior German officers that to continue
fighting a war on two fronts was bound to end in failure. It was
proposed that Germany should negotiate a peace with Britain and the
United States, which would then allow them to concentrate their efforts
on defeating the Soviet Union.
Hitler
rejected this idea. He knew that the allies would insist on his removal
before agreeing to a deal with Germany.
Some senior officers decided
that the only solution was to assassinate Hitler. In 1943 seven
assassination attempts were planned but none of them was successfully
carried out.
The
most dramatic of these attempts was the July Plot.
On July 20, 1944, Colonel Claus
von Stauffenberg, who was attending one of Hitler's military
conferences, placed a bomb in a briefcase under the table. When the bomb
exploded it killed four people and seriously injured ten others, but
Hitler only suffered minor cuts and burns.
Over
the next few months most of those involved in plot to kill Hitler,
including Wilhelm
Canaris, Carl
Goerdeler, Julius
Leber, Ulrich
Hassell, Hans Oster,
Peter
von Wartenburg, Henning von
Tresckow, Ludwig Beck,
Erwin
von Witzleben and Erich Fromm
were either executed or committed suicide.
It is
estimated that around 4,980 Germans were executed after the July Plot.
Hitler decided that the leaders should have a slow death. They were hung
with piano wire from meat-hooks. Their executions were filmed and later
shown to senior
members of both the NSDAP and the armed
forces.
Hitler
believed that General Erwin
Rommel, Germany's most famous military leader, was also involved in
the July Plot. Rommel was so popular that Hitler was unwilling to have
him executed for treason. Rommel was therefore forced to commit suicide
and the public was told that he had died of a heart attack.
In
January 1945, the Soviet troops entered Nazi
Germany. Hitler was forced to leave his headquarters in East Prussia
and moved south to Berlin. Soon afterwards he was joined by his
mistress, Eva Braun. Hitler talked of the possibility that Britain and
the United States would go to war with the Soviet Union and that Germany
would be saved. He told one of his generals that "throughout history
coalitions have always gone to pieces sooner or later." Hitler was right
that the Soviet Union and the United States would eventually be in
conflict, but unfortunately for him this did not happen until after the
war had ended.
Hitler
was now nearly fifty-five years old but looked much older. His hair had
gone grey, his body was stooped, and he had difficulty in walking. His
voice had become feeble and his eyesight was so poor that that he needed
special lenses even to read documents from his 'Fuehrer
typewriter'.
Hitler
also developed a tremor in his left arm and leg. He had originally
suffered from this during the First World War
and also after the failure of the Munich
Putsch in 1923. It was a nervous disorder that reappeared whenever
Hitler felt he was in danger.
People
who had not seen him for a few months were shocked by his appearance.
One man remarked: "It was a ghastly physical image he presented. The
upper part of his body was bowed and he dragged his feet as he made his
way slowly and laboriously through the bunker from his living room... If
anyone happened to stop him during this short walk (some fifty or sixty
yards), he was forced either to sit down on one of the seats placed
along the walls for the purpose, or to catch hold of the person he was
speaking to... Often saliva would dribble from the comers of his
mouth... presenting a hideous and pitiful spectacle."
Heinrich
Himmler and Herman
Goering both considered the possibility of overthrowing
Hitler. One plan involved Himmler arresting Hitler and announcing to the
German people that Hitler had retired due to ill-health. Their main
concern was to do a deal with Britain and the United States that would
prevent the Soviet Union occupying Germany. The German leaders were not
only concerned about the imposition of communism, but also feared what
Soviet soldiers anxious to gain revenge for the war crimes committed
against their people by the SS
might do.
(Of the five million Soviet soldiers captured by the Germans an
estimated three million were murdered or allowed to die of
starvation.)
When
the Soviet troops entered Germany it
was suggested that Hitler should try to escape. Hitler rejected the idea
as he feared the possibility of being captured. He had heard stories of
how the Soviet troops planned to parade him through the streets of
Germany in a cage. To prevent this humiliation Hitler decided to commit
suicide.
Two
days before his death Hitler married Eva Braun.
That night he tested out a cyanide pill on his pet Alsatian
dog,
Blondi. Braun agreed to commit suicide with him. She could have
become rich by writing her memoirs but she preferred not to live without
Hitler.
