Chapter 21 Flashcards
Significance of popular mood during war
When war started in September 1939, there were no cheering crowds in Berlin or other German cities. Although loyalty to the Führer was very strong, and his foreign policy triumphs between 1933 and 1939 had been very popular, the mood of the German public at the news of the start of hostilities’ with Poland was one of reluctant loyalty. In terms of public opinion, therefore, the start of the Second World War in Germany did not match Hitler’s expectations. It was a principal aim of Nazi domestic policy in the early years of the war to sustain the morale of the home front and eliminate any elements of weakness in public mood.
Establishment of rationing schemes
One of the critical factors in maintaining civilian morale was the availability of vital foodstuffs and other commodities. Shortages and the inadequacies of the rationing system during the First World War were one of the main causes of growing war-weariness in 1917 and 1918, and the Nazi regime was determined not to make the same mistakes as the Kaiser’s government. Decrees establishing a food rationing system were issued in August 1939, even before the war began.
Clothing was not initially included in the rationing scheme but permits were needed to purchase clothes. This caused panic buying before the regulations took effect and led to the inclusion of clothing in the rationing scheme in November 1939.
What was the allocation of food rations based on?
The allocation of food rations was based on age, occupation and race. Those who were employed in manual labour received more than those who had more sedentary occupations. Jews received smaller rations. There were special allocations for groups such as pregnant women, nursing mothers and the sick. The allocations established at the beginning of the war remained largely unchanged during the first two years of the war.
Success of rationing scheme early on
The Nazi regime was reluctant to ask the civilian population to make significant reductions in their consumption at the beginning of the war for fear that this might provoke anti-war feelings. Nevertheless, civilian consumption was cut more in Germany than in Britain at the start of the war. The regime was able to exploit the newly occupied countries for food supplies for the German people and, while the Nazi-Soviet Pact was in force, there were also imports of grain from the Soviet Union. On the whole, therefore, the rationing system worked efficiently and there were no serious food shortages between 1939 and 1941. Shortages of coal, shoes, soap and washing powder, however, did cause discontent from time to time.
How was the rationing situation later on?
After the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941, some rations were reduced. The meat ration, for example, was cut from 500g per person per week to 400g, then cut again. In the later years of the war, meat could not be eaten every day and other goods were in very short supply. By the end of the war, especially in the industrial cities, food supplies had become very precarious and unpredictable and many Germans were experiencing malnutrition. In the countryside, farmers had access to food they could grow themselves but they also experienced shortages of animal feed, fuel and replacement tools, which limited their ability to produce food.
Ration allowances in August 1939
Meat
500g per person per week
Butter
125g per person per week
Margarine
100g per person per week
Sugar
250g per person per week
Cheese
62.5g per person per week
Eggs
1 per person per week
How was propaganda used to keep up morale?
Maintaining the morale of Germans was a high priority for the regime.
Goebbels had developed a highly sophisticated propaganda system, which controlled the flow of information to the German people. The regime also used its secret police system, the SD and Gestapo, to monitor the public mood and the effectiveness of propaganda. The SD reports provide a valuable source of information for historians about German morale at different stages
of the war.
Phase 1: Blitzkrieg, September 1939- June 1941
• After defeating Poland in the east, German forces achieved a series of quick victories against various European countries.
Phase 1: Blitzkrieg, September 1939- June 1941 public mood
The public mood in Germany in the first 21 months of the war was volatile and propaganda was not always effective in lifting morale, even though Goebbels understood that maintaining morale was vital to the success of the Nazi war effort. Quick and relatively easy victories in the early stages of the war were a cause for celebration: edited newsreels showed German forces sweeping aside inferior opposition as they achieved stunning victories. Hitler was presented as the military genius who was responsible for these victories and his speeches, broadcast on the radio, were vital in bolstering morale. Between January 1940 and June 1941, Hitler made nine major speeches. At this stage of the war, propaganda led people to be optimistic and believe that the war would be over soon.
When the defeat of France in June 1940 did not bring immediate peace,
Britain was blamed for prolonging the war.
Phase 2: The spreading war, June- December 1941
Events in the war
• Germany invaded the USSR in June 1941 and occupied vast areas of territory, but in December 1941, the Red Army launched a counter-attack against the Germans, which halted the German advance.
• Germany declared war on the USA in December 1941. The hope of another short victorious war was over. Nazi Germany now faced a world war against the Grand Alliance of the USSR, USA and Britain.
