July 1933: Hitler announced that the Nazi revolution was over and “must be followed by the inward education of man” & transformation of Germany →
Gleichschaltung’ ('bringing into line') of society. Aim = align all aspects of life w. National Socialism.
Six Ways to Control Germany
1. One-Party State
• (23 March 1933): Made Hitler all-powerful Fuhrer.
• Law against Formation of Parties (14 July 1933): Nazis = only legal party. Other parties banned; leaders imprisoned.
• Nazi Party members got privileges (jobs, houses). Some joined for business benefits.
2. Terror
• Nazis controlled local govt & police (Gestapo & SS est. 26 April 1933). Germans encouraged to report dissent.
◦ 1934: Nazis formed
under Nazi bishop Ludwig Müller.
◦ 1936: Confessing Church (led by Niemöller) opposed Nazis.
◦ 1937: Niemöller, pastors arrested; banned.
• Jehovah’s Witnesses:
◦ 1935: Watchtower Society dissolved.
◦ 1939: 6k Witnesses sent to camps.
July 1933: Hitler announced that the Nazi revolution was over and “must be followed by the inward education of man” & transformation of Germany →
Gleichschaltung’ ('bringing into line') of society. Aim = align all aspects of life w. National Socialism.
Six Ways to Control Germany
1. One-Party State
• Enabling Act (23 March 1933): Made Hitler all-powerful Fuhrer.
• Law against Formation of Parties (14 July 1933): Nazis = only legal party. Other parties banned; leaders imprisoned.
• Nazi Party members got privileges (jobs, houses). Some joined for business benefits.
2. Terror
• Nazis controlled local govt & police (Gestapo & SS est. 26 April 1933). Germans encouraged to report dissent.
• Night of the Long Knives (13 June 1934): Hitler purged Nazi Party opponents.
3. Propaganda
• Josef Goebbels: Led a propaganda campaign = cult of Hitler. 1936 Olympics = propaganda success.
• Methods: Bands, book-burnings, censorship, cinema, loudspeakers, rallies, newsreels, posters,
Volksempfänger ('People's Receiver'; 2/3 of households owned by 1941).
• Aim = glorify Hitler, create sense of success & unity.
4. Youth
• Anti-Nazi teachers/professors replaced; school lessons = hidden Nazi indoctrination (eg: maths problems re cost of disabled people).
• Hitler Youth: Boys trained in war games & Nazi ideas.
• BDM (League of German Girls): Girls taught to be good mothers, love Hitler.
5. Workforce
• 2 May 1933: Trade Unions banned; leaders imprisoned;
• Nazi Deutsche Arbeitsfront (German Labour Front – DAF) replaced them, reducing pay & banning strikes.
• Reichsarbeitsdienst (National Labour Service – RAD) = public works programmes.
• Strength through Joy: Rewards for workers (cinema, holidays).
6. Religion
• Kirchenkampf (Church Struggle): Religion = ideological enemy to be replaced w. Nazism.
NB Nazis failed to destroy religion; Church attendance ↑ under Nazi rule.
• Roman Catholics:
◦ 1933 Concordat: Promised Church neutrality if it stayed out of politics (immediately broken).
◦ 1933: Catholic newspapers banned.
◦ 1934: Catholic leader Klausener assassinated.
◦ 1935-36: Monks tried for ‘perversions’; Catholic Youth Clubs restricted.
◦ 1937: Pope’s statement: Mit brennender Sorge criticised Nazis → Hitler imprisoned Catholics, closed presses.
• Protestants:
◦ 1934: Nazis formed
Reichkirche under Nazi bishop Ludwig Müller.
◦ 1936: Confessing Church (led by Niemöller) opposed Nazis.
◦ 1937: Niemöller, pastors arrested; Confessing Church banned.