A Sobering Glimpse at Nazi Propaganda

In producing our upcoming one-hour special, “Rick Steves’ The Story of Fascism in Europe,” I was impressed at how effectively 80 million Germans were led astray by their own government’s very clever propaganda.

These photos give a glimpse of Germany in the 1930s. A painting shows a Norman Rockwell-style look at the ideal family — a fascist ideal hiding a harsh, racist agenda. A poster features a little boy, inspired and mesmerized by a messianic political rock star whose title was simply “the Leader.” Another poster basically asks a society, “Do you really want to pay 60,000 marks to let this retarded man live? Doesn’t our state have better things to do with our money?”

"Farm Family from Kalenberg" painting by Adolf Wissel

“Farm Family from Kalenberg,” Adolf Wissel

 

Nazi propaganda poster

A Nazi propaganda poster

 

Nazi propaganda poster

This poster exclaims, “60000 RM. This is what this person suffering from hereditary defects costs the Community of Germans during his lifetime. Fellow Citizen, that is your money, too.”

 

Germany’s Chilling Fascist Memorabilia

At the end, people did what they could to destroy any evidence that they were part of the Third Reich. A lot was just squirreled away and forgotten. In the last decade, as old Nazis have died, their children — exploring old boxes hidden away in attics — have found lots of memorabilia from those times. They donate it to the big state museums, which then store it away. I asked the curator at the great German History Museum in Berlin why there was so little of the excessive pomp and grandeur of the Nazi regime on display. He said that they keep the vast majority of artifacts that might inspire neo-Nazi groups warehoused and out of sight.

Museum visitors can, however, get a glimpse of Germany in the 1930s through exhibits which display the darkest side of the Nazi regime. A poster shows the facial features of people who were part of what was considered “the master race” (and those that didn’t belong). Calipers and hair samples help government officials determine who was of the proper racial stock to be a German citizen. And a huge hall with a dome that would house 180,000 people was envisioned to celebrate a world where the individual is sacrificed for the greatness of the state.

Master Race poster

Nazi hair chart and caliper

Volkshalle model

It’s all chilling…and with angry, populist, nativist political movements on the rise in many countries — and with images like those from the deadly white-supremacist rally in Charlottesville in our own country — it’s even more chilling.

Germany on Edge as Far-Right Rises in Europe

Hitler with microphone

Hitler ready to give his first major radio address — a medium he would go on to use very effectively to rule his nation.

Germany is a bit on edge these days, with the rise of white-supremacist groups, neo-Nazi groups, and right wing political parties around Europe, which seem to sanitize the tactics Hitler used to come to power in the early 1930s. In Poland, the nationalist, anti-refugee government has actually taken control of the new WWII museum in Gdańsk because it gives the “wrong” spin to that history (a spin not friendly to its right-wing ideology). And in Hungary and Poland, the electorate is so fiercely split, it’s reminding people of the tense two-political-camps feeling during the 1930s when oftentimes families couldn’t even talk to each other.

My German friends explain that conventional conservative political powers supported Hitler in the early 1930s because they thought he would mobilize a certain political base, but then could be tamed or controlled once in power. They believed many Germans voted for Hitler because they didn’t take his promises seriously and just thought he’d shake things up.

Hitler and his government

Today in Berlin, there is a small but powerful monument remembering how, after the last free vote in the German parliament, the members of parliament who voted against Hitler were arrested and sent to concentration camps, where they died.

Memorial to Politicians Who Opposed Hitler

The Memorial to the Politicians Who Opposed Hitler (Mahnmal für die ermordeten Reichstagsabgeordneten)

When asked what Germany is doing to protect its democracy, my friend explained, “Today in Germany, the media always agrees on the facts. Truth still rules. From these facts, people with different politics can then editorialize and debate. This makes it difficult for populist factions to spread their message. Right-wing populist movements in Germany have to get and share their ‘news’ on Facebook because the media doesn’t give them a platform.”

Video: Learning History’s Lessons at Zeppelin Field

Fascism is in the news these days: White-supremacist groups are waving their flags, blustery strong men with a disregard for the norms of democratic governing are using the same playbook that worked for dictators a century ago, and Europeans who thought a repeat was not possible are now looking with a wary eye at countries sliding to the extreme right. (Of course, we’re not talking Holocaust-type fascism, but an ideological cousin — built on fear and promises — that can lead a society astray.)

We’re in Nürnberg, filming an hour-long doc on fascism that will air next September on public television. We need to take advantage of the buildings and artifacts that survive from the Reich (“empire”), which Hitler boasted would last a thousand years (which lasted from 1933 to 1945). Much was destroyed by WWII bombs, but Zeppelin Field, where Hitler held his enormous rallies, remains. In this clip, we visit the rally ground’s Golden Hall — the best surviving Hitler interior I’ve seen.

Fascism in Germany

notes

I’m in Germany with my TV crew, filming a new one-hour special about 20th-century fascism in Europe that will air next September on public television. Over the next several days, I’ll be sharing photos and videos from behind the scenes.

Here’s a look at the powerful propaganda art on display in Berlin’s Museum of German History (which has the best artifacts from the Hitler years I’ve seen anywhere in Germany):

filming in german history museum

The entry of the Documentation Center in Nürnberg architecturally cuts like a dagger through Hitler’s massive, yet unfinished, Nazi Congress Hall:

nazi documentation center

A famous statue evokes the human suffering at Hitler’s first concentration camp, Dachau:

rick steves filming at dachau