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- NAZISM
- The National Socialist German WorkersÆ Party almost died one morning in
- 1919. It numbered only a few dozen grumblersÆ it had no organization
- and no political ideas.
- But many among the middle class admired the NazisÆ muscular opposition
- to the Social Democrats. And the Nazis themes of patriotism and
- militarism drew highly emotional responses from people who could not
- forget GermanyÆs prewar imperial grandeur.
- In the national elections of September 1930, the Nazis garnered nearly
- 6.5 million votes and became second only to the Social Democrats as the
- most popular party in Germany. In Northeim, where in 1928 Nazi
- candidates had received 123 votes, they now polled 1,742, a respectable
- 28 percent of the total. The nationwide success drew even faster... in
- just three years, party membership would rise from about 100,000 to
- almost a million, and the number of local branches would increase
- tenfold. The new members included working-class people, farmers, and
- middle-class professionals. They were both better educated and younger
- then the Old Fighters, who had been the backbone of the party during its
- first decade. The Nazis now presented themselves as the party of the
- young, the strong, and the pure, in opposition to an establishment
- populated by the elderly, the weak, and the dissolute.
- Hitler was born in a small town in Austria in 1889. As a young boy, he
- showed little ambition. After dropping out of high school, he moved to
- Vienna to study art, but he was denied the chance to join Vienna
- academy of fine arts.
- When WWI broke out, Hitler joined Kaiser WilhelmerÆs army as a
- Corporal. He was not a person of great importance. He was a creature
- of a Germany created by WWI, and his behavior was shaped by that war and
- its consequences. He had emerged from Austria with many prejudices,
- including a powerful prejudice against Jews. Again, he was a product of
- his times... for many Austrians and Germans were prejudiced against the
- Jews.
- In Hitler's case the prejudice had become maniacal it was a dominant
- force in his private and political personalities. Anti-Semitism was not
- a policy for Adolf Hitler--it was religion. And in the Germany of the
- 1920s, stunned by defeat, and the ravages of the Versailles treaty, it
- was not hard for a leader to convince millions that one element of the
- nationÆs society was responsible for most of the evils heaped upon it.
- The fact is that HitlerÆs anti-Semitism was self-inflicted obstacle to
- his political success. The Jews, like other Germans, were shocked by
- the discovery that the war had not been fought to a standstill, as they
- were led to believe in November 1918, but that Germany had , in fact,
- been defeated and was to be treated as a vanquished country. Had Hitler
- not embarked on his policy of disestablishing the Jews as Germans, and
- later of exterminating them in Europe, he could have counted on their
- loyalty. There is no reason to believe anything else.
- On the evening of November 8, 1923, Wyuke Vavaruab State Cinnussuiber
- Gustav Rutter von Kahr was making a political speech in MunichÆs
- sprawling BⁿrgerbrΣukeller, some 600 Nazis and right-wing sympathizers
- surrounded the beer hall. Hitler burst into the building and leaped
- onto a table, brandishing a revolver and firing a shot into the
- ceiling. ôThe National Revolution,ö he cried, ôhas begun!ö
- At that point, informed that fighting had broken out in another part of
- the city, Hitler rushed to that scene. His prisoners were allowed to
- leave, and they talked about organizing defenses against the Nazi coup.
- Hitler was of course furious. And he was far from finished. At about
- 11 oÆclock on the morning of November 9--the anniversary of the founding
- of the German Republic in 1919--3,000 Hitler partisans again gathered
- outside the BⁿrgerbrΣukeller.
- To this day, no one knows who fired the first shot. But a shot rang
- out, and it was followed by fusillades from both sides. Hermann G÷ring
- fell wounded in the thigh and both legs. Hitler flattened himself
- against the pavement; he was unhurt. General Ludenorff continued to
- march stolidly toward the police line, which parted to let him pass
- through (he was later arrested, tried and acquitted). Behind him, 16
- Nazis and three policemen lay sprawled dead among the many wounded.
- The next year, R÷hm and his band joined forces with the fledgling
- National Socialist Party in Adolf HitlerÆs Munich Beer Hall Putsch.
- Himmler took part in that uprising, but he played such a minor role that
- he escaped arrest. The R÷hm-Hitler alliance survived the Putsch, and
- ╓hmÆs 1,500-man band grew into the Sturmabteilung, the SA, HitlerÆs
- brown-shirted private army, that bullied the Communists and Democrats.
- Hitler recruited a handful of men to act as his bodyguards and protect
- him from Communist toughs, other rivals, and even the S.A. if it got out
- of hand. This tiny group was the embryonic SS.
- In 1933, after the Nazi Party had taken power in Germany, increasing
- trouble with the SA made a showdown inevitable. As German Chancellor,
- the Fⁿhrer could no longer afford to tolerate the disruptive
- Brownshirts; under the ambitious R÷hm, the SA had grown to be an
- organization of three million men, and its unpredictable activities
- prevented Hitler from consolidating his shaky control of the Reich. He
- had to dispose of the SA to hold the support of his industrial backers,
- to satisfy party leaders jealous of the SAÆs power, and most important,
- to win the allegiance of the conservative Army generals. Under pressure
- from all sides, and enraged by an SA plot against him that Heydrich had
- conveniently uncovered, Hitler turned the SS loose to purge its parent
- organization.
- They were too uncontrollable even for Hitler. They went about their
- business of terrorizing Jews with no mercy. But that is not what
- bothered Hitler, since the SA was so big, (3 million in 1933) and so out
- of control, Hitler sent his trusty comrade Josef Dietrich, commander of
- a SS bodyguard regiment to murder the leaders of the SA.
- The killings went on for two days and nights and took a tool of perhaps
- 200 ôenemies o the state.ö It was quite enough to reduce the SA to
- impotence, and it brought the Fⁿhrer immediate returns. The dying
- President of the Reich, Field Marshal Paul von Hindenburg, congratulated
- Hitler on crushing the troublesome SA, and the Army generals concluding
- that Hitler was now their pawn--swore personal loyalty to him.
- In April 1933, scarcely three months after Adolf Hitler took power in
- Germany, the Nazis issued a degree, ordering the compulsory retirement
- of ônon-Aryansö from the civil service. This edict, petty in itself,
- was the first spark in what was to become the Holocaust, one of the most
- ghastly episodes in the modern history of mankind. Before he campaign
- against the Jews was halted by the defeat of Germany, something like 11
- million people had been slaughtered in the name of Nazi racial purity.
- The Jews were not the only victims of the Holocaust. Millions of
- Russians, Poles, gypsies and other ôsubhumansö were also murdered. But
- Jews were the favored targets--first and foremost.
- It took the Nazis some time to work up to the full fury of their
- endeavor. In the years following 1933, the Jews were systematically
- deprived by law of their civil rights, of their jobs and property.
- Violence and brutality became a part of their everyday lives. Their
- places of worship were defiled, their windows smashed, their stores
- ransacked. Old men and young were pummeled and clubbed and stomped to
- death by Nazi jack boots. Jewish women were accosted and ravaged, in
- broad daylight, on main thoroughfares.
- Some Jews fled Germany. But most, with a kind of stubborn belief in
- God and Fatherland, sought to weather the Nazi terror. It was forlorn
- hope. In 1939, after HitlerÆs conquest of Poland, the Nazis cast aside
- all restraint. Jews in their millions were now herded into
- concentration camps, there to starve and perish as slave laborers.
- Other millions were driven into dismal ghettos, which served as holding
- pens until the Nazis got around to disposing of them.
- The mass killings began in 1941, with the German invasion of the Soviet
- Union. Nazi murder squads followed behind the Wehrmacht
- enthusiastically slaying Jews and other conquered peoples. Month by
- month the horrors escalated. First tens of thousands, then hundreds of
- thousands of people were led off to remote fields and forest to be
- slaughtered by SS guns. Assembly-line death camps were established in
- Poland and train loads of Jews were collected from all over occupied
- Europe and sent to their doom.
- At some of the camps, the Nazis took pains to disguise their intentions
- until the last moment. At others, the arriving Jews saw scenes beyond
- comprehension. ôCorpses were strewn all over the road,ö recalled one
- survivor. ôStarving human skeletons stumbled toward us. They fell
- right down in front of our eyes and lay there gasping out their last
- breath.ö What had begun as a mean little edict against Jewish civil
- servants was now ending the death six million Jews, Poles, gypsies,
- Russians, and other ôsub-humansö
- Uncounted thousands of Jews and other hapless concentration-camp
- inmates were used as guinea pigs in a wide range of medical and
- scientific experiments, most of them of little value.
- Victims were infected with typhus to see how different geographical
- groups reacted; to no oneÆs surprise, all groups perished swiftly.
- Fluids from diseased animals were injected into humans to observe the
- effect. Prisoners were forced to exist on sea water to see how long
- castaways might survive. Gynecology was an area of interest. Various
- methods of sterilization were practiced--by massive X-ray, by irritants
- and drugs, by surgery without benefit of anesthetic. As techniques were
- perfected, it was determined that a doctor with 10 assistants could
- sterilize 1,000 women per day.
- The ôexperimental peopleö were also used by Nazi doctors who needed
- practice performing various operations. One doctor at Auschwitz
- perfected his amputation technique on live prisoners. After he had
- finished, his maimed patients were sent off to the gas chamber.
- A few Jews who had studied medicine were allowed to live if they
- assisted the SS doctors. ôI cut the flesh of healthy young girls,ö
- recalled a Jewish physician who survived at terrible cost. ôI immersed
- the bodies of dwarfs and cripples in calcium chloride (to preserve
- them), or had them boiled so the carefully prepared skeletons might
- safely reach the Third ReichÆs museums to justify, for future
- generations, the destruction of an entire race. I could never erase
- these memories from my mind.ö
- But the best killing machine were the ôshower bathsö of death. After
- their arrival at a death camp, the Jews who had been chosen to die at
- once were told that they were to have a shower. Filthy by their long,
- miserable journey, they sometimes applauded the announcement. Countless
- Jews and other victims went peacefully to the shower rooms--which were
- gas chambers in disguise.
- In the anterooms to the gas chambers, many of the doomed people found
- nothing amiss. At Auschwitz, signs in several languages said, ôBath and
- Disinfectant,ö and inside the chambers other signs admonished, ôDonÆt
- forget your soap and towel.ö Unsuspecting victims cooperated willingly.
- ôThey got out of their clothes so routinely,ö Said a Sobibor survivor.
- ôWhat could be more natural?ö
- In time, rumors about the death camps spread, and underground
- newspapers in the Warsaw ghetto even ran reports that told of the gas
- chambers and the crematoriums. But many people did not believe the
- storied, and those who did were helpless in any case. Facing the guns
- of the SS guards, they could only hope and pray to survive. As one
- Jewish leader put it, ôWe must be patient and a miracle will occur.ö
- There were no miracles. The victims, naked and bewildered, were shoved
- into a line. Their guards ordered them forward, and flogged those who
- hung back. The doors to the gas chambers were locked behind them. It
- was all over quickly.
- The war came home to Germany. Scarcely had Hitler recovered from the
- shock of the July 20 bombing when he was faced with the loss of France
- and Belgium and of great conquests in the East. Enemy troops in
- overwhelming numbers were converging on the Reich.
- By the middle of August 1944, the Russian summer offensives, beginning
- June 10 and unrolling one after another, had brought the Red Army to the
- border of East Prussia, bottled up fifty German divisions in the Baltic
- region, penetrated to Vyborg in Finland, destroyed Army Group Center and
- brought an advance on this front of four hundred miles in six weeks to
- the Vistula opposite Warsaw, while in the south a new attack which began
- on August 20 resulted in the conquest of Rumania by the end of the month
- and with it the Ploesti oil fields, the only major source of natural oil
- for the German armies. On August 26 Bulgaria formally withdrew from the
- war and the Germans began to hastily clear out of that country. In
- September Finland gave up and turned on the German troops which refused
- to evacuate its territory.
- In the West, France was liberated quickly. In General Patton, the
- commander of the newly formed U.S. Third Army, the Americans had found a
- tank general with the dash and flair of Rommel in Africa. After the
- capture of Avranches on July 30, he had left Brittany to wither on the
- vine and begun a great sweep around the German armies in Normandy,
- moving southeast to Orleans on the Loire and then due east toward the
- Seine south of Paris. By August 23 the Seine was reached southeast and
- northwest of the capital, and two days later the great city, the glory
- of France, was liberated after four years of German occupation when
- General Jacques LeclercÆs French 2nd Armored Division and the U.S. 4th
- Infantry Division broke into it and found that French resistance units
- were largely in control.
-