OND Flashcards

1
Q

List the fascist motivations for creating the OND

A
  • To provide social services for Italians
  • To control all aspects of life for Italian citizens; totalitarian ambitions
  • To replace the cooperative service of the TUs that were banned
  • Increase Italians love and gratitude for the regime
  • Improve the health of the people
  • Genuine concern for the otherwise ignored peasant
  • To pursue rural individuals, as they were outside of the propaganda sphere
  • To persuade Italians that fascism could provide as well as socialism
  • Compensate Italians for falling wages and poor living conditions
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2
Q

Why was it launched on 1925 labour day?

A

To replace the need for TUs following the Vidoni Palace Pact

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3
Q

When was it reorganised under the PNF?

A

1927

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4
Q

How did the OND expand its remit after being reorganised by the PNF?

A

By taking over many existing activities and clubs

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5
Q

What did the OND provide?

A

Social activities, holidays, entertainment, sport and welfare

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6
Q

Why was its role extended during the Battle for Lira?

A

To help workers suffering wage reductions

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7
Q

Give an example of a firm developing its own Dopolavaro institution

A

Dopolavaro Ansaldo was set up by a steel firm and had 50,000 members

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8
Q

List the aims of the Dopolavaro

A
  • Replace and extend the services previously provided by labour organisations
  • Provide compensation for low pay
  • Help production by developing healthy workers
  • Foster the image of caring employers
  • Gain popularity and win support
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9
Q

How was the it geared towards gaining support?

A

It was largely non ideological, meaning that it was geared towards winning the support of Italians rather than converting them to fascism

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10
Q

What did the regime do to ensure it had as many members as possible?

A

Subscription dues were subsidised by the state and employers were forced to contribute

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11
Q

List the range of activities it offered

A
  • Libraries, films and radios for communal listening
  • A travel agency which subsidised trips
  • Mobile cinemas, theatre and orchestras for remote areas
  • Sport and summer camps
  • Welfare to families in distress
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12
Q

How were the mobile cinemas provided used for propaganda?

A

They would be proceded by newsreels produced by the government controlled film agency, LUCE

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13
Q

Describe the extent of the organisation

A
  • Impressive membership: 280,000 in 1926, 1.7 million in 1931 and 3.8 million in 1939
  • By 1939, 80% of salaried employees, 40% of the industrial workforce and 25% of peasants were members
  • It was the largest and most active adult organisation
  • Most villages, even in the south, had a dopolavaro clubhouse
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14
Q

How many holiday trips did it provide per year by the late 1930s?

A

Over 4 million

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15
Q

Describe the impact it had

A
  • It was the main point of contact with the industrial working class, who were seen as potentially hostile; it was hoped that through it they might become more attracted to the regime
  • Diverted attention away from socio-economic problems
  • Controlled employees’ leisure time
  • The state played an active role in developing mass leisure; as elsewhere this was done by a consumer society
  • It was the fascist state’s most popular regime and survived the regime’s collapse
  • It failed to foster a national community; often there was class segregation on passenger trains and cruise shifts
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16
Q

What was it renamed to after 1945?

A

The National Organisation for Worker Assistance

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17
Q

What was the name of the sister scheme in Nazi Germany?

A

Strength Through Joy (KDF)

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18
Q

How was it different to the KDF scheme?

A

It placed less emphasis on self improvement

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19
Q

What did the OND rapidly become?

A

One of the most successful and popular policies of the regime

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20
Q

Who funded its activities?

A

The state, but they did not provide lavish funding

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21
Q

Describe the quality of equipment and facilities

A

Often basic

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22
Q

How was the OND different to other aspects of society under the regime?

A

There was no need for coercion; people joined in its activities because they wanted to

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23
Q

How many members did it attract in its first year?

A

Around 300,000

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24
Q

How many local theatres, drama societies, music societies, mobile cinemas and libraries did it provide?

A

Thousands

25
Q

What did it have a virtual monopoly over?

A

Italian amateur football

26
Q

Describe the importance of the OND for the small towns and villages

A

In many of these towns and villages, social life revolved around the OND clubhouse, the OND sports ground and the OND radio

27
Q

What was the main reason that it was so successful?

