The Nazi promise to restore Germany's honor and glory struck a powerful chord.

by Rabbi Eliyahu Ellis and Rabbi Shmuel Silinsky

One of the parties that started to gain in popularity and strength would become the German National Socialist Party, which was neither particularly Nationalist nor Socialist. Hitler joined and galvanized the party around a grandiose idea – they were going to take over Munich, and then after Munich, they would go for the rest of Germany. Their aim was to get Germany back to its "true" values, "true" traditions.

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Beer Hall Putsch

Beer Hall Putsch, November 1923
photo courtesy of Yad Vashem

The "Beer Hall Putsch" was their attempted coup of Munich which failed, leaving 16 Nazis and 3 German policemen dead. The result was that Hitler was arrested for high treason, given a light sentence for 5 years but only spent 9 months in prison. It was during this time that he wrote the famous "Mein Kampf" ("My Struggle"), which was basically, "What I will do when I run the world." The book was a runaway best seller in Germany. It made him independently wealthy, a millionaire.

Upon his release from prison, Hitler revitalized the Nazi party.

In German politics, the Nazi Party never had a majority in the government. They had 2%-3%, in the 1920’s – never more. Then in 1929, history intervened with the "Great Economic Depression." The situation in Germany went from "worse" to "horrible." The country was completely in chaos. Now there were food riots, pitched battles in the street every night. HItler's twisted promises offered Germans a solution to their despair.

Von Hindenburg was the president of Germany. He was a World War I general, a war hero whom everyone loved. But he was getting old now, and a bit senile. The military, the industrialists and others pressured Von Hindenburg into a special deal. Although 1932 elections made the Nazi party the largest in Germany, no single party had actually won a majority. No one could form a government.

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Hindenberg Receiving Hitler

Hindenberg Receiving Hitler As New Chancellor
photo courtesy of Yad Vashem

Under his special powers, the president could dissolve the parliament and appoint a chancellor. That chancellor’s job would be to prepare Germany for a new election. Under pressure from the military and industrial sectors, Von Hindenburg appointed Hitler. The "powers that be" thought Hitler was a bit strange, but they planned to use his following and add it to theirs. That would create a majority government and shore up their power base… But as soon as he got into office, it became clear that Hitler was not about to listen to anyone. It was rather like letting the fox into the chicken coop to guard the chickens. Hitler got in and became chancellor, and did what any fox would do when he gets into the coop - he started destroying the chickens.

Read a reaction of Jews in Poland.

Published: Wednesday, December 31, 1969
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Visitor Comments: 25

(25) classified, February 27, 2011 8:51 PM

i approve this message!!

i thank you greatly aish.com , this help has ade me gain intelectual knowledge umong my cereberal hemispheres. furthermore, i enjoyed your ending and this analysis you have brought to me has helped me with my history essay

(24) Herb Goldberger, January 26, 2011 12:46 AM

Guilt of the world

One cannot put the blame solely with Adolph Hitler and the Nazi party. The leaders of the world at that time did so. By doing this, they absolved themselves of their failure to act properly. When Hitler was in prison after the Beer Hall Putsch, he wrote his Mein Kampf. In this book, he was quite explicit as to what his plans were for the Jews of the world. He explained that he was going to rid the world of this vermin. It was all there in black & white, only to be read, & taken seriously. As he got stronger, & stronger, the world, afraid to act against him allowed him to gain enough strength to put into action the heinous plan he revealed earlier. The world still did nothing to help save Jews of Europe. Did the U.S.A. accept more than the quota that they had set up ?How about England , France, & Great Britain ?Absolutely not. One merely has to read about the ship St.Lous that was returned to Europe with its cargo of Jews that were trying to escape this terror, only to be denied entry. Allied forces also had the opportunity to bomb the rail lines leading to Auschwitz. This would have disrupted the flow of Jews marked for extermination. This would have saved many lives, but the Allies did not see the necessity of doing this. I guess when you are victorious in winning a war, you do not have to justify your actions to anyone. In conclusion I of course agree that Hitler and the NAZI party were evil as evil could be, BUT they never could have gone as far as they did without having the entire world as their accomplices.

(23) al, April 22, 2009 5:47 AM

Thanks a bunch!!

thanks heaps for the content on this site. it has a good insight, and information for my research essay into hitlers rise to chancellorship in 1934!

(22) Crystal, January 26, 2009 9:19 PM

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(21) anonymous, October 28, 2008 1:33 PM

cool

this site is very helpful with a project i had to do in history. thanks a lot.

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About the Author

Rabbi Eliyahu Ellis

Rabbi Eliyahu Ellis studied biology and geology at Northern Illinois University. In addition, he spent time as a deep-sea diver in the oil fields in the North Sea between Scotland and Norway and has circumnavigated the seas of the world in a sailboat. Rabbi Ellis received rabbinic ordination from Aish HaTorah where he is a senior lecturer at the Discovery and Essentials programs.

Rabbi Shmuel Silinsky

Rabbi Shmuel Silinsky received his BS from Cornell with a major in Communication Arts and a minor in Archeology, and did post-graduate work at UCLA in the field of Desert Plants and Natural History. Prior to moving to Israel, he worked in the field of Urban Ecology including several years as a landscape designer in Beverly Hills. Rabbi Silinsky received rabbinic ordination from Aish HaTorah and the Chief Rabbi of Jerusalem. He currently teaches at the Yeshivat Aish HaTorah in Jerusalem.

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