The
Soviet troops were now only 300 yards away from Hitler's underground
bunker. Although defeat was inevitable, Hitler insisted his troops fight
to the death. Instructions were constantly being sent out giving orders
for the execution of any military commanders who retreated.
Hitler
made a will leaving all his property to the Nazi
Party. After saying their farewells Hitler and Eva Braun
went into a private room and took cyanide tablets. Hitler also shot
himself in the head. His body was then cremated and his ashes were
hidden in the Chancellery grounds.
The
place where he was buried is now under the shadow of the Berlin Wall.
The man who tried to increase the size of Germany had in fact become
responsible for dividing it into two.
As a
direct result of Hitler's actions, communism, which he had attempted to
destroy, covered the whole of Eastern Europe, including half of Germany.
The Jewish race, which he had tried to eliminate, had formed their own
state and became a powerful force in world politics.
Hitler
left a devastated Europe and with it a warning for the future. His
regime had illustrated the dangers of nationalism,
the obscenity of
racism and the importance of democracy. It was an expensive lesson, but
it did provide the basis for a better future.

(1) Adolf
Hitler,
wrote in Mein
Kampf about receiving the letter that told him he had been
accepted for the German
Army at the outbreak of the First World
War.
I opened the document with trembling hands;
no words of mine can describe the satisfaction I felt. Within a few days
I was wearing that uniform which I was not to put off again for nearly
six years.
(2)
Hans Mend, a soldier in Adolf Hitler's regiment, interview in 1936.
Hitler
was a strange fellow. He spent long periods of time sitting in the
corner holding his head in silence. Then all of a sudden he would jump
up, and running about excitedly, make a speech attacking the
Jews.
(3)
Adolf
Hitler,
Mein
Kampf (1925)
On the 13th October, 1918, I was
caught in a heavy British gas attack at Ypres. I stumbled back with
burning eyes taking with me my last report of war. A few hours later, my
eyes had turned into glowing coals and it had grown dark around
me.
(4)
Adolf Hitler was in hospital recovering from a chlorine gas
attack when he heard that the German government had
surrendered.
Everything
went black before my eyes; I tottered and groped my way back to the
ward, threw myself on my bunk, and dug my burning head into my blanket
and pillow. So it had all been in vain. In vain all the sacrifices and
privations; in vain the hours in which, with mortal fear clutching at
our hearts, we nevertheless did our duty; in vain the death of two
million who died. Had they died for this? Did all this happen only so
that a gang of wretched criminals could lay hands on the
Fatherland.
I knew that
all was lost. Only fools, liars and criminals could hope for mercy from
the enemy. In these nights hatred grew in me, hatred for those
responsible for this deed. Miserable and degenerate criminals! The more
I tried to achieve clarity on the monstrous events in this hour, the
more the shame of indignation and disgrace burned my brow.
(5) Kurt Ludecke first heard Adolf Hitler speak in
1922.
I studied this slight, pale man, his brown hair
parted on one side and falling again and again over his sweating brow.
Threatening and beseeching, with small pleading hands and flaming
steel-blue eyes, he had the look of a fanatic. Presently my critical
faculty was swept away he was holding the masses, and me with them,
under a hypnotic spell by the sheer force of his conviction.
(6)
Adolf
Hitler,
Mein
Kampf (1925)
The masses find it difficult to
understand politics, their intelligence is small. Therefore all
effective propaganda must be limited to a very few points. The masses
will only remember only the simplest ideas repeated a thousand times
over. If I approach the masses with reasoned arguments, they will not
understand me. In the mass meeting, their reasoning power is paralyzed.
What I say is like an order given under hypnosis.
(7) Emil
Kirdorf spoke about meeting Adolf
Hitler for the first time in 1927 in an interview published in
Preussische Zeitung (1937).
The inexorable
logic and clear conciseness of his train of thought filled me with such
enthusiasm with what he said. I asked the Führer to write a pamphlet on
the topics he had discussed with me. I then distributed the pamphlet in
business and industrial circles. Shortly after our Munich conversation
and as a result of the pamphlet written by the Führer and distributed by
me, several meetings took place between the Führer and leading
industrial personalities.
(8) Adolf Hitler, The Road to Resurgence
(1927)
Instead of
raising aloft the merits of race and nation, millions of our people pay
homage to the idea of internationally.
