Experiences of Germans under the Nazis Flashcards

1
Q

What were the initials for the National Labour Service?

A

RAD

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2
Q

Describe what the National Labour service was

A

All men between 18-25 had to spend 6 months in the RAD. They planted forests, mended hedges and dug drainage ditches in farms. They had to wear uniform and live in camps but they were given free meals. They were paid only pocket money but at least it was a job. Unemployment fell rapidly.

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3
Q

Describe an example of a Public Work Scheme

A

In June 1933, Nazis announced that they planned to build a new network of autobahns (motorways) to connect Germany’s major towns and cities. Provided work for 100,000 people and by 1928 3800km of motorway had been built. At the same time, new schools and hospitals were being built, providing work for even more people.

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4
Q

Describe rearmament

A

Hitler was determined to make Germany a strong, military power again so he ordered the building of tanks, battleships, fighter planes and guns.
Thousands of jobs created and huge government contracts made factory owners and business owners very wealthy (these were the people Hitler had promised to help if he came to power)

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5
Q

Describe the conscription that Hitler introduced and what effect it had

A

From 1935, all males between 18-25 were forced to join the armed forces for at least 2 years. Within 5 years, the army grew from 100,000 to 1,400,000, providing even more people with jobs.

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6
Q

What was invisible unemployment and how did it work?

A

Nazis used a variety of methods to reduced unemployment figures.
Women who gave up work to have a family didn’t count in the figures
Part-time workers were counted as full-time workers
Nazis created work by sacking people, such as Jews, and giving their jobs to non-Jews. These unemployed Jews were then now counted in unemployment figures

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7
Q

Describe the economy under Schacht

A

He realised imports of raw materials (wood, iron, steel and rubber) were needed to build more weapons as Germany didn’t have all these goods.
He signed deals with countries in South America and south-east Europe to supply Germany with raw materials in return for German goods (buying goods from countries was usually very expensive)
For a short time it went well, weapon production increased and unemployment decreased.
Germany was still dependent on foreign raw materials and the changes were happening too slowly for impatient Hitler.
Schacht was sacked and replaced by Goering.

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8
Q

Describe the economy under Goering

A

In 1936, Goering introduced the 4 year plan to increase military production.
Nazis order large amounts of uniform, weapons and equipment creating jobs in steel factories, textile mills and ship building yards.
High targets were set and met in industries such as steel and explosives.
However, targets weren’t met for other = key industries such as oil.
Despite huge number of extra goods and materials produced under the 4 year plan, Germany wasn’t ready for war.
Germany still relied on raw materials from abroad so Goering tried to make Germany self-sufficient

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9
Q

How did Germany become self-sufficient?

A

They stopped trading with other countries and relied entirely on their own resources. They would find alternatives to things such as acorns to make coffee and petrol made from coal.

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10
Q

What positives did Nazis bring for the farmers?

A

Cut their taxes to save them from the effects of the depression.
If they got into debt, they couldn’t be thrown off their land.
Farmers couldn’t divide land between their children to try and keep farms large and controlled by the same families. Some farmers liked this as they wanted their farm to be secure in the family for generations.

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11
Q

What negatives did Nazis bring for the farmers?

A

Some farmers didn’t like the law that prevented the division of farms because their children had to look for jobs in cities instead.
In the late 1930s the Nazis controlled food prices.

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12
Q

Initials of the German labour front

A

DAF

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13
Q

What did the German Labour Front do?

A

Replaced trade unions. Promised to protect the rights of workers and improve conditions.

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14
Q

What were the names of the 2 schemes that the German Labour Front ran?

A

Beauty of Labour (SDA)
Strength through joy (KDF)

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15
Q

Describe what the 2 schemes ran by the German Labour Front did

A

Beauty of Labour - Tried to improve working environment by installing better lighting, safety equipment, low-cost cantines, sports facilities, new washrooms.
Strength through joy - Organised leisure activities to encourage hard work. Reward scheme that offered cheap holidays, trips to the theatre and tickets to football matches if workers met their targets.

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16
Q

What were the negatives of the German Labour Front?

A

Workers lost their rights because trade unions were banned. Workers couldn’t quit without government’s permission and were banned from going on strike. People could be forced to work as many hours as the Nazis required.
Some of the holidays the KDF provided such as cruises and ski trips were still too expensive for working-class Germans.