Phase 2: The spreading war, June- December 1941 Public Mood
The invasion of the USSR was presented as a crusade against Jewish-Bolshevism and the success of German forces in forcing the Red Army to retreat engendered a fecling of optimism. However, the SD reported boneles feans that the war would go on for years. slough Nazi propagand, downplayed the extent of the Soviet success, letters home from soldiersan downpra endermined the propaganda. Soldiers talked of the harsh winter conditions and the seemingly limitless Soviet supply of manpower and toilitary equipment. The hopes of a quick and easy victory were dissipated.
Other scapegoats were needed to explain the spreading of the war in 1941, ther scany declared war on the USA. Behind the British, the Soviet and the American enemies, according to the propaganda, lay a Jewish international comesiracy to destroy the Third Reich and the Aryan race. There was a marker increase in anti-Semitic propaganda during the war.
Phase 3: The turning of the tide, January 1942- January 1943
Events in the war
•German losses in the USSR started to mount in the harsh winter conditions
Phase 3: The turning of the tide, January 1942- January 1943
Public Mood
Rising casualty figures and letters home from soldiers serving on the Eastern Front gradually awakened the civilian population to the realities of the war they were engaged in. When Goebbels broadcast an appeal for people to collect winter clothing for soldiers on the Eastern Front, the mood of disillusionment deepened Although an SD report in January 1942 stated that Faith in the Führer is unshakeable, the scepticism about propaganda, which was remarked upon in this report, was an early sign that confidence in the regime was beginning to erode.
The defeat at Stalingrad was a major turning point in the war, both militarily and on the home front. It signalled a defeat for Nazi propaganda as much as a defeat for its armed forces. News of the defeat was such a shock to public morale because Goebbels had built up unrealistic expectations of Nazi victory and concealed the truth about the desperate situation of German forces there.
War-weariness now became much more evident. Criticism of the propaganda emanating from the regime increased and the Hitler myth began to lose some its potency. On the other hand, there was undoubtedly a deep well of patriotism and willingness to endure hardship on which the regime could draw as it belatedly attempted to gear the nation up for total war.
Phase 4: February 1943-May 1945: ‘Total War’ and the defeat of Germany
Events in the war
•In February 1943, Goebbels declared that Germany was engaged in a ‘Total War.
The British and Americans attempted to cripple Germany’s war effort through unrelenting bombings against German cities.
• The D-Day landings in Normandy in June 1944 opened up a second front in western Europe and by early 1945 Allied forces had entered Germany itself.
Berlin was captured by Soviet forces in April 1945 and Germany conceded
unconditional surrender to the Allies on 8 May 1945.
Phase 4: February 1943-May 1945: ‘Total War’ and the defeat of Germany
Public Mood
By the early months of 1943 it had become clear that Germany was involved in a struggle for survival. Goebbels made an important speech at the Sports Palace in Berlin in February 1943 in which he called for the nation to engage in total war.
Goebbels Total War’ speech appears to have struck a chord with many people.
His call for radical measures to mobilise the population and the economy Were generally welcomed and the main criticism was that these measures Were being introduced too late. The aftermath of the defeat at Stalingrad, therefore, was a crucial time for the Nazi regime. However, no longer could Hitler be convincingly portrayed as a military genius, although attempts were made to shift the blame onto incompetent military commanders. With Hitler appearing less frequently in public, the Hitler myth also began to decline.
By the spring of 1944, morale had declined even further. News of almost continuous retreat by German forces on the Eastern Front, the failure of the U-boat campaign to bring Britain to its knees and heavy Allied bombing raids on German cities had led to a ‘a downbeat mood among the population?
The Allied landings in Normandy on D-Day in June 1944 were a further serious blow to Germany. Paradoxically, events in June 1944 brought a temporary lifting of morale. This was partly due to the feeling that the final settling of accounts with the British and Americans was now at hand, and partly to Goebbels trying to counter defeatism with talk of plans for retaliation with secret weapons. The use of VI and V2 missiles in 1944-5 did temporarily raise spirits but, neither militarily nor in terms of public opinion, could these weapons alter the course of events.
By the end of August 1944, after Paris had been liberated and German forces had suffered further reverses in the east, defeat began to be accepted as inevitable. An SD report in August 1944 stated that ‘most compatriots, even those whose belief has hitherto been unshakeable, have lost all faith in the Führer.
The final months of the war saw growing cynicism about Nazi propaganda.
The ‘Hitler Myth, which Goebbels claimed as his greatest achievement, crumbled away in the final months of the war.
Four phases of the war
Phase 1: Blitzkrieg, September 1939- June 1941
Phase 2: The spreading war, June- December 1941
Phase 3: The turning of the tide, January 1942- January 1943
Phase 4: February 1943-May 1945: ‘Total War’ and the defeat of Germany