Nazism
Nazism was the
ideology held by the
National Socialist German Workers Party (
Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, commonly called the NSDAP or Nazi Party). The word
Nazism is most often used in connection with the
government of
Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945, also known as the "
Third Reich". In terms of ideology, Nazism combines
racialism,
nationalism,
anti-Semitism and
anti-communism, and draws from a variety of other sources. Currently, Nazism is outlawed as a political ideology in modern Germany, as are forms of iconography and propaganda from the Nazi era. Still, remnants and revivalists, known as "
Neo-Nazis", continue to operate in Germany and abroad.
Originally, the term
Nazi was coined as a quick way of referring to the Party or ideology that would later be - and to this day, remains - in close association with
Adolf Hitler (the phrase is derived from the first four letters in the first word of the official name,
Nationalsozialistische,
German for "National Socialist" and often abbreviated with
NS or the word
Nazi).
Nazi was also meant to mirror the term
Sozi (a common and slightly derogatory term for the Nazis' main opponents, the
socialists in Germany). However, the Nazis from the era of the Third Reich rarely referred to themselves as "Nazis", preferring instead the official term, "National Socialists".
Nazi was most commonly used as a pejorative term, but its use became so widespread that, currently, some
Neo-Nazis also use it to describe themselves.
The Nazis of Hitler's time believed in the superiority of an
Aryan race, advocated strong
leadership through a centralized government and claimed to be defending Germany and the entire
Western world against
communism and
internal subversion. Hitler developed the Nazi Party in its more primitive stages and rose to become the movement's undisputable ideographic figurehead. Consequently, much of what is thought to be "Nazism" is in line with
Hitler's own political beliefs, and the ideology and the man continue to remain largely interchangeable in the public eye. However, scholars often disagree when cataloging Nazism as a "coherent ideology." This is furthered by the inability of various modern Nazi groups to decide what their ideologies are.
In both popular thought and academic scholarship, Nazism is generally considered a form of
fascism - with "fascism" defined so as to include any of the
authoritarian,
nationalist,
totalitarian, and right-wing movements that developed in Europe around the same time. However, fascists tended to believe that all elements in society should be unified through
Corporatism to form an "Organic State"; this meant that Fascists often had no strong opinion on the question of
race, as it was only the State and
nation that mattered. Nazism, on the other hand, emphasized the
Aryan race or "Volk" principle to the point where the state simply seemed a means through which the Aryan race could realize its "true destiny". The Nazis themselves, however, claimed to be "German" above all, and less inspired by other ideologies or cultures.
Following
World War II and
the Holocaust, the term "Nazi" and most other words and symbols associated with Nazism (such as the
swastika) acquired extremely negative connotations in
Europe and
North America. Calling someone a "Nazi" or even suggesting that one has something in common with Nazism is considered an
insult. People of all political persuasions often attempt to draw parallels between their opponents and the Nazis in order to put their opponents in a negative light. This is a
fallacy called
reductio ad Hitlerum. See also
Godwin's law and
fascist (epithet).
According to
Mein Kampf (
My Struggle), Adolf Hitler first began to develop his views through observations he made while living in Austria. He concluded that there was a racial, religious, and cultural hierarchy, and he placed "Aryans" at the top as the superior race while Jews and "Gypsies" (the Roma) were people at the bottom. He closely examined and questioned the policies of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire, where as a citizen by birth, Hitler lived during the Empire's last throes of life. He believed that its
ethnic and
linguistic diversity had weakened the Empire and helped to create dissention. Further, he saw
democracy as a destabilizing force because it placed power in the hands of
ethnic minorities who, he claimed, "weakened and destabilized" the Empire by dividing it against itself.
Nazi thought, an extension of various philosophies, came together at a critical time for Germany; The nation had just lost
World War I and was in the midst of a period of great
economic depression and instability. The
Dolchstosslegende, or "stab in the back" legend, held that the war effort was sabotaged internally, suggesting that supposed "lack of patriotism" had led to Germany's defeat. In the realm of politics, these charges were directed towards the
Social Democrats and the
Weimar government, as the latter had been accused of "selling out" the country. Additionally, the Dolchstosslegende encouraged many to look at "non-German" Germans critically, especially those with potential "extra-national loyalties", such as the
Jews. Such an appeal capitalized on
anti-Semitic sentiments.