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17
Q

Positives of the German Labour Front?

A

Nazis fulfilled their promise to provide work.
KDF did provide rewards for Germans including free trips to the cinema and concerts.

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18
Q

Rationing due to WWII

A

Supplies were needed for soldiers so sacrifices had to be made in Germany. There were severe food shortages. By November 1939, food and clothing were rationed (1 egg per week). Goods like soap and toilet paper were in short supply. Hot water was rationed to 2 days a week.

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19
Q

Severe labour shortages due to WWII

A

Factories were forced to stay open longer. All the male workers were now soldiers so large numbers of women were drafted in to work in factories. By 1944, 7 million foreign workers had been brought in from countries Germany had conquered to work as slave labour in the factories.

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20
Q

What was total war?

A

1942 Albert Speer was made Armaments minister and told to organise for Total War. Everything was entirely focused on making weapons and growing food for the soldiers. Anything that didn’t contribute to the war (beer houses, dance halls, sweet shops) was closed down. Factories were forced to stay open longer.

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21
Q

Bombing in Germany due to WWII

A

By 1942, Britain and America were bombing German cities. This meant that there was no electricity, water or transport. Panicked people left their homes as refugees to search for safer places. There were thousands of deaths and injuries and the medical services were at full stretch. Support for the Nazis began to weaken.

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22
Q

How were the subjects students studied affected by Nazi beliefs?

A

Students were ‘indoctrinated’ to believe a particular set of ideas.
History - Learnt about key German victories and how badly Germany was treated at the end of WW1.
Geography - Countries that Germany would conquer next
PE - time given to PE trebled.
Eugenics/race studies - Taught students the Nazi belief in inferiority of black people, Jews and Eastern Europeans. Superiority of Aryan races. Mental and physical characteristics could be improved by choosing who could become parents.
Science - Weapon-making and chemical warfare.

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23
Q

How were teachers and the ways they taught affected by Nazi beliefs?

A

Textbooks were rewritten so Nazi ideas were taught as accepted facts. Teachers were made to put across Nazi beliefs in their lessons. All teachers had to join the German Teachers League and any who refused to teach the way the Nazis wanted were sacked.

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24
Q

Special schools set up by the Nazis

A

Napolas schools and Adolf Hitler schools.
Teachers identified students who had potential to become future Nazi leaders. They went intense training, lots of academic examinations and physical training. Graduated as ‘Ideal Nazis’ , strong, clever and loyal to Hitler.

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25
Q

Nazis and Universities

A

Between 1933 and 1934 15% of university professors were replaced, mainly for racial or political reasons. By 1939 over 3000 had been dismissed. Universities had to change courses to reflect Nazi beliefs, including antisemitism.
Einstein’s theory wasn’t included because he was Jewish. All students had to train as a soldier for a month each year. Top University professors were handpicked by the Nazis.

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26
Q

Why did less people attend university under the Nazis?

A

Nazis didn’t regard university education as particularly important

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27
Q

When was Hitler Youth set up?

A

1922

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28
Q

Laws that Hitler passed to increase membership of Hitler Youth (1933-1939)

A

1933 - Banned all other youth groups
1936 - Law for the Incorporation of German Youth. Gave Hitler Youth equal status to home and school.
1939 - Attendance for Hitler Youth became compulsory.

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29
Q

What were boys taught as part of Hitler Youth?

A

How to march, fight with knives, fire a gun and keep themselves fit. Nazis wanted to prepare boys for their future role as soldiers.

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30
Q

What were girls taught as part of Hitler Youth?

A

How to keep fit, cook good meals, look after babies and prepare for motherhood. Reflected the Nazi’s traditional views of women.

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31
Q

Age groups and different Hitler Youth groups for boys

A

Little Fellows: 6-10
Young Folk: 10-14
Hitler Youth: 14-18

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32
Q

Age group and different Hitler Youth groups for girls

A

Young Girls: 10-14
League of German Girls: 14-17

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33
Q

Examples of youth groups that opposed Hitler Youth

A

Swing Youth - Listened to Jazz music (banned by the Nazis because of its black origins) and had Jewish friends.
Edelweiss Pirates - Sang songs making fun of Hitler, attacked Hitler Youth groups.