A

Because it did not over-emphasise ideology and propaganda, concentrating on involvement and enjoyment

28
Q

Why was it so effective at manipulating public opinion and consolidating support for the regime?

A

Because the propaganda message was indirect and the main emphasis was on having a good time

29
Q

What was it an important channel for?

A

Social welfare benefits

30
Q

List the kind of social welfare benefits it provided

A

Members got cheap rail tickets, discounts in shops and subsidised holidays

31
Q

What does Philip Morgan conclude about the OND?

A

‘That its cumulative impact was probably to alleviate and divert some of the social distress and discontent arising during the depression years

32
Q

Why did it increase the amount of Italians who watched films?

A

Because its mobile cinemas toured the countryside

33
Q

Why was it useful for the regime that it allowed more Italians to watch films?

A

Because films offered people an escape from their humdrum lives and gave a false sense of security and national pride

34
Q
A
35
Q

What was it designed to provide?

A

State sponsored after work entertainment

36
Q

What were the three main motivations behind its creation

A
  • Making the lives of Italians more enjoyable
  • Improving their health
  • Gaining their support for the regime (most important)
37
Q

Why was it useful for the regime that it provided increased opportunities for involvement in sport?

A

Because the state was improving national success in sports for propaganda purposes

38
Q

How does it illustrate the totalitarian leanings of the regime?

A

Because it shows how they wished to control all aspects of citizens’ lives

39
Q

Who was the organisation aimed at?

A

Groups, particularly in rural areas, who might remain largely outside of the influence of the press, radio and cinema

40
Q

What happened to it in the the 1930s?

A

It underwent a major extension as part of the ‘going to the people’ policy of trying to integrate the masses of the state

41
Q

What two main things did it focus on?

A

Providing leisure facilities and giving financial assistance to members in need

42
Q

Evaluate the success of the OND in helping win support for the regime

A

It undoubtedly helped win support for the regime, but this must be distinguished from turning Italians into committed fascists, they accepted the regime but did not absorb the ideology

43
Q

What does De Grazia say about the success of the OND?

A

‘The initial aims of the regime, that of eliminating the socialist state , bringing the working population under control and blunting social tensions during a period of economic crisis, were largely achieved by organisational policies like this’

44
Q

What does Whittam say about the success of the OND?

A

‘If fascism helped to create a forceful, militaristic society and to transform the Italian citizen into the new ‘fascist man’ then the OND not only failed to fulfil this, but was counter productive. It was so popular precisely because it enabled millions of Italians to enjoy resources without the obligation of any full commitment to fascists ideals and practise

45
Q

What did the vast expansion of the OND under to ‘go to the people’ movement indicate?

A

The greater stress on creating a more committed nation of fascists

46
Q

Why can the arguement be made that the OND was less successful in reaching people in the south?

A

Because OND membership in the south was far lower than elsewhere

47
Q

What did it run to help spread fascist ideas?

A

Community listening meetings

48
Q

Who did the target in particular with their community listening meetings?

A

The illiterate and those in rural areas

49
Q

Why did it fail in helping M achieve his vision of extending theatre to the masses?

A

Because drama remained a minority pursuit

50
Q

How did it cause debate between party and state?

A

Because there was conflict over whether the party or the state would have control over it

51
Q

How was it beneficial for the economy?

A

Because it created lots of new state jobs

52
Q

How is the OND an example of M’s need for instant approval?

A

Because he was not content for the youth to grow up and transform the Italian character; he wanted to influence adults there and then

53
Q

How many theatres did it control by the mid-1930s?

A

1350

54
Q

How many drama societies did it control by the mid-1930s?

A

2000

55
Q

How many brass bands did it control by the mid-1930s?

A

3000

56
Q

How many libraries did it control by the mid-1930s?

A

8000

57
Q

Why was coercing Italians into membership rarely necessary?

A

Because working class Italians were quick to take advantage of subsidised sports, entertainment and holidays

58
Q

What illustrates the relative absence of propaganda within the OND

A

The programme of the theatre company ‘Carro di Tespi’. Of the seven plays performed in Rome in 1938, five were comedies and two were serious plays, neither of which had any direct relevance to fascist ideology

59
Q
A