Monday, 25 July 2011

My Comments for other blogs

http://propagandarohan.blogspot.com/2011/07/hilters-propaganda.html#comments


Chia Hwee:

 Hey the information you provided is really useful and easy to understand how hiltler rose to power through propaganda.=)


Rohan:

Hey your information is quite long but detailed.I would suggest you to summarise your information even more.So that it would be more easier for everyone to read the summarised version. =)

http://history-i-sboring.blogspot.com/


Chia Jun Seng

 Hey your information is quite little.I would suggest you to add more details about how hitler used fear to rise to power.Futhermore,you should add some pictures or videos to make it interesting.=)   





Comments made by:Puvaneswary(17)       3A

Monday, 18 July 2011

Hitler's secret army





On the occasion of the anniversary of the Battle of Tannenberg, Hitler identified his government, the Third Reich, with the second empire created by Bismarck, thereby establishing a link with a past which Germans remembered with pride, while at the same time,  denouncing the "disgraceful" Weimar period.In 1934, he purged the Nazi Party of all potential dissenters, including some of the original party members, in a "night of the long knives" during which about a thousand party members were executed. He sharply reduced the numbers of the Nazi paramilitary movement, the Sturm Abteilung, or brown shirts. This re-assured the German Army which had viewed the S.A. as a rival military force. Hitler then organized a massive party rally at Nuremberg which helped to restore the confidence of party members shattered by the purge.The SA (Storm-Abteilung or Stormtroopers) were Hitler's own private army.  Supposedly the SA was formed to protect speakers at Nazi meetings from intimidation by left wing opponents. In practise however, the SA often started the violence themselves by breaking up the meetings of the Social Democratic Party which often ended in drunken brawls.The SS had been private body guards for Hitler and other Nazi leaders. SS stands for Schutz-Staffel or 'protection squad'. It had only 500 men but Heinrich Himmler was responsible for building it into an elite force of 50 0000 men. In 1934 they helped Hitler crush the SA and the role of the SS also changed. They become the main means of terrorising or intimidating Germans into obedience. The SS had almost unlimited power to arrest people without trial, search houses or confiscate property. They also ran the concentration camps.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vGSBF9JPVXw



Other Hitler Secret Weapon!

UFO
"The Nazi party had a secret flying disc already off of the drawing board and flying and it was capable of 1200 miles an hour.


SUBMARINE
 
"German submarines frequently appeared in the southern Atlantic. In 1942, Captain Gerlach archipelago Goug investigated as a possible base for radars and camps for prisoners. April 4, 1944 British submarine sunk the German submarine U-859. 47 crew members were killed, but 20 were saved. After 30 years one of the escaped told that the boat was a secret shipment of mercury. It is known that mercury is used for the production of certain fuels. Some light on the interest of Germans to Antarctica sheds statement commander of the German submarine fleet K. Denitsa, that "the German submarine fleet rebuilt in another part of the world in the impregnable fortress". Just before the end of the WWII, two German provision U-boats, U-530 and U-977, were launched from a port on the Baltic Sea.


credits:
http://www.naziufosecret.com/



Done by:Nur Insyira
``insyirafloorzz=D

Use Of Fear!

Hitler.


After Hitler was appointed as the chancellor of Germany on January 30, 1933, he grabbed every opportunity to turn Germany into a one-party dictatorship. He also moved carefully to organize the police power necessary to enforce his long-term policies of "racial" purification and European conquest both inside and outside the legal framework of the German constitution.


On the day of his appointment as German chancellor, Adolf Hitler greets a crowd of enthusiastic Germans from a window in the Chancellery building. Berlin, Germany, January 30, 1933.


On the night of February 27-28, 1933, a mentally disabled Dutch citizen set fire to the German parliament building. Hitler and his propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, presented the incident as the prelude to an armed Communist uprising and persuaded the aging President Paul von Hindenburg to establish what became a permanent state of emergency. This decree, known as the Reichstag Fire Decree, suspended the provisions of the German constitution that protected basic individual rights, including freedom of the press, freedom of speech, and freedom of assembly. The decree also permitted increased state and police intervention into private life, allowing officials to censor mail, listen in on phone conversations, and search private homes without a warrant or need to show reasonable cause. Under the state of emergency established by the decree, the Nazi regime could arrest and detain people without cause and without limits on the length of incarceration.


Hitler and the Nazi regime also resorted to simple and extra-legal terror to intimidate opponents. Nazi paramilitary formations, such as the SA and the SS, had been established during the 1920s to terrorize political opponents and to protect Nazi leaders. After the Nazis came to power, many members of these units were recruited as auxiliary policemen and given license to arbitrarily beat or kill persons they deemed to be opponents. In addition, Nazi party faithful, in individual spontaneous acts of violence or in locally organized waves of persecution, assaulted those they perceived to be enemies of the regime.


