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The Role of Propaganda in the Nazi Takeover
When one thinks of the term "propaganda", what comes to mind? Would it
bring a positive response? Would it bring a negative response? When one
thinks of "propaganda" in association with the Holocaust, what comes to
mind? A positive response or a negative response? Most likely a negative
response. Why is "propaganda" any different from what any political
party or regime does, namely to disseminate its views? Is "propaganda"
simply the name we give to views which we do not like or which we think
to be untrue? And finally, was the role of "propaganda" in the Nazis
assumption of power overstated? (Daniel Goldhagen, 1996) As many people
who are learned in the field of the Holocaust will agree, propaganda
played an extremely vital part in the Nazis rise to power, as well as
their brain-washing of the German population into detesting all, of what
they considered, "heretics" to the degree of accepting their murders.
Validity of the accusations upon which they attempted to justify their
action against the Jews was not an issue. The issue in this case was its
power of persuasion. Although to achieve this goal the Nazi party deemed
it necessary to monopolize the communications, media, and entertainment
industries, Germany already had a strong anti-Semitic background.
European anti-Semitism is an outgrowth of Christianity. Since the time
of the Roman Empire, Christian leaders preached boundlessly against
Jews. It escalated from generation to generation, for as long a the Jews
rejected Jesus as their Messiah, the Jews "challenged" the whole belief
system of Christianity. The idea that it was the Jews that killed their
savior also evolved from that time period. Along those lines, the notion
that all Jews of forever were responsible for Jesus death, for they
approved of the crime, would have certainly done it again (according to
the anti-Semitics), and had always rejected his teachings.
As the Medieval period came, the Christians hatred for Jews further
articulated and was brought to a new level. The Christians in the
Medieval world saw Jews in twofold opposition to Christianity: they
rejected his revelation and were his killers. In addition, church
members had much detested the Jews on the basis that they should have
accepted Jesus as their Messiah. Consequently, persecution and killing
of the Jews became a part of everyday life, leaving many regions of
Western Europe without any Jews by the end of the sixteenth century.
Entering the nineteenth century, German anti-Semitism went through an
acute transformation. It was then that it made its change from a
religious issue, to a racial one. Germans naturally detested Jews, and
with a passion. Nineteenth century Germans now saw Jews as the symbol
for everything awry in their declining economy, even though they made up
but a mere one percent of the population. Soon the cultural taboos that
had formerly shaped the moral fabric of Germany at the time lost all
influence. It was then that German anti-Semitism reached a high point:
false, cruel, yet indisputable accusations. Prostitution, sexual
degradation and depravity, and the sexual assaulting of unsuspecting
German virgins are examples. The Germans also imagined Jew conducting
ritual murders.
By the time the Nazi party instituted totalitarian control, all that
remained was to build on the framework provided by the nineteenth
century. A framework which included anti-Semitism being common
knowledge, Germans obsessive hatred toward Jews, the common belief of
Jews being the reason for their collapsing economy, the belief of Jews
being evil and a source of great harm. This new type of anti-Semitism
was of a savage nature and a logic that it was necessary to rid Germany,
along with the rest of the world, of Jews by whatever means necessary.
Already having a foundation for their cause, all the Nazis had to do was
execute their strategies. Even before gaining full control in January of
1933, they used all possible methods, and even introduced new forms of
publicity, to get national attention and recognition. The Nazi party
sponsored mass meetings and pageants, distributed all sorts of visual
aids and propaganda, and assumed control of the radio and film industry.
Once the Nazis gained control they used all the above means and more to
strengthen their totalitarian control on the German population. By means
of blatant false claims and accusations, the Nazis made untrue
justifications for political and military aggression, as well as
enthusiasm toward Nazi goals.
Hitler knew how he had to manipulate propaganda to get "positive"
results from the population. In his book, Mein Kampf, he wrote:
To whom should propaganda be addressed? To the scientifically trained
intelligentsia or to the less educated masses? It must be addressed
always and solely to the masses.
What the intelligentsia...need is not propaganda but scientific
instruction. The content of propaganda is as far from being science as
the object depicted in a poster is from being art. A poster s art lies
in the designer s ability to capture the attention of the masses by form
and color.
The function of propaganda does not lie in the scientific training of
the individual, but rather in directing the attention of the masses
toward certain facts...It must be directed toward the emotions, and only
to a very limited extent toward the so-called intellect.
The receptive ability of the masses is very limited, their intelligence
is small, their forgetfulness enormous. Therefore, all propaganda has to
limit itself to a very few points and repeat them like slogans until
even the very last man is able to understand what you want him to
understand.
And that is the basis upon which Hitler set up his whole campaign. He
wanted to aim his propaganda crusade exclusively toward the masses. In
doing so they would accept it as a decree. Furthermore, it was extremely
important that the material exposed to the masses appeal to the
interests of the majorities, and not address itself to just the
intellect. Propaganda had to be popular and be geared in order for even
the most simple-minded individuals to understand. Equally as important,
was the necessity to give the people the "conceptual truth," but really
only spreading the information the leader wanted to disseminate.
