Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

How Germans Fell for the 'Feel-Good' Fuehrer
Spiegel ^ | 03/22/05 | Jody K. Biehl

Posted on 03/22/2005 7:20:59 AM PST by Pikamax

How Germans Fell for the 'Feel-Good' Fuehrer

By Jody K. Biehl in Berlin

Hitler not only fattened his adoring "Volk" with jobs and low taxes, he also fed his war machine through robbery and murder, says a German historian in a stunning new book. Far from considering Nazism oppressive, most Germans thought of it as warm-hearted, asserts Goetz Aly. The book is generating significant buzz in Germany and it may mark the beginning of a new level of Holocaust discourse.

DER SPIEGEL Hitler took great care to pamper and coddle his people and they loved him -- and the Nazi regime -- for it. A well-respected German historian has a radical new theory to explain a nagging question: Why did average Germans so heartily support the Nazis and Third Reich? Hitler, says Goetz Aly, was a "feel good dictator," a leader who not only made Germans feel important, but also made sure they were well cared-for by the state.

To do so, he gave them huge tax breaks and introduced social benefits that even today anchor the society. He also ensured that even in the last days of the war not a single German went hungry. Despite near-constant warfare, never once during his 12 years in power did Hitler raise taxes for working class people. He also -- in great contrast to World War I -- particularly pampered soldiers and their families, offering them more than double the salaries and benefits that American and British families received. As such, most Germans saw Nazism as a "warm-hearted" protector, says Aly, author of the new book "Hitler's People's State: Robbery, Racial War and National Socialism" and currently a guest lecturer at the University of Frankfurt. They were only too happy to overlook the Third Reich's unsavory, murderous side.

Financing such home front "happiness" was not simple and Hitler essentially achieved it by robbing and murdering others, Aly claims. Jews. Slave laborers. Conquered lands. All offered tremendous opportunities for plunder, and the Nazis exploited it fully, he says.

Once the robberies had begun, a sort of "snowball effect" ensued and in order to stay afloat, he says Germany had to conquer and pilfer from more territory and victims. "That's why Hitler couldn't stop and glory comfortably in his role as victor after France's 1940 surrender." Peace would have meant the end of his predatory practices and would have spelled "certain bankruptcy for the Reich."

Instead, Hitler continued on the easy path of self deception, spurring the war greedily forward. And the German people -- fat with bounty -- kept quiet about where all the wealth originated, he says. Was it a deplorable weakness of human nature or insatiable German avarice? It's hard to say, but imagine if today's beleaguered government of German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder could offer jobs and higher benefits to the masses. "No one would ask where the money came from and they would directly win the next election," Aly says.

Stadtarchiv Oberhausen The Nazis helped themselves to Jewish wealth and used it to feed the war machine. Likewise, in the 1940s, soldiers on the front were instructed to ravage conquered lands for raw materials, industrial goods and food for Germans. Aly cites secret Nazi files showing that from 1941-1943 Germans robbed enough food and supplies from the Soviet Union to care for 21 million people. Meanwhile, he insists, Soviet war prisoners were systematically starved. German soldiers were also encouraged to send care packages home to their families to boost the morale of their wives and children. In the first three months of 1943, German soldiers on the Leningrad front sent more than 3 million packages stuffed with artifacts, art, valuables and food home, Aly says.

"About 95 percent of the German population benefited financially from the National Socialist system. The Nazis' unprecedented killing machine maintained its momentum by robbing from others. ... Millions of people were killed -- the Jews were gassed, 2 million Soviet war prisoners were starved to death ... so that the German people could maintain their good mood." By contrast, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill cajoled his people in 1940, just after France had fallen, to "brace ourselves to our duties" so that in a thousand years, "men will still say, this was their finest hour."

How to make a criminal regime thrive

DPA The Nazi war plunder had a snowball effect. If Hitler stopped it, the Reich would have been bankrupt. Aly's theory is not only fascinating for its brazenness, but also for the ruckus it is causing in Germany, where lately the trend has been to accept that Germans, too, suffered under Hitler and under the Allied bombing raids at the war's end. Aly is now negating much of that suffering, insisting that every single German benefited from Hitler's culture of killing. The Feuilleton, or cultural pages, of German newspapers -- which only recently exploded with coverage of the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Aushwitz -- have teemed with articles about Aly since the book, "Hitler's People's State" came out on March 10. In the left-leaning newspaper Die Tageszeitung, he has even engaged in an open fight with Cambridge economics historian Adam Tooze who has criticized the mathematical methods he used to substantiate his theory. Sales, too, are much better than he or his publisher imagined. "I didn't write the book for the lay person," he says. "It's crammed full of facts and dry historical and economic data and has close to 1,000 footnotes." But if people want to read it, he says he won't complain. It will come out in French this autumn and in English in 2006.

