Opposition and Resistance

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History-Nazi Germany Mapa Mental sobre Opposition and Resistance, creado por millieprice7 el 23/11/2013.
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Mapa Mental por millieprice7, actualizado hace más de 1 año
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Resumen del Recurso

Opposition and Resistance
  1. Religious opposition - Christianity was a danger = taught forgiveness, love, peace, the strong helping weak. Hitler wanted a Nazi religion. GOD = Hitler, BIBLE = 'Mein Kampf' DISCIPLES = SS CROSS = Swastika
    1. ACTION TAKEN = 1) Against Catholics -> Hitler co-operated with the pope at first. The Concordat was an agreement between the 2 to leave one another alone, in 1933. However by 1937, Catholic schools were closed, clubs shut down and 400 priests in concentration camps. -> failure because churches were packed and priests seen as Martyres. 2) Against protestants -> Nazis set up the Reich Church for protestants BUT Martin Niemoller set up a rival group 'The Confessional Church' - 3/4 of protestants joined. -> failure again, Niemoller was imprisoned, still spoke out and influenced thousands.
    2. YOUTH OPPOSITION
      1. THE EDELWEISS PIRATES - They were young people who opposed Nazi ideas. Listened to forbidden 'swing' music and wrote anti-Nazi graffiti on walls. Named after the Edelweiss flower, which used as an emblem. Wore check shirts and dark trousers. At weekends would meet up with other groups, go on hikes and hope to beat up Hitler Youth patrols. They weren't a big threat because there were only 2000 members. However, they did kill the head of the Gestapo. Quite a big threat.
        1. THE SWING YOUTH - Were middle class youths who wanted to dance and listen to swing music which was a blend of black jazz and white dance-band music, wore English style clothes - particulary sports jackets, girls wore make up and Jews were accepted into their groups. Common greeting was 'Heil Benny' after there band leader Benny Goodman. Some of young people were harshly punished such as Hasso Schutzendorff who in Oct 1942 was put in concentration camp, had his hair cut off, was thrashed with an iron bar and forced to push trolleys full of earth uphill for a fortnight. Not too much of a threat.
          1. THE WHITE ROSE GROUP - Led by students Hans and Sophie Scholl (brother and sister) and professor Kurt Huber at Munich university in 1941. Hans Scholl had seen first hand, the atrocities that were carried out against Jews, the Poles and other non-Aryans. Publicised these atrocities in leaflets which were issued anonymously. On Feb 1943, hans and Sophie Scholl were seen giving out leaflets at Munich University and were reported by the caretaker and were tortured, arrested and beheaded. A bit of a threat as they knew what was really going on and publicised it.
            1. Evidence the Nazis failed in preventing Youth opposition - Swing Youth rejected Nazi ideas about music and clothing, White Rose produced leaflets, Edelweiss Pirates killed leading members of the Gestapo and less young people were keen on joining the Hitler Youth during the war BUT these were only a minority. Evidence of the Nazis success - all joined the Hitler Youth, acted as informers on all adults, controlled schools and education and the vast majority of young people did not oppose the Nazis.
            2. ARMY OPPOSITION
              1. Army posed as the most serious threat to Hitler during the war. Some of the Army turned against Hitler because the army had suffered defeats, were appalled by the brutality of the SS, army leaders had reluctantly supported Hitler in the first place, bombing of German towns and food shortages.
                1. OPERATION VALKYRIE - An operation which involved a bomb in a briefcase used to assassinate Hitler. General Ludwig Beck supported plans devised by Count Von Stauffenberg. On July 20th 1944, Stauffenberg took briefcase to a military meeting conference in East Prussia, where he placed it under a table 2 metres away from Hitler. Bomb went off but the heavy table saved Hitlers life. He took savage revenge on all involved, killing 5746 people including Von Stauffenberg and Beck.
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