The Nazis utilized propaganda to saturate Nazi ideology, philosophy, and
mentality into the German population, as well as to change the
traditional German moral standards (as far as behavior). Subsequently,
as the Nazis hoped would happen, the ideas acquired via propaganda would
mature into a part of everyday German life. It would become an issue in
and out of the home. According to Hitler, the masses must not have two
or more enemies. Rather, they should concentrate on one primary enemy:
the Jews. To support this idea, the Nazi propaganda reinforced racist
philosophy on the "normal" anti-Semitism by giving the Jews the title of
"enemy of the common people." Two elements, hatred and racism, were
integrated in propaganda to urge the population to find the importance
of ridding Germany of the parasitic/blood-sucking Jew. In Hitler s view,
anti-Semitism was a vital weapon in the propaganda enterprise. He
insisted that wherever it is used, it has a huge effect, and refused to
it disregarded as a political weapon. So began the obsessive
anti-Semitic propaganda campaign of Nazi Germany. To achieve their goal,
they began using all means of media. Early on, the Nazis began showing
very anti-Semitic movies and shows, as did they air such programs on the
radio.
They were now getting closer and closer to their goal of having the
population detest to the Jews, to the point where the commonly seen
distasteful episodes in Polish ghettos lead the people to accept the
beating, killing, and liquidation of Jews. The Nazis even got
international protests to subside. They aired movies exemplifying the
pleasant conditions in the concentration camps. For example, the Nazis
broadcasted scenes of a masquerade presented at the Theresienstadt camp.
In recognition of the significant role propaganda was playing in the
Nazi s battle, the Reich Ministry of Public Enlightenment and Propaganda
(Reichsministerium fтr Volksaufklrung und Propaganda) was created on
March 5, 1933. Headed by Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi expert in propaganda
and a notoriously persuasive speaker, a new generation of radio, press,
cinema, and arts manipulation was brought forth. Goebbles ran the
department from an old palace which oversaw thirty-two other field
offices. He recruited the brightest, most intelligent young men he could
find to work in his department.
In the Nazi s industrial takeover of Germany, the propaganda machine was
then set up into seven different sections, each in charge of the a
department:
1. Administrative and Organization
2. Propaganda
3. Radio
4. Press
5. Films
6. Theatre
7. Adult Education
Anyone who produced, distributed, broadcasted, published, or sold any
form of cinema, media, press, or literature had to first join one of the
departments and then follow all rules of the department head. That
person was usually Joseph Goebbles. Naturally, no Jews, non-Aryans, or
any of Hitler s adversaries were not allowed to join. Thus, without a
license to practice their businesses, all artists, writers, publishers,
producers, or directors could not work or do any business in their
field. Also along with those quotas, came the prohibition of all Jewish
newspapers, radio, and cinema.
Part of Hitler s master plan was to have his nation to become the most
powerful country in the world; an Aryan nation, that is. Without a
doubt, that requires more Aryans. As a part of this theory, the fuhrer,
with much assistance form Goebbles, began a new campaign. This time, it
was aimed at women.
Hitler wanted to encourage good health and child birth among women.
There were two things that constituted this: having women take on a
nursing, house-wife role and for them to make time for activity, such as
sports. However, it would not be easy to entice women to compromise on
giving up what they considered to be a trim figure.
Hitler needed to replace the traditional fit look for women with a more
substantial motherly looking image (Seymour Rossel, The Holocaust:
The World and the Jews, 1933-1945 84). Workers in the arts industry were
urged to use such women in their work. Hitler even granted an award to
any German woman who gave birth to six or more children. SS troops were
given instructions to marry blond-haired, blue-eyed women who had not
yet received the Reich sports award.
The family life campaign soon branched off to another important issue,
education. For if Germany were to be flooded with Aryan children they
had to get the "right" education and to be taught by the "right"
teachers: Nazi teachers. Therefore, the German school systems discharged
all Jewish and non-Nazi teachers. At that point, 97% of the teachers in
Germany belonged to the Nazi Teachers Association.
Textbooks and children s books, as well, had heavy military and
anti-Semitic overtones.
A modern bomber can carry 1,800 incendiaries.
How long is the path along which it can distribute these bombs if it
drops a bomb every second at a speed of 250 kilometers per hour? How far
apart are the craters?
The New Order, p. 103
Some children s books even intimidated Nazi members, because they were
so biased that they were horrifying. Perhaps the author that best
exemplifies this was the notoriously relentless and obsessive
anti-Semite, Julius Streicher.
e The Poisonous Mushroom, a children s book, and "Der Stтrmer," a Nazi
newspaper. While his works appalled even some Nazis, Hitler was
intrigued by his "skillful and amusing campaign."
With the campaign aimed at children, the Nazis integrated both
anti-Semitic ideology and encouraged children to join the Hitler Youth,
for boys, and the League of German Girls, for girls. Indeed, the
enrollment rate was very high, but the storm of children joining the two
youth organizations were not all going for their hatred toward Jews.
Rather, many saw it as a good opportunity to go camping, make friends
(activities which the to organizations did, in fact, often do); in a
way, the equivalent of our Boy/Girl Scouts of America Organization.
