With a lock of hair falling over his forehead and a square little mustache on
his often somber face, Adolf Hitler seemed a comical figure when he first
entered into politics. He was a public speaker who ranted and raved until his
voice was hoarse and sweat dripped from his brow. With the help of fanatic
disciples and gullible masses, Hitler profoundly changed Germany and the
political face of Europe. An evil genius, he unleashed the most terrible war in
history and unprecedented genocide in which more than six million Jews died. In
addition, he killed five million Poles, Slavs, Gypsies, Russians and believed
political enemies.
Hitler is called mad but were the men around him also
mad? They were cultivated, educated, learned men. Germany wasn’t a backward
country, preyed on by ignorance, but one of the most advanced nations in the
world; renown for great scientific and cultural achievements. His program was
one for evil and destruction and yet the majority of the people in Germany
accepted it. How did Hitler come to power? The people of Germany were weakened
in the aftermath of World War I and therefore were willing to listen to his
ideas. Those ideas have lived on, unfortunately. Many around the world still
find inspiration in his words. Also have lived on, the memories. Time has not
dimmed these terms: storm troops, gas chambers, death camps, and holocaust. A
new generation asks, why?
On the morning of September 15 1930, early
editions of newspapers across Germany brought the first reports that Adolf
Hitler’s National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP) had scored a stunning
electoral triumph. Only two years earlier, the party had languished in
obscurity. The appeal of the Nationalist Socialists was so small that most
commentators, those who recognized them at all, saw them as
a minor and
declining party. Yet, when the polls closed on the evening of September 14 1930,
the NSDAP had become the second largest party in the Weimar Republic (Hamilton
4-6).
The NSDAP was founded as “Deutschearbei Partei”, (DAP) or the German
Workers Party in
Munich, during January 1919 (71). It was one of a number of
parties clustered along the outskirts of
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German politics in
the immediate post-war period. Initially, it was hardly more than a debate
society. It had less than thirty members, only three of which were active
political speakers (Kertz 29). The organization would probably have remained
this way had it not been for the extraordinary leadership and propagandistic
talents of Adolf Hitler who joined the party in 1919 (Benz 93).
Adolf Hitler
was born in Austria in 1889. He stood out in no way as a boy and didn’t finish
High School. He moved to Vienna in 1907 and applied to the Vienna Academy of
Art, twice, but was rejected. The heads of the department felt he was not
talented enough (92). They had no idea how this decision would affect history.
When World War I broke out, Hitler enthusiastically enlisted in the German army.
His life was going nowhere and the war provided him with something to fill the
void. He was looking for an adventure. In the war he proved a dedicated and
brave soldier. He was temporarily blinded by poisonous gas and was shot in the
leg. He “learned a lot about violence and its uses” (93). But Hitler was never
promoted to a leadership position. His supervisors claimed that he had no
leadership qualities. They were quite wrong.
At the end of the war Hitler
was disillusioned and angry as Germany had lost. Like many other disillusioned
soldiers, he became very nationalistic and anti-Semitic. Suddenly he was sure
that the purpose of his life was to lead Germany. Adolf the artist was the dead
and Hitler the politician was soon to emerge. It was his remarkable energy and
magnetism as a public speaker that first “shot the party into the local Munich
limelight and later catapulted the movement into national recognition”
(Phillippe 94).
From it’s beginning, the DAP was distinguished from other
German parties. Like the others, it was extremely nationalistic, anti-Semitic,
anti-Marxist and anti-Weimar Republic. But the DAP was determined to win the
support of the working class for its cause. The party emphasized its commitment
to “ennobling the German worker” (Benz 120) and claimed the Jews were
controlling Germany and taking over. In reality, there were only about six
hundred thousand Jews living in Germany and they represented less than one
percent of the population (120-123).