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34
Q

Statistics to show how membership of Hitler Youth increased as different laws were passed

A

1933 - 3 million
1936 - 5 million
1939 - 7 million

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35
Q

What were the 3 k’s for women to follow?

A

Kinder, Kirche and Kuche
Children, church and cooking

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36
Q

Decline of birth rates from 1900 to 1933

A

1900 - 2 million per year
1933 - Under 1 million

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37
Q

What had caused the decline in birth rates from 1900-1933?

A

Result of career-driven women having fewer children. In the 1920s many women attended university and became lawyers or doctors. They had many rights and freedoms and if they worked for the government, they were paid the same as men.

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38
Q

Why did Nazis want women to have more babies?

A

A low birth rate and low population didn’t fit with their plans to expand Germany’s territory and settle Germans in other parts of Europe. They also felt that it was the women’s patriotic duty to stay at home and have lots of children. Women were not seen as equal to men.

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39
Q

What did Hitler do to women within a few months of him coming to power?

A

Many female doctors, teachers, lawyers and judges were sacked. Getting a job was discouraged as it got in the way of producing children. Women were banned from jury service because the Nazis thought they were unable to think without emotion.

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40
Q

How did Hitler encourage women to have more children?

A

Loans were given out to newly married couples (equivalent of a year’s wages) to encourage them to have children. First child - they could keep a quarter of the money. Second child - They could keep the second quarter of the money and so on.
Nazis banned abortion and contraception.
Every year on 12 August the Motherhood Medal was awarded to women who had the most children. 8 children = Gold Cross

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41
Q

What was Lebensborn and did it work?

A

A movement that attempted to increase birth rate. 8000 children were born in Germany as a result of this.

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42
Q

What were women banned from wearing and doing and why?

A

Banned from smoking, it was ‘unladylike’.
Couldn’t wear high heels or trousers.

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43
Q

What were the 2 groups the Nazis set up for women?

A

German Women’s League - Coordinated all women’s groups in the country. Representatives travelled around and gave advice on cooking, childcare and healthy eating.
Nazi Women’s Organisation - An elite female group dedicated to Nazi beliefs and ideas.

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44
Q

Were the Nazi’s policies on women a success?

A

Birth rate increased in Germany from under 1 million in 1933 to 1.4 million by 1939.
However, Nazis needed women to go back to work because men were fighting the war and workers were needed in the factories. This went against what Nazi’s said a woman’s role was and her place in the workplace.

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45
Q

Why did some Christians support the Nazis?

A

Nazis said they believed in the importance of marriage, family and moral values. Most Christians also believed in these.
Christians feared communism because it was anti-religious. Hitler promised to destroy communism.
Hitler promised to respect the Catholic Church.

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46
Q

What was Germany’s main religion at the time?

A

Christianity
1/3 Catholic
2/3 Protestant

47
Q

What was the concordat? When was it signed?

A

An agreement between Hitler and the Catholic Church (Pope) that they wouldn’t interfere with each other.
Signed in 1933.

48
Q

How did Hitler break the concordat?

A

He felt that German Catholics listened to the Pope more than him so he started to harass and arrest Catholic priests. He also shut down Catholic youth clubs and schools.

49
Q

How did the Pope respond to Hitler’s bad relationship with the Catholic Church and why?

A

He issued a statement called ‘with burning anxiety’ that stated the Nazis were being hostile to the Church and Christ. This was read out in Catholic Churches across Germany but it had little effect and the Nazis continued to arrest Catholic Priests.

50
Q

Which member of the church openely criticised the Nazis? Why and when?

A

August 1941, one of Germany’s best-known religious leaders, Catholic Archbishop Galen. He criticised the Nazis use of terror tactics, euthanasia and concentration camps.

51
Q

How did the Nazis respond to member of the church openly criticising the Nazis?

A

They put Galen under house arrest until the end of the war

52
Q

What was the name of the Protestants who admired Hitler and why did they admire him?

A

German Christians. They admired his views on marriage and moral values. They wanted to see their Church under Nazi control. They often wore Nazi uniforms.

53
Q

Who was the leader of the German Christians?

A

Ludwig Muller. He became the first Reich Bishop in September 1933.

54
Q

What was the name of the Protestant group who didn’t like Hitler’s ideas and why?