Billboards, poster, leaflets, and flyers were everywhere. Some were
aimed at the adult population, some at children. Most commonly, they
were to urge the public to join Hitler s crusade, for there was a job
and a place for everybody. The Nazi s offered men jobs in Hitler s army.
If they were inexperienced, they offered training camps, seminars, and
classes, in which they were taught everything from military maneuvers to
how to identify a Jew.
As effective of the other forms of Nazi propaganda were, the best
results came from the media: newspapers, radio, and film. Control of the
media was the key to gaining control of the people s minds.
Joseph Goebbles took the first step to assuming full control of the
news-wire services. He then merged the different wire-services into the
German News Bureau. This allowed him to control the distribution of news
at its source. Now that the Nazis had full control of the news
circulation in Germany, they began making laws pertaining to it. For
example, in 1933, Goebbles instituted the Editor s Law. This stated that
all newspapers had to go through his ministry. Accordingly, the editors
were responsible for every picture and word in their publication, and if
Goebbles did not like what was being printed, the editors would be
punished. Although, they would most commonly lose their jobs, Goebbles,
on occasion, would have the person sent to a concentration camp. His
regulations on new circulation so limited the liberty of the reporter,
that daily press conferences were often held. There, Goebbles would
dictate what should be written in the article and how it should look.
Unfortunately for the Nazis, mu ch of the population of Germany stopped
reading newspapers, altogether, for they already knew what would be
written.
Since Goebbles realized he could not brainwash the people just through
the newspaper, he then took over radio communication. By making sure
stores kept a plentiful stock of inexpensive radios, a record seventy
percent of German families owned at least one radio. If in the event
that a family did not own one, the Nazis encouraged gathering in groups
at home, at work, and at eating places to listen to the broadcasts. With
over a quarter of a typical day s broadcasting time being reserved
solely for Nazi propaganda, the people became very vulnerable to what
they heard. To be sure not one person was without the privilege of
listening to daily broadcastings, the Nazis had loud speakers installed
all over the country.
Goebbles also seized control of the cinemas. Still a fairly new concept,
motion pictures were very popular among the Germans. The Nazis began
making both movies and documentaries with extremely anti-Semitic
messages. There were documentaries that were merely intended for the
glorification of the Nazis, while other were tasteless, explicit movies
based on mere blatant lies and biases produced by the Nazis and other
anti-Semitic organizations. Some were so anti-Semitic that the actors
requested that a telegraph be sent out publicizing that they themselves
were not really Jewish. Despite the horrifying motion-picture
campaigning, countless numbers attended these films.
By now, the German population was predominantly anti-Semitic. Stage one
of the Nazis plan was done. However, Nazi missionaries began coming
over to the United States. Although quickly deported, they left behind
their ideas. Organizations such as the Christian Front and the
German-American Bund were formed and strongly supported the Nazis.
Newsletters and leaflets were being mass produced throughout the
country. Luckily the majority of Americans retained their morals and
acceptance of Jews.
In their quest for both world and racial domination, the Nazis covered
all possible territory/subject-matter, and all possible means of
accomplishing their goal. They monopolized and strictly monitored all
branches of the communications and media industry. By doing this, the
Nazis only allowed the people to hear what they wanted them to hear, and
nothing more. In the midst of a major economic depression, the German
people were both vulnerable and desperate, and the unemployment rate was
very high. Thus, many people had nothing else to do beside listen to the
radio and read the newspaper. Naturally, there was no commercial or
industrial market, almost everything fitting into those two categories
was failing, so it was not difficult to take over. Hitler s plan was
working very well.
Reflecting on the manner in which the term "propaganda" is used in this
paper, it could be understandable why one could see the word as a
negative term. Even though the dictionary defines "propaganda" as
publicity to either further or damage one s cause, I am unable to
picture myself defining Hitler s publicity scheme as merely marketing,
promotion, or advertising. Rather, I see it as a disgusting form of
"disinformation" (See, p. 1). In conclusion, even though the word,
"propaganda," can be used in reference to either positive or negative
campaigning, it is how we have come to, most often, identify ideology
which we do not approve of or think not to be true.
Works Cited
ï‚· Ausubel, Nathan. Pictorial History of the Jewish People. New York:
Crown Publishers, 1953.
ï‚· Goldhagen, Daniel. Hitler s Willing Executioners. New York: Random
House, 1996.
ï‚· Goldhagen, Daniel. Personal Interview. 25 December 1996.
rld Book Encyclopedia. HYPERLINK
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aven.ios.com/~kimel19/index.html" l "index " Internet . AT&T Worldnet
Service, Vrs. 3.0. Windows 95, disk.
ï‚· Levin, Nora. The Holocaust: The Destruction of European Jewry. New
York: Schocken Books, 1973
ï‚· Microsoft Encarta Encyclopedia. Computer software. Microsoft
Corporation, 1996. Windows 95, 6.39 MB, CD-ROM.
ï‚· Rossel, Seymour. The Holocaust: The World and the Jews, 1933-1945.
West Orange: Behrman House, 1992.
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