The timing for the book's German release, as his publishers well know, couldn't be better. Germany will spend the next six weeks hitting dozens of World War II anniversaries before arriving at memorial celebrations on May 8 and 9 marking 60 years since the war's end. It is also, says Aly, no coincidence that the work comes close to three generations after Hitler's suicide.

"The book could have been written 10 years ago, even 20 years ago," he says. All of the documents were there. We just weren't open to them. Personally, I didn't have the questions then."

The documents include reams of complex economic, bank and tax records as well as thousands of clippings from regional newspaper archives that Aly spent the past four years scouring. In the book, he uses them to support his theory that half the war was financed by government credit and that close to 70 percent of the rest came from plunder. "I am not trying to turn the history of National Socialism on its head," he insists. "But I think -- despite all the time that has passed -- it is still important to ask the most fundamental questions, namely how all this happened. What were the most important elements that allowed this criminal regime to thrive? So much came out of the German middle class. That is the most troubling aspect of the history."

AP Jewish slave workers toil at the Dachau concentration camp to benefit the Reich. Such ground has been broken before. In his 1996 bestseller, "Hitler's Willing Executioners: Ordinary Germans and the Holocaust," controversial Harvard professor Daniel Goldhagen -- an American Jew -- dared to point his finger at average Germans and insist they not only knew about the Third Reich atrocities, but in their rabid anti-Semitism were eager co-conspirators. And for decades, historians have spoken of Hitler's popular appeal, his ability to head off unemployment and shore up the nation's shoddy infrastructure. In fact, Germany's famous "Autobahn" (highway) is sometimes called the "Hitler Bahn" because it was built by the Nazis. His Napola and Adolf Hitler schools famously cut through social classes, admitting rich and poor to Nazi indoctrination. Still, until now, economists have struggled to prove that the plunder from abroad really drove the war machine.

Perhaps, says Aly, that is partly because German historians weren't ready to look at what he calls "secondary" questions about the structural and financial underpinnings of the Nazi war machine. "Writing about them would have reduced the human scale of the tragedy," he says. Plus, he insists, it is always "much easier to say it was the fault of a small group of elites, the power-crazed SS commanders, or even big businesses" than to point to your own greed. German society has spent decades digesting and "perhaps now we have reached a new level," he says.

Were Germans liberated from the Nazis, too?

REUTERS German President Horst Koehler bows in memory at Auschwitz. Do Germans belong at Holocaust memorial ceremonies? Current politics seems to mirror this sentiment. These days, making use of an agile word and mind flip, Germans have begun to insist that they -- like the rest of Europe -- were also liberated on May 8, 1945. They say it marks the day they and their children were freed from Nazi oppression. Still, in 1945, says Aly, Germans didn't think they were being liberated. "They had to be liberated from themselves," he says. "That's the problem."

In truth, Germans have made great strides in accepting their guilt and have even "liberated themselves," enough that it is now politically acceptable for German politicians to participate in World War II anniversaries in other countries. In May, Gerhard Schroeder became the first German chancellor to participate in a D-Day celebration. In January, German President Horst Koehler bowed his head at Auschwitz in memory of the 1.5 million people killed before the Red Army liberated the camp. Another trip is planned to Moscow for May celebrations.

Scholarship and even more delicately, German Holocaust sensitivities, too have progressed in recent years. In January, the first post-war German-Jewish comedy, "Alles Auf Zucker" (Bet it all on Zucker) was released and became an immediate box office hit. Before its release, film and television executives had long held that any productions involving Jews and Germans meant poison at the box office. Germans are also starting to talk about their own suffering during the war, particularly during the relentless Allied bombing of German cities such as Dresden. Aly accepts such suffering as truthful, saying talking about it shows that Germans have made advances from the shame-faced decades just after the war when no German academic could look at the war objectively. The question, he says is, "how do you relegate that suffering? We were also victims of our own aggression."

The important thing, he says is that German perspectives continue to evolve. He sees his book as an important part of that process. "I think in 10 years, because of this book, our understanding will be very different than it was less say a year ago," he says. "That's because my book contains a large number of short descriptions and sketches, and I am quite certain that the questions I ask will be investigated by my colleagues. That will definitely give us a lot more information. I notice it already in the echo from the book. I am getting letters from families who corroborate what I write. I'm sure more of that will come."


