AS level History Germany 1933-1945 (Nazi organisations and the coordination of German society) Mapa Mental sobre Religion in Nazi Germany 1933-1945, criado por BethanyKJN em 17-02-2014.
Due to the fact that the
majority of the German
Population were regular
church goers
Hitler's view on Christianity
'Neither of the denominations has any future left. That
won't stop me stamping out Christianity in Germany
root and branch. One is either Christian or Geman. You
cannot be both.'
Instead of Christianity, the Nazis were going to
introduce Teutonic paganism
Based around Alfred
Rosenberg's ideas
The propagation of
'Blood and Soil' ideology
The replacement of Christian
ceremonies such as marriage and
baptism with the pagan equivilents
The wholesale rejection on
Christian ethics
These were closely linked to
racial and nationalist views
Protestants
The German Evangelical curch
The German Christians
Pressure group of Nazi
supporters which operated
within the German
Evangelical church
Considered themselves the SA of
the chuch
Wore SA or SS
uniforms whilst
conducting services
Hung swastika
flags in their
churches
Fused Nazi ideology and
their faith together to
make a militant,
aggressive and crusading
form of Christianity
Thought of church members as
soldiers fighting for Christ and the
fatherland with Hitler being
portrayed with the national
messiah
The Reich Church
Was formed when the 28
churches were brought
together and formed the
Reich Church
This was under Nazi control
When Ludwig Muller became head
of the Reich church
All elected bodies with in the
church were abolished
Church re-organised
under a leadership
principle
July 1933
Mass rally at the Sports Palace in Berlin
All pastors who had not sworn
allegiance to the new regime were
dismissed
All non-Aryan pastors
were also dismissed
Had to adopt
the Aryan
paragrpah
18 Pastors who had converted to
Christianity from Judaism had to be
dismissed
By the end of 1933 Reich Church had been
successfully coordinated in to the
Volksgemeinshft
Strongly anti-communist and anti-Semitic.
Main area of support
for the Nazis during
elections
Crossed over with
Nazi ideology
Made up of 28 separate churches
The Confessional Church
Not all Pastors or
congregations supported the
changes to the church
In September 1933,
Martin Neimhollier and
Dietrich Bonhoeffer
established the Pastor's
emergency league
Evolved in to a break
away church
The confessional church
Resisted state interference
Re-established a
theology based on the
bible and not the
Nazis ideology
It was in direct deffiance to the
Nazi policy of Gleichschaltung
The Nazis therefore failed
to coordinate the church in
Nazi Germany
Catholics
The Condordat
In July 1933, the regime
and the Vatican came to
an agreement
The Vatican recognise the regime and
would not interfere with it's politics
In return the Nazi regime
would not interfere with the
church and the church
could keep it's schools,
youth groups and lay
organisations
The Nazi regime soon broke the agreement
Summer 1933: The Nazis seized
property belonging to Catholic Lay
organisations and forced them to
close
Catholic newspapers were
ordered to drop the word
Catholic from their titles
During the Night of
the Long Knives a
number of leading
Catholics within
Germany were
executed
Some Catholic priests by 1935-36
had began to speak out about the
Nazi regime
Permission to hold public
meetings were restricted
Catholic newspapers and
magazines were heavily
censored
Membership to the Hitler
Youth became compulsory
causing the church youth
groups to struggled to keep
hold of its members
The Papal Encyclical, 1937
Pope Pius XI condemned the
hatred that the Nazis poured
upon the church
Gestapo and SS agents were
placed inside church
organisations to spy on them
Tight restriction of
Catholic press
Pilgrimages and
processions
restricted
Youth
groups
closed down
Catholic charities
banned
Monasteries closed down
and their property seized
Propaganda portrayed
the church as corrupt
due to the sex
scandals brought to
light
200 Priests
arrested and
tried on sex
charges
Church schools
were being closed
down
By 1939 all Catholic
schools converted in to
community schools
Much harder to get them to
conform to Gleichschaltung
Part of an
international church
Leader in religious matters was
the Pope
Less susceptible to
Nazi ideology
Less likely to vote for
the Nazi party in
elections
After the Nazis had been
elected they were
prepared to compromise
with them
They viewed Communism
a far bigger evil than
Nazism
Also shared the
nazis anti-Semitic
view
By the summer of 1939 the
power and influence of the
catholic church had been
severely weakened
Was forced to retreat
No organised resistance against the
Nazi regime as a whole
The German Faith movement
Some leading Nazis thought
the way to undermine the
churches in Nazi Germany was
to create a new religion
Richard Darre believed that the
way foreword was to go back to
preChristian Paganism which
focused on Nordic Gods
These were seen to be
more Aryan than
Christianity
Christmas was replaced
with the celebration of the
Winter solstice
The German Faith
movement was never more
than a fringe cult
Only had 40,000
members at its
height
However Himmler said that; 'We live in an age of final
confrontation with Christianity. It is part of a mission
of the SS to give the German people over the next 50
years the non-Christian ideological foundations for a
way of life appropriate to their own character.'
How successful were the Nazis? How
much did life change for the German
people?
The Nazis were not very successful in trying
to covert people to change to their ideology.
some did go but not many. This shows that
the German people felt more strongly about
their religion than Hitlers view point on religion
as a whole.