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Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews

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by Peter Longerich


  NSDAP achieved unprecedented successes in elections in the years from 1930 to

  1933, the fundamental elements of Hitler’s ideology, ‘space’ and ‘race’, were

  consistently at the forefront of his addresses. 44 On many occasions Hitler stressed how he continued to see the ‘Jewish race’ as the principal enemy of the German

  people.

  On 29 August 1930, for example, shortly before the National Socialists’ huge

  success in the Reichstag elections, Hitler referred to the Jews in a speech given in

  Munich: ‘The head of another race is on top of the body of our nation, heart and head

  are no longer one and the same in our people.’45 In another speech held a few weeks later he depicted the struggle against the Jews—without naming them explicitly—as

  a divinely appointed task: ‘if we appear today as Germans and try to resist the

  poisonous effect of an alien people, what we are doing is attempting to return into the

  hands of the almighty Creator the same creature as He has given us. ’46

  There is much here to support the view that the reduction in anti-Jewish attacks

  was a temporary tactical concession on the part of the National Socialist leader-

  ship which, after its electoral success, was trying to enter into a coalition with the

  18

  Historical Background

  Centre Party. When these plans collapsed, from late 1931 or early 1932 onwards, it

  seems that more space was made for anti-Semitic tirades. 47

  It is clear from a list of definitive statements compiled and published by the CV

  that in 1931 and 1932 National Socialist speakers made demands that included

  taking Jews as hostages to ensure that money allegedly taken out of the country be

  brought back in or to fend off an attack by France. They demanded also that Jews

  be removed from public office, from the field of journalism, or removed

  altogether; they insisted that Jews be deprived of citizenship, called for the burning

  of synagogues, or promised pogroms in the event of an attack on a member of the

  National Socialist leadership. 48 Speakers indulged themselves in ever more extravagant comparisons of Jews with animals and fantasies of annihilation as they

  demanded, for example, the ‘extirpation’ of Jews ‘like tapeworm’, or insisted that

  they be made ‘harmless . . . like fleas’. 49 The National Socialist Party press seems to have had little occasion to rein in their anti-Semitic propaganda in these years: the

  Völkische Beobachter, the Party’s main publication, revelled in violent anti-Semitic

  tirades; 50 the same was true of Goebbels’s newspaper, Der Angriff—‘attack’—

  which was tailored for the public of Berlin in particular.

  Anti-Semitic activities and attacks by Party followers were just as evident in the

  years 1930–2 when the Party was officially calling for moderation in the matter of

  the ‘Jewish question’ and distanced itself from such actions. After 1930 there was

  an increase in the number of attacks on cemeteries and desecrations of syn-

  agogues, and in the cases where the perpetrators were identified a significant

  proportion of these actions were committed by NSDAP followers. 51

  NSDAP members repeatedly attacked Jews or ‘Jewish-looking’ people on the

  streets, 52 and such activities reached an initial high in the violence organized by the Berlin SA on the Kurfürstendamm on 12 September 1930, the Jewish new year,

  when more than a thousand SA followers, not in uniform, randomly attacked

  Jewish passers-by. 53 Immediately after the Reichstag elections of 31 July 1932 NS

  followers swamped East Prussia and various other regions of Germany with a

  wave of violent attacks, a number including the use of hand grenades and

  including the attempted murder of Jewish citizens; the windows of many Jewish

  businesses were smashed, too. 54 The boycott of Jewish firms and other Jewish institutions, which we shall return to in more detail later, was driven forwards on

  the authority of the NSDAP. National Socialists even went as far as making

  accusations of ritual murder in order to fan the flames of anti-Semitism. 55

  Women and men received threats because of their alleged ‘racial disgrace’. 56

  During the election campaign for the poll on 6 November 1932 the Nazi Party

  made use of massive anti-Semitic propaganda, coining the slogan ‘bigwigs and the

  Lords’ Club57 with the Jew’, including a correspondingly large range of examples from their repertoire of anti-Jewish caricatures. 58

  During the period from 1930 to 1933, however, with an eye to a possible coalition

  with other right-wing forces, the NSDAP officially rejected the rowdy anti-Semitic

  Anti-Semitism in the Weimar Republic

  19

  tendency and stressed its intention of solving the ‘Jewish question’ in a ‘reason-

  able’, or in other words legal, manner.

