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Rise of Hitler Focus 3: What was the impact of Hitler’s rule on Germany? Death of Democracy Discriminatory Treatment of Targeted Groups Impact of Hitler’s.

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Presentation on theme: "Rise of Hitler Focus 3: What was the impact of Hitler’s rule on Germany? Death of Democracy Discriminatory Treatment of Targeted Groups Impact of Hitler’s."— Presentation transcript:

1 Rise of Hitler Focus 3: What was the impact of Hitler’s rule on Germany? Death of Democracy Discriminatory Treatment of Targeted Groups Impact of Hitler’s Rule Tight Control over German Life Reduced Unemployment

2 The Enabling Act  death of democracy  Other political parties banned  Trade unions banned and replaced by the German Labour Front  Opponents removed from civil service  Mass media under Nazi control  Opponents arrested, killed or imprisoned in concentration camps Political Impact

3 1. Tight control over all aspects of German life  Emergency laws  loss of political and civil rights  SS and Gestapo struck fear in the people  Propaganda used to spread Nazi beliefs and ideas  influenced people’s minds  Censorship imposed  controlled what people read, see and listen Social Impact

4 2. Treatment of various groups  Young people  Women  Jews  Christian churches Social Impact

5  Nazi youth organisations were set up for different age groups and sexes  Aim – to believe in only Nazi ideas  Those who did not join found it difficult to enter universities or find jobs after leaving schools The Young People

6  Boys – training to become soldiers  Little Fellows (6 to 10)  Young German Folk (10 to 14)  Hitler Youth (14 to 18) The Young People

7  Girls – training to become mothers  Young Maidens (10 to 14)  League of German Maidens (14 to 18) The Young People

8  Anti-Nazi youth groups, e.g. the ‘Edelweiss Pirates’, the ‘Swing Kids’, the ‘White Rose Society’  Nazis did not have complete control over the Germans The Young People

9  Education system was controlled  Aim – to teach Nazi ideas and to instil a sense of loyalty  Subjects emphasised – History, Geography, Biology, Physical Education The Young People

10  Role of women – to produce babies and to look after their families  Incentives given to encourage procreation  Working women were forced to give up their jobs The Women

11  The Nazis blamed the Jews for all of Germany’s problems  Measures taken against the Jews:  Marriages between Germans and Jews forbidden  Jews considered racially impure and inferior  Did not want Jews to contaminate the Aryan race which Germans were part of The Jews

12  Measures taken against the Jews:  Boycott of Jewish businesses, shops and professionals  Jews were not allowed to work in the civil service, excluded from public places  Nuremberg Laws (1935) – Jews were stripped of their German citizenship, forbidden to marry non-Jews The Jews

13  The Crystal Night (9–10 Nov 1938)  Jewish shop windows smashed and synagogues burnt down  Jews were killed and arrested to be placed in concentration camps  The Holocaust  The ‘Final Solution’ to the ‘Jewish problem’ was the mass execution of millions of Jews in gas chambers during WWII The Jews

14  Established the Reich Church to preach Nazi values  To control the Protestant churches  Nazi Catholic groups set up to spread Nazi values  Those who opposed the Nazis were arrested and sent to concentration camps  Closed down all church schools and church youth groups  Reduced the influence of the church over the people The Christian Churches

15  Two main economic aims:  To reduce unemployment  To achieve economic self- sufficiency (autarky) Economic Impact

16 To reduce unemployment:  Massive public works programme  Building of motorways (autobahns), schools and hospitals created jobs  Jobs meant people had money to buy goods  factories produced more  created jobs  Reclaiming waste land and pulling down slums in the cities  created jobs Economic Impact

17 To reduce unemployment:  Rearmament programme  Conscription was reintroduced  created jobs  Increasing size of army  more weapons needed  created more jobs in the arms factories Economic Impact

18 To reduce unemployment:  Removing Jews, Nazi opponents and women from the civil service  created jobs  Number of unemployed fell from 6 million (1933) to 2.5 million (1935) and then to 250,000 (1939)  Made Hitler very popular with the masses Economic Impact

19  Rearmament programme benefitted only big businesses and not small businesses  Four-Year Economic Plan set up to make Germany self-sufficient  Failed to develop oil and rubber substitutes  Had to continue importing raw materials Economic Impact


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