Nazi rationale also invested heavily in the
militarist belief that great nations grow from military power and maintained order, which in turn grow "naturally" from "rational, civilized cultures". The Nazi Party appealed to German nationalists and national pride, capitalizing on
irredentist and
revanchist sentiments as well as aversions to various aspects of
modernist thinking. Many ethnic Germans still had heartfelt ties to the goal of creating a
greater Germany and some felt that the use of military force was necessary to achieve it.
Alfred Rosenberg's racial philosophy wholly embraced the
Aryan Invasion Theory, which traced Aryan peoples in ancient
Iran invading the
Indus Valley Civilization, and carrying with them great knowledge and science that had been preserved from the
antediluvian world. This "antediluvian world" referred to
Thule, the speculative pre-Flood/Ice Age origin of the Aryan race, and is often tied to ideas of
Atlantis. Most of the leadership and the founders of the Nazi Party were made up of members of the "Thule Gesellschaft" (the Thule Society), which romanticized the Aryan race through theology and ritual.
Hitler also claimed that a
nation was the highest creation of a
race, and great nations (literally
large nations) were the creation of homogeneous populations of great races, working together. These nations developed cultures that naturally grew from races with "natural good health, and aggressive, intelligent, courageous traits". The weakest nations, Hitler said, were those of impure or mongrel races, because they had divided, quarrelling, and therefore weak cultures. Worst of all were seen to be the parasitic
Untermensch (
Subhumans), mainly Jews, but also Gypsies, homosexuals, the disabled and so called anti-socials, all of whom were considered
lebensunwertes Leben ("Life-unworthy life") owing to their perceived deficiency and inferiority, as well as their wandering, nationless invasions ("the International Jew"). The
persecution of homosexuals as part of
the Holocaust has seen increasing scholarly attention since the 1990s.
According to Nazism, it is an obvious mistake to permit or encourage
multiculturalism within a nation. Fundamental to the Nazi goal was the unification of all
German-speaking peoples, "unjustly" divided into different
Nation States. Hitler claimed that nations that could not defend their territory did not deserve it. Slave races he thought of as less worthy to exist than "leader races". In particular, if a master race should require room to live (
Lebensraum), he thought such a race should have the right to displace the inferior
indigenous races.
"Races without homelands", Hitler proclaimed, were "parasitic races", and the richer the members of a "parasitic race" were, the more "virulent" the parasitism was thought to be. A "master race" could therefore, according to the Nazi doctrine, easily strengthen itself by eliminating "parasitic races" from its homeland. This was the given rationalization for the Nazis' later oppression and elimination of Jews,
Gypsies,
Czechs,
Poles, the mentally and physically handicapped, homosexuals and others not belonging to these groups or categories that were part of the
Holocaust. Hitler and his
living space doctrine found immense popularity among the largely condensed German population of over sixty million. The
Wehrmacht,
Waffen-SS and other German soldiers as well as civilian paramilitary groups in occupied territories were responsible for the deaths of an estimated eleven million men, women, and children in concentration camps, prisoner-of-war camps, labor camps, and death camps such as
Auschwitz and
Treblinka.
Hitler extended his rationalizations into a
religious doctrine, underpinned by his criticism of traditional
Catholicism. In particular, and closely related to
Positive Christianity, Hitler objected to Catholicism's ungrounded and international character - that is, it did not pertain to an exclusive race and national culture. At the same time, and somewhat contradictorily, the Nazis combined elements of Germany's
Lutheran community tradition with its Northern European,
organic pagan past. Elements of militarism found their way into Hitler's own theology, as he preached that his was a "true" or "master" religion, because it would "create mastery" and avoid comforting lies. Those who preached
love and tolerance, "in contravention to the facts", were said to be "slave" or "false" religions. The man who recognized these "truths", Hitler continued, was said to be a "natural leader", and those who denied it were said to be "natural slaves". "Slaves" â€" especially intelligent ones, he claimed â€" were always attempting to hinder their masters by promoting false religious and political doctrines.