The SS was a particularly important tool of Nazi terror. Its members staffed the concentration camps, in which perceived enemies of the regime were imprisoned.
In addition, SS chief Heinrich Himmler also gained control over the regular (nonparty) police. Under Himmler and his deputy, Reinhard Heydrich, the SS centralized the German political police forces within a new agency, the Gestapo (Geheime Staatspolizei; secret state police). Together with a newly unified nationwide criminal police force, these plainclothes detectives used ruthless methods to identify and arrest political opponents and others who refused to conform to the policies of the Nazi regime.



Members of the SS.



In the months after Hitler took power, SA and Gestapo agents went from door to door looking for Hitler's enemies. They arrested Socialists, Communists, trade union leaders, and others who had spoken out against the Nazi party; some were murdered. By the summer of 1933, the Nazi party was the only legal political party in Germany. Nearly all organized opposition to the regime had been eliminated. Democracy was dead in Germany.
Essential to the intimidating effects of the terror was the willingness of many German citizens (whether out of conviction, greed, envy, or vengeance) to denounce their fellow citizens, Jewish and non-Jewish, to the police. The Gestapo could not have exercised such control over German society without the benefit of this steady stream of denunciations, many of which were entirely unfounded.
Many of the new Nazi authorities, including the SA, SS, and municipal administrative heads, established detention "camps" throughout Germany. In addition to actual camps, these detention facilities included old warehouses, abandoned factories, and other buildings. Here the Nazi authorities held political opponents without trial and under cruel and brutal conditions. On March 20, 1933, the SS established a camp in an abandoned munitions factory outside Dachau, located near Munich in southwestern Germany. The Dachau concentration camp would become the "model" for a vast system of SS-managed camps.

Information taken from: 
Done by: Rachel (12) 3C. 

Sunday, 17 July 2011

Authoritarian Regime-Hitler:Use of Fear




The terror method was used mainly on the Jews, Communists, and Gypsies,etc, rather than the general German Public. It was to secure and preserve discipline and eliminate any threats or challenges to Hitler’s leadership. All the Nazis’ major opponents were either killed, exiled or put in prison. Examples of this technique include the Gestapo Secret Police and the Concentration Camps around Germany between 1933 and the late 1930s. The new laws enabled the Gestapo to arrest anyone on suspicion and send them to concentration camps without trial or explanation. The Nazis would not tolerate criticism and anyone who said negative remarks about the party or Hitler in public would be arrested. The illusion of the Gestapo made people assume that the Terror system was larger than it actually was and it eventually got to the stage where it relied on informants. The informants believed they were doing a good duty and so that they would not be arrested for something else.


The SA were Hitler's own private army that he set up in 1921. Supposedly the SA was formed to protect speakers at Nazi meetings from intimidation by left wing opponents. In practise however, the SA often started the violence themselves by breaking up the meetings of the Social Democratic Party which often ended in drunken brawls.

The SS had been private body guards for Hitler and other Nazi leaders. It had only 500 men but Heinrich Himmler was responsible for building it into an elite force of 50 0000 men. In 1934 they helped Hitler crush the SA and the role of the SS also changed. They become the main means of terrorising or intimidating Germans into obedience. The SS had almost unlimited power to arrest people without trial, search houses or confiscate property. They also ran the concentration camps.


Use Of Fear !


Even by using propaganda, Hitler still can't get rid of other political opponents. When propaganda failed, the Nazis controlled through fear. Like stalin hitler has a private army. They arrested who they cose and torture people.

Hitler's army

Hitler has to private army , SA and SS. SS was it elite group chosen for its total loyalty to hitler. Hitler also control the existing police force and the regular army when he was in power. But his hold over them was never as storng as his old over SS.



 Hitler's army killing people.



  Night of the Long Knives

The head of Hitler's army SS, spread rumors about SA revolt aginst the NAZI leadership. He also said that they was preparing to attack the Nazi.  On 30 June 1934 , The Night of the long Knives, Hitler had his army SA arrested quietly. Some taught it was a mistake as they were loyal to Hitler. About 200 of them were show and SS became the main security force.

                                                       

The picture show Hitler with a gun which says that this night was ordered by Hitler himself. The legs at the bottom shows the dead bodies of the SA army. 