The strength
and genius of the individual person are, in line with the absurd nature
of democracy, being set aside in favour of majority rule, which amounts
to nothing more than weakness and stupidity.
And rather
than recognize and affirm the necessity of struggle, people are
preaching theories of pacifism, reconciliation among nations and eternal
peace.
These three
outrages against mankind, which we can recognize through all history as
the true signs of decadence in races and states, and whose more zealous
propagandist is the international Jew, are the characteristic symptoms
of Marxism which is progressively gaining a hold on our
people.
(9) Adolf Hitler, The Road to Resurgence
(1927)
Germany,
England, France and Italy are dependent on exports. Indeed, even America
is leaving the purely domestic economic circuit and is emerging as an
industrial competitor on a worldwide scale, helped, to be sure, by
sources of raw materials that are just as cheap as they are
inexhaustible. Especially in the sphere of the motorization of the
world. America appears to be cornering the whole world market. In
addition, the outside world has succeeded in breaking down a number of
German monopolies on the world market thanks to the coercive restraints
of wartime and the result of peace treaties.
Finally,
however, the economies of the world's great industrial states are backed
up by their political power. And the decisive factor in economic
conflict in the world was never yet rested in the skill and know-how of
the various competitors, but rather in the might of the sword they could
wield to tip the scales for their businesses and hence their lives.
(10)
Adolf Hitler, speech
to the NSDAP Women's Organization (September,
1934)
The slogan "emancipation of
women" was invented by Jewish intellectuals. If the man's world is said
to be the State, his struggle, his readiness to devote his powers to the
service of the community, then it may perhaps be said that the woman's
in a smaller world. For her world is her husband, her family, her
children, and her home. But what would become of the greater world if
there were no one to tend and care for the smaller one? The great world
cannot survive if the smaller world is not stable. We do not consider it
correct for the women to interfere in the world of the man. We consider
it natural if these two worlds remain distinct.
(11)
Adolf Hitler, speech
(September, 1935)
The so-called granting of
equal rights to women, which Marxism demands, in reality does not grant
equal rights but constitutes a deprivation of rights, since it draws the
woman into an area in which she will necessarily be inferior. The woman
has her own battlefield. With every child that she brings into the
world, she fights her battle for the nation.
(12) The Münchener Post (20th September 1931)
In a flat on
Prinzregentenplatz a 23-year-old music student, a niece of Hitler's, has
shot herself. For two years the girl had been living in a furnished room
in a flat on the same floor on which Hitler's flat was situated. What
drove the student to kill herself is still unknown. She was Angela
Raubal, the daughter of Hitler's half-sister. On Friday 18 September
there was once again a violent quarrel between Herr Hitler and his
niece. What was the reason? The vivacious 23-year-old music student, Geli,
wanted to go to Vienna, she wanted to become engaged. Hitler was
strongly opposed to this. The two of them had recurrent disagreements
about it. After a
violent scene, Hitler left his flat on the second floor of 16 Prinzregentenplatz.
On Saturday 19 September it
was reported that
Fraulein Geli had been found shot in the flat with Hitler's gun in her hand. The
dead woman's nose was broken, and there were other serious
injuries on the body. From a letter to a female friend
living in Vienna, it is clear that Fraulein Geli had the firm intention
of going to Vienna. The letter was never posted. The mother
of the girl, a half-sister of Herr Hitler, lives in
Berchtesgaden; she was summoned to Munich. Gentlemen from the Brown
House then conferred on what should be published about the
motive for the suicide. It was agreed that Geli's death should
be explained in terms of frustrated artistic
ambitions.
(13) Ernst
Hanfstaengel, The Missing Years
(1957)
I am sure that the death of
Geli Raubal marked a turning point in the development of Hitler's
character. This relationship, whatever form it took in their intimacy,
had provided him for the first time in his life with a release to his
nervous energy which only too soon was to find its final expression in
ruthlessness and savagery. His long connexion with Eva Braun never
produced the moon-calf interludes he had enjoyed with Geli and which
might in due course, perhaps, have made a normal man out of him. With
her death the way was clear for his final development into a demon, with
his sex life deteriorating again into a sort of
bisexual narcissus-like vanity, with Eva Braun little more
than a vague domestic adjunct.
