Attempts were also made to create a sense of national community through organizational means. On one hand, old, previously autonomous organizations had their independence removed and their capacity for harbouring subversive views neutralized; on the other hand, people were harnessed for activities that gave them experience of comradeship and community at the same time as promoting particular Nazi aims. The luxuriant profusion of clubs, associations and societies characteristic of Imperial and Weimar Germany was pruned, coerced and remoulded into new, Nazi-dominated frameworks. The wide variety of youth organizations, ranging from conservative and nationalist through Catholic to Social Democratic youth groups, were submerged into the Nazi youth organizations under the leadership of Baldur von Schirach. Children between the ages of ten and fourteen were encouraged and expected to join groups for boys (Deutsches Jungvolk, DJ) and girls (Jungmädelbund, JM), while those between fourteen and eighteen were to join the Hitler Youth (Hitler Jugend, HJ) and League of German Maidens (Bund Deutscher Mädel, BDM), respectively. The Nazi youth organizations were at first similar to their non-Nazi predecessors in their open-air activities: camping, hiking and singing songs as they marched through the pine forests or sat by campfires at a lakeside. Many young people undeniably enjoyed the expeditions and comradeship engendered by these activities. But from December 1936 the Hitler Youth was given an official status alongside school and home as an educational institution that was supposed to cover all those in the relevant age groups. Children were expected to enter on 20 April (Hitler’s birthday) in the year in which they reached the age of ten. Membership finally became compulsory in a decree of March 1939. Meanwhile, since 1934 there had been an increasing emphasis on paramilitary activities and attitudes.
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.
While youth was an obvious focus for investment in the future of Nazi Germany, so, too, were the progenitors of future generations: women. In this area, Nazi ideology was clear in principle but less than consistent in practice. As is well-known, the Nazis promoted the view of women’s role being confined to ‘children, kitchen, church’ (Kinder, Küche, Kirche). The birth rate had been declining in early twentieth-century Germany, and the Nazis wanted to reverse this trend and replenish the ‘racial stock’. A variety of means were attempted, many of which were not specifically Nazi but represented more widespread attitudes at the time. In the depression of the late Weimar years there had been much criticism of ‘double earners’, and the effective expulsion of women from sections of the labour force was underway before the Nazis came to power. After 1933 the pattern of female participation in the labour force was a partially contradictory one. While Nazi prejudices had a deep impact in some areas – the exclusion of women from practising law or becoming judges is an example – in other areas, such as the caring professions and primary school teaching, female participation increased slightly. By the later 1930s the pressures of rearmament and labour shortage encouraged a higher female employment rate. There is some dispute among historians as to whether, during the war years, ideology or economic necessity took precedence in policies on female employment.
At the same time, birth control techniques were discouraged, and the benefits and virtues of having a large family were promoted. Attempts were made to propagate a view of marriage as being for the purpose of producing healthy, racially pure stock, with the state having a clear interest in the reproduction of a ‘superior’ species. As in other areas, Nazi views were dressed up to appear scientifically respectable: the expert – the doctor – had a role to play in giving a medical blessing to what might otherwise have been seen as purely the intimate, private affair of an individual couple. The decision to reproduce was not a matter solely for individuals, but an affair of the state, responsible for ensuring healthy future stock – and for sterilizing those people deemed unfit to pass on their genes into the genetic pool of the next generation. Such views were insidiously put across in such seemingly non-propagandistic publications as popular dictionaries of health and medicine, such as Knaurs Gesundheitslexikon.7 Financial incentives were given to those having numerous children, and symbolic rewards in the form of a ‘mother’s cross’ (Mutterkreuz) were awarded to those having eight, six or four children (gold, silver and bronze crosses, respectively). Courses in motherhood and domestic science were run by the Nazi women’s organization, the Deutsches Frauenwerk (DFW), which had been established in September 1933 to coordinate the various women’s organizations of pre-Nazi Germany. Along with the original NSDAP organization, the National Socialist Frauenwerk (NSF), the DFW attempted to organize and mobilize women. Like Nazi youth organizations, Nazi women’s organizations had a limited impact: working-class and rural women proved relatively impervious to their supposed attractions. Moreover, Nazi women’s policy was in any case subject to intrinsic contradictions: while attempting to emphasize the woman’s role as wife and mother, it simultaneously tended to take her away from the family through time-consuming organizational activities. As it turned out, the essentially private sphere of family life proved relatively resistant to Nazi infiltration and ‘coordination’.8 Moreover, issues of ‘race’ and class often cross-cut questions of gender.
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