The Camps

The nazi set up a concentration camp and were used to isolate 'undesirables' from everyday life. 'Undesirable' are jews and many unwanted people. This camp was different from prison as the prisoners didn't do any crime at all. 
The aim of this campp was to "educate" people to accept Nazi Idea. First few prisoners were mostly political opponent.  And bu 1935  most of them were shot or meeting in secret and hard to catch.


....The concentration camps ....


History Project


Project on Authoritarian Regime - Hitler


Use of fear

Based on the research that I have made , there are many ways Hitler uses to control people. One of it was the use of fear. As the use of propaganda failed, the Nazis uses fear to control the people. 



  




Hitler’s private army 


SS and SA are Hitler's private army . SS , Schutzstaffel , role is to protect at Hitler's mass meetings that were conducted in public . SA , Sturmabteilung , are from the nationalist Freikorps of the post . The SS is also loyal towards Hitler only and were seen as an elite force  by Heinrich Himmler .








How does the use of fear helped Nazi became more powerful in Germany ?

Night of the Long Knives

On 30 June 1934 , Hitler was convinced by Goring and Himmler that Rohm was planning a coup d'etat which was quite untrue . The SS arrest the victims , which Hitler had ticked off their names , and take them to backyards and stairwells to be shot . Theodore Eicke shot Rohm after he refuse to commit suicide . Most of the SA leaders and many of Himmler's and Goring's enemies had been done away with by 1 July 1934 .   The Night of the Long Knives assured the rise of SS . 
















The Concentration Camps


Between 1933 and 1945 , there were concentration camps in  Nazi Germany . This concentration camps is to imprison political opponents of Nazi Policy . This camps were organized by the SA , SS , police and local civilian authorities .









Informations taken from these websites:


Done by Wafa Zainalabidin (27) 3A
Hitler's SS: Private Army
Of the Third Reich
-The blackshirted SS (Defense Detachment) of Heinrich Himmler, fulfilled certain things for Adolf Hitler's Nazi Party until 1932, the year before Hitler BECOMING A Chancellor.

-THE NAZI STREET THUGS WHO HAD ALREADY HARMED THE GERMANS IN MANY WAYS, OPPOSED THE NAZIS.

-SUBSEQUENTLY, HITLER CHOSE THE SS ARMY TO MURDER HUNDREDS OF HIS PRESUMED OPPONENTS INSIDE AND OUTSIDE THE SA—INCLUDING  THE CHANCELLOR WHO PRECEDED HIM.
-KURT VON SCHLEICHER—ON JUNE 30, 1934, THE "NIGHT OF THE LONG KNIVES."













Hitler’s Army:SA
-IN 1921 ADOLF HITLER FORMED HIS OWN PRIVATE ARMY CALLED STURM ABTEILUNG (STORM SECTION). THE SA (ALSO KNOWN AS STORMTROOPERS OR BROWNSHIRTS) WERE ORDERED TO DISRUPT THE MEETINGS OF POLITICAL OPPONENTS AND TO SAVE HITLER FROM REVENGE ATTACKS.


-THE SA WORE GREY JACKETS, BROWN SHIRTS (KHAKI SHIRTS ORIGINALLY INTENDED FOR SOLDIERS IN AFRICA.



















How did the use of fear helped Nazi become more powerful in Germany?
-The Night of the Long Knives, in June 1934, saw the wiping out of the SA's leadership and others who had MADE Hitler ANGRY in the recent past in Nazi Germany.


-After this date, the SS lead by Heinrich Himmler was to become far more powerful in Nazi Germany.


-For all the power the Enabling Act gave Hitler, he still felt threatened by some in the Nazi Party. He was also worried that the regular army had not given an oath of allegiance. 


-By June 1934, the regular army hierarchy also saw the SA as a threat to their authority. Röhm had openly spoken about taking over the regular army by absorbing it into the SA which alarmed the army's leaders.


-By the summer of 1934, Hitler had decided that Röhm was a 'threat' and he made a pact with the army. Röhm was removed and the SA men came under the control of the army and needed to be loyal to Hitler.


-The first the public officially knew about the event was on July 13th 1934, when Hitler told the Reichstag that met in the Kroll Opera House, Berlin, that for the duration of the arrests that he and he alone was the judge in Germany and that the SS carried out his orders. From that time on the SS became a feared force in Nazi Germany lead by Heinrich Himmler. The efficiency with which the SS had carried out its orders greatly impressed Hitler and Himmler was to acquire huge power within Nazi Germany.


















Informations taken from these websites:
-http://www.larouchepub.com/other/2006/3313nazi_private_army.html
-http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/night_of_the_long_knives.htm






Done by Puvaneswary(17)  3A.