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Totalitarian Dictatorship In Nazi Germany

Decent Essays

While the Nazi party attracted little attention in the early years following the Great War, Hitler was able to establish a totalitarian dictatorship by the late 1930s. How were the Nazis able to gain a dramatic amount of support so fast?
Prior to World War I, Germany was one of the fastest growing industrialized and most educated nations in all of Europe, but their humiliating defeat in the war hurt the country’s economy, politics, and national pride (Watson 8). The country lost its faith in the current system, the Weimar Republic, at this time of financial and political difficulty in Germany. It was around this time that the Nazi party, which believed in extreme nationalism, anti-Semitism and strongly disapproved of the Versailles treaty, …show more content…

During the Weimar Republic, multiple political parties existed within the country under a chaotic and inefficient electoral system. As a result, the country was unable to make fast decisions and was essentially run by a coalition of small parties (Watson 7). Due to their distrust around the Weimar system, many Germans were drawn to extremist parties such as the Nazis, who promised national greatness and a charismatic and ambitious leader in a more traditional and stable absolute government. The Nazi party argued that Germany needed a “new political system in which one great national party, the NSDAP, [would] organize all aspects of German government and society” (Watson 35). Hitler promised that he would serve as a strong and vigorous leader that would lead the country towards greatness in place of the “squabbling, corrupt politicians” who were worsening the state of the country (Watson 35). This promise of a single political party and leader appealed greatly to the German population, which was looking for a strong leader to solve the economic unrest and political violence that had plagued the country in the years following the Great War. However, the promise of the unity under a single leader would not be able to fully convince the German people without a sense of national unity to hold the country …show more content…

Nationalism, which had recently become more prominent in the Great War, allowed common German people to feel that they had something in common with each other and pride in their German heritage. One aspect of Hitler’s idea of nationalism that was unique was that he directed his message to virtually all ethnic Germans, regardless of religion, occupation, or region (Watson 26). His broadened idea of national identity appealed to more people, since most other parties who were more exclusive (Watson 28). Furthermore, anti-Semitism, which was at the heart of Hitler’s philosophy was appealing to many Germans because Jews were a visible minority in business, universities, and government, and therefore, an easy target of hate and resentment (Watson 1). A large number of Germans were also furious about the Treaty of Versailles and anti-Semitism allowed them to blame a specific group of people for Germany’s loss in the war (Watson 7). Hitler’s statement that “the stronger must dominate the weaker and not blend with the weaker”, further created a sense of national superiority over other groups that appealed to many German people who wanted to a greater sense of national pride (Watson 9). In his speech to the Nazi Party in Munich, Hitler also expressed his idea that “anybody who supports [him] in

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