A

Confessional Church. They felt that Nazi core beliefs were completely opposed to those of Christianity. They openly criticised the Nazis.

55
Q

Who was the leader of the Confessional Church?

A

Pastor Martin Niemoller.

56
Q

How did the Nazis respond to the Confessional Church?

A

They arrested 800 pastors and sent their leader, Niemoller to a concentration camp. They also banned the Confessional Church.

57
Q

How were other Christian groups affected by the Nazis?

A

1/3 of Jehovah Witnesses were killed in concentration camps because they were pacifists and refused to serve in the army.
Salvation army, Christian Scientists and Seventh Day Adventists Church all disappeared from Germany.

58
Q

Percentage of Jewish people who had fled Germany before Hitler stopped them from leaving

A

80%

59
Q

Who did the Nazis think the ‘inferior races’ were?

A

Jews, Roma, Sinti (gypsies), Slavs and black people.

60
Q

Statistics of the different groups that were killed by the Nazis

A

1/2 million Roma and Sinti
6 million Jews from all over Europe

61
Q

How were Jews treated when war broke out in 1939?

A

Forced to live in Ghettos and to work in labour camps. Many were murdered by execution squads. Later in the war, they were sent to death camps where they were worked to death or murdered by poison gas.

62
Q

What did Nazis call anyone who did not fit their vision of a perfect Aryan?

A

‘Undesirable’.

63
Q

Who was sent to concentration camps?

A

Jewish people, people from other ‘inferior’ racial groups, gay people, criminals, prostitutes, Jehovah’s Witnesses, political opponents, pacifists, homeless people.

64
Q

Why were people with disabilities sterilised by the Nazis?

A

Hitler claimed they damaged the ‘purity’ of the German race, linked to Nazi belief in eugenics. They thought that by preventing anyone with a disability from having children, they would ‘improve’ the human race.

65
Q

Statistics of Nazis sterilising people

A

400,000 people with hereditary illnesses were made to have operations to sterilise them (prevent them from having children)
200,000 people with a disability were killed.

66
Q

Jews were the …. for Germany’s problems

A

Scapegoats

67
Q

How did Hitler use propaganda to spread antisemitism?

A

Speeches, news articles and even films showed how evil, selfish and damaging Jewish people were to the German nation.

68
Q

Which public places were Jews banned from?

A

Swimming pools and cinemas.

69
Q

What jobs were Jews not allowed to have?

A

Government jobs. Careers in medicine, teaching or journalism.

70
Q

When were the Nuremburg laws?

A

September 1935.

71
Q

What were 2 Nuremburg laws against Jews?

A

Reich Citizen Act - Stated that no Jew could vote and had no legal protections. Jews had no legal rights.
Law for the Protection of German Blood and Honour - Banned marriage between Jews and non-Jews.

72
Q

When was Kristallnacht?

A

November 1938

73
Q

What happened on Kristallnacht?

A

SS troops carried out a nationwide campaign of terror against Jews.
10,000 Jewish shops had their windows broken.
100 Jews were killed
20,000 Jews sent to concentration camps.
200 synagogues burned down.

74
Q

What did the leading Nazis start to work on by the end of 1914?

A

The final solution

75
Q

What was the SS Einsatzgruppen?

A

Execution squads

76
Q

When was the Wansee conference?

A

1942

77
Q

What did Nazi leaders plan at the Wansee conference?

A

They discussed how they would mass-murder every Jew in Nazi-controlled territory. The Final Solution to the Jewish question.

78
Q

Who oversaw the Final Solution?

A

Heinrich Himmler, Head of the SS

79
Q

What was decided at the Wansee conference?

A

6 death camps (extermination camps) were to be built. They contained gas chambers to carry out the murders. Jews would be killed by either being worked to death or being killed in gas chambers.

80
Q

Jewish resistance in Ghetto example

A

Warsaw ghetto in Poland, Jews rebelled against German soldiers. It took 43 days for Germans to regain control. They then arrested and executed all those involved and burned down the ghetto.

81
Q

Rebellion in death camp example

A

In Treblinka camp in 1943. 15 guards were killed and 150 prisoners managed to escape but the Nazis soon regained control and many escapees were killed.

82
Q

What was Himmler’s role in the police state?

