Opposition and resistance in Nazi Germany
Historians tend to define 鈥榦pposition鈥 in Nazi Germany as any acts which openly defied the regime, while resistance is taken to mean active attempts to overthrow Hitler and the Nazis. There were obviously a great deal more of the former than of the latter. However, it is also generally acknowledged that the regime was widely accepted and enjoyed much popular support.
The extent of support for the Nazi regime
It is difficult to know exactly how popular the regime was as Hitler鈥檚 police state made it very difficult to express opposition and Nazi propagandaInformation, often biased or misleading, designed to persuade people to adopt a particular point of view. portrayed the F眉hrer as his people鈥檚 saviour. However, it is clear that the Nazis were the most popular party when they came to power and many Germans welcomed the stability and economic growth an authoritarian A government that controls most aspects of people's lives. regime brought.
In general, Germans were happy to trade the freedom and democracy of Weimar for the certainty and security Hitler brought. His regime restored Germany鈥檚 international prestige through rearmamentManufacturing arms and increasing the army. and the dismantling of the Treaty of VersaillesThe peace treaty signed by the Allies and Germany at the end of the First World War, on 28 June 1919.. The sheer scale of propaganda - especially that directed towards German children - meant that many more Germans became active Nazi Party members and were convinced of Hitler鈥檚 greatness.
Opposition from the Churches
Protestantism
- Many ProtestantChristians who broke away from the Roman Catholic Church during the Reformation. They believe in the teachings of the Bible but reject the authority of the Pope. pastors, led by Martin Niem枚ller, formed the Confessional Church in opposition to Hitler's Reich Church. Niem枚ller was held in a concentration camp during the period 1937-1945 and a total of 800 clergy were sent to camps.
- Another Protestant pastor and member of the Confessional Church, Dietrich Bonh枚ffer, was linked to the 1944 bomb plotThe attempted assassination of Adolph Hitler on 20 July 1944. Hitler escaped death after a bomb, planted by Colonel Claus Schenk von Stauffenberg, exploded at his headquarters in Rastenberg, East Prussia. and was executed.
Catholicism
- Despite the ConcordatAn agreement with the Vatican., some CatholicChristians whose religious leader is the Pope. priests opposed Hitler. In 1937, the Pope's message 'With Burning Concern' attacked Hitler as 'a mad prophet with repulsive arrogance' and was read in every Catholic Church.
- The Catholic Archbishop of Munster, von Galen, led a successful campaign to end euthanasia of mentally-disabled people.
- 400 German Catholic priests were imprisoned in Dachau concentration camp by the regime.
Opposition from the young
- The main youth opposition group was the Edelweiss Pirates, based in the Rhineland. They reacted to the discipline of the Hitler Youth by daubing anti-Nazi slogans and singing pre-1933 folk songs. In 1942 over 700 of them were arrested and in 1944, the Pirates in Cologne killed the Gestapo(Secret State Police.) A ruthless organisation that aimed to eliminate political opponents in Nazi Germany, and was responsible for the rounding up of Jews during the Nazi period and attempting to exterminate them. chief, so the Nazis publicly hanged 12 of them.
- The White Rose group was formed by students at Munich University in 1943. They published anti-Nazi leaflets and marched through the city in protest at Nazi policies. Its leaders, brother and sister Hans and Sophie Scholl, were arrested to and sentenced to the guillotine.
- During the war, 鈥楽wing Youth鈥 and 鈥楯azz Youth鈥 groups were formed. These were young people who rejected Nazi values, drank alcohol and danced to jazz. The Nazis rejected jazz music as degenerate and called it Negro music, using their racial ideas against this cultural development. These youths were closely monitored by the Gestapo, who regularly raided illegal jazz clubs.
Opposition from workers
Perhaps the most widespread and persistent opposition to the Nazi regime came from ordinary German workers, often helped by communists, who posted anti-Nazi posters and graffiti, or organised strikes. In Dortmund the vast majority of men imprisoned in the city鈥檚 jail were industrial workers. Workers went on strike over high food prices in 1935 and during the Berlin Olympics in 1936.
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