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Germany; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: hitler; wwii
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120121-137 last
To: Sam the Sham
People who consider the fascists, "socialist", ignore where they came from. The roots of fascism were not in Marxism.

Mussolini actually had been a socialist. So his roots very definitely were "on the left."

But the controversy is a little silly. Nazism and Fascism were syntheses of "right" and "left" ideas of the day, and it's hard now to unsort out the mixed elements and put such movements firmly on one side or the other.

In the context of the 1920s and 1930s -- international communism defined as the "left" and street fighting between National Socialists or Fascists and Communists -- one can make a case that Hitler and Mussolini were more right than left, but that only goes so far, and you miss a lot if you try to pigeonhole their movements according to a right-left schema.

121 posted on 03/22/2005 5:03:54 PM PST by x
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 42 | View Replies]

To: Sam the Sham
"There is no such thing as a non-statist European right."

There, thats better.

122 posted on 03/22/2005 5:49:17 PM PST by chudogg (www.chudogg.blogspot.com)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 96 | View Replies]

To: chukcha

Hitler only tolerated reading of the New Testament and railed against the Old Testament. He personally worshipped Norse gods.


123 posted on 03/22/2005 6:17:13 PM PST by GOP_1900AD (Stomping on "PC," destroying the Left, and smoking out faux "conservatives" - Take Back The GOP!)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 118 | View Replies]

To: GOP_1900AD
Hitler only tolerated reading of the New Testament and railed against the Old Testament. He personally worshipped Norse gods.

Whatever... It does not mean that he persecuted Christians.
124 posted on 03/22/2005 6:29:51 PM PST by chukcha
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 123 | View Replies]

To: chukcha

Suggest your take some time and read Hitler's "Table Talk". He clearly viewed Christianity and Judism in the same light and had for each the same goal.

I am sure that had he made his thoughts public, his universal appeal would certaily have suffered. Use of the religious symbols by the Nazis was a convenient ruse similar to Stalin's sudden "return to religion" after being attacked by Germany.


125 posted on 03/22/2005 7:58:03 PM PST by Western Phil
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 118 | View Replies]

To: Western Phil
Stalin never "returned to religion". He only stopped persecution of Russian Church during the war and call for everybody to defend the Motherland. The were never chaplains in the Soviet Army - they had commissars and politruks. Contrast this with Wehrmacht. They never had "Nazi ideology officer", they had chaplains - Christian and, sometimes, Muslim.

There is a big - no, huge - stretch to state that Hitler persecuted Christians, based on some book that claims to quote private conversations with Hitler. There was never such a policy in Nazi Germany.
126 posted on 03/22/2005 8:38:22 PM PST by chukcha
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 125 | View Replies]

To: 2banana

"Christians were widely condemned as "right wing fanatics"

On this one point, after reading any of the Schiavo threads, I think they may have been right.


127 posted on 03/22/2005 8:54:31 PM PST by flaglady47 (O)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 8 | View Replies]

To: Sam the Sham

"3. Why did facsists never suppress the right, allowing it to survive intact ?"

Stalin, being actually much more viscious than Hitler, first got rid of the moderate politicians, then the left, and then he nailed the right. A grand slam. He got them all. Then they had a dictator, him.


128 posted on 03/22/2005 9:08:17 PM PST by flaglady47 (O)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 23 | View Replies]

To: SMARTY

Last but not least, the US has NEVER gone to war much less begun hostilities for 'gain'.

We invade culturally and economically, all over the globe. Now, that's a good thing IMO, but we do invade and stay, just not in the typical way. Ask the French, who get all bent out of shape because our movies, computer stuff, fast food joints, etc. are everywhere.


129 posted on 03/22/2005 9:15:41 PM PST by flaglady47 (O)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 36 | View Replies]

To: Sam the Sham
Does that mean continental Europe has always been socialist ?

In a word, yes.

Aside from the monarchies (another form of totalitarian state), Europeans have always embraced the idea of a strong central government and social engineering. This is one of the main reasons that Marx's ideas caught on so well.

At the time, most of these types of movements would have had other labels, but, when looking at them from today's perspective, it is quite easy to recognize the degree of "socialism" involved in them. To some degree, one could make the argument that Marx did nothing more than look to several of these movements while writing "Das Kapital".