A

He controlled all police forces and was head of the SS. He personally reported to Hitler and was a loyal Nazi.

83
Q

The role of the SS in the police state

A

Set up in1925, they were orginally Hitler’s personal bodyguards. Gradually the group (led by Himmler) was built up and became the most feared organisation in the country. They were tall, strong and very loyal to Hitler. Divided into 3 sections.

84
Q

Describe the 3 sections the SS was divided into

A

The SD - Looked after security. Had the power to arrest anyone, search homes and seize property. They even spied on and policed the Nazi party itself.
The Waffen SS - An elite unit in the army
The Death’s Head Units - Ran the concentration camps and later the death camps.

85
Q

Describe the role of the Gestapo in the police state

A

The secret police. They didn’t wear uniforms and spied on anyone who they thought might be a threat. They tapped telephone calls and opened mail. Had the power to arrest, imprison without trial and torture anyone. Relied on a huge network of ‘informers’ who would report anyone who even moaned about the Nazis. Encouraged children to report on their parents or teachers.

86
Q

Describe the role of the regular police in the police state

A

Ordinary police continued their regular work but ignored crimes committed by the Nazis.
All the top jobs in the ordinary police went to Nazis.

87
Q

Describe the role of the law courts in the police state

A

Law courts and judges were under Nazi control too. New laws meant that people faced prison (or even death penalty) for smuggling banned books into Germany, telling an anti-Hitler joke or listening to a foreign radio station among other things.

88
Q

Describe the role of the concentration camps in the police state

A

Set up as soon as Hitler took power. Large prisons where any ‘enemies of the state’ could be held for any length of time.. Set up to ‘correct’ people who weren’t doing what the Nazis wanted. Inmates were forced to work hard and some were even tortured or worked to death. Jews, Roma and Sinti, political opponents and anyone who criticised Hitler.

89
Q

Who was head of propaganda?

A

Joseph Goebbels, a leading Nazi

90
Q

What were the key messages in Nazi propaganda?

A

Blaming Jews for Germany’s problems, making Germany strong and powerful again, criticising the Treaty of Versailles .

91
Q

What was censorship and how did Goebbels use it?

A

The Government tightly controlled what German people heard, read or saw. If anything was harmful to Hitler or the Nazis, it was banned. This allowed Goebbels to control and limit other ideas and beliefs.

92
Q

How did Goebbels control the newspaper?

A

Only stories that were positive about the Nazis were allowed to be printed. There were also many negative stories about Jews. Newspapers that printed stories that Goebbels hadn’t approve were closed down.

93
Q

How did Goebbels control films?

A

All film plots were shown to Goebbels before the actual film was made. All films had to show the Nazis in a good way, and their ‘enemies’ in a bad way.

94
Q

How did Goebbels control radio?

A

Nazis controlled all radio stations which were used to put across Nazi ideas. Cheap radios were produced that could only tune in to Nazi-controlled stations. More Germans owned radios in the 1930s than Americans. Loudspeakers were placed in the streets, in factories and cafes to air radio broadcasts.

95
Q

How did Goebbels control books, theatre and music?

A

Writers were forced to write books, plays and songs that praised Hitler and the Nazis?

96
Q

How did mass rallies act as propaganda?

A

Held in celebration of Hitler. Special arenas were built that could hold half a million people. Choirs, bands speeches, fireworks and air shows were performed to showcase how impressive and well organised the Nazis were.

97
Q

What was the name of the organisation set up by the Nazis that controlled cultural activities?

A

The Chamber of Culture

98
Q

Describe what the Chamber of Culture did

A

Led by Goebbels. All musicians, writers, artists and actors had to be members of this organisation and anyone who refused to wouldn’t be allowed to work. Jews were banned from joining. Ruled that all cultural such as art, theatre, music, film, literature, had to give the same message that Nazi beliefs and ideas were correct and everything that Hitler did was in the best interest of the country.

99
Q

How was music affected by Nazi rule?

A

Goebbes ruled that music should be German or Austrian. Marching music, old folk songs and classical music were popular. Music that was popular in Weimar Germany was not permitted. Jewish composers were banned and so was Jazz music because of its black origins.

100
Q

How was theatre affected by Nazi rule?

