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The impact of war on the German people

In Germany in 1914, at the beginning of World War One, there had been great enthusiasm for war.

In 1939, this was no longer the case as the vast majority of Germans only reluctantly supported the war.

The early period of the war, 1939-41, was successful for the German army and there was little ill-effect on the civilian population.

Successful tactics meant that Germany was able to take resources from conquered territories such as Poland, Holland and Belgium.

In fact, early military successes actually gave rise to celebrations amongst the German people and caused an increase in Hitler’s popularity.

Initially was not needed very much as victories arrived at the start of the war, but as the war drew on and German success became more limited, the role of propaganda increased.

Joseph Goebbels urged the people to work harder and to make even greater sacrifice to achieve victory, especially after German cities were bombed.

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Air raids and bombing

Initially, the British - later joined by the United States, and to a lesser extent the USSR - targeted their bombing raids on industrial and military targets.

However, in 1942, the Allies switched to a policy of ‘area bombing’, i.e. targeting large industrial cities with incendiary bombs (bombs designed to cause fires), and not distinguishing between military and civilian targets.

A number of key cities came under attack (not including Berlin, which was subject to relentless attacks in the latter part of the war).

  • On 30 May 1942: the first British ‘thousand bomber raid’ was launched against Cologne.
  • July and August 1943: Hamburg was bombed on two occasions. As a result of the second air raid, two thirds of the city’s buildings were destroyed and tens of thousands died.
  • February 1945: Dresden was attacked over two nights with 70 per cent of buildings destroyed and around 25,000 people killed.
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Results of the bombings in Germany

Effect of the Allied bombing of Germany during World War Two
  • 3.6 million homes were destroyed.
  • 7.5 million people were made homeless.
  • 300,000 – 400,000 civilians were killed.
  • Many people fled to the countryside.
  • The raids had a limited impact on the morale of the German population as Nazi propaganda tended to downplay their destruction and the number of deaths.
  • The raids strengthened rather than weakened the determination of the Germans.
  • There was severe overcrowding in the buildings left habitable.
The effect of the Allied bombing of Germany during World War Two
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'Total War'

Female worker in a German aircraft factory in 1942
Image caption,
Female worker in a German aircraft factory in 1942

'Total War', first declared by Joseph Goebbels in February 1943, was an idea that all of Germany’s economic activity would be focused solely on winning the war.

By 1943, it was clear that Germany was not winning and that its economy was not able to provide the country with all that it needed to succeed in the kind of war being fought.

Therefore, the economy needed to be changed.

Albert Speer had become Minister of Armaments and Production in 1942 and was given the task of increasing war production within the economy.

He ensured that all production of civilian goods stopped and factories only produced goods which would support the war effort.

As a result, working hours increased, women were brought in to work in factories and foreign workers were even used.

Female worker in a German aircraft factory in 1942
Image caption,
Female worker in a German aircraft factory in 1942
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Impact of Speer's plan

Speer had some success:

Improvements attempted:

  • More armaments.
  • Better planning.
  • Improved cooperation between different sectors of the economy and the military.
  • More workers.

Successes:

  • Panzer III battle tanks were produced twice as quickly.
  • The output of workers in munitions went up an average of 60 per cent.
  • Weapon production increased by 130 per cent between 1941 and 1943.
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Rationing

Daily food ration for a German civilian during World War Two
Image caption,
Daily food ration for a German civilian during World War Two

and rearmament meant consumer goods were already expensive and scarce before the war and although the main restrictions were not until 1942, there were some problems early in the war.

Food was rationed immediately in 1939, although Germans did not experience chronic shortages until 1944.

Rationing during the war

  • The Germans diet became more monotonous, with lots of bread, potatoes and preserves.
  • There were meat shortages due to the lack of imports from the USA.
  • Parks and gardens were dug up to make vegetable patches.
  • Extra rations were given to people considered important to the war effort.
  • Clothing was rationed from November 1939 onwards.
  • There were coal shortages.
  • A flourishing was created. Luxury clothes and perfume were readily available for the rich.
  • Food consumption per person fell 25 percent by 1941.

In general, rationing was accepted with little opposition, especially as food rations were reasonably generous until the middle of the war.

However, in the last year of the war, were no longer honoured and shortages of food and clothing were severe.

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Labour shortages and the role of women in the workplace

13.7 million German men served in the army during the war, and this created a huge labour shortage on the home front.

As they did during World War One, women played a vital role. They worked in armaments factories and as medics.

There was compulsory agricultural labour service for unmarried women under 25.

In 1943, women aged 17 to 45 had to register for work.

However, only 1 million out of 3 million of those eligible did so.

Of those who registered, about 400,000 were employed because employers and the Nazis still preferred to use prisoners.

Hitler opposed the suggestion to women into the army, but Nazi women’s groups organised collections of clothing for the soldiers on the harsh Eastern front in the USSR.

The Nazis also made extensive use of forced labour, transporting hundreds of thousands of civilians and prisoners of war from Eastern Europe and elsewhere to Germany to keep the war effort going.

By 1943, 21 per cent of the German workforce were foreigners.

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Escalation of racial persecution

The outbreak of World War Two spelt disaster for those Jews who had remained in Germany.

Persecution quickly escalated.

By the end of the war, six million European Jews had been exterminated, including over three million from Germany.

World War Two also affected other minorities.

85 per cent of Germany's Sinti and Roma died in concentration camps.

Between 1939 and 1941, over 100,000 Germans with physical and mental disabilities were killed in secret, without the consent of their families.

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Ghettos

Immediately after the war broke out in September 1939, the Nazi policy of isolating Jews from the rest of German society intensified.

In Poland, the Jews were herded into overcrowded ghettos in towns such as Lodz, Riga, and Minsk.

Question

What was a ghetto?

Warsaw Ghetto

The Warsaw Ghetto
Image caption,
The Warsaw Ghetto was established in 1940

The Warsaw Ghetto was the largest of the Nazi ghettos during World War Two.

Conditions were appalling.

It had 400,000 Jews crammed into an area covering approximately 1 square mile.

95 per cent of the wooden shacks they lived in had no running water or sanitation.

Food was scarce and there was a deliberate policy of starving the population.

Hundreds of thousands died of starvation and disease, such as .

As the war continued, the Jews were often moved from the ghettos to concentration camps.

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The Einsatzgruppen

By the end of 1941, the ghettos and camps were overwhelmed by the number of Jews being sent to them.

Many Jews never even arrived at the camps because they were simply murdered instead.

Four specially created units totalling 3,000 men, called Einsatzgruppen, had been set up to follow behind the German army during its invasion of the USSR.

They were to round up Jews, officials and Russian army officers, and execute them.

Initially, they targeted Jewish men, but in August 1941 the policy was extended to the entire Jewish population.

The victims were taken to the edge of towns and villages, forced to dig mass graves and then shot and buried in huge numbers.

In September 1941, in a two-day massacre at Babi Yar, Kyiv, nearly 34,000 Jews were killed.

By the end of 1941, 500,000 Jews had been murdered in this way and in total the victims of Einsatzgruppen numbered around 1.2 million.

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The Final Solution

Image caption,
Portrait of Reinhard Heydrich

At the end of 1941, Hitler demanded an “aggressive policy” to rid Germany of Jews.

On 20 January 1942, Reinhard Heydrich, the Head of the , held a conference in the Wannsee suburb of Berlin to discuss what the new aggressive policy should be.

At this meeting, it was agreed that all Jews under German occupation would be brought to Poland, where those fit enough would be worked to death and the rest exterminated.

This led to the horror of the Nazi death camps, six of which were built specifically to murder those brought to them.

Image caption,
Portrait of Reinhard Heydrich
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The Death Camps

Hungarian Jews arriving at Birkenau station in Auschwitz-Birkenau, in German-occupied Poland, June 1944
Image caption,
Hungarian Jews arriving at Birkenau station in Auschwitz-Birkenau, in German-occupied Poland, June 1944

A number of camps were built throughout Eastern Europe, some were solely extermination camps and others were labour and extermination camps such as Auschwitz-Birkenau.

By the end of the war, an estimated 6 million Jews had been murdered by the Nazis.

Jews arrived at the camps on trains, where they were separated into two groups: those fit enough to work and those to be killed immediately – usually women, children and the elderly.

The latter group was ushered into what they thought were showers, where they were gassed to death using pellets of known as Zyklon B.

It took up to 30 minutes for victims to die. Their bodies were then burnt in huge ovens.

Altogether, it is thought around six million Jews were murdered, as well as several million other victims, including and , homosexuals, Soviet prisoners of war, Jehovah’s Witnesses and other ‘undesirables’.

This is known as the Holocaust.

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Opposition from young people

There was growing opposition and resistance in Germany to Nazi rule during the war years.

Swing Youth

  • These were middle class young people who rejected Nazi values.
  • They drank alcohol and danced to jazz music. The Nazis rejected jazz as degenerate and called it 'Negro music', using their racial ideas to oppose this cultural development.

Edelweiss Pirates

  • They were made up of primarily working class boys from regions in the west of Germany, such as the Rhineland. This was the main youth opposition group during the war.
  • They attacked members of and were fond of singing anti-Nazi songs. In 1942, over 700 of them were arrested. In 1944, 12 members were publicly hanged after their members in Cologne killed the Gestapo chief.

White Rose Group

  • Students at Munich University in 1943, led by brother and sister Hans and Sophie Scholl.
  • They published anti-Nazi leaflets, for example on the gassing of children, and marched through the city in protest at Nazi policies. Its leaders were eventually arrested and sentenced to the .
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Opposition from the churches

Dietrich Bonhoffer
Image caption,
Dietrich Bonhoffer

In 1941, Hitler ordered an end to pressure on the churches because he needed the public’s support during the war.

He decided to wait until the end of the war to suppress religion.

This relaxation of pressure meant attendance at services increased, but the churches were not very vocal in defence of others, such as the Jews.

Despite receiving reports from across Europe about the deportation of Jews to extermination camps, Pope Pius XII and most Protestant leaders did not condemn it.

It was left to individual clerics to speak out.

The Catholic Church had one success against the Nazis in 1941 when the Bishop of MĂŒnster, von Galen, led a campaign which ended the euthanasia of people with mental disabilities.

Many in the Protestant churches also did not oppose the regime openly.

However, there were examples of resistance, such as Dietrich Bonhoffer, a Protestant pastor in the Confessional Church.

He joined the resistance and was linked to the 1944 and was executed in 1945.

The Prussian Confessional Church also acted and condemned the extermination of people on health and racial grounds.

Dietrich Bonhoffer
Image caption,
Dietrich Bonhoffer
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Opposition within the army

There were various efforts to remove Hitler during the war; the one that came closest to succeeding happened towards the end, when it was becoming clear that Germany would be defeated.

Operation Valkyrie

In July 1944, a group of army officers tried to assassinate Hitler and replace him with a government led by General Ludwig Beck, who had resigned from a senior military leadership position in 1938 due to his opposition to Hitler’s foreign policy.

A bomb was planted by Colonel Claus von Stauffenberg at a meeting attended by the FĂŒhrer.

It exploded, but Hitler survived because a thick leg of the table shielded him from the worst of the blast.

Retaliation was swift and decisive.

Stauffenberg was shot the same day and 5,000 people were executed in the crackdown on opposition that followed.

The great German military leader Field Marshal Erwin van Rommel was accused of being involved in the plot and was forced to commit suicide as punishment for his involvement.

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The effectiveness of opposition to the Nazis up to 1945

There was not a great deal of resistance in Germany during the war.

Most people remained loyal to the regime, even if they were not enthusiastic about it or the war.

Nevertheless, there was widespread grumbling and disillusionment.

Young people were the most influenced by Hitler’s propaganda, and only a few groups, like the Edelweiss Pirates and the White Rose worked actively against the regime.

Others, like the Swing Movement, confined their opposition to not complying with some regulations.

The churches did not form major opposition to the Nazis during the war.

Many of their leaders had already been arrested.

Others kept quiet because either they feared persecution or they wanted to retain some presence in Germany so Hitler did not have a completely free hand.

There was greater opposition to the regime from individual Christians than from church leaders.

There were a number of army plots, but there was no effective opposition to Hitler because the military leaders were too busy competing with each other.

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