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Racial Propaganda

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Alongside persecutory laws, the Nazis promulgated their hatred of the Jews through numerous propaganda channels, which were utilized to ingrain the idea of a universal Jewish enemy in the minds of gentile Germans.

The underlying anti-Semitism that had increased after the First World War was now nurtured and encouraged by Joseph Goebbels, the Nazi propaganda minister. Jews were not only blamed for Germany’s defeat in 1918 but became scapegoats for all the ills that had befallen the nation since the armistice. An international Jewish conspiracy was deemed a perpetual threat to Germany’s status in Europe and the recent financial hardship was linked to Jewish business owners, who, according to the Nazis, cheated their customers.

Derogatory cartoons appeared in newspapers such as Der Stürmer and in school textbooks, with captions that stated ‘Jews are our misfortune’ or ‘Jews are not wanted here’. In stark contrast to this twisted prejudice against Jewry was the emphasis on the supremacy of the pure-blooded, Aryan master race. While propaganda images of Jews depicted furtive-looking caricatures with stereotypically Jewish features, campaigns promoting the racial superiority of ethnic Germans employed pictures of blonde-haired, blue-eyed humans in peak physical fitness.


Anti-Semitic propaganda in Worms, 1933

Bundesarchiv, Bild 133-075 / CC-BY-SA

Such nationalistic pride became intrinsically linked to racism and was also manifested in organizations such as the Hitler Youth and the League of German Girls, which became obligatory for young Germans from 1936. All members had to prove their racial purity and were thereafter moulded into fledgling National Socialists. State-controlled education and physical training programmes impressed upon Germany’s youth the superiority of their nation and culture, the importance of upholding Aryan glory, and the inferiority of other races. An entire generation was indoctrinated and mobilized against purported enemies of the state through Nazi youth movements and the propaganda machine.

Anti-Semitic films, including The Eternal Jew (1940), also drew on nationalistic themes, with frequent cuts between footage of Jews and footage of rats enforcing the notion of Jews as societal parasites. Other propaganda films alluded to Darwinism and the ‘survival of the fittest’ theory, showing weaker creatures inevitably being killed by stronger species in the natural struggle for dominance. In one such film a student observes that the animal kingdom has ‘a proper racial policy’. The idea that breeding practices should be extended to humans in order to weed out supposedly degenerate factions was a stalwart of Nazi ideology which would, as the 1930s progressed, lead to violent discrimination against homosexuals and the mentally and physically ill, as well as Jews.

A fleeting reprieve in the negativity directed at the Jewish community came during the 1936 Berlin Olympics, as the Nazis did not want to attract international criticism about the treatment of Jews in the Third Reich. Throughout the Games, anti-Semitic propaganda was minimized, but almost all Jewish athletes were nevertheless prohibited from competing in the German team. Among those unable to represent her country was Gretel Bergmann, who had equalled a German high jump record only one month previously. With the close of the Berlin Olympics, the open tirade against Germany’s Jewish population resumed.

The Holocaust: History in an Hour

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