(14)
Frederick T. Birchall, New York
Times (19th August, 1934)
Eighty-nine and nine-tenths
per cent of the German voters endorsed in yesterday's plebiscite
Chancellor Hitler's assumption of greater power than has ever been
possessed by any other ruler in modern times. Nearly 10 per cent
indicated their disapproval. The result was expected.
The German people were
asked to vote whether they approved the consolidation of the offices of
President and Chancellor in a single Leader-Chancellor personified by
Adolf Hitler. By every appeal known to skillful politicians and with
every argument to the contrary suppressed, they were asked to make their
approval unanimous.
Nevertheless 10 per cent of
the voters have admittedly braved possible consequences by answering
"No" or made their answers, ineffective by spoiling the simplest of
ballots. There was a plain short question and two circles, one labeled
"Yes" and the other "No," in one of which the voter had to make a cross.
Yet there were nearly 1,000,000 spoiled ballots.
The results given out by
the Propaganda Ministry early this morning show that out of a total vote
of 43,438,378, cast by a possible voting population of more than
45,000,000, there were 38,279,514 who answered "Yes," 4,287,808 who
answered "No" and there were 871,056 defective ballots. Thus there is an
affirmative vote of almost 90 per cent of the valid votes and a negative
vote of nearly 10 per cent exclusive of the spoiled ballots which may or
may not have been deliberately rendered defective.
The endorsement gives
Chancellor Hitler, who four years ago was not even a German citizen,
dictatorial powers unequaled in any other country, and probably
unequaled in history since the days of Genghis Khan. He has more power
than Joseph Stalin in Russia, who has a party machine to reckon with;
more power than Premier Mussolini of Italy who shares his prerogative
with the titular ruler; more than any American President ever dreamed
of.
No other ruler has so
widespread power nor so obedient and compliant subordinates. The
question that interests the outside world now is what Chancellor Hitler
will do with such unprecedented authority.
In the Communist districts
protest votes with Communist inscriptions were rare. In Western Berlin
they were more frequent. In one district five ballots had the name
"Thaelmann" written in. (Ernst Thaelmann is an imprisoned Communist
leader.) One ballot contained this inscription, "Since nothing has
happened to me so far I vote 'Yes.'" It was signed "Non-Aryan."
Interesting also are the
following results: the hospital of the Jewish community in one district
cast 168 "Yes" votes, 92 "Noes," and 46 ballots were invalid. The Jewish
Home for Aged People in another district cast 94 "Yes" votes, four
"Noes" and three invalid ballots. This vote is explainable, of course,
by the fear of reprisals if the results from these Jewish institutions
had been otherwise. It is paralleled by other results outside Berlin.
In all Bavaria Chancellor
Hitler received the largest vote in his favor in the concentration camp
at Dachau where 1,554 persons voted "Yes" and only eight "No" and there
were only ten spoiled ballots.
Hamburg, which only two
days ago gave Herr Hitler the most enthusiastic reception he had ever
received anywhere, led the country in the opposition vote. The official
figures were: Total vote cast, 840,000; "Yes," 651,000; "No," 168,000;
invalidated ballots, 21,000.
The "No" vote, in other
words was 20 per cent of the total vote. Counting the invalid ballots as
negative in intent, the total opposition votes exceeded 22 per cent. The
percentage of the electorate voting was 92.4.
Hamburg is the home city of
Ernst Thaelmann and on his triumphant entry into the city on Friday,
Herr Hitler made it a point to drive past Thaelmann's former home.
As far as observers could
ascertain, the election everywhere was conducted with perfect propriety,
and secrecy of the ballot was safe-guarded. The ballots were marked in
regular election booths and placed in envelopes and these were put in
the ballot boxes. After the voting had ended the ballot box was emptied
on a large table and the vote was counted publicly in the regular
manner. Appraising of individual votes seemed impossible.
One check on possible
non-voters, however, was exercised by instructions that the voting
authorizations issued to those who for one reason or another planned to
be outside their regular voting district on election day must be
returned unless used. The number of such authorizations issued for this
election exceeded anything known before.
Throughout the day Storm
Troopers stood before each polling place with banners calling on the
voters to vote "Yes." Otherwise voters remained unmolested. Inside the
polling places uniforms and even party emblems had been forbidden, but
the execution of this order was lax. In some apparently doubtful
districts brown uniforms dominated the scene as a warning to would-be
opponents.