The ideological roots that became German "National Socialism" were based on numerous sources in European history, drawing especially from
Romantic 19th Century
idealism, and from a biological reading of
Friedrich Nietzsche's thoughts on "breeding upwards" toward the goal of an
Übermensch (
Superhuman). Hitler was an avid reader and received ideas that were later to influence Nazism from traceable publications, such as those of the
Germanenorden (
Germanic Order) or the
Thule society. He also adopted many
populist ideas such as limiting profits, abolishing rents and generously increasing social benefits - but only for Germans.
Hitler's theories were not only attractive to Germans: people in positions of wealth and power in other nations are said to have seen them as beneficial. Examples are
Henry Ford, founder of the
Ford Motor Company, and
Eugene Schueller, founder of
L'Oréal. Nevertheless, the support for these theories was highest among the general population of Germany.
It must be noted that Nazism, as a doctrine is far from being
homogeneous and can indeed be divided into various sub-ideologies. During the 20s and 30s, there were two dominant NSDAP factions. There were the followers of
Otto Strasser, the so-called Strasserites and the followers of
Adolf Hitler or what could be termed Hitlerites.
The
Strasserite faction eventually fell afoul of Hitler, when Otto Strasser was expelled from the party in 1930, and his attempt to create an oppositional 'left-block' in the form of the
Black Front failed. The remainder of the faction, which was to be found mainly in the ranks of the SA, was purged in the
Night of the Long Knives, which also saw the murder of
Gregor Strasser, Otto's brother. After this point, the Hitlerite faction became dominant.
In the post war era, Strasserism has enjoyed something of a revival with many neo-Nazi groups openly proclaiming themselves to be 'Strasserite'. Whether they genuinely eschrew Hitlerism in favour of Strasserism, or whether they simply think that by distancing Nazism from Hitler they can somehow make the ideology more acceptable is a matter of intense debate however.
The significance of homosexuals in the Nazi Party is considered minor by most historians. However, some tiny groups like the International Committee for Holocaust Truth, and authors Scott Lively and Kevin E. Abrams in
The Pink Swastika: Homosexuality in the Nazi Party, argue that many homosexuals were involved in the inner circles of the Nazi party:
Ernst Röhm of the SA (whose execution was thinly rationalized as being based on his homosexuality),
Horst Wessel,
Max Bielas, and others. This perspective is denounced as hateful propaganda by most human rights associations and groups, stirring heated debates and accusations of censorship and "hate-speech" from both sides. Most historians and scholars of fascism do not take the work of Lively and Abrams seriously, and dismiss it as part of a
Christian Right campaign against gay rights. Conversely, some Nazi supporters argue that such claims are simply more attempts to discredit Nazi ideology.
Since
World War II, in which Nazi Germany was allied with
Fascist Italy, there has been a widely held view among historians and the general population that Nazism and
Fascism are closely related. The term
Fascism is often used in a very broad sense, to refer to a variety of
authoritarian nationalist political movements that exist or existed in many countries. As such, Nazism is usually classified as a particular version of Fascism.
However, if one restricts the definition of
Fascism to those movements and governments that called
themselves Fascist (e.g.
Benito Mussolini's regime in Italy and the
British Union of Fascists), a number of differences between Nazism and Fascism can be observed. Fascists tended to believe that all elements in society should be unified through
Corporatism to form an "Organic State"; this meant that Fascists often had no strong opinion on the question of
race, as it was only the State and
nation that mattered. Nazism, on the other hand, emphasized the
Aryan race or "Volk" over state to the point where the state simply became a means through which the Aryan race could realize its true destiny. Although they would later collaborate, tensions rose between Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany over the increasing possibility of an Austria-Germany merger, which would create a more powerful
Greater Germany. In 1934, the
Austrofascist Chancellor of Austria,
Englebert Dolfuss, was assassinated by Austrian Nazis, who acted on behalf of Hitler and the Party.
*
National Socialist Program.
*
Racism.
** Especially
anti-Semitism, which eventually culminated in
the Holocaust.
** The creation of a
Herrenrasse (or Herrenvolk) (
Master Race = by the
Lebensborn (
Fountain of Life; A department in the Third Reich)).
**
Anti-Slavism.
** Belief in the superiority of the White, Germanic, Aryan or
Nordic races.
* Anti-
Marxism,
Anti-Communism, Anti-
Bolshevism.
*
Homophobia.
* The rejection of
democracy, with as a consequence the ending of the existence of
political parties,
labour unions, and
free press.
*
Führerprinzip (
Leader Principle) Belief in the leader (responsibility up the ranks, and authority down the ranks).
* Strong show of local culture.
*
Social Darwinism.
*
Eugenics; sometimes included sterilization and
euthanasia.
* Limited
Religious freedom (Point #24 in the 25 point plan). [
1]
*
Environmental protection.
* Rejection of the
modern art movement and an embrace of
classical art.
* Defense of
Blood and Soil (
German:
"Blut und Boden" - represented by the red and black colors in the Nazi flag).
* "Lebensraumpolitik", "
Lebensraum im Osten" (the creation of more living space for Germans in the east).
* Related to
Fascism.
Nazism and romanticism
According to
Bertrand Russell, Nazism comes from a different tradition than that of either Liberalism or Marxism. Thus, to understand values of Nazism, it is necessary to explore this connection, without trivializing the movement as it was in its peak years in the 1930s and dismissing it as little more than
racism.
Some historians say that the anti-Semitic element, which did not exist in the sister fascism movements in
Italy and
Spain, was adopted by Hitler to gain popularity for the movement. Personal accounts by
August Kubizek, Hitler's childhood friend, have varied, offering ambiguous claims that anti-Semitism did and did not date back to Hitler's youth.Ironically, Germany had been a haven for many Jews over the years, including influencial families such as the
Rothschilds, although World War I and the Dolchstosslegende helped to end that legacy. Likewise, although it had always existed, anti-Semitism was rife in the former German Empire. Historians universally accept that Nazism's mass acceptance depended upon nationalistic and anti-immigrantion appeals (which also could include
xenophobia and anti-Semitism) and a patriotic flattery toward the wounded collective pride of defeated World War I veterans. Early support for the Nazis, displayed in various parades, came from the old conservative order that was the military. Others have focused on anti-Semitism (rather than general
anti-immigration) claiming it to have been central to Hitler's
Weltanschauung, or
world view.Many see strong connections to the values of Nazism and the
irrationalist tradition of the
romantic movement of the early 19th century. Strength, passion, frank declarations of feelings, and deep devotion to family and community were valued by the Nazis though first expressed by many Romantic
artists,
musicians, and
writers.
German romanticism in particular expressed these values. For instance, Hitler identified closely with the
music of
Richard Wagner, who harbored anti-Semitic views as the author of
Das Judenthum in der Musik. Some claim that he was one of Hitler's role models, a comment of Kubizek's that is also disputed. Nevertheless, Wagner's most important
operas, the
Ring cycle, express Aryanist ideals, and contain what some people interpret as anti-Semitic caricatures. The
Bayreuth Festival was also promoted by Hitler.
The idealization of tradition, folklore, classical thought, leadership (as exemplified by
Frederick the Great), their rejection of the liberalism of the
Weimar Republic and the decision to call the German state the Third
Reich (which traces back to the medieval
First Reich and the pre-
Weimar Second Reich) has led many to regard the Nazis as
reactionary.
Nazi mysticism
Nazi mysticism is a term used to describe a
philosophical undercurrent of Nazism that denotes the combination of Nazism with
occultism,
esotericism,
cryptohistory, and/or the
paranormal. The esoteric
Thule Society and
Germanenorden were
secret societies that, while only a small part of the
Völkisch movement, led into the Nazi party.
Dietrich Eckart, a member of Thule, actually coached Hitler on his
public speaking skills, and while Hitler has not been shown to have been a member of Thule, he received support from the group. Hitler later dedicated
Mein Kampf to Eckart.
Heinrich Himmler showed a strong interest in such matters, although as Steigmannâ€"Gall points out, Hitler and many of his key associates attended Christian services.
Nazi mysticism, however, plays a major role in some forms of contemporary Nazism, with a mythology including such ideas as interdimensional
vril-powered
UFO's,
hyperborean supermen, and a
Nazi Moon base, along with the more widely known myth of Hitler having escaped to
the Antarctic. In addition, technology used by the Nazi's was derived from UFO's
.
Ideological competition
Nazism and Communism emerged as two serious contenders for power in
Germany after the
First World War, particularly as the
Weimar Republic became increasingly unstable.
What became the Nazi movement arose out of resistance to the
Bolshevik-inspired insurgencies that occurred in Germany in the aftermath of the First World War. The
Russian Revolution of 1917 caused a great deal of excitement and interest in the
Leninist version of
Marxism and caused many socialists to adopt
revolutionary principles. The 1918-
1919 Munich Soviet and the 1919
Spartacist uprising in Berlin were both manifestations of this. The
Freikorps, a loosely organized
paramilitary group (essentially a
militia of former World War I soldiers) was used to crush both these uprisings and many leaders of the Freikorps, including
Ernst Röhm, later became leaders in the Nazi party.
Capitalists and conservatives in Germany feared that a takeover by the
Communists was inevitable and did not trust the democratic parties of the
Weimar Republic to be able to resist a communist revolution. Increasing numbers of capitalists began looking to the nationalist movements as a bulwark against
Bolshevism. After
Mussolini's
fascists took power in
Italy in 1922, fascism presented itself as a realistic option for opposing "Communism", particularly given Mussolini's success in crushing the Communist and
anarchist movements that had destabilized Italy with a wave of strikes and factory occupations after the First World War. Fascist parties formed in numerous European countries.
Many historians, such as
Ian Kershaw and
Joachim Fest, argue that Hitler's Nazis were one of numerous nationalist and increasingly fascistic groups that existed in Germany and contended for leadership of the
anti-Communist movement and, eventually, of the German state. Further, they assert that fascism and its German variant,
National Socialism, became the successful challengers to Communism because they were able to both appeal to the establishment as a bulwark against Bolshevism and appeal to the working class base, particularly the growing underclass of unemployed and unemployable and growingly impoverished middle class elements who were becoming declassed (the
lumpenproletariat). The Nazis' use of pro-labor rhetoric appealed to those disaffected with capitalism by promoting the limiting of profits, the abolishing of rents and the increasing of social benefits (only for Germans) while simultaneously presenting a political and economic model that divested "Soviet socialism" of elements that were dangerous to capitalism, such as the concept of
class struggle, "the
dictatorship of the proletariat" or worker control of the
means of production. Thus, Nazism's populist
anti-Communism and
anti-capitalism helped it become more powerful and popular than traditional
conservative parties, like the
DNVP. The simplicity of Nazi rhetoric, campaigns, and ideology also made its conservative allies underestimate its strength, and its ability to govern or even to last as a
political party.
Support of anti-Communists for Fascism and Nazism
Various
right-wing politicians and political parties in Europe welcomed the rise of fascism and the Nazis out of an intense aversion towards Communism. According to them, Hitler was the savior of
Western civilization and of capitalism against
Bolshevism. During the later 1930s and 1940s, the Nazis were supported by the
Falange movement in Spain, and by political and military figures who would form the government of
Vichy France. A
Legion of French Volunteers against Bolshevism (LVF) and other anti-
Soviet fighting formations were formed.
The British Conservative party and the right-wing parties in France
appeased the Nazi regime in the mid- and late-1930s, even though they had begun to criticise its
totalitarianism and in Britain especially, Nazi Germany's policies towards the Jews. However, Britain under both Conservative and
Labour had appeased pre-Nazi Germany. Left-wing contemporary commentators suggested that these parties did in fact support the Nazis. Important reasons behind this appeasement included, first, the erroneous assumption that Hitler had no desire to precipitate another world war, and second, when the rebirth of the German military could no longer be ignored, a well-founded concern that neither Britain nor France was yet ready to fight an all-out war against Germany. In addition, some have argued that Nazi Germany was assisted in its development to create a front to counter early Bolshevik ambitions.
In 1936, Nazi Germany and
Japan entered into the
Anti-Comintern Pact, aimed directly at countering Soviet foreign policy. This later became the basis for the
Tripartite Pact with Italy, the foundation of the
Axis Powers. The three nations were united in their rabid opposition to
Communism, as well as their militaristic, racist regimes, but they failed to coordinate their military efforts effectively.
In his early years Hitler also greatly admired
the United States of America. In
Mein Kampf, he praised the United States for its
race-based
anti-immigration laws and for the subordination of the "inferior" black population. According to Hitler, America was a successful nation because it kept itself "pure" of "lesser races". However, his view of the United States became more negative as time passed. In his later estimations, the United States was becoming a mongrel nation, calling it "half Judaised, half Negrified".
See also:
Economics of fascism |
The Nazi Party utilized a right-facing swastika as their symbol, using the colors red and black to represent Blut und Boden (blood and soil). Black, white, and red were in fact the colors of the old North German Confederation flag, based on the Prussian colors black and white, combined with the red and white of the medieval Hanse cities. In 1871, with the foundation of the German Reich, the flag of the North German Confederation became the German Reichsflagge (Reich's flag). Black, white, and red subsequently became the colors of German nationalism (e.g. during World War I and the Weimar Republic and arguably, even today). |
Nazi economic practice concerned itself with immediate domestic issues and separately with ideological conceptions of
international economics.
Domestic economic policy was narrowly concerned with three major goals:
* Elimination of unemployment.
* Elimination of hyperinflation.
* Expansion of production of consumer goods to improve middle and lower-class living standards.
All of these policy goals were intended to address the perceived shortcomings of the
Weimar Republic and to solidify domestic support for the party. In this, the party was very successful. Between 1933 and 1936 the
German GNP increased by an average annual rate of 9.5 percent, and the rate for industry alone rose by 17.2 percent.
This expansion propelled the German economy out of a deep
depression and into full employment in less than four years. Public consumption during the same period increased by 18.7%, while private consumption increased by 3.6% annually. However, as this production was primarily consumptive rather than productive (make-work projects, expansion of the war-fighting machine, initiation of conscription to remove working age males from the labor force and thus lower unemployment), inflationary pressures began to rear their head again, although not to the highs of the Weimar Republic. These economic pressures, combined with the war-fighting machine created in the expansion (and concomitant pressures for its use), has led some to conclude that a European war was inevitable. (See ).
Some economists argue that the expansion of the German economy between 1933 and 1936 was not the result of measures adopted by the Nazi Party, but rather the consequence of economic policies of the prior Weimar Republic, which had begun to have an effect on factors such as
hyperinflation. However, it was the policies of Nazi Germany that restored national confidence, arguably the key ingrediant to any successful economic policy.
Kurt Schmitt (born 7 October 1886 in Heidelberg; died 2 November 1950 in Heidelberg) was a Board member of
Allianz AG Germanys largest insurance company and was a German economic leader and the Reich Economy Minister from June 1933 until January 1935.
Internationally, the Nazi Party believed that an
international banking cabal was behind the global depression of the 1930s. Control of this cabal, which had grown to a position where it controlled both Europe and the United States, was identified with an elite and powerful group of Jews. However, a number of people believed that this was part of an ongoing plot by the Jewish people, as a whole, to achieve
global domination. The
Protocols of the Elders of Zion, which began its circulation in Russia at the beginning of the 20th century, were said to have confirmed this, already showing "evidence" that the Bolshevik takeover in Russia was in accordance with one of the protocols. Broadly speaking, the existence of large international
banking or merchant banking organizations was well known at this time. Many of these banking organizations were able to exert influence upon nation states by extension or withholding of credit. This influence is not limited to the small states that preceded the creation of the
German Empire as a
nation state in the 1870s, but is noted in most major histories of all
European powers from the 16th century onward. Nevertheless, after the
Great Depression, this libelous and unverified manuscript took on an important role in Nazi Germany, thus providing another link in the Nazis ideological motivation for the destruction of that group in
the Holocaust.
These theories were used to justify a
totalitarian political agenda of racialism, which grew to include the racist persecution of Jews while
suppressing dissent.
Like other fascist regimes, the Nazi regime emphasized
anti-communism, opposition to corporate interests not aligned with the state, uniting all workers to work for the common good, and the
leader principle (Führerprinzip), a key element of fascist ideology in which the ruler is deemed to embody the political movement and the nation. Unlike some other fascist ideologies, Nazism was virulently racist. Some of the manifestations of Nazi racism were:
*
Anti-Semitism, culminating in
the Holocaust.
*
Ethnic nationalism, including the notion of Germanic people's status as the
Herrenvolk ("master race") and
Übermensch.
* A belief in the need to purify the German race through
eugenics (this culminated in the involuntary
euthanasia of disabled people and the
compulsory sterilization of people with mental deficiencies or illnesses perceived as hereditary).
Anti-clericalism can also be interpreted as part of Nazi ideology, simply because the new Nazi hierarchy was not about to let itself be overode by the power that the Church traditionally held. In Austria, clerics had a powerful role in politics and ultimately responded to the
Vatican. Although a few exceptions exist,
Christian persecution was primarily limited to those who refused to accommodate the new regime and yield to its power. The Nazis often used the church to justify their stance and included many
Christian symbols in the Third Reich (Steigmannâ€"Gall). A particularly poignant exemplar is the seen in the life of
Dietrich Bonhoeffer.
Perhaps the primary intellectual effect has been that Nazi doctrines discredited the attempt to use
biology to explain or influence social issues, for at least two generations after Nazi Germany's brief existence.
The Nazi descendants have been mute in the post-war democracies, with some exceptions, when interviewed by psychologists and historians. In Norway, a group of descendants have taken the official stigmatizing appellation "
War children" in order to break the silence and to protest against the continuous demonization of their families. Some
historical revisionists disseminate
propaganda that minimizes the Holocaust and other Nazi acts in order to remove the stigma attached to National Socialism. Often, attempts are also made to put a
spin on the policies of the Nazi regime and the events that occurred under it.These revisionists are often, however, involved in political matters and aligned with, or in the employ of, neo-Nazis. This fact itself often casts suspicion on their beliefs.
 |
Adolf Hitler walking out of the Brown House after the 1930 elections. |
The most prominent Nazi was
Adolf Hitler, who ruled
Nazi Germany from
January 30,
1933, until his suicide on
April 30,
1945, and led the German
Reich into
World War II. After the war, many prominent Nazis were convicted of
war crimes and
crimes against humanity at the
Nuremberg Trials, where 21 were executed.
A few scattered people, mostly not from Germany, converted to Nazism during or after
World War II and contributed to further development of the ideology, especially in a spiritual or esoteric direction:
Seán Russell of Ireland,
Savitri Devi of France,
Julius Evola of Italy,
Miguel Serrano of Chile and
Francis Parker Yockey, as well as
George Lincoln Rockwell, within the United States.
 |
A Nazi symbol, the right-facing swastika or gamma cross. |
The Nazi state was founded upon a racially defined "German Volk". This is a central concept of
Mein Kampf, symbolized by the motto
Ein Volk, Ein Reich, Ein Führer (one people, one empire, one leader). The Nazi relationship between the Volk and the state was called the
Volksgemeinschaft ("people's community"), a neologism that defined a communal duty of citizens in service to the Reich. The term "National Socialism", arguably derives from this citizen-nation relationship, whereby the term
socialism is invoked (despite the fact that socialism is traditionally defined as "worker's ownership over the means of production") and is meant to be realized through the common duty of the Volk to the Reich or German nation; all actions are to be in service of the Reich. This notion of the Reich, in turn, was a virulently
nationalist ideology, a tendency that decisively defined its organizational thrust and overall immediate and long-term aims. In practice, the Nazis argued, their goal was to bring forth a nation-state as the locus and embodiment of the people's collective will, bound by the
Volksgemeinschaft as both an ideal and an operating instrument, geared to serve the interests of the German people.
In comparison, many socialist ideologies oppose the idea of nations, which they see as artificial divisions that support the
status quo and
oppression. They argue that one crucial consequence of national divisions is that they lead to wars of aggression, waged for the interest of the
ruling class. The contested relationship between socialism and collectivism on the one hand, and the Nazi and Fascist movements on the other, is discussed at
Fascism and ideology.
An important question about Nazism is the factors that promoted its success in Germany. These factors may have included:
*
Economic devastation all over
Europe after
World War I.
* Humiliation of Germany at the
Treaty of Versailles, and the widespread belief that the German military were not defeated on the battlefield but "
stabbed in the back" by politicians and
Jews.
* A perception that there were a disproportionate number of rich
Jewish bankers controlling Germany's finances.
* Perceived Jewish involvement in
war profiteering during WWI.
* Appeal of
nationalist rhetoric.
* Rejection of
Communism and the perception that Communism was a Jewish-inspired and Jewish-led movement; hence the Nazi use of the term
Judeo-Bolshevik.
* The split in the working class between Social Democrats (SPD) and Communists, exacerbated by the Communists' policy of treating the SPD as
"Social Fascists"* The
Great Depression.
* Hitler's choice of taking power through legal political means rather than a violent
coup after the failure of the
Beer Hall Putsch.
The multiple atrocities and racist ideology that the Nazis followed have made them notorious in popular discourse as well as history. The term "Nazi" has become a genericised term of abuse. So have other Third Reich terms like "Führer" (often spelled "fuhrer" or less often, but more correctly, "fuehrer" in English-speaking countries), "Fascist", "
Gestapo" (short for
Geheime Staatspolizei, or
Secret State Police in English) or "Hitler". The terms are used to describe any people or behaviours that are viewed as thuggish, overly authoritarian, or extremist.
The terms are also used to describe anyone or anything seen as strict or doctrinaire. Phrases like "
grammar nazi", "
Feminazi", and "
Open Source Nazi" are examples of those in use in the USA. These uses are offensive to some, as the controversy in the popular press over the
Seinfeld "
Soup Nazi" episode indicates, but still the terms are used so frequently as to inspire "
Godwin's Law".
More innocent terms, like "fashion police", also bear some resemblance to Nazi terminology (Gestapo, Secret State Police) as well as references to
Police states in general.
Another similar effect can be observed in the usage of
typefaces. Some people strongly associate the
blackletter typefaces (e.g.
fraktur or
schwabacher) with Nazi propaganda (although the typeface is much older, and its usage, ironically, was banned by government order in 1941). A less strong association can be observed with the
Futura typeface, which today is sometimes described as "germanic" and "muscular".
In popular culture such as films like the
Indiana Jones series, Nazis are often considered to be ideal villains whom the heroes can battle without mercy.
Video game website
IGN declared Nazis to be the most memorable
video game villains ever [
2].
Nazism, both before and after World War II, was a quasi-religion to its followers, and like many world religions it had its own venerated locations or sites.
Savitri Devi visited many of them during a
tour of the sites in 1953.
*
Berchtesgaden, home of the
Berghof.
*
Braunau am Inn, birthplace of Adolf Hitler.
*
Feldherrnhalle, site of, the failed
Munich Putsch*
Leonding, where the parents of Adolf Hitler were buried.
*
Linz, where Hitler went to school.
*
Landsberg am Lech, where Hitler was imprisoned.
*
Nuremberg, site of the enormous Nazi rallies.
*
Wewelsburg, headquarters of the
SS.
*
Wunsiedel, burial site of
Rudolf Hess.
Devi also visited some sites, not directly connected to Nazism, but perceived to be of spiritual or German-national significance:
*
Externsteine, pre-christian formation
*
Hermannsdenkmal, statue of Germany's national hero
Arminius the
CheruscanSource: [
3]
#
Peter Levenda,
Unholy Alliance: A History of the Nazi Involvement With the Occult, 2002 2nd edition ISBN 0826414095
# For an account of Hitler's apparent lack of early anti-Semitism, read
August Kubizek,
The Young Hitler I Knew, Greenhill Books, 2006 ed. ISBN 1853676942. Bear in mind, however, this post-war claim is rumored to be contradicted by the pre-war claim made in Kubizek's largely out of print, mid-war
Reminiscences.Richard Steigmannâ€"Gall,
The Holy Reich: Nazi Conceptions of Christianity, 1919â€"1945 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003).
David Redles. 2005.
Hitler's Millennial Reich: Apocalyptic Belief and the Search for Salvation. New York University Press. ISBN 0814775241
Further reading
*
List of Adolf Hitler books*
Victor Klemperer,
LTI - Lingua Tertii Imperii (1947)
*
*
Fascism,
Fascism and Ideology*
Glossary of the Third Reich*
Ex-Nazis,
List of former Nazis influential after 1945,
List of living Nazis *
Pursuit of Nazi collaborators*
Neo-Nazism*
Songs of the Third Reich*
Nazi mysticism*
Jingoism*
Nationalism*
The Holocaust*
Hitler's National Socialist Party platform*
Nazi Beliefs*
Blind Obedience: Fuhrerprinzip and Befehlnotstand*
German Propaganda Archive*
Lithuanian National Socialist Party*
Estonian SS men*
NS-Archiv - Large collection of original scanned Nazi documents
*
AxisHistory - contains a lot of information on the Axis countries
*
National Socialism - Modern day National Socialists
*
Profits über Alles! American Corporations and Hitler by Jacques R. Pauwels