Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Topic 3 - Hitler Opposition Notes


~ Hitler Policy Notes ~

General Opposition:
o      Recently, much more attention focused on opposition by historians
o      Grumbling to general political activism to threatening resistance
o      Dissent about lack of wage increases, increased working hours, compulsory activities, and the subordination of consumer interests to rearmament
o      Discontent was low compared to resistance of peasantry in Soviet Union
o      Grumbling sparked by economic conditions, not fundamental reservations
o      Preferred Hitler to the Weimar Republic

Youth Opposition:
o      Growth of social deviance that threatened to undermine re-education of youth
o      Edelweiss Pirates – antagonist to authority and Hitler Youth, whose patrols they would ambush and beat up
o      Slogan was ‘Eternal War on the Hitler Youth’
o      Supported the Allies during war and offered help to German army deserters
o      Swing movement was provocative and as jazz was ‘negro music’ it was degenerate
o      Lacked the organizational edge to be anything more than an embarrassment to the regime
o      Social deviance was never a serious opposition

Church Opposition:
o      Catholics protested to replacing crucifixes with portraits of Hitler in Catholic schools
o      Opposition to regime’s euthanasia program from 1939
o      Nazify schools and euthanasia were temporarily suspended
o      Protestant opposition less likely to succeed than Catholic, due to fragmentation and division
o      Catholic church was centralized with considerable capacity for exerting pressure

Party Opposition:
o      Communists and Social Democrats
o      Failed badly
o      SPD voted against Enabling Act, so funds seized and exiled
o      Underground members produced rebellious propaganda
o      Gestapo had success in identifying and eradicating opposers
o      KPD activities were banned after Reich fire
o      Produced over 1 million anti-Nazi leaflets between 1933 and 35
o      10% of whole Communist membership were killed
o      Thälmann, the leader of the KPD was arrested in 1933
o      Communists impeded by external constraints such as the foreign policy of Stalin and the Nazi-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact
o      Not until 1941, when Hitler invaded the USSR that Communists retorted
o      Strongest form of resistance was the attempt to remove the regime all together
o      Only done by a coup as all the constitutional channels had been blocked by Hitler’s ‘legal revolution’
o      Reason for the failure of an armed resistance – there was simply no depth in numbers to offset the failure of individual attempts like the Stauffenburg bomb plot
o      General Beck tried to persuade the General Staff to remove Hitler in 1938, and also urged the British government to resist Hitler’s demands for the Sudetenland
o      Rommel participated in a plot against Hitler’s life
o      Conservatives wanted to replace Hitler’s regime with a more democratic one to negociate an armistice with Allies
o      Would be no November 1918, since Hitler was head of state and not open to any attempt to deal
o      Allies insisted on an unconditional surrender thereby removing an important component from the campaign of the resistance movement

Prevention Opposition:
o      Enabling Act
o      Law against the formation of political parties (single party state)
o      Totalitarian state that eradicated institutions with formal expressions of dissent and opposition
o      Propaganda
o      Nazism could be removed only by conquering armies, not by internal revolution
o      Banned Jazz, left-wing art and literature, and modern art
o      Public hanging of Edelweiss Pirates
o      SS and SA to pick off individual manifestos and anti-Nazi behavior
o      Concentration camps
o      Gestapo
o      Opposition did develop in such a variety of forms indicating the totalitarianism was only partly successful
o      Volksgemeinschaft was not achieved
o      SPD fell from 14,000 in 1935 to 3800 in 1938 due to Gestapo arrests
o      1942 and 1944 Gestapo goes through with a relentless crackdown of Communist rebels and cripples the organization
o      The basic Gestapo law passed by the government in 1936 gave the Gestapo carte blanche to operate without judicial oversight. The Gestapo was specifically exempted from responsibility to administrative courts, where citizens normally could sue the state to conform to laws.
o      A further law passed later in the year gave the Gestapo responsibility for setting up and administering concentration camps.
o      Gestapo woke up people in the middle of the night and put them in court . Made citizens sign a paper pleading guilty often by torture
o      Gestapo was limited in numbers and depended on denunciations rather than spying directly on people.


Establishment:
o      Opposition of KPD
o      Youth
o      Church
o      Methods to deal – Gestapo
o      Not many people

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