Nazi Party

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    prominence of the personality you have studied.” Albert Speer joined the Nazi party due to an intense reaction to the personal nature of Hitler's call to arms. While Speer was working at a university in Berlin, Hitler came to address the students and teachers. Speer was immediately impressed by the blue suit Hitler wore because how he presented himself was completely different to the militaristic depiction portrayed in Nazi propaganda. Speer was not only impressed by Hitler’s appearance but…

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    Anti-Semitism In Germany

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    When analyzing the Nazi Party in World War II, the party’s success contributed to multiple factors. These components such as political, economic, social changes and the anti-Semitism in Europe contributed to the rise of Nazism in Germany. In the book, War & Genocide: A Concise History of the Holocaust by Doris Bergen, states, “In order for a house to burn down, three things are required. The timber must be dry and combustible, there needs to be a spark that ignites it, and external conditions…

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    to spread the ways of Nazi ideals. To spread anti-Semitism, Hitler expected the following; teachers were to teach Nazi ideals otherwise they had to suffer consequences, students were expected to join Hitler Youth, and there was a standardized school curriculum. SECTION HEADER One of the conjectures Hitler had expected, was having all…

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    trustworthy and would give all their time to putting Germany back on the map. Adolf Hitler soon rose to the challenge to become Chancellor and quoted that he had ‘the duty to be a fighter for truth and justice’ which, in time, won over the votes for the Nazi party, but could not gain the voters all by himself. Hitler’s Henchmen played a massive part in Hitler’s leadership and two of the most of important were Himmler (In charge of Terror) and Goebbels (who was in charge of Propaganda). Their…

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    In Detlev Peukert’s “Young People: For or Against the Nazis?” Peukert dichotomizes what the mindset of the teens and children in Germany, and why they were so adamant about becoming a good citizen in the eyes of the Nazi party. Determining why the youth growing up during the rise of the Nazi party were so willing to follow and support the Nazi party and Adolf Hitler’s reign of supremacy is a fascinating topic to dismember and investigate. Peukert discusses what the youth of the time really…

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    the key spots and Bavarian authorities had time to gather to stop the march on Berlin. The shootout killed about 14 Nazis and captured Hitler. This event led to his trial and later on the making of his ideology in the Mein Kampf, which changed the whole world war and the years to come. The Beer Hall Putsch and Hitler’s autobiography, the Mein Kampf, led to the rise of the Nazi party, which ultimately caused an immense change during World War II to today’s society across the world.…

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    Why did the Holocaust Occur? What factors led to the Holocaust? Ryan Le ELA/ History 8 Mr. Zussman/ Mrs. O’Connor 3/2/15 - 4/17/15 The Holocaust was an organized, systematic genocide of those Hitler and the Nazi Party considered “inferior." They included Jews, Roma, the disabled, homosexuals, Slavic peoples, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and political rivals of the Nazi’s. There were many events that led to the Holocaust. From 1914 to 1918, World War I raged throughout Europe.…

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    Ordinary Germans, Ordinary Nazis World War II was the stage of numerous horrific atrocities. But it was only after the war that the world witnessed the extent of the crimes committed by the Nazis. As evidence of the unthinkable genocide against the Jewish people was uncovered, people could only watch in horror. Nations everywhere gazed in shock at the ability of the Nazi Party to convince ordinary people to allow, and even take part in, such horrendous actions. They masterfully sculpted and…

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    culture. 4. What occurred in the Nazi party during the early and mid-1920s? The party grew in vast amounts.…

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    interwar years were both a period of decline and progress for multiple reasons. The Treaty of Versailles and the Nazi Party contributed to Germany’s decline and progression from 1919 through 1939. The interwar years in Germany were both a period of decline and progress because the Treaty of Versailles had harsh economic consequences towards their country, however the rise of the Nazi Party provided hope for the German citizens. The Treaty of Versailles caused a decline in the German society…

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