Nazi Racism
For years before Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany, he was obsessed with
ideas about race. In his speeches and writings, Hitler spread his beliefs
in racial "purity" and in the superiority of the "Germanic
race" -- what he called an Aryan
"master race." He pronounced that his race must remain pure
in order to one day take over the world. For Hitler, the ideal "Aryan"
was blond, blue-eyed, and tall. When Hitler and the Nazis came to power, these beliefs became
the government ideology and were spread in publicly displayed posters,
on the radio, in movies, in classrooms, and in newspapers. The Nazis began
to put their ideology into practice with the support of German scientists
who believed that the human race could be improved by limiting the reproduction
of people considered "inferior." Beginning in 1933, German physicians
were allowed to perform forced sterilizations, operations making it impossible
for the victims to have children. Among the targets of this public program
were Roma (Gypsies), an ethnic minority numbering about
30,000 in Germany, and handicapped individuals, including the mentally
ill and people born deaf and blind. Also victimized were about 500 African-German
children, the offspring of German mothers and African colonial soldiers
in the Allied armies that occupied the German Rhineland region after World War I.
Hitler and other Nazi leaders viewed the Jews
not as a religious group, but as a
poisonous "race," which "lived
off" the other races and weakened them. After
Hitler took power, Nazi teachers in school
classrooms began to apply the
"principles" of racial science. They measured skull size and nose
length, and recorded the color of their pupils'
hair and eyes to determine whether students
belonged to the true "Aryan race."
Jewish and Romani (Gypsy) students were often
humiliated in the process.
For more information, see "Racism" in the Holocaust Encyclopedia.
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