Holocaust: The Nazi Persecution and Murder of the Jews by Peter Longerich (booksvooks TXT) 📕
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- Author: Peter Longerich
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that in 1931 and 1932 National Socialist speakers made demands that included
taking Jews as hostages to ensure that money allegedly taken out of the country be
brought back in or to fend off an attack by France. They demanded also that Jews
be removed from public office, from the field of journalism, or removed
altogether; they insisted that Jews be deprived of citizenship, called for the burning
of synagogues, or promised pogroms in the event of an attack on a member of the
National Socialist leadership. 48 Speakers indulged themselves in ever more extravagant comparisons of Jews with animals and fantasies of annihilation as they
demanded, for example, the ‘extirpation’ of Jews ‘like tapeworm’, or insisted that
they be made ‘harmless . . . like fleas’. 49 The National Socialist Party press seems to have had little occasion to rein in their anti-Semitic propaganda in these years: the
Völkische Beobachter, the Party’s main publication, revelled in violent anti-Semitic
tirades; 50 the same was true of Goebbels’s newspaper, Der Angriff—‘attack’—
which was tailored for the public of Berlin in particular.
Anti-Semitic activities and attacks by Party followers were just as evident in the
years 1930–2 when the Party was officially calling for moderation in the matter of
the ‘Jewish question’ and distanced itself from such actions. After 1930 there was
an increase in the number of attacks on cemeteries and desecrations of syn-
agogues, and in the cases where the perpetrators were identified a significant
proportion of these actions were committed by NSDAP followers. 51
NSDAP members repeatedly attacked Jews or ‘Jewish-looking’ people on the
streets, 52 and such activities reached an initial high in the violence organized by the Berlin SA on the Kurfürstendamm on 12 September 1930, the Jewish new year,
when more than a thousand SA followers, not in uniform, randomly attacked
Jewish passers-by. 53 Immediately after the Reichstag elections of 31 July 1932 NS
followers swamped East Prussia and various other regions of Germany with a
wave of violent attacks, a number including the use of hand grenades and
including the attempted murder of Jewish citizens; the windows of many Jewish
businesses were smashed, too. 54 The boycott of Jewish firms and other Jewish institutions, which we shall return to in more detail later, was driven forwards on
the authority of the NSDAP. National Socialists even went as far as making
accusations of ritual murder in order to fan the flames of anti-Semitism. 55
Women and men received threats because of their alleged ‘racial disgrace’. 56
During the election campaign for the poll on 6 November 1932 the Nazi Party
made use of massive anti-Semitic propaganda, coining the slogan ‘bigwigs and the
Lords’ Club57 with the Jew’, including a correspondingly large range of examples from their repertoire of anti-Jewish caricatures. 58
During the period from 1930 to 1933, however, with an eye to a possible coalition
with other right-wing forces, the NSDAP officially rejected the rowdy anti-Semitic
Anti-Semitism in the Weimar Republic
19
tendency and stressed its intention of solving the ‘Jewish question’ in a ‘reason-
able’, or in other words legal, manner.
The NS Monatshefte, the Nazi Monthly Journal published an article in its
October 1930 volume that explained, on the basis of the Party Programme, how
plans for anti-Jewish laws would be put into practice in the ‘Third Reich’ that was
to come. There was a plan, for example, to give Jews a special legal status which
would have as a consequence a ‘restriction in their simple rights as citizens’,
including the removal of both active and passive voting rights and of military
service. This general restriction imposed on German Jews would ‘not exclude
further interventions, if they prove necessary’. The author of the article then gave a
series of examples that read like a catalogue for the anti-Semitic laws that would be
introduced a few years later. In a similar vein, Ernst von Heydebrand von der Lasa,
the Deputy Director of the domestic policy office of the NSDAP, published a draft
law in 1931 that made provision for the exclusion of Jews from German citizen-
ship. 59
In contrast to fundamental draft plans such as these, it seems that there were
not so many requests for spectacular anti-Jewish laws made by the NSDAP’s
parliamentary group after 1930 as there had been previously. Nevertheless, in the
Prussian parliament there was a demand made that Jews be excluded from
theatres and the radio and for a numerus clausus to be imposed on Jewish
receivers. 60
Gregor Strasser, who was head of the Nazi Party’s national organization,
announced in October 1931 that a National Socialist government would ensure
that ‘the dominance of Jews in Germany would come to an end’ and that this
meant ‘the exclusion of Jews from all areas in which they are in a position to
hamper the German economy’. 61 In June 1932 Strasser declared in a radio address that the Party ‘did not want to persecute the Jews’, but that they did intend a
‘German leadership with no trace of Jewish or foreign spirit’. 62
Possible concerns were assuaged by an explanation given by Goering in May
1932 to an Italian newspaper. He noted the plans for far-reaching special laws to be
applied to Jews, but stressed ‘that any decent Israelite businessman who wishes to
live in Germany as a foreigner under the protection of the law to which all
foreigners are subject, will be allowed to pursue his business’. 63 Goebbels defended the anti-Semitic policies of his party again a few weeks before taking power, in an
interview with the Daily Express. 64
However, the facts that in Germany in 1933 radical anti-Semitism was elevated
to the status of official government policy and that with the help of initial anti-
Semitic laws the equality of citizenship of the Jews was destroyed are not
attributable solely to the rise of the NSDAP. It was above all crucial that the
thought of excluding the Jews from citizenship rights had been becoming an
increasingly popular notion in the socio-cultural milieu of the Conservatives, the
NSDAP’s future partners in government, since the 1920s. This was initially
20
Historical Background
because representatives of a radical anti-Semitic stance within conservative-
leaning organizations had used demands for expelling Jewish members to trigger
a long-lasting debate on the attitude of these organizations to the ‘Jewish
question’. These discussions often ended with the introduction of an ‘Aryan
clause’, which
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