Nazi Ideas about Society and the Treatment of Workers. Nazi Germany. This icon indicates the slide contains activities created in Flash. These activities are not editable. For more detailed instructions, see the Getting Started presentation. What we will learn today. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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So far in this unit we have focused on how the Nazi regime developed politically – through propaganda and the creation of a police state. We will now move on to look at the social policies of the regime.
In this presentation you will learn:
1. What sort of society the Nazis hoped to create.
2. How the Nazis sought to put these policies into practice.
Hitler aimed to persuade ordinary Germans that their purpose was to contribute to the greater good of the German people (Volk).
He therefore attacked the idea of individual liberty, which he felt was incompatible with a strong people’s community (Volksgemeinschaft).
For Hitler, life meant struggle – against Bolsheviks, Jews, foreign nations. Only if all members of the Volksgemeinschaft stood against these threats with common aims and perspectives (Weltanschauung) could the Volk hope to survive.
Blood: Only physically and mentally fit Aryans had any place in the new society. There was no room for social outcasts, the disabled or non-Aryans.
Soil: Hitler felt that this Volksgemeinschaft should be based around the peasantry – whom he considered the most racially pure element in Germany, and the source of all true German culture.
Society would be classless and all would share a belief in the beauty of labour. This was stressed in propaganda, using slogans such as ‘Arbeit macht frei’ (‘labour liberates’). Hitler himself was called the ‘first worker of the nation’.
What possible problems could arise from this focus on (a) Aryans and (b) the peasantry?
The 'Beauty of Labour' movement encouraged employers to improve working conditions, and organized various campaigns, for example they campaigned for:
good ventilation in the work place,
hot meals in the factory.
After 1935 the RAD (Reich Labour Service) made it compulsory for all men and women between the ages of 18 and 25 to do six months labour service.
This was intended to encourage a sense of hard work in young people. The work was poorly paid, and involved hard manual labour on farms or road-building projects.
The 'Strength Through Joy' programme (KdF) organized trips to concerts, plays, exhibitions, sporting events, folk dances, educational events and even arranged holidays.
By 1938, a special KdF office was organizing holidays and travel for approximately 10.3 million Germans. The idea was that people would work better if they were refreshed.
What did Hitler say about the KdF?
… the German worker will receive an adequate holiday and … everything will be done to ensure that this holiday and the rest of his free time offer a genuine recovery.
One of the Nazi’s most ambitious projects was to develop Prora, a huge holiday resort on the Baltic Island of Rugen. It was one of five planned to be built, but the only one started. It was never finished, due to the war. Work began in May 1936 with 48 construction companies, employing 2000 workers.
What impact do you think this had, both on Nazi popularity and the German economy?