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    Nazism, commonly known as National Socialism (German: Nationalsozialismus), [1] [2] [3] [4] refers primarily to the ideology and practices of the Nazi Party under Adolf Hitler; and ...

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National Socialism

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Rise of Adolf HitlerRise of Adolf Hitler
Article Outline
V

Hitler Assumes Complete Leadership

Some time after the meeting of February 1920, Hitler's party changed its name to the National Socialist German Workers' party. The new party grew slowly, and principally in Bavaria. Convinced of the necessity, indeed, the value, of violence to achieve its ends, the party soon organized the Sturmabteilungen (Storm Troops), or SA, to defend its meetings; to disrupt the meetings of liberal democrats, socialists, Communists, and trade unionists; and to persecute Jews, especially Jewish merchants. It was aided in these activities by some disaffected army officers, notably Ernst Röhm.

In 1921 Hitler was elected “unlimited chairman” of the party, which in the same year adopted as its official emblem a flag consisting of a red field, in the centre of which was a white circle containing a black swastika. In 1923 Hitler established the newspaper Völkischer Beobachter (People’s Observer) as the official daily party organ. As the German Communist party, founded in 1919, grew in strength, the National Socialists concentrated much of their propaganda on denunciations of Bolshevism, which they characterized as a conspiracy of international Jewish financiers. They also proclaimed their contempt for parliamentary democracy and agitated for a dictatorship.

VI

The Beer Hall Putsch

On November 8, 1923, with 600 armed storm troopers Hitler marched on a beer hall in Munich, at which Gustav von Kahr, head of the provincial Bavarian government, was addressing a public meeting. Hitler took von Kahr and his associates prisoner and, abetted by General Erich Ludendorff, declared in von Kahr's name the formation of a new national government. Immediately thereafter von Kahr was released, and he turned against Hitler and Ludendorff. Following a brief skirmish with the Munich police on November 9, Hitler and his associates fled, and the so-called Beer Hall Putsch (revolution) failed. Hitler and Ludendorff were subsequently arrested. The latter went unpunished, but Hitler received a five-year prison sentence, and the party was outlawed. In prison Hitler dictated Mein Kampf to Rudolf Hess. As later expanded by Hitler, this was a frank statement of National Socialist doctrines, propaganda techniques, and plans for the conquest first of Germany, and then of Europe. In later years Mein Kampf became the bible of National Socialism.

Hitler was released from prison in little less than a year. The National Socialist party was then in a state of virtual dissolution, in large part because improvement in the country's economic conditions had created an atmosphere more favourable to moderate political organizations. During the following years, with the aid of a small number of loyal associates, Hitler slowly rebuilt the party. In 1926 he established himself as the Führer (leader) of the party and organized the armed and black-shirted Schutzstaffel (protective units), or SS, known as the Elite Guard, to supervise and control the party and its semimilitary arm, the SA. Following the onset of the world economic depression in 1929, the flow of foreign capital into Germany ceased, the country's foreign trade declined, the wheels of German industry slowed, unemployment increased greatly, and agricultural prices fell. As the depression deepened, a situation ripe for revolution began to emerge. Fritz Thyssen, head of the Thyssen conglomerate of steelworks and related enterprises, and other capitalists contributed large sums of money to the National Socialist party. Numerous German capitalists were, however, unalterably opposed to National Socialism.

VII

The Party in the Reichstag

The movement grew rapidly, recruiting thousands of discharged civil servants, ruined shopkeepers and small-business owners, impoverished farmers, workers disillusioned with the Socialist and Communist parties, and a host of frustrated and embittered young people of all classes, brought up in the post-war years and without hope of personal economic security. In the Reichstag elections of 1930 the National Socialists polled almost 6.5 million votes (more than 18 per cent of the total votes cast) compared to little more than 800,000 (about 2.5 per cent) in 1928. The 107 seats they won in that election made them the second-largest party in the Reichstag, after the Social Democrats, who won 143 seats. The Communists, who polled 4.6 million votes and who also made a considerable gain, had 77 seats.