  The NS Monatshefte, the Nazi Monthly Journal published an article in its

  October 1930 volume that explained, on the basis of the Party Programme, how

  plans for anti-Jewish laws would be put into practice in the ‘Third Reich’ that was

  to come. There was a plan, for example, to give Jews a special legal status which

  would have as a consequence a ‘restriction in their simple rights as citizens’,

  including the removal of both active and passive voting rights and of military

  service. This general restriction imposed on German Jews would ‘not exclude

  further interventions, if they prove necessary’. The author of the article then gave a

  series of examples that read like a catalogue for the anti-Semitic laws that would be

  introduced a few years later. In a similar vein, Ernst von Heydebrand von der Lasa,

  the Deputy Director of the domestic policy office of the NSDAP, published a draft

  law in 1931 that made provision for the exclusion of Jews from German citizen-

  ship. 59

  In contrast to fundamental draft plans such as these, it seems that there were

  not so many requests for spectacular anti-Jewish laws made by the NSDAP’s

  parliamentary group after 1930 as there had been previously. Nevertheless, in the

  Prussian parliament there was a demand made that Jews be excluded from

  theatres and the radio and for a numerus clausus to be imposed on Jewish

  receivers. 60

  Gregor Strasser, who was head of the Nazi Party’s national organization,

  announced in October 1931 that a National Socialist government would ensure

  that ‘the dominance of Jews in Germany would come to an end’ and that this

  meant ‘the exclusion of Jews from all areas in which they are in a position to

  hamper the German economy’. 61 In June 1932 Strasser declared in a radio address that the Party ‘did not want to persecute the Jews’, but that they did intend a

  ‘German leadership with no trace of Jewish or foreign spirit’. 62

  Possible concerns were assuaged by an explanation given by Goering in May

  1932 to an Italian newspaper. He noted the plans for far-reaching special laws to be

  applied to Jews, but stressed ‘that any decent Israelite businessman who wishes to

  live in Germany as a foreigner under the protection of the law to which all

  foreigners are subject, will be allowed to pursue his business’. 63 Goebbels defended the anti-Semitic policies of his party again a few weeks before taking power, in an

  interview with the Daily Express. 64

  However, the facts that in Germany in 1933 radical anti-Semitis
m was elevated

  to the status of official government policy and that with the help of initial anti-

  Semitic laws the equality of citizenship of the Jews was destroyed are not

  attributable solely to the rise of the NSDAP. It was above all crucial that the

  thought of excluding the Jews from citizenship rights had been becoming an

  increasingly popular notion in the socio-cultural milieu of the Conservatives, the

  NSDAP’s future partners in government, since the 1920s. This was initially

  20

  Historical Background

  because representatives of a radical anti-Semitic stance within conservative-

  leaning organizations had used demands for expelling Jewish members to trigger

  a long-lasting debate on the attitude of these organizations to the ‘Jewish

  question’. These discussions often ended with the introduction of an ‘Aryan

  clause’, which symbolically expressed the readiness of the whole organization

  to adopt a radical stance on the ‘Jewish question’, distance themselves from

  traditional conservative views, and fall into line behind the National Socialists.

  There were two political organizations in particular that paved the way for their

  move into the National Socialist camp with an ‘Aryan clause’, the German

  National[ist] People’s Party (DNVP) and the ‘Stahlhelm’—the so-called Steel

  Helmet Veterans’ Organization, which would join with the NSDAP in 1931 to

  form the Harzburg Front and become partners in Hitler’s government in 1933.

  The DNVP took the decision to exclude Jewish members in 1924 and (for

  formal reasons) again in 1926. 65 This decision was in line with the ideas of the right wing of the Party that used the Party’s cooperation with democratic forces in

  parliament and coalition governments (in 1925 and 1927) to accuse the leadership

  of abandoning its fundamental opposition to the Weimar Republic and of bring-

  ing it too close to the state that it disliked. With the election of Alfred Hugenberg

  in 1928 the right wing of the Party prevailed and determined on an alliance with

  the NSDAP. 66 Hugenberg was himself relatively restrained about making anti-Semitic statements, probably because of his interests as the head of a group of

  press companies, but it is clear that the exclusion of Jewish members was a

  precondition for the Nazi-friendly line of development that the Party took. In

  the Steel Helmet Veterans’ Organization the völkisch wing under the Deputy

  Leader, Theodor Duesterberg, gradually succeeded in taking over and bringing

  about a political alliance with the DNVP and the NSDAP. 67 These forces managed to engineer the exclusion of Jewish members in 1924 and ensured that thereafter

  the organization routinely took an anti-Semitic stance.

  The strong influence of völkisch forces on attitudes to the ‘Jewish question’ was

  also felt in the ‘Reichslandbund’ or National Rural League, the successor to the

  strongly anti-Semitic pre-First World War Farmers’ League. The RLB’s propa-

  ganda shifted in 1924–5 towards the extensive use of anti-Semitic stereotypes

  under pressure from völkisch forces. These were attempting to depict the particu-

  lar burdens on agriculture, following currency stabilization in 1924, as a conspir-

  acy on the part of international Jewry to force it into subjugation. This way of

  seeing things was adopted to a large extent by the RLB. 68

  The German National Association of Commercial Employees (DHV) had

  more than 300,000 members at the end of the 1920s and it undertook a lively

  programme of anti-Semitic propaganda and education. Under the intellectual

  leadership of the publicist Wilhelm Stapel, the Association propagated a völk-

  isch-cultural brand of anti-Semitism and stressed the essential incompatibility of

  being both German and Jewish. 69

  Anti-Semitism in the Weimar Republic

  21

  Thus the Weimar Republic saw a large number of middle-class associations take

  steps to exclude their Jewish members, and it is remarkable that the anti-Semitic

  forces managed to implement this process of exclusion precisely during the most

  stable period of the Republic, at a time, therefore, when such associations were

  recovering from the years of inflation and consolidating themselves. For instance,

  the ‘Jewish question’—the demand by völkisch members of the association that an

  ‘Aryan clause’ be inserted into the constitution—played a major role from the

  early 1920s onwards at the annual general meetings of the German-Austrian

  Alpine Club, which was probably the most important of all German leisure and

  tourist organizations. Important branches such as Berlin and Breslau did in fact

  succeed in banning Jewish members. 70

  However, discussions about the introduction of an ‘Aryan clause’ were held in

  German gymnastic associations (the German League of Gymnasts did not

  accept Jewish members), in the German Academy, in the Association for

  Germans Abroad, and other organizations where the anti-Semitic forces did

  not prevail. 71

  Scattered references to the exclusion of Jews from local associations can be

  found throughout the literature on regional history, but the question of how far

  this represented a consistent pattern is an important area that still requires further

  research—and in the light of the importance of such associations in Germany and

  their close connections with local politics this omission is all the more scandalous.

  Students took a leading role in the spread of radical anti-Semitic ideas in

  German society. At the beginning of the 1920s almost all the student bodies had

  ceased to accept Jewish members. The Deutscher Hochschulring, an umbrella

  organization of student associations (DHR), refounded in 1920, saw itself as

  particularly völkisch and anti-Semitic and quickly became a powerful force in

  most of the country’s universities, the general student councils, and within the

  German National Student Union. This dominant role found expression above all

  in the huge influence the DHR had on getting the student body to adopt radical

  anti-Semitic positions. 72 This occurred for the first time in 1922 when the DHR

  was able to push through a constitutional amendment according to which the

  association sanctioned the practice of its members, the German and Austrian

  student organizations, of not accepting any students of Jewish origin at all. 73

  Five years later the University Circle caused another conflict linked to the

  ‘Jewish question’. It was sparked by the fact that the majority of state-

  recognized and state-supported student associations accepted Jews into their

  ranks provided they were German citizens, but did not accept Jews classed as

  ‘Germans from abroad’, such as those from Danzig or territories ceded to

  Poland. When the Prussian Minister of Culture demanded that this practice

  be changed, in a vote taken in 1927 the majority of the student representa-

  tives voted against, which eventually led to the dissolution of the student

  organizations. 74

  22

  Historical Background

  At the end of the 1920s the leading political role amongst student organizations

  was taken over by the National Socialist League of German Students. After 1929 it

  ensured that the student associations in a
number of universities decided to

  demand that the number of Jewish students be limited to the proportion of Jewish

  members of the population in the area of the Reich. 75 Violence against Jewish students and professors was a daily occurrence in German universities towards the

  end of the Weimar Republic. 76

  Radical anti-Semitic positions also spread within the two principal Christian

  confessions where they reinforced what were already fairly strong anti-Semitic

  prejudices that had been formed on confessional or religious grounds.

  Within the Protestant Church a group known as the ‘German Christians’ had

  formed from the early 1920s onwards, rejecting the Jewish roots of Christianity—

  most notably the Old Testament and the Jewish ancestry of Jesus himself—and

  attempting to reconcile Christian theology with Germanic mythology. 77

  Whilst these groups only met with very limited success, from the early 1930s

  onwards the National Socialists succeeded in mobilizing their supporters on the

  occasion of church elections, working in particular with the ‘Faith Movement of

  German Christians’ who were opposed to ‘racial miscegenation’ and the ‘Jewish

  mission’. In the church elections of November 1932 the German Christians

  gathered about a third of all the votes, which roughly corresponded to the

  proportion of National Socialist supporters in the population at large. 78

  The Church reacted to these forces—which after all challenged the fundamental

  premises of Christian belief according to prevailing theology—with sympathy and

  a willingness to dialogue rather than by clearly distancing itself from them. Under

  the influence of this völkisch provocation the spectrum of opinion within the

  Church moved decisively to the right in the direction of völkisch and racist ideas. 79

  The indirect influence of the German Christians proved to be much more

  important than any direct effects they could have by virtue of their position within

  the Church.

  The Königsberg Church Congress of 1927 marked a caesura in the attitude of

  the Protestant Church to the völkisch movement. It witnessed the presentation of

  the outline for a new political theology in the paradigmatic paper given by the

 

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