Hitler Youth

Front Cover
Harvard University Press, 2004 M11 30 - 355 pages

In modern times, the recruitment of children into a political organization and ideology reached its boldest embodiment in the Hitler Youth, founded in 1933 soon after the Nazi Party assumed power in Germany. Determining that by age ten children's minds could be turned from play to politics, the regime inducted nearly all German juveniles between the ages of ten and eighteen into its state-run organization. The result was a potent tool for bending young minds and hearts to the will of Adolf Hitler.

Baldur von Schirach headed a strict chain of command whose goal was to shift the adolescents' sense of obedience from home and school to the racially defined Volk and the Third Reich. Luring boys and girls into Hitler Youth ranks by offering them status, uniforms, and weekend hikes, the Nazis turned campgrounds into premilitary training sites, air guns into machine guns, sing-alongs into marching drills, instruction into indoctrination, and children into Nazis. A few resisted for personal or political reasons, but the overwhelming majority enlisted.

Drawing on original reports, letters, diaries, and memoirs, Kater traces the history of the Hitler Youth, examining the means, degree, and impact of conversion, and the subsequent fate of young recruits. Millions of Hitler Youth joined the armed forces; thousands gleefully participated in the subjugation of foreign peoples and the obliteration of "racial aliens." Although young, they committed crimes against humanity for which they cannot escape judgment. Their story stands as a harsh reminder of the moral bankruptcy of regimes that make children complicit in crimes of the state.

 

Contents

Problems of Training Discipline and Leadership
48
German Girls for Matrimony and Motherhood
70
The Bund Deutscher Madel in Peacetime
73
The Challenges of World War II
85
Eugenics and Race
94
Dissidents and Rebels
113
The Varieties of Dissidence
115
The Empire Strikes Back
148
Elation and Disenchantment
172
Detours Duplications and Alternatives
192
The Final Victory
215
Hitlers Young Women Deceived
231
The Responsibility of Youth
247
Abbreviations
267
Notes
271
Acknowledgments
347

Hitlers Youth at War
167
Index
349

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Page 7 - German youth movement, at least in its first phase, was not its "intellectual leap-frogging" and confused politics but something else entirely. The movement represented an unpolitical form of opposition to a civilization that had little to offer the young generation, a protest against the lack of vitality, warmth, emotion, and ideals in German society.
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