(15) Adolf Hitler met Kurt von
Schuschnigg, the Austrian Federal Chancellor on 12th February, 1938.
Schuschnigg later recalled what Hitler said to him at the meeting about
marching into the Rhineland in March, 1936.)
Don't
believe that anyone in the world will hinder me in my decisions! Italy?
I am quite clear with Mussolini; with Italy I am on the closest possible
terms. England? England will not lift a finger for Austria. And France?
Well, two years ago when we marched into the Rhineland with a handful of
battalions - at that moment I risked a great deal. If France had marched
then, we should have been forced to withdraw. But for France it is now
too late!
(16) Statement issued by Neville
Chamberlain and Adolf
Hitler after the signing of the Munich
Agreement (30th September)
We, the
German Führer and Chancellor and the British Prime Minister, have had a
further meeting today and are agreed in recognizing that the question of
Anglo-German relations is of the first importance for the two countries
and for Europe.
We regard the
agreement signed last night and the Anglo-German Naval Agreement as
Symbolic of the desire of our two peoples never to go to war with one
another again. We are resolved that the method of consultation shall be
the method adopted to deal with any other questions that may concern our
two countries.
(17) Adolf
Hitler, speech at Koenigsberg (25th March, 1938)
Certain foreign newspapers have said that we fell on
Austria with brutal methods. I can only say; even in death they cannot
stop lying. I have in the course of my political struggle won much love
from my people, but when I crossed the former frontier (into Austria)
there met me such a stream of love as I have never experienced. Not as
tyrants have we come, but as liberators.
(18) David Lloyd
George, Daily
Express (17th November, 1936)
I have just
returned from a visit to Germany. ... I have now seen the famous German
leader and also something of the great change he has effected. Whatever
one may think of his methods - and they are certainly not those of a
Parliamentary country - there can be no doubt that he has achieved a
marvellous transformation in the spirit of the people, in their attitude
towards each other, and in their social and economic outlook.
One man has
accomplished this miracle. He is a born leader of men. A magnetic
dynamic personality with a single-minded purpose, a resolute will, and a
dauntless heart. He is the national Leader. He is also securing them
against that constant dread of starvation which is one of the most
poignant memories of the last years of the war and the first years of
the Peace. The establishment of a German hegemony in Europe which was
the aim and dream of the old prewar militarism, is not even on the
horizon of Nazism.
(19) Basil Liddell
Hart, The Other Side of the Hill
(1930)
Before the war, and still more during the
conquest of the West, Hitler came to appear a gigantic figure, combining
the strategy of a Napoleon with the cunning of a Machiavelli and the
fanatical fervour of a Mahomet. After his first check in Russia, his
figure began to shrink, and towards the end he was regarded as a
blundering amateur in the military field, whose crazy orders and crass
ignorance had been the Allies' greatest asset. All the disasters of the
German Army were attributed to Hitler; all its successes were credited
to the German General Staff.
That picture
is not true, though there is some truth in it Hitler was far from being
a stupid strategist. Rather, he was too brilliant-and suffered from the
natural faults that tend to accompany such brilliance.
He had a
deeply subtle sense of surprise, and was a master of the psychological
side of strategy, which he raised to a new pitch. Long before the war he
had described to his associates how the daring coup that captured Norway
might be carried out, and how the French could be manoeuvred out of the
Maginot Line.
He had also
seen, better than any general, how the bloodless conquests that preceded
the war might be achieved by undermining resistance beforehand. No
strategist in history has been more clever in playing on the minds of
his opponents - which is the supreme art of strategy.
It was the
very fact that he had so often proved right, contrary to the opinion of
his professional advisers, which
helped him to gain influence at
their expense. Those results weakened their arguments in later
situations which
they gauged more correctly. For in the Russian
campaign his defects became more potent than his gifts, and the debit
balance accumulated to the point of bankruptcy. Even so, it has to be
remembered that Napoleon, who was a professional strategist, had been
just as badly dazzled by his own success, and made the same fatal
mistakes in the same place.
(20) After the war General Guenther
Blumentritt wrote about how Hitler reacted after the defeat of France in
June 1940.
Hitler was
in very good humour, he admitted that the course of the campaign had
been 'a decided miracle', and gave us his opinion that the war would be
- finished in six weeks. After that he wished to conclude a reasonable
peace with France, and then the way would be free for an agreement with
Britain.
He then
astonished us by speaking with admiration of the British Empire, of the
necessity for its existence, and of the civilization that Britain had
brought into the world. He remarked, with a shrug of the shoulders, that
the creation of its Empire had been achieved by means that were often
harsh, but 'where there is planing, there are shavings flying'. He
compared the British Empire with the Catholic Church - saying they were
both essential elements of stability in the world. He said that all he
wanted from Britain was that she should acknowledge Germany's position
on the Continent. The return of Germany's lost colonies would be
desirable but not essential, and he would even offer to support Britain
with troops if she should be involved in any difficulties anywhere. He
remarked that the colonies were primarily a matter of prestige, since
they could not be held in war, and few Germans could settle in the
tropics.
He concluded
by saying that his aim was to make peace with Britain on a basis that
she would regard as compatible with her honour to accept.
(21)
William
Joyce, Germany Calling (9th November, 1942)
In the speech which the
Führer delivered yesterday on the eve of 9th November - a historic date
in the annals of the German National Socialist Party - there was one
characteristic which dominated: the note of calm and complete confidence
in victory, based not only on feeling and faith, but upon reason; upon
the knowledge that Germany has in her hands the means of winning this
war; that the raw materials at her disposal are sufficient for the
purpose; that her food supplies are assured; and that, as the Führer
said, wherever the battle front might be, Germany would always parry
every thrust and go over to the offensive. No doubt the press and radio,
secure in the knowledge that the vast majority of their public
understand no German, have given quite a different impression of the
speech, in accordance with their established custom. But every German
who listened to the Führer yesterday must have realised more clearly
than ever what immense reserves of strength his country possesses, and
what singleness of purpose actuates its leaders. As Adolf Hitler said:
'We shall not fail, and in consequence it is our enemies who will go
down.' The words are simple enough, but they express the funda- mental
and historic truth in which we live.
(22) After the war General Hasso
Manteuffel was interviewed about his thoughts on Adolf
Hitler.
Hitler had a magnetic, and indeed hypnotic
personality. This had a very marked effect on people who went to see him
with the intention of putting forward their views on any matter. They
would begin to argue their point, but would gradually find themselves
succumbing to his personality, and in the end would often agree to the
opposite of what they intended. For my part, having come to know Hitler
well in the last stages of the war, I had learnt how to keep him to the
point, and maintain my own argument. I did not feel afraid of Hitler, as
so many did. He often called me to his headquarters for consultation,
after that Christmastide I had spent at his headquarters by invitation,
following the successful stroke at Zhitomir that had attracted his
attention.
Hitler had
read a lot of military literature, and was also fond of listening to
military lectures. In this way, coupled with his personal experience of
the last war as an ordinary soldier, he had gained a very good knowledge
of the lower level of warfare - the properties of the different weapons;
the effect of ground and weather; the mentality and morale of troops. He
was particularly good in gauging how the troops felt. I found that I was
hardly ever in disagreement with his view when discussing such matters.
On the other hand he had no idea of the higher strategical and tactical
combinations. He had a good grasp of how a single division moved and
fought, but he did not understand how armies operated.
(23) Traudl Junge, was
Adolf Hitler's personal secretary. She later commented on his views on
women.
Hitler didn't marry, he said
himself, because he didn't want to lose his fascination for women.
Obviously, an unmarried man is far more desirable than a boring husband.
As a man, he didn't look attractive at all. It was more that he
personified power - that was his fascination. And also his presence. He
had a way of looking at you with those eyes, which could really set you
alight. And somehow he was a mythical figure for women. He was a
saviour, and he gave off an aura of power, and that impressed women.
Like a Messiah, perhaps.
(24) Albert
Speer was Minister for Armaments and War
Production in Hitler's government. At his trial at Nuremberg
in 1946 he discussed the dangers of modern
dictatorship.
Hitler's dictatorship
differed in one fundamental point from all its predecessors in history.
His was the first dictatorship in
the present period of technical
development, a dictatorship which made complete use of all technical
means for the
domination of its own country. Through technical means
like the radio and the loud-speaker, eighty million people were
deprived of independent
thought. It was thereby possible to subject them to the will of one
man.

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