Mary Fulbrook

A History of Germany 1918 - 2020


Скачать книгу

were less susceptible to Nazi distortion. Yet even at the level of school mathematics, examples could be used for exercises in arithmetic that sustained or propagated a certain worldview. Pupils were asked to do sums relating to the distance covered in certain times by tanks, torpedo boats, infantry battalions; they were asked to work out, given different speeds, at what distances from a town an enemy aircraft would be met by German air defence forces, if the latter started when the former were a certain distance away, and so on.5 The subject of racial science (Rassenkunde) was introduced, putting across Nazi views on heredity and racial purity. Schoolchildren undertook such projects as bringing to school a photo of a relative and writing an essay describing the features characteristic of the racial group of the person illustrated. The overall balance of the curriculum was altered too. There was an increased emphasis on sport and physical fitness, with sport compulsory even at university. For a small and select group, there was enhanced ideological education and paramilitary training, as in the elite Nazi boarding schools known as Napolas (Nationalpolitische Erziehungsanstalten), which were set up specifically to train future leaders. Of greater significance to far larger numbers of young people was the emphasis on community service through various work schemes – a useful means not only of attempting to inculcate a sense of community but also of obtaining cheap labour, particularly important in the later years of the Third Reich.

      Nevertheless, it does not seem that the Nazi youth organizations were an unmitigated success in inculcating a Nazi worldview in those who participated in them. Many young people simply conformed to the minimum extent necessary to avoid sanctions. Other young people developed their own youth subcultures, which the Nazis failed to suppress. Alternative youth groups included the ‘Edelweiss Pirates’ (spontaneous groups of youngsters who waged war on the Hitler Youth) and the Leipzig Meuten, the Dresden ‘Mobs’, the Halle Proletengefolgschaften, the Hamburg ‘Deathshead Gang’ and ‘Bismarck Gang’ and the Munich Blasen. While these groups were in the main working class, the swing movement was largely supported by upper-middle-class enthusiasts for ‘decadent’ jazz music. It is quite clear, not only from autobiographical accounts of individual alienation from the Hitler Youth (such as that by Heinrich Böll) but also from these more visible subcultural groups – members of which ran considerable risks and did not always escape retribution for their nonconformity – that Nazi attempts to bend the minds of a whole generation were only partially successful. Even so, the younger generation was in general far more Nazified than older generations.6

      Plate 2 Members of the Nazi League of German Girls (BDM) walk proudly down the street of a German town. Source: Holocaust museuam.

      In the sphere of work, similar attempts were made to foster a sense of community. Programmes such as ‘Strength through Joy’ (Kraft durch Freude) and ‘The Beauty of Work’ (Schönheit der Arbeit) made a pretence at fostering the health and well-being of workers. Although a few benefited from well-publicized holidays, such as pleasure cruises, many were not taken in by the propaganda about the ‘factory community’ in which individual effort served the good of the