Nazi Propaganda and Censorship
Once they succeeded in ending democracy and turning Germany into a one-party
dictatorship, the Nazis orchestrated
a massive propaganda campaign to win the loyalty and cooperation of Germans.
The Nazi Propaganda Ministry, directed by Dr. Joseph Goebbels, took control of all
forms of communication in Germany: newspapers, magazines, books, public
meetings, and rallies, art, music, movies, and radio. Viewpoints in any
way threatening to Nazi beliefs or to the regime were censored or eliminated
from all media.
During the spring of 1933, Nazi student
organizations, professors, and librarians made up
long lists of books they thought should not be
read by Germans. Then, on the night of May 10,
1933, Nazis raided libraries and bookstores across
Germany. They marched by torchlight in nighttime
parades, sang chants, and threw books into huge
bonfires. On that night
more than 25,000 books were burned. Some were
works of Jewish writers, including Albert Einstein
and Sigmund Freud. Most of the books were by
non-Jewish writers, including such famous
Americans as Jack London, Ernest Hemingway, and
Sinclair Lewis, whose ideas the Nazis viewed as
different from their own and therefore not to be
read.
The Nazi censors also burned the books of Helen
Keller, who had overcome her deafness and
blindness to become a respected writer; told of
the book burnings, she responded: "Tyranny
cannot defeat the power of ideas." Hundreds
of thousands of people in the United States
protested the book burnings, a clear violation of
freedom of speech, in public rallies in New York,
Philadelphia, Chicago, and St. Louis.
Schools also played an important role in spreading Nazi ideas. While some books
were removed from classrooms by censors, other textbooks, newly written,
were brought in to teach students blind obedience to the party, love for
Hitler, and antisemitism. After-school meetings of the Hitler Youth and the League of German
Girls trained children to be faithful to the Nazi party. In school and
out, young people celebrated such occasions as Adolf Hitler's birthday
and the anniversary of his taking power.
For more information, see "Nazi Propaganda" in the Holocaust Encyclopedia.
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