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Dictator (Fuehrer) of the Third German Reich. Hitler
was born in Braunau,
Austria,
to a family of small landowners. His father was a customs
official. From 1900-1905 Hitler went to secondary school in
the Austrian town of Linz, marking the end of his formal
education. His father died in 1903. In 1907 Hitler attempted
to get into the Vienna Academy of Art's School of Painting,
but he failed the entrance exam. That same year, his mother
died of breast cancer - her doctor had been Jewish. In 1908,
Hitler moved to Vienna.
He survived on the orphan's allowance that he received from
the government and from the sale of postcards he painted. At
that time,
antisemitism
was rampant in Vienna. The city's mayor, Karl Lueger, was
rabidly antisemitic, and Hitler embraced his ideology.
Hitler later declared that the period during which he lived
in Vienna was extremely influential in molding his opinions
and views. Hitler moved
to Munich in 1913. When World War I broke out the following
year, he joined the Bavarian army. Working as a message
runner in
Belgium and
France, Hitler was quite a good
soldier. He was promoted to lance corporal and was awarded
medals for his bravery. After the
war, Hitler returned to Munich bitterly disappointed over
Germany’s defeat. He believed that the Jews were responsible
for Germany's loss. At that point, he wrote his first
political document, in which he stated that the final aim of
antisemitism should be the "total removal of the Jews." He
soon joined the small antisemitic German Workers' Party
that, in 1920, changed its name to the National Socialist
German Workers' Party—or the
Nazi Party,
for short. The Party's platform called for all German Jews
to be denied civil rights and for some of them to be removed
or exiled from the country. People began recognizing Hitler
as an extraordinary and charismatic public speaker. In 1921
he became his Party's all-powerful chairman and a cult of
personality was created, which depicted him as the greatest
of Germans, with infallible judgment. By 1923 the Nazi Party
included 56,000 members and a private army of 15,000 Storm
Troopers. [SA] In November
1923, Hitler attempted to take over the Bavarian Government
in Munich during an armed revolt called the Beer Hall
Putsch. The bid failed, and Hitler was sentenced to five
years in jail. However, he was released after nine months.
Whilst in jail he had written the first part of his book,
Mein Kampf (My
Struggle). In 1925
Hitler reestablished the Nazi Party. Its membership
continued to grow, particularly at the end of the decade,
when Germans were hit hard by the Great Depression and
needed a scapegoat for their troubles. Hitler and his Party
were seen as dynamic and youthful. In the national elections
of 1932, the Nazi Party won 230 seats of a total of 599,
giving it 37.3 percent of the vote—making it the largest
political party in the German parliament. On January 30,
1933, as a result of backroom deals, Hitler was named
chancellor of Germany. Despite the fact that his Party did
not hold an absolute majority in the government, Hitler was
able to gain increasing power. On February 27, Hitler
masterminded a fire in the parliament building—and used it
as an excuse to destroy his political opponents in the
government. Less than a week later, Hitler passed a law
annulling German democracy and bequeathing unto him,
absolute power. With the death of the German president
Paul Von Hindenberg
on August 2, 1934, Hitler assumed that office, as well. From within
his racial view of the world, Hitler sought to revitalize
Germany. Thus, among his main goals were building up the
army and implementing anti-Jewish measures. On April 1, 1933
an anti-Jewish boycott took place all over Germany (see also
Boycott, Anti-Jewish]
and on April 7, a law was passed making it legal to fire
Jews from their civil service jobs. In September 1935, the
racial Nuremberg Laws
were passed and the Nazis introduced a series of anti-Jewish
measures excluding the Jewish population from all facets of
German life. Meanwhile the Nazis had also begun
establishing concentration camps where their political and
ideological opponents were imprisoned. In March
1938, Hitler annexed Austria to Germany. This added almost
200,000 more Jews to Hitler's domain. Later that year, he
was given the Sudetenland region of Czechoslovakia as a
result of the
Munich
Conference,
and in March 1939, he took over the rest of the Czech lands
and established a puppet regime in
Slovakia.
On September 1 of that same year, Hitler's army invaded
Poland,
signaling the beginning of
World War II and the start of an amazing string of
military victories adding greatly to Hitler's aura. The
Germans immediately began persecuting Polish Jewry. In the
spring of 1940, Hitler's armies conquered most of Western
Europe in a lightning campaign, and the following spring
victory over the Balkans. The systematic mass killing of
Jews, also known euphemistically as the “Final Solution" began in June 1941 after Germany attacked
its former ally, the Soviet Union,
and began to conquer large portions of its territory. Hitler
viewed the Jews as his ideological enemies and a danger to
the "Aryan" race, Germany, and the world in general. He also
saw them as the major proprietors of democracy, liberalism,
and Socialism—ideological trends directly opposed to his
beliefs. Thus, as Fuehrer (Leader) of Germany, Hitler
focused on destroying the Jews through Nazi racial
principles and establishing German dominance in Europe, and
later the world. The first
massacres of Jews in the
Soviet Union were carried out by
Einsatzgruppen
units, regular army units, various police units, and local
collaborators. Soon, Hitler decided to extend the mass
murder of Jews to all of Europe. His regime established
extermination camps where millions of Jews were abused and
exterminated. However, by the end of 1942, Hitler's luck
began to change. The Soviet army began winning battles
against the Germans on the eastern front, and in 1943 and
1944 the Western Allies, including the
United States, which
had joined the war in December 1941, were beating the
Germans on the southern and western fronts. He blamed others
for his failures, and in 1944, some of his generals
unsuccessfully tried to assassinate him. As Germany lost
increasingly more battles and military defeat seemed
imminent, Hitler continued the "Final Solution." By April 2,
1945, Hitler was able to brag about the murder of European
Jewry. However, less than a month later, on April 30, 1945,
Hitler committed suicide in his Berlin bunker, with his wife
Eva Braun. He will be remembered as the man who orchestrated
and implemented one of the worst evils in history. |