You earlier conceded that the right/left in Europe is unlike the right/left in the US. I agree. BUT, I contend that the European spectrum consists almost entirely of what we in the US would refer to as "left".

To the extreme left you have/had:
the anarchists,
the communists,
the Greens, [semi-communist, totalitarian tendencies, very heavy control of capital]
"social" parties (SPD in Germany), [heavy socialists tendencies, very strong central government, heavy control of capital]
National Socialists, [moderate socialist, strong central government, controls on capital]
Conservatives (CDU, CSU in Germany) [light social tendencies, strong on central government, "free" on capital]
Free Democrats (Moderates) ["libertarian", decentral, capitalist]

You contend that the Nazi's favored the "right" and destroyed the "left". In essence this is correct. However, it was the far "left" that posed the most threat to the concept of Nazism as it wanted to go much further down the road of state control. The "right" were "natural" allies as the Nazi's weren't as extreme (on the face) as the communists. The Nazi's ensured a strong central government and left enough "free enterprise" in place to satisfy the "right". In fact, even the SPD of the time supported Hitler's rise as he was a "better" choice than the communist alternative.

So, as I said at the beginning, yes, European governments are and were for the most part "socialist". The exact degree of socialism depends on which group is actually in power at any one moment.

I would invite you to reread the link I posted earlier. There are some very compelling arguments there that do a far better job of describing Nazism's relationship to socialism than I can.

130 posted on 03/23/2005 12:20:05 AM PST by An.American.Expatriate (Here's my strategy on the War against Terrorism: We win, they lose. - with apologies to R.R.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 82 | View Replies]

To: flaglady47

That's another thing, and probably what has the Muslims so wired up. Cultures have clashed before but not with the impact or to the complete extent that the computer age has permitted this time. Muslims stood it off before but cannot now. Technology and politics have always been married but the situation is much more life and death for them than for us.


131 posted on 03/23/2005 4:11:46 AM PST by SMARTY
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 129 | View Replies]

To: chukcha
How do you explain the fact that the cross was featured in all German Army insignia? I am not talking about swastika.

The Nazis used any religion to further their power. For example, the Nazis raised two Muslim Waffen SS Divisions during the war. These were the only true "religious" SS Division the Nazis ever created (and it is safe to say that the Germany was not a Muslim nation). Himmler was fascinated by the thought of Muslims to be fearless soldiers willing to kill for their religion. One of these Muslim Waffen SS divisions (The Hanjer Division) was responsible for the murder of over 90 percent of the Yugoslavian Jewish population. And these Muslim Waffen SS Divisions did where Islamic religious symbols on their German Army uniforms...

132 posted on 03/23/2005 5:31:41 AM PST by 2banana (My common ground with terrorists - They want to die for Islam, and we want to kill them.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 118 | View Replies]

To: 2banana
And these Muslim Waffen SS Divisions did where Islamic religious symbols on their German Army uniforms...

And they were given Iron Crosses for their "accomplishments".

The Nazis used any religion to further their power.

Exactly. This contradicts your earlier statements that they were anti-Christian. Contrast this with Soviets, who were against any religion and never used religion - only allowed it (barely).
133 posted on 03/23/2005 5:54:22 AM PST by chukcha
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 132 | View Replies]

To: dead

You owe me a new keyboard.


134 posted on 03/23/2005 6:18:07 AM PST by Melas
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 3 | View Replies]

To: walden

Bonhoeffer was a great man. I love his poem (which has become a song) "By gracious powers".


135 posted on 03/24/2005 2:20:42 AM PST by Michael81Dus
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 71 | View Replies]

To: Sam the Sham
Any depiction of the Nazis as "socialist" collapses in the face of the unshakeable fact that fascist violence was entirely directed against the left.

"My cousin Francis [I of France] and I are in complete agreement: he wants Vienna, and so do I."
--Emperor Charles V

136 posted on 04/06/2005 8:59:03 AM PDT by steve-b (A desire not to butt into other people's business is eighty percent of all human wisdom)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: Sam the Sham

Conservatives were more scared of the Bolsheviks (can't say I would have blamed them) and they saw Hitler as the best way to keep Germany from it. They thought they could control Hitler, and then he would fade quickly. They were dead wrong. Sometimes the enemy of your enemy is still your enemy.


137 posted on 04/06/2005 9:04:23 AM PDT by dfwgator (It's sad that the news media treats Michael Jackson better than our military.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 42 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first previous 1-20 ... 61-8081-100101-120121-137 last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson