CHAPTER 3 : NAZISM AND THE RISE OF HITLER (CLASS IX)
Ans: It was a war started by Germany during the Second World War, which resulted in the mass murder of selected groups of innocent civilians of Europe.
Answer:
- The abdication of the emperor gave an opportunity to parliamentary parties to recast German polity.
- A democratic constitution was established with a federal structure.
Ans: Germany, Italy and Japan.
Answer: 1929.
Question 20.
Mention two provisions of Article 48 with reference to Germany.
Answer:
- It was the President to impose emergency.
- It provided powers to President to suspend Civil Rights.
Question 21.
Who was assigned the responsibility of economic recovery by Hitler?
Answer: Hjalmar Schacht.
Question 22.
When did Germany withdraw herself from the ‘League of Nations’?
Answer: 1933.
Question 23.
Who was the Propaganda Minister of Hitler?
Answer: Goebbels.
Question 24.
Hitler integrated which two nations under the slogan, ‘One people, One Empire and One Vote’?
Answer: Austria and Germany.
Question 25.
“The Weimar constitution had some inherent defects, which made it unstable and vulnerable to dictatorship.” Explain.
Answer:
- The system of proportional representation made achieving a majority by any one party a near impossible task, leading to the rule by coalitions.
- Article 48 gave the President the power to impose emergency. So this article was being misused by the ruler.
Question 26.
Where was Hitler bom?
Answer: Austria.
Question 27.
Why was the famous Enabling Act passed?
Answer: To establish dictatorship in Germany.
Question 28.
Name any four races or people who were considered undesirable or Inferior in Germany.
Answer:
- Jews,
- Blacks,
- Gypsies,
- Russians.
Question 29.
Who were known as November criminals?
Answer:
The group of people, who mainly supported the Weimar Republic of Germany were known as November criminals. Most of them were Socialists, Catholics and Democrats.
Question 30.
What was Dawes Plan?
Answer:
It was a Plan introduced by America to bail Germany out of the financial crisis which it suffered after the First World War.
Question 31.
Name any four countries which were occupied or attacked by Germany between 1936 to 1945.
Answer:
- Rhineland,
- Austria,
- Sudetenland
- Poland.
Question 32.
Why were the Jews classified as ‘undesirable’ by the Nazis?
Answer:
The Jews were classified as ‘undesirable’ by the Nazis because they had been stereotyped as the killers of Christ and usurers.
Question 33.
Which science was introduced to justify Nazi ideas of race?
Answer: Racial Science.
Question 34.
To whom did Mahatma Gandhi had written a letter for International peace?
Answer: Hitler.
Question 35.
“Nazism became a mass movement during the Great Depression period’’. Give reason for the same. HOTS
Answer:
It was during the Great Depression that Nazism became a mass movement. The depression had a severe impact on the economy of Germany, many banks collapsed and businesses shut down, workers lost their jobs and the middle classes were threatened with destitution. In such a situation Nazi propaganda stirred hopes of a better future.
Question 36.
Who was the founder of Nazi Party?
Answer: Hitler.
Question 37.
Define Holocaust.
Answer:
These were Nazi killing operations which were carried out to kill the Jews.
Question 38.
When did Japan attack Pearl Harbor?
Answer: 9 December, 1941.
Question 39.
What was the reason for the entry of US in Second World War?
Answer:
Japan bombed Pearl Harbour.
Question 40.
Which incident marked the end of the Second World War?
Answer:
The war ended in May 1945 with Hitler’s defeat and the US dropping of the atom bomb on Hiroshima in Japan.
B. SHORT TYPE :
Question 1.
Mention four major terms of the Treaty of Versailles.
Or
‘The Treaty of Versailles was harsh and humiliating’. Justify by
giving four terms of the treaty.
Answer:
- Germany lost its overseas colonies, a tenth of its population, 13 per cent of its territories, 75 per cent of its iron and 26 per cent of its coal to France, Poland, Denmark and Lithuania.
- The Allied Powers demilitarised Germany to weaken its power.
- The War Guilt Clause held Germany responsible for the war and damages the Allied countries suffered. Germany was forced to pay compensation amounting to around £ 6 billion.
- The Allied armies also occupied the resource-rich Rhineland for much of the 1920s. Many Germans held the new Weimar Republic responsible for not only the defeat in the war, but the disgrace at Versailles.
Features of political radicalism in Germany are :
- The political situation that came into view after the rise of Weimar Republic is termed as political radicalism.
- The demand and the uprising for Soviet style governance were suppressed by the Weimar republic and this enraged them to form the communist party.
- Both communists and socialists wanted political radicalism against Hitler’s Rule.
- This situation aggravated with economic crisis in 1923. Germany paid war repartation in Gold and so the Gold Reserves of Germany became scarce.
- Due to this, Germany refused to pay the war repartation. As a result, French occupied Ruhr, which was the leading industrial area of Germany.
- Germany printed paper currency in excess which further led to worsening of the situation and hyper inflation, (any three)
Explain any three components of the ideology of Hitler.
Answer:
- According to Nazi theory, there was no equality between people, but only a racial hierarchy. In this view, blond, blue eyed Nordic German Aryans were at the top while the Jews were at the bottom.
- Hitler borrowed his ideas from the theory of Charles Darwin and Herbert Spencer. Both these scientists explained the concept of evolution and natural selection. They gave the concept of ‘survival of the fittest.’ This idea was used by the Nazis to justify their imperial rule and war.
- Hitler also used the idea of Lebensraum or living space. He believed that new territories had to be acquired for settlement.
Answer:
Three major effects of the First World War in Germany are :
- World War I, ended with the Allies defeating Germany and the Central Powers in November 1918. The Peace Treaty at Versailles with the Allies was a harsh and humiliating Treaty. Germany lost its overseas colonies, a tenth of its population. 13 percent of its territories, 75 per cent of its iron and 26 per cent of its coal to France, Poland, Denmark and Lithuania.
- The Allied Powers demilitarized Germany to weaken its power Germany was forced to pay compensation amounting to £ 6 billion.
- The Allied armies also occupied the resource-rich Rhineland for much of the 1920s.
What were the promises made hy Hitler to people of Germany?
Answer:
- He promised to build a strong nation, undo the injustice of the Versailles Treaty and restore the dignity of the German people.
- He promised employment for those looking for work, and a secure future for the youth.
- He promised to weed out all foreign influences and resist all foreign ‘conspiracies’ against Germany
Explain the impact on Germany of her refusal to pay war f compnsation in 1923.
Answer:
- The French occupied Ruhr, the leading industrial and mineral dominating area.
- Germany retaliated with passive resistance and printed paper currency recklessly. With too much printed money in circulation, the value of the German Mark fell drastically.
- Due to the fall in the value of Mark prices of goods soared and Germany fell into hyperinflation situation.
What steps were taken by Hitler to reconstruct Germany?
Answer:
- Hitler assigned the responsibility of economic recovery to the economist, Hjalmar Schacht, who aimed at full production and full employment through a state-funded work-creation programme. This project produced the famous German superhighways, and the people’s car, the Volkswagen.
- In foreign policy also, Hitler, acquired quick successes. He pulled Germany out of the League of Nations in 1933, reoccupied the Rhineland in 1936, and integrated Austria and Germany in 1938. .
- He was of the opinion that resources are to be accumulated through the expansion of territory.
How was the Nazi Party formed?
Answer:
Nazi Party formed by :
- Disintegration of Weimar Republic led to the formation of Nazi Party after the First World War.
- Hitler enrolled for the army when the First World War broke out. He also earned medals for bravery.
- The German defeat horrified him and Versailles Treaty made him furious. Later, he joined a small group called the German Workers party.
- Subsequently, he took over the organization and renamed in National Socialist German Workers Party. This party came to be known as Nazi Party.
Explain the following terms :
(i) Holo-caust,
(ii) Concentration Camp,
(iii) Wall Street Exchange.
Answer:
(i) Holocaust:
- It refers to the Nazi killing operations. Undesirable people were taken to concentration camp, Gestapo, gas chambers etc., and were subjected to death.
- While the Germans were pre-occupied with their own plight as a defeated nation emerging out of the rubble, the Jews wanted the world to remember the atrocities and sufferings they had endured during the Nazