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Adolf Hitler
Dictator and leader of the German
Nazi movement. Born April 20, 1889 in the small Austrian town of
Braunau on the Inn River along the Bavarian-German border, son
of an Austrian customs official of moderate means. Hitler’s
early youth in Linz on the Danube seems to have been under the
repressive influence of an authoritarian and, after retirement
in 1895, increasingly short-tempered and domineering father
until the latter's death in 1903.
After an initially fine performance in elementary school, Adolf
soon became rebellious and began failing in the Realschule
(college preparatory school). Following transfer to another
school, he finally left formal education altogether in 1905 and,
refusing to bow to the discipline of a regular job, began his
long years of dilettante, aimless existence, reading, painting,
wandering in the woods, and dreaming of becoming a famous
artist. In 1907, when his mother died, he moved to Vienna in an
attempt to enroll in the famed Academy of Fine Arts. His failure
to gain admission that year and the next led him into a period
of deep depression and seclusion from his friends. Wandering
through the streets of Vienna, he lived on a modest orphan's
pension and the money he could earn by painting and selling
picture postcards. It was during this time of his vagabond
existence among the rootless, displaced elements of the old
Hapsburg capital, that he first became fascinated by the immense
potential of mass political manipulation. He was particularly
impressed by the successes of the anti-Semitic, nationalist
Christian-Socialist party of Vienna Mayor Karl Lueger and his
efficient machine of propaganda and mass organization. Under
Lueger's influence and that of former Catholic monk and race
theorist Lanz von Liebenfels, Hitler first developed the
fanatical anti-Semitism and racial mythology that were to remain
central to his own "ideology" and that of the Nazi party.
In May 1913, apparently in an attempt to avoid induction into
the Austrian military service after he had failed to register
for conscription, Hitler slipped across the German border to
Munich, only to be arrested and turned over to the Austrian
police. He was able to persuade the authorities not to detain
him for draft evasion and duly presented himself for the draft
physical examination, which he failed to pass. He returned to
Munich, and after the outbreak of World War I a year later, he
volunteered for action in the German army. During the war he
fought on Germany's Western front with distinction but gained no
promotion beyond the rank of corporal. Injured twice, he won
several awards for bravery, among them the highly respected Iron
Cross First Class. Although isolated in his troop, he seems to
have thoroughly enjoyed his success on the front and continued
to look back fondly upon his war experience.
The end of the war suddenly left Hitler without a place or goal
and drove him to join the many disillusioned veterans who
continued to fight in the streets of Germany. In the spring of
1919 he found employment as a political officer in the army in
Munich with the help of an adventurer-soldier by the name of
Ernst Roehm--later head of Hitler's storm troopers (SA). In this
capacity Hitler attended a meeting of the so-called German
Workers' party, a nationalist, anti-Semitic, and socialist
group, in September 1919. He quickly distinguished himself
as this party's most popular and impressive speaker and
propagandist, helped to increase its membership dramatically to
some 6,000 by 1921, and in April that year became Fuhrer
(leader) of the now-renamed National Socialist German Workers'
party (NSDAP), the official name of the Nazi party.
The worsening economic conditions of the two following years,
which included a runaway inflation that wiped out the savings of
great numbers of middle-income citizens, massive unemployment,
and finally foreign occupation of the economically crucial Ruhr
Valley, contributed to the continued rapid growth of the party.
By the end of 1923 Hitler could count on a following of some
56,000 members and many more sympathizers and regarded himself
as a significant force in Bavarian and German politics. Inspired
by Mussolini's "March on Rome," he hoped to use the crisis
conditions accompanying the end of the Ruhr occupation in the
fall of 1923 to stage his own coup against the Berlin
government. For this purpose he staged the well-known Nazi Beer
Hall Putsch of Nov. 8/9, 1923, by which he hoped--in coalition
with right-wingers around World War I general Erich
Ludendorff--to force the conservative-nationalist Bavarian
government of Gustav von Kahr to cooperate with him in a
rightist "March on Berlin." The attempt failed, however. Hitler
was tried for treason and given the rather mild sentence of a
year's imprisonment in the old fort of Landsberg.
It was during this prison term that many of Hitler's basic ideas
of political strategy and tactics matured Here he outlined
his major plans and beliefs in Mein Kampf, which he dictated to
his loyal confidant Rudolf Hess. He planned the reorganization
of his party, which had been outlawed and which, with the return
of prosperity, had lost much of its appeal. After his release
Hitler reconstituted the party around a group of loyal followers
who were to remain the cadre of the Nazi movement and state.
Progress was slow in the prosperous 1920s, however, and on the
eve of the Depression, the NSDAP still was able to attract only
some 2.5 percent of the electoral vote.
With the outbreak of world depression, the fortunes of Hitler's
movement rose rapidly. In the elections of September 1930 the
Nazis polled almost 6.5 million votes and increased their
parliamentary representation from 12 to 107. In the presidential
elections of the spring of 1932, Hitler ran an impressive second
to the popular World War I hero Field Marshal Paul von
Hindenburg, and in July he outpolled all other parties with some
14 million votes and 230 seats in the Reichstag (parliament).
Although the party lost 2 million of its voters in another
election, in November 1932, President Hindenburg on Jan. 30,
1933, reluctantly called Hitler to the chancellorship to head a
coalition government of Nazis, conservative German nationalists,
and several prominent independents.
The first two years in office were almost wholly dedicated to
the consolidation of power. With several prominent Nazis in key
positions (Hermann Goring, as minister of interior in Prussia,
and Wilhelm Frick, as minister of interior of the central
government, controlled the police forces) and his military ally
Werner von Blomberg in the Defense Ministry, he quickly gained
practical control. He persuaded the aging president and the
Reichstag to invest him with emergency powers suspending the
constitution in the so-called Enabling Act of Feb. 28, 1933.
Under this act and with the help of a mysterious fire in the
Reichstag building, he rapidly eliminated his political rivals
and brought all levels of government and major political
institutions under his control. By means of the Roehm purge of
the summer of 1934 he assured himself of the loyalty of the army
by the subordination of the Nazi storm troopers and the murder
of its chief together with the liquidation of major rivals
within the army. The death of President Hindenburg in August
1934 cleared the way for the abolition of the presidential title
by plebiscite. Hitler became officially Fuhrer of Germany and
thereby head of state as well as commander in chief of the armed
forces. Joseph Goebbels's extensive propaganda machine and
Heinrich Himmler's police system simultaneously perfected
totalitarian control of Germany, as demonstrated most
impressively in the great Nazi mass rally of 1934 in Nuremberg,
where millions marched in unison and saluted Hitler's theatrical
appeals.
Once internal control was assured, Hitler began mobilizing
Germany's resources for military conquest and racial domination
of the land masses of central and eastern Europe. He put
Germany's 6 million unemployed to work on a vast rearmament and
building program, coupled with a propaganda campaign to prepare
the nation for war. Germany's mythical enemy, world Jewry--which
was associated with all internal and external obstacles in the
way of total power--was systematically and ruthlessly attacked
in anti-Semitic mass propaganda, with economic sanctions, and in
the end by the "final solution" of physical destruction of
Jewish men, women, and children in Himmler's concentration
camps.
Foreign relations were similarly directed toward preparation for
war: the improvement of Germany's military position, the
acquisition of strong allies or the establishment of convenient
neutrals, and the division of Germany's enemies. Playing on the
weaknesses of the Versailles Peace Treaty and the general fear
of war, this policy was initially most successful in the face of
appeasement-minded governments in England and France. After an
unsuccessful coup attempt in Austria in 1934, Hitler gained
Mussolini's alliance and dependence as a result of Italy's
Ethiopian war in 1935, illegally marched into the Rhineland in
1936 (demilitarized at Versailles), and successfully
intervened--in cooperation with Mussolini--in the Spanish Civil
War. Under the popular banner of national self-determination, he
annexed Austria and the German-speaking Sudetenland of
Czechoslovakia with the concurrence of the West in 1938 (Munich
Agreement), only to occupy all of Czechoslovakia early in 1939.
Finally, through threats and promises of territory, he was able
to gain the benevolent neutrality of the Soviet Union for the
coming war (Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, August 1939). On Sept. 1,
1939, Hitler began World War II—which he hoped would lead to his
control of most of the Eurasian heartland—with the lightning
invasion of Poland, which he immediately followed with the
liquidation of Jews and the Polish intelligentsia, the
enslavement of the local "subhuman" population, and the
beginnings of a German colonization. Following the declaration
of war by France and England, he temporarily turned his military
machine west, where the lightning, mobile attacks of the German
forces quickly triumphed. In April 1940 Denmark surrendered, and
Norway was taken by an amphibious operation. In May-June the
rapidly advancing tank forces defeated France and the Low
Countries.
The major goal of Hitler's conquest lay in the East, however,
and already in the middle of 1940 German war production was
preparing for an eastern campaign. The Air Battle of Britain,
which Hitler had hoped would permit either German invasion or
(this continued to be his dream) an alliance with "Germanic"
England, was broken off, and Germany's naval operations
collapsed for lack of reinforcements and materiel.
On June 22, 1941, the German army advanced on Russia in the
so-called Operation Barbarossa, which Hitler regarded as
Germany's final struggle for existence and "living space"
(Lebensraum) and for the creation of the "new order" of German
racial domination. After initial rapid advances, the German
troops were stopped by the severe Russian winter, however, and
failed to reach any of their three major goals: Leningrad,
Moscow, and Stalingrad.
The following year's advances were again slower than expected,
and with the first major setback at Stalingrad (1943) the long
retreat from Russia began. A year later, the Western Allies,
too, started advancing on Germany.
With the waning fortunes of the German war effort, Hitler
withdrew almost entirely from the public; his orders became
increasingly erratic and pedantic; and recalling his earlier
triumphs over the generals, he refused to listen to advice from
his military counselors. He dreamed of miracle bombs and
suspected treason everywhere. Under the slogan of "total victory
or total ruin," the entire German nation from young boys to old
men, often barely equipped or trained, was mobilized and sent to
the front. After an unsuccessful assassination attempt by a
group of former leading politicians and military men on July 20,
1944, the regime of terror further tightened.
In the last days of the Third Reich, with the Russian troops in
the suburbs of Berlin, Hitler entered into a last stage of
desperation in his underground bunker in Berlin. He ordered
Germany destroyed since it was not worthy of him; he expelled
his trusted lieutenants Himmler and Goring from the party; and
made a last, theatrical appeal to the German nation. Adolf
Hitler committed suicide on April 30, 1945, leaving the last
bits of unconquered German territory to the administration of
non-Nazi Adm. Karl Doenitz.
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