This racist view of Jews was an old
grudge dating back thousands of years. This feeling had always been renewed and
highlighted during difficult times. The Jews were forever a minority and since
the beginning of Christianity, had been outsiders. Christian leaders in ancient
Rome condemned forever the Jews for
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having killed one of their
own, Jesus. Jews were different; they had different foods, dressed differently,
they celebrated different holidays and their ordinary speech was different.
Because of this and because they refused to accept Jesus as the son of God they
were a natural target. At this time, Germany settled into this old and
comfortable routine learning to hate those it had always disliked (Chaikin).
From the very moment of his early entry into the tiny NSDAP, Hitler was
determined to transform the party into a prominent political organization. He
had great plans, most of which came true. His tireless activity (he was
unemployed) and his surprising success as public speaker soon made him
indispensable (Benz 82). By the end of the year, Hitler had become both
propaganda chief and a member of the executive committee. At the same time the
party changed its name to the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP);
or Nazis for short.
Hitler, ordinary as he seemed, turned out to be a
mesmerizing speaker. During 1920, his reputation as a fiery and effective
speaker continued to attract increasingly large audiences to his carefully
orchestrated and powerful public appearances. His voice, his features, his
words, the passion he displayed put a spell on his audiences. He was like a
magician. But it wasn’t just magic; the meetings were always held in the late
afternoons after his audiences had left work (Hamilton 310). They were more
susceptible to what he had to say. The mood in Germany was grim and his public
was depressed. Hitler took advantage of all their weaknesses. Doctors, lawyers,
teachers and other members of the upper class, as well as workers began to join
the Nazi party.
Hitler dressed up his creed with symbols of power. He put
his early Nazi followers into brown-shirted uniforms and called them storm
troops or SA. The name inspired fear. So did the way they looked and the sound
of their boots. Hitler also created a Nazi flag: a red banner with a black
swastika on a white circle. He did not invent the swastika and before he adopted
it, the swastika was a positive, spiritual symbol that meant life and was used
by many cultures (Beers 65).
Hitler’s followers left the meeting halls after
he spoke shouting “Heil Hitler! Heil Hitler!” (Kertz 17). Fired by his words,
they went out into the streets singing angrily, “When Jewish blood flows from
our
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knives, things will be better!” (18) Not only did they
sing, they looked for Jews to beat up. With bully bravado, between 10 and 15 of
them would gang up on just one person. Hitler’s followers were everywhere. Out
of fear or out of sentiment, the public hesitated to interfere.
Did the
German government try to stop the brutality? It did, but by the time, the police
got there, the aggressors had dispersed. In addition, the Weimar Republic, the
German government was not very powerful. From it’s foundation during the
coalition of 1918, two days before the end of World War II, until it’s demise
with Nazi assumption of power in 1933, the Weimar Republic was burdened by a
series of overlapping, political, social, and economic problems (Hamilton
79-83). It arose from the turmoil of war in Germany and was viewed as
responsible for German loss of the war. A lot of hostility towards it was also
due to the Versailles Treaty.
Germany had agreed with the Allies to stop the
fighting, believing that President Woodrow Wilson’s idealistic “Fourteen Points”
would be the basis for a negotiated peace treaty. They found that the treaty was
not negotiable and the German delegation was advised to agree or be taken over.
The Allies, against President Wilson’s wishes, were determined to get their
revenge on Germany. Under the terms of the treaty, Germany was charged with sole
responsibility for the war, stripped of it’s colonial empire and a huge chunk of
its land, and forced to pay heavy reparations (Beers 317). The treaty seriously
disrupted German political and economic life and was considered horribly unfair
by Germans and non-Germans alike. In essence, the end to World War I was the
beginning of World War II.
By early 1923, Hitler was in firm command of the
Nazi party. As he was responsible for the growth of the group, he could and did
set himself up as its leader. Hitler was ready to test the political waters. He
wasn’t willing to wait any longer and ruled out participation in electoral
politics as the road to power. He was convinced that the Republic could be
toppled by revolution. At the time, the Republic seemed vulnerable (Kertz 52).
The Weimar Republic was determined to avoid the postwar recession and mass
unemployment among the millions of demobilized veterans. It also had to pay
pensions to millions of injured veterans, widows, sons and other surviving
dependents of the war dead. It also, of course had to pay billions of dollars in
war reparations. The result of all these economic demands was high inflation and
the result of the
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inflation was a dramatic deterioration of
the Reichmark’s (RM) value. In January 1922, a dollar was worth 8.20 RM. By
December, it was worth 7,589.27 RM. In January 1923, it was worth 17,952 RM. By
August the exchange rate reached an astronomical 109,996.15 RM to the dollar.
(Kertz 52)
Economic life in Germany acquired an almost surrealistic quality.
Imagine that in August you buy a ticket for a streetcar in Berlin for 100,000
RM. One month later the same ticket costs 4,500,000 RM and by November, it’s 150
million RM. In January you buy a kilo of potatoes for 20 RM. In October, the
same kilo costs 90 billion. Bread was more than five times that, eventually at
467 billion (53). The price
of one kilo of beef at 4 trillion simply defies
imagination. Life was madness not to mention how it affected
the cost of
living. As prices went up, salaries went up but not quite as quickly as prices.
Meanwhile, the Allies refused to accept payment for the war offered in
devalued German currency. They sent French and Belgian troops to occupy the
Rurh. A broad political and economic crisis soon developed in Germany. There
“was rampant inflation, high unemployment, uprisings in the Rhineland, a
communist coup in Hamburg, and mobilization of rightist forces in Bavaria”
(Hamilton 79-80). The Republic had the world on its shoulders.
This
atmosphere of political and economic crisis inspired Hitler to enlist the NSDAP
in a conspirational alliance with a number of other German political parties and
right-wing groups in 1923. They planned to overthrow first the Bavarian
government and eventually the Third Reich. When at last the accordingly named
Beer Hall Putsch went into action it was a fiasco. It was not very organized nor
supported by the army. The conspiracy was immediately crushed, Hitler was
arrested and the NSDAP was banned throughout the Reich. The humiliation of the
Beer Hall Putsch taught Hitler patience. If he wanted to gain power, he would
have to do it the hard way: by getting elected (Hamilton 79-81).
Although he
was found guilty of treason and sentenced to five years in prison, Hitler was
released within a year. During his short stay, he was given private quarters and
allowed to receive visits often. While in prison he wrote Mein Kampf (My
Struggle), the bible of the Nazi party. In Mein Kampf, Hitler set forth his
racial views. He said that Germans were the master Aryan race and deserved to
rule the world (Beers 314). Actually, the Aryans were one of the first settlers
of India and had nothing to do with Germany (315). He also said that the Jews
were evil. The evil was in their genes and could never be eliminated.
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While Hitler was in jail, the NSDAP participated in their
first Reichstag election. Although the failure of the Putsch had sent the
already shaky movement into disarray, some order was restored in the first few
months of the following year (Hamilton 86-87). Shortly after the failed
rebellion, Hitler had entrusted the leadership of the group to Alfred Rosemberg,
a man with “little organizational experience and less personal authority over
the group; qualifications which may have highly recommended him to Hitler” (87).
The future Der Fuhrer didn’t want the Nazis to be entirely without leadership
but he also didn’t want to be upstaged.
With it’s leader arrested and it’s
organization banned throughout Germany, the NSDAP floundered. Before the Putsch,
Hitler had given very little thought to any type of plan B should the plot
miscarry. As a result, the party wavered on the brink of disintegration. But the
election of 1924, nicknamed the “inflation election” because it was during a
time when Germany was in a chaotic state due to hyperinflation, was a successful
one. They brought in 6.5 percent of the vote (Phillippe 310).
Starting in
1925, with the institution of the Dawes Plan, a desperate and successful attempt
to rebuilt Germany and create a variety of jobs and stimulate the economy,
Germany entered a period of relative prosperity and political stability. Just as
economic turmoil and political unrest characterized the early postwar period,
the years from 1924 to 1929 would be remembered as the Golden Twenties (Hamilton
123-124). It was the calm before the storm.
For the National Socialists, the
next four years were filled with failed tactic after failed tactic to regain a
foothold in German politics. After his release from the Landsberg prison, Hitler
was determined to reestablish his control over the National Socialist movement
(Phillippe 88). He was also still determined to climb to power the legal way. In
practical terms this meant he needed to recruit more supporters for his Nazi
party and needed to get them to vote for him. But nothing worked. When the
Reichstag that was elected four years earlier was dissolved, new elections were
set for May 20, 1928. The NSDAP brought in
2.6 percent of the vote
(Phillippe 102-105). It seemed that the organization was done with. Until Black
Tuesday.
Half a world away from Germany was the US; the distance didn’t
stop the Great Depression in America from devastating the German economy just
when it was getting back on its feet. In late 1929,
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industrial
production began a steady slide. As production fell, unemployment rose. By
January 1930, over three million Germans were unemployed (Beers 172). Once again
the state of Germany was disrupted and there was misery.
Meanwhile, the
NSDAP was better organized and better financed than at any other time in their
brief history. Hitler had used the years spent in obscurity to firmly establish
his leadership and came to be seen almost like a god to his fanatic followers.
The Nazi machine began to take up steam and they began an extensive
propagandistic campaign.
They promised debt relief to desperate farmers, new
jobs for the unemployed and the perfect
answer to very problem plaguing
Germany. But it was more than that. Hitler and his Nazis provided hope. Hitler
with his words wove a comforting picture of a united, prosperous Germany, which
was exactly what they needed to hear (Hamilton 200-205). The Nazis renewed
success in recruiting members during the Great Depression was tangible evidence
of desperation leading to seeing the NSDAP party in a favorable light.
Hitler promised to save Germany from the long chain of disasters. They had
lost World War I and been forced to accept the brutal Versailles Treaty and then
had to deal with inflation. The Depression proved a new set of problems as well
as the end of prosperity.. Screaming, his voice charged with emotion, Hitler
spoke of acquiring territory and winning glory for Germany. He told them they
were not to blame for losing World War I, they had lost it because of their
enemies, the Jews. Again and again he made the same points. Germans were a
master race fit to rule the world. Nazis were a force of good in the world, Jews
were a force of evil (Kertz 88-90).
Hitler was a visibly organized force
unlike the failed Weimar Republic. In it’s many “centers for good” (Chaikin
132), the Nazi headquarters, financed by wealthy NSDAP members, Germans found
dedicated Nazis “to talk to and drink with” (132) and bemoan Germany’s state of
affairs. In the organized
marching troops, there was some semblance of order
to the chaos. The Nazis and the Jews became the answer; the one to embrace and
the other to hate. This common hate proved the common link between the Nazis who
were of varying parts of the country and status.
Soon, there appeared an
upward curve in the Nazis’ electoral fortunes. They became incredibly
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popular and had a major breakthrough in the elections of
September 1930 (Hamilton 22). Their status as a major political party was
instituted. As the depression deepened, the Nazi’s membership began to swell. By
1932, the NSDAP had a membership of 1.5 million (Hamilton 123). The most
important election for the Nazis and for the whole world took place in 1937
after a very illustrious campaign. In its most dramatic stroke, Hitler took to
the skies in a highly publicized tour appearing in 21 cities in six days. Their
campaign was a great success. At this election, the Nazis took 37.3 percent of
the votes. (Hamilton 23) They had finally won.
The result put Hitler in a
commanding position but President Hindenburg refused to name him Chancellor.
This was a very unpopular decision. The Nazis were not yet the most numerous
group in Germany but they were certainly the most active and rather most
menacing. They desperately wanted Hitler to be chancellor. In January of 1933,
President Hindenburg finally asked Hitler to become Chancellor (Phillippe 117).
Because the Nazis did not have a majority of seats in the Reichstag, Hitler had
to form a coalition government. In 1933 after the death of President Hindenburg,
the German cabinets combined the offices president and chancellor to make
Hitler, Der Furher. He had achieved his goal. He was supreme leader and
unlimited master of all Germany. Now he had the power to make war on the Jews.
He wanted to make Germany Judenrein, free of Jews. He was going to scare them
out.
As soon as Hitler took power, he put his beliefs into practice. He
abolished freedom of speech and assembly, banned all parties except for the Nazi
party and had his political enemies murdered; including
seventy-seven Nazis
whose loyalty he questioned. Herman Goering, Hitler’s second-in-command, ran the
Gestapo, the dreaded secret police (Benz 98). They arrested, tortured and killed
any one who opposed Hitler. Joeseph Goebbels was in charge of propaganda and
utilized all media to spread hatred of the Jews. The black-shirted SS wore on
their uniforms the death emblem, a skull and crossed bones to signify that they
were as obedient as corpses. Their duties were to conduct door-to-door searches
looking for Hitler’s
opponents (107-108). The list was a long one: Jews,
communists, Gypsies, Poles, Russians, Jehovah’s Witnesses, socialists,
unfriendly writers, homosexuals (Benz 107) …. It was possible to be arrested for
anything or nothing at all.
Even his precious Germans weren’t always
satisfactory. German cripples, the deformed and
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mentally ill,
orphans, and the homeless marred his image of the master race. Hitler wanted to
make all Germans perfect physical specimens. All of them tall and strong with
blue eyes and blond hair though he himself was short, with brown eyes and hair.
The Nazis controlled every aspect of German life. They organized Germany’s
schoolchildren into “Hitler Youth Groups”. They wore swastika bands and were
taught to hate Jews. They were also encouraged to spy on their parents and other
adults and to report anyone who said anything against Hitler or his party
(Hamilton 112-114).
And what of the German Jews? They were caught in a
terrifying, situation. No one had ever expected Hitler to become Chancellor; and
certainly didn’t expect him to become Der Furher. His raving speeches and
messages of hatred were to be ignored in a civilized world. Right? The Jews had
suffered from the war and the inflation and the Depression just like everyone
else. Now their home was a strange, hostile, dangerous place no matter where in
Germany they lived and eventually no matter where in Europe you lived.
The
SS “beat Jews in the streets, raided synagogues, trod on sacred Jewish objects,
and burned holy books, laughing and joking as they did so” (Benz 127). They
mocked, humiliated and murdered Jews. Goebbels fed the flames of hatred. All
over Germany, the press reported false acts of Jewish treachery. Stories about
Jews drinking the blood of Christian children (Benz 127-128). The lies rang like
truth when they appeared in bold, black ink on the pages of respected
newspapers.
Movie houses, cafes, concert halls and other public places began
to put up signs reading, “Jews
not wanted.” Signs at swimming pools read,
“No Jews and no Dogs.” As if there was no difference. In cabarets, German
entertainers put on mock weddings between a German and a pig that was wearing a
sign that said, “I’m a Jew!” Hatred and suspicion were everywhere. Germans began
to shun their former neighbors and friends. German mobs felt free to loot Jewish
stores and homes. German children felt free to
bully their Jewish
classmates. April 1, 1933 there was a national boycott of Jewish stores. Armed,
glaring,
uniformed Nazis stood guard outside every Jewish store and allowed
no one to enter. (Benz 127-130)
On March 12, 1938 German troops marched into
Austria. They were met not with resistance, but with flowers. Here too, Hitler
launched a campaign against the Jews. Soon, Austria hated the Jews too.
Jewish stores were, again, boycotted. ( Phillippe 230- 231) The SS made
Jewish men get down on all fours
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and eat grass, then climb
trees and twitter like birds. They made Jewish women run until they fainted.
Now Hitler wanted Austria to be Judenrein too. But they were so annoying he
wanted them out of all Europe. Let the Americans deal with them. Then one day,
he decided he wanted them off the face of the Earth. He would make the whole
world free of Jews. He needed an excuse to do so and was given one by a very
enraged Herschel Grynszpan.
The seventeen-year old was living in Paris when
he received word from his Jewish family that, being Polish they had been
expelled from Germany and sent back to Poland. But Poland no longer recognized
them as citizens and they were wandering around, stateless with invalid
passports in the “no man’s land” between Poland and Germany. On November 7,
1938, or Kristallnacht, “Night of Broken glass” the angry boy went to the German
embassy in Paris and shot the first official he saw. The boy was arrested and
the official died two days later (Benz 230-231). This act triggered off events
the dimensions of which Herschel could not even have begun to understand or even
guess at. It led to the Final Solution, the systematic murder of millions of
Jews all over Europe: the Holocaust.
Hitler committed horrible crimes
against the Jews and many others in the concentration camps, and ghettoes but he
was never punished. In anticipation of his downfall Hitler killed himself in
1945. Because he did it himself he had the last laugh. His book, Mein Kampf is
banned in Germany and considered a dirty word. Most Germans want to forget any
of it ever happened. But perhaps they shouldn’t. The holocaust was plain,
undeniable truth of the horror of humanity. It has been immortalized in
pictures,
in visual and verbal accounts of those who experienced it and
the horrified minds and hearts of the world. If we always remember it and learn
to understand it, then we can prevent it from ever happening again; if we answer
the question, how did Hitler come to power?
Perhaps it is the weakness of
democracies that anyone can take control. Hitler came to power the legitimate
way, through participating in elections. True he broke or bent a few rules and
cheated and lied but probably no more than any other politician. It is common
belief that had Hitler come along at another less desperate time for Germany,
history would have played itself out very differently. Germany was weak.
The
people were miserable and Germans were scared after being hit with wave after
wave after wave of
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calamity.
The Nazis provided the
answer for impoverished farmers, ruined shopkeepers and small-business owners,
workers disillusioned with the socialists and communist parties, and a host of
frustrated and embittered young people of all classes, brought up in the postwar
years and without hope of personal economic security. Hitler did a lot of good
for Germany, fulfilling most if not all his promises. He provided employment and
stabilized the economy. Hitler told Germans they were the master race and
promised them the world. He also provided them with a scapegoat; someone to
pinpoint their anger at: the Jew. If someone had to suffer and pay the price for
Germany’s prosperity then let it be the Jew. Such was their mentality. History
books should not portray the Germans as evil; their eager acceptance of Hitler’s
ideas and policies is the product of human weakness and imperfection.
But
Hitler was evil. Perhaps the most evil of men. An amoral man he viewed his
fellow human beings as mere bricks in the political structure he wanted to
erect. Hitler has hurt and permanently scarred the world with his destructive
message, a message that still lives. But we must never forget the Holocaust or
Hitler. Both event and figure have something to show about humanity that is ugly
but always there; always ready to strike out. If it is forgotten, it might
happen again.
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Works Cited
Beers, Solomon. Hitler’s Rise to Power. Idaho: The
Hunter Company, 1987.
Benz, William. An Analysis of Hitler’s Rise to Power.
New York: Lorne Inc., 1969
Chaikin, Miriam. A Nightmare in History: The
Holocaust 1933-1945. New York: Clarion Books, 1987.
Hamilton, Daniel. The
Nazi Voter. New York: White Stag Publishing, 1982
Kertz, Nadia. The
Holocaust 1933-1945. Boulder Colorado: Seden Publishing, 1972
Phillippe,
Lee. Those on the left. San Diego: Perham, 1975.