The Nazi party took all possible advantage of the deepening depression from 1929 to 1932. Desperate efforts by Chancellor Heinrich Brüning to save the democratic republic by emergency decrees did not succeed in stemming the growing tide of unemployment. Rather, his ineffectual government undermined what remained of belief in parliamentary democracy in Germany. As a consequence, Hitler drew a huge vote in the presidential elections of 1932, although he lost to President Paul von Hindenburg.

In the elections to the Reichstag held in July 1932, the National Socialists polled 13.7 million votes and won 230 of the total of 670 seats. Now the strongest party, although still lacking a majority, they were offered places in a coalition government by President Hindenburg. Hitler refused and demanded sole power. The Reichstag was dissolved, and in the elections for its successor, held in November, the party vote declined to approximately 11.7 million and the party won only 196 seats. The combined Social Democratic and Communist vote was more than 13 million, and together the Social Democrats and Communists won 221 seats; but as these parties were bitter opponents, the Nazis, despite their setback, remained the strongest party in the Reichstag. Again Hitler refused to participate in a coalition government, and again the Reichstag was dissolved. On the advice of former chancellor Franz von Papen, Hindenburg appointed Hitler chancellor on January 30, 1933. Then the party began the creation of the National Socialist state.

Late in February, almost at the close of the election campaign for a new Reichstag, the building housing the national parliament was destroyed by fire, and arson was suspected. The Nazis blamed the Communists and made the incident a pretext to suppress the Communist Party with brutal violence; later, the Social Democratic Party was also violently suppressed. Neither party offered organized resistance. All other parties were subsequently outlawed, the attempt to create a new party was made a crime, and the National Socialist Party became the only legal party. In the Enabling Act of March 23, 1933, the legislative powers of the Reichstag were passed to the Cabinet. The act granted Hitler dictatorial powers and signified the end of the Weimar Republic. By a law passed on December 1, 1933, the Nazi party was “indissolubly joined to the state”.

VIII

Organization of the Party After 1933

Thereafter the party was the principal instrument of the totalitarian control of the state and of German society, exercised through the leadership corps of the party. Loyal Nazis soon held most high government offices—national, provincial, and local. Party members of “pure” German blood 18 years or more of age swore allegiance to the Führer, and according to Reich law became accountable for their actions only in special party courts. Nominally, membership in the party was voluntary, and millions willingly joined, but a great many others were compelled to become members against their will. Many civil-service employees were required to join. At its peak, the party had an estimated membership of about 7 million.

The principal auxiliary organization of the Nazi party was the SA, officially designated as the “guarantor of the National Socialist revolution” and the “vanguard of National Socialism”. It extorted large sums of money from German workers and farmers through its annual “winter help” collections for the poor; conducted the training in National Socialism of all German youth up to the age of 17; organized a thorough pogrom against the Jews in 1938; and, during World War II, supplied the indoctrination officers attached to the field forces of the German army and led the home-defence forces of the Reich. Another important party formation was the SS, which during World War II organized special combat divisions to bolster the regular army at critical moments. Together with the Sicherheitsdienst (Security Service), or SD, the espionage agency of the party and the Reich, the SS controlled the Nazi party during the last years of the war. The SD operated the concentration camps for victims of National Socialist terrorism and during the war played an important role in enabling Hitler to win control of the armed forces from the general staff. Still another important party auxiliary was the Hitler Jugend (Hitler Youth organization), which prepared boys of 14 to 17 years of age for membership in the SA, the SS, and the party. The party's Auslandsorganisation (Foreign Organization) conducted National Socialist propaganda and created, financed, and directed National Socialist organizations among Germans and people of German extraction abroad.

IX

Reorganization of German Society

Hitler began to create the National Socialist state by eliminating all working-class and liberal democratic opposition. The Reichstag fire trial served as the pretext not only for suppressing the Communist and Social Democratic parties, but also for abrogating all constitutional and civil rights and for instituting concentration camps for victims of National Socialist terror.

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