A

As soon as the Nazis took power, they banned ‘modern’ plays and films that they didn’t approve of, such as the Threepenny Opera. Nazis ruled that plays should mainly focus on German history and politics, and allowed the work of some older playwrights like Goethe to be performed.
Nazis also shut down cabaret clubs. These noisy theatre bars were places were songs about sex and politics were common.

101
Q

How was literature affected by Nazi rule?

A

Goebbels created a list of banned books, which were removed from librairies and bookshops. They were classed as ‘un-German’ or were by Jewish authors. Goebbels encouraged books about race, the glory of war and the brilliance of the Nazis.
Popular books written in Weimar Germany were banned including the anti-war novel, All Quiet on the Western Front. Around 2500 writers left Germany between 1933-1945.

102
Q

How was cinema affected by Nazi rule?

A

Goebbels realised how popular cinema was and how powerful it could be. Nazi supporters such as Alfred Hugenberg owned film studios so the Nazis had a direct influence on exactly which films were made. Goebbels read and approved all film scripts. All film types had to carry a pro-Nazi message. German soldiers were always heroes and Jews were portrayed as mean and nasty. News report of Hitler’s achievements shown before the main film. Message of extreme patriotism and antisemitism.

103
Q

How was art affected by Nazi rule?

A

Hitler hated ‘modern’ art from Weimar Germany, he referred to it as ‘degenerate’. In 1936, the Nazis publicly burned 5000 paintings they disapproved of. Opened an exhibition of unacceptable art. Nazis wanted art to be easy to understand for the general public. It should show heroic German figures and family scenes of strong, Aryan Germans.

104
Q

How was design affected by Nazi rule?

A

Hitler didn’t approve of modern design such as the Bauhaus movement and closed down its movement in 1933. Hitler favoured huge, stone structures, often similair to buildings from ancient Greece or Rome.

105
Q

How was sports and leisure affected by Nazi rule?

A

Health and physical fitness was important to Nazi culture so success in sport was used to promote the Nazi regime. Olympic Games were held in Berlin in 1936 and the Nazis used the opportunity to show how good Nazi Germany was. German Olympic squad won the most medals, showed how talented and strong the German race was compared to ‘inferior’ races. German filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl filmed the entire games using the most advanced equipment.

106
Q

What was the lowest type of opposition to Hitler?

A

Moaning or grumbling about Hitler. Telling an anti-Hitler joke in the privacy of their own homes.

107
Q

What was passive resistance to the Nazis?

A

When Germans publicly showed they didn’t support the Nazis by refusing to do exactly as they were told. They refused to give the ‘Heil Hitler’ salute or to give money to Hitler Youth members who collected funds.

108
Q

What was open opposition to the Nazis?

A

Some Germans such as the Swing Youth openly declared their dislike of Nazi ideas by listening to jazz music and having Jewish friends. Other groups like the White Rose group urged Germans to get rid of Hitler. They handed out ant-Nazi leaflets, put up posters and wrote graffiti on walls. Banned youth groups such as the Edelweiss Pirates and the Navajos beat up Nazi officials and helped army deserters. Others sabotaged railway lines and acted as spies, passing on military secrets to other countries. Leaders of Protestant and Catholic Churches made some criticism of the Nazis. Catholic Church spoke out about killing of disabled people in 1941.

109
Q

What was the Kreisau Circle?

A

Consisted of army officers, university professors and aristocrats who were shocked by Hitler’s plans for war and the brutality of the Nazi regime. They discussed assassinating Hitler and getting rid of the Nazis but they didn’t actually do anything

110
Q

Who were the leaders of the White Rose group?

A

Hans and Sophie Scholl

111
Q

What was the Beck-Goerdeler group?

A

Led by former army general and Nazi official. They contacted the British about the possibility of removing Hitler, but nothing could be agreed. They did however make attempts on Hitler’s life and were behind the July Bomb Plot.

112
Q

When was the July bomb plot?

A

1944

113
Q

What was the July bomb plot?

A

Closest any Germans got to actually assassinating Hitler. War was going very badly and a disillusioned army officer, Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg, agreed to be part of a group that would detonate a bomb where Hitler was meeting other Nazi leaders. They hoped they could then take over and end the war.

114
Q

Did the July bomb plot work?

A

No, they killed 4 men, burnt Hitler’s hair and burst his eardrums but the bomb failed to kill Hitler.