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Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

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Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6
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Page 1: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Gleichschaltung and folk community

Week 11, January 6

Page 2: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Louise Solmitz’ family, 1928

Solmitz about Hitler’s visit in Hamburg on March 3, 1933:“What an exhilarating day without any cloud, full of patriotic kick! We walked to the headquarters of the NSDAP. […] The pillars are wavering: Hitler is coming! Hitler is coming! […] We met masses of people coming towards us. […] On the connecting rail line stood a group of policemen, and I saw for the first time armlets with swastika. Everyone was wearing them, everyone! […] The hands went up to Hitler salute. It was like 1914, everyone could have hugged all out of the feeling for Hitler. It was like being drunk without wine.”

Bedrohung, Hoffnung, Skepsis: Vier Tagebücher des Jahres 1933, ed. Frak Bajohr, Beate Meyer, and Joachim Szodrzynski (Göttingen:Wallstein, 2013), illustration from here

Page 3: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Events before the Reichstag fire

• Decree for the Protection of the German People (February 4)

• Legal difference between law and decree

- For arresting without judicial warrant on charges of high treason for up to three months into protective custody

- SS and SA used the decree to arrest their political opponents

• SPD and KPD don’t go into (violent) resistance• Upcoming elections March 5

Page 4: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Reichstag Fire, February 27

Page 5: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Marinus van der Lubbe

At the trial, Leipzig 1933. vdL was sentenced for high treason and executed

Page 6: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Aftermath of the Reichstag Fire

• Escalation of terror: political opponents arrested and brought into early concentration camps

• By March 15, 10,000 communists arrested • Reichstag Fire Decree (February 28)• limit of freedom of press, of opinion, of personal freedom,

in freedom of meetings, house searches, confiscation of property

• control of the state govt over the lands• gave the judicial base for what followed

Page 7: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Election on March 5, 1933

• No longer an independent election• People massively intimidated, especially in smaller

towns and villages• NSDAP 43,9%; KPD 12,3; SPD 18,3; Zentrum 11,2;

Kampffront (continuation DNVP) 8%• While the Nazis and the DNVP now had a majority,

they still did not have two thirds in the parliament needed to change the constitution

• Even in these rigged elections, Hitler did not receive a majority of the votes

Page 8: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Garnison church: Day of Potsdam, March 21-- old German and Prussian elites coalesce with the Nazis

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yC9OBj-vnwk

Page 9: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Enabling law, March 23

• Hitler: “give me four years time” Four Year Plan• KPD’s mandates were annulled by the Reichstag

decree Communist MPs could not vote• Hitler secured two third majority to change the

constitution• crucial margin of victory provided by the Zentrum• Only the SPD MPs voted against• Transformed Germany into a dictatorship• Legal base (together with the Reichstag decree) for the

Third Reich

Page 10: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Memorial for the 96 murdered Reichstag deputies

Page 11: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

• Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service (April 7) removed Jews and political opponents from public service

• Catholic church cautiously supported the new regime; Concordat of July 30

• SPD prohibited and other parties dissolved• After Hindenburg’s death in August 34, the office of

the Reich Chancellor and the president merged• New kind of state -- dictatorship

Finalizing of the transformation of power

Page 12: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Legal and political interpretations

• Ernst Fraenkel’s Dual State• Franz Neumann’s Behemoth both interpreted

the transformation of the political order• Nazi Germany as a state of exception• Siege mentality• Decisiontaking not according to norms but

measures – no more normative law• Personal loyalty crushed by terror• No remaints of legality, only technical laws

Page 13: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

Folk community

“I have been expelled from the folk community”

Page 14: Gleichschaltung and folk community Week 11, January 6.

The Nazi folk community

• More a notion than a reality• Idea of an equal community of racial comrades• Everyone’s participation• Participatory violence• Equality defined racially and socially• Strong gender components; state interfering with family and

private sphere• Based on exclusion of those who did not fit in racially and

biologically (“non-Aryans,” “asocials,” homosexuals, those sexually “deviant,” criminals, hereditary ill)

• Eugenics and later annihilation


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