The Rise of Hitler The Rise of Hitler: in This Topic We Are Going To Learn About How Hit
The Rise of Hitler The Rise of Hitler: in This Topic We Are Going To Learn About How Hit
INTRODUCTION
IN THIS TOPIC WE ARE GOING TO LEARN ABOUT HOW HIT
THE RECONSTRUCTION
Hitler assigned the responsibility of economic recovery
to the economist Hjalmar Schacht who aimed at full
production and full employment through a state-funded
work-creation programme. This project produced the
famous German superhighways and the people’s car,
the Volkswagen.
In foreign policy also Hitler acquired quick successes.
He pulled out of the League of Nations in 1933,
reoccupied the Rhineland in 1936, and integrated
Austria and Germany in 1938 under the slogan, One
people, One empire, and One leader. He then went on
to wrest German- speaking Sudentenland from
Czechoslovakia, and gobbled up the entire country. In
all of this he had the unspoken support of England,
which had considered the Versailles verdict too harsh.
These quick successes at home and abroad seemed to
reverse the destiny of the country. Hitler did not stop
here. Schacht had advised Hitler against investing
hugely in rearmament as the state still ran on deficit
financing. Cautious people, however, had no place in
Nazi Germany. Schacht had to leave. Hitler chose war
as the way out of the approachingeconomic crisis.
Resources were to be accumulated through expansion
of territory. In September 1939, Germany invaded
Poland. This started a war with France and England. In
September 1940, a Tripartite Pact was signed between
Germany, Italy and Japan, strengthening Hitler’s claim
to international power. Puppet regimes, supportive of
Nazi Germany, were installed in a large part of Europe.
By the end of 1940, Hitler was at the pinnacle of his
power. Hitler now moved to achieve his long-term aim of
conquering Eastern Europe. He wanted to ensure food
supplies and living space for Germans. He attacked the
Soviet Union in June 1941. The war ended in May 1945
with Hitler’s defeat and the US dropping of the atom
bomb on Hiroshima in Japan.
THE CONCLUSION
From 1933 to 1938 the Nazis terrorised, pauperised and
segregated the Jews, compelling them to leave the country.
The next phase, 1939-1945, aimed at concentrating them in
certain areas and eventually killing them in gas chambers in
Poland.
Bibliography
The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich by William L. Shirer
Berlin Diary : The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent 1934-1941 by William L. Shirer