HITLER
Web Information collected by Patrick Boone
Hitler, Adolf (1889-1945), German political and
military leader and one of the 20th century's most powerful
dictators. Hitler converted Germany into a fully militarized
society and launched World War II in 1939 (see Federal Republic
of Germany). He was against the Jews and built the Nazi Party
into a mass movement. He hoped to conquer the entire world, and
for a time dominated most of Europe and much of North Africa. He
instituted sterilization and euthanasia measures to enforce his
idea of racial purity among German people and caused the
slaughter of millions of Jews, Sinti and Roma (Gypsies), Slavic
peoples, and many others, all of whom he considered inferior.
Early Years
Adolf Hitler was born in Braunau am Inn,
Austria-Hungary, in 1889, the fourth child of Klara and Alois
Hitler. Hitler=s
father worked his way up in the Austrian customs service to a
position of considerable status, and as a result Hitler had a
comfortable childhood. Hitler began school in 1900, and his
grades were above average. It was decided that he would attend
Realschule, a secondary school that prepared students for
further study and emphasized modern languages and technical
subjects. However, Hitler and his father strongly differed about
career plans. His father wanted him to enter the civil service;
Hitler insisted on becoming an artist. As a result, Hitler did
poorly in Realschule, having to repeat the first year and
improving little thereafter.
During this time, Hitler began to form his
political views: a strong sense of German nationalism, the
beginnings of anti-Semitism, and a distaste for the ruling
family and political structure of Austria-Hungary. Like many
German-speaking citizens of Austria-Hungary, Hitler considered
himself first and foremost a German.
The death of Hitler=s
father in January 1903 changed the family. The survivors' income
was adequate to support Hitler, his mother, and his sister, but
the absence of a dominant father figure altered Hitler's
position in the family. He spent much time playing and dreaming,
did poorly in his studies, and left school entirely in 1905
after the equivalent of the ninth grade.
A Time in Vienna
Hitler had hoped to become an artist but was
rejected as unqualified by the Vienna Academy of Fine Arts in
October 1907. His mother died in 1908, and Hitler pretended to
continue his studies in Vienna in order to receive an orphan=s
pension. In reality, he mostly wandered about the city admiring
its public buildings and frequently attending operas, especially
those of Richard Wagner, whom Hitler adored for his heroic
portrayals of German mythology.
When he had exhausted his inherited funds,
Hitler, unwilling to take a job, ended up in a homeless shelter.
It was there that he was first exposed to extreme political
ideas, particularly the racial concepts of Lanz von Liebenfels.
Liebenfels published a periodical about the supposed superiority
of Aryans, an ill-defined race which included Germans, and the
inferiority of other races, especially Jews. At the same time
Hitler acquired a hatred for socialism and came to equate it
with the Jews.
Between 1910 and 1913 Hitler=s
life improved when he began to paint and sell postcards and
pictures for a living, copying famous paintings and drawing
public buildings. He debated ideas with others in the hostel in
which he lived, developing the beginnings of his public speaking
style. Failure to register for the draft in Austria led him to
flee for Munich, Germany, in 1913 to escape Austrian
authorities. He was extradited to Austria but was found
physically unfit to serve in the military. He then returned to
Munich.
World war 1
The outbreak of World War I in 1914 came as an
opportunity for Hitler, as his money was running out. He
volunteered for a Bavarian unit in the German army and served
the whole war. Though repeatedly decorated for bravery, he was
never promoted beyond private first class. In a war of very high
casualties, this is difficult to explain. Perhaps officers
considered him a loner who could carry messages and perform
other dangerous duties but who was unsuited to command men.
Hitler saw trench warfare as a form of the
struggle for survival among races. At the same time, his
anti-Semitic feelings were growing extreme. When Germany was
defeated in 1918, Hitler was lying in a military hospital,
temporarily blinded by mustard gas. He decided Jews had caused
Germany=s defeat and
that he would enter politics to save the country.
Hitler returned to Munich after the war. He was
selected to be a political speaker by the local army
headquarters, given special training, and provided with
opportunities to practice his public speaking before returning
prisoners of war. His speaking successes led to his selection as
an observer of political groups in the Munich area. In this
capacity, he investigated the German Workers' PartyCone
of the many nationalist, racist groups that developed in Munich
in the postwar years.
Beginnings of the Nazi Party
The German Workers' Party, later renamed the
National Socialist German Workers=
Party (abbreviated NSDAP or Nazi Party), became Hitler=s
political focus. Here he found an outlet for his talents in
political agitation and party organization. The party espoused
essentially the same ideas Hitler had picked up in Vienna:
violent racial nationalism and anti-Semitism. He also shared the
Nazis= opposition to
the liberal democracy of the German Weimar Republic, which had
been established after the war.
Though still in the army, Hitler quickly became
the new spokesman for the party. His talent for public speaking
and the use of the local army's resources to generate publicity
drew large audiences to events sponsored by an organization that
had only 100 to 200 members. When he presented the party's
official program to a gathering on February 24, 1920, there were
almost 2000 present.
Hitler was discharged from the army the
following month, and he soon attained dominance in the Nazi
party. He was the party=s
most effective recruiter and, thanks to paid attendance at his
speeches, its most successful fundraiser. When opposed within
the party, he found ways to push out rivals and dissenters.
Several times he did so by threatening to leave the party
himself. Hitler obtained enough support to have himself chosen
as Führer (absolute leader) of the party on July 29, 1921.
Rise to Power
Hitler appealed to a wide variety of people by
combining an effective and carefully rehearsed speaking style
with what looked like absolute sincerity and determination. He
found a large audience for his program of national revival,
racial pride in Germanic values, hatred for France and of Jews
and other non-German races, and disdain for the Weimar Republic.
Hitler asserted only a dictatorship could rescue Germany from
the depths to which it had fallen. His views changed only
minimally in subsequent years and attracted increasingly larger
audiences.
Economic Collapse
At the end of World War I, the Allies (those
countries who had fought against Germany) had demanded that
Germany pay reparationsCthat
is, payments for war damages. The government refused to pay all
that was demanded by the Allies. When Germany failed to pay
enough, France and Belgium occupied the coal mines in the Ruhr
industrial area in west central Germany in January 1923.
In protest, the German government halted all
reparation payments and called for passive resistance by all the
workers in the Ruhr area. This resistance took the form of a
general strike, with laborers throughout the Ruhr refusing to
work. To pay the striking workers, and to make up for money lost
due to the stoppage of coal production, the government printed
huge amounts of new money. This vast increase in the money
supply triggered runaway inflation, as the German currency
rapidly lost value. People saw their savings become worthless,
while the price of goods skyrocketed.
The Beer Hall Putsch
Faced with massive inflation and growing civic
unrest, the German government abandoned passive resistance and
attempted to work out a new agreement with the Allies. At this
point, Hitler decided the time was right to start a revolution.
His followers were becoming restless, and he feared that the
opportunity to launch a coup might pass as the government worked
out an agreement and ended inflation.
On November 8, 1923, Hitler and 600 armed
members of the Sturmabteilungen (or SA, a Nazi paramilitary
force) made their move. They marched on a Munich beer hall where
Gustav von Kahr, head of the provincial Bavarian government, was
addressing a public meeting. Hitler took von Kahr and his
associates hostage and declared in von Kahr's name the formation
of a new national government. Von Kahr was then released, and he
immediately retracted the statement, outlawed the Nazi party,
and ordered the Bavarian police to crush Hitler=s
revolution.
Undaunted, Hitler and his men led a march to the
center of Munich the following day. State police halted the
march, shooting started, and 16 of Hitler's followers were
killed. Lacking mass support, Hitler had no chance against the
police and military power of the Bavarian government. The
so-called Beer Hall putsch (revolt) had failed. Hitler fled but
was soon arrested and tried. In court he practically took over
the proceedings, denouncing both the Weimar Republic and the
Bavarian government. Hitler was sentenced to five years in
prison for treason, but was released after less than one year.
Even though the putsch failed, it proved useful
to Hitler. He received a great deal of publicity and learned an
important lesson about the way to destroy democracy. It was not
to be destroyed by outside force, but by working within its
system to build up popular support, always avoiding a
confrontation with its police and military power.
Mein Kampf
While in prison, Hitler dictated the first
volume of Mein Kampf (My Struggle, translated 1939); after his
release he continued with a second volume. This work contained
many of his basic ideas. Hitler believed that history was the
record of struggles among races. He held that the superior Aryan
race, centered in Germany, would be the final victor and would
rule the world. But to win this struggle, Germany would have to
be ruled by a dictator and would have to be racially aware.
Racial awareness would come through a process of mobilizing the
masses with propaganda that appealed to their feelings, not
their reason, and aroused their hatred for all other allegedly
inferior races, especially Jews. No class or other distinctions
in German society mattered.
Another of Hitler=s
major ideas was the concept of Lebensraum (living space). He
denounced as hopelessly stupid those German political parties
and movements that wanted to reverse the 1919 Treaty of
Versailles and reclaim what Germany had then lost. Instead,
Hitler argued that Germany needed large amounts of territory in
which to expand, a need that he would meet by conquering
territory and expelling or killing the local populations. Such
measures naturally required wars, but not for political or
economic objectives. Hitler=s
wars would be fought to win vast stretches of land on which
German settlers would raise large families. Eventually more land
would be needed, but the population would have grown
sufficiently to provide the soldiers needed to replace the
losses caused by war and to conquer more land. What would happen
when the German settlers met on the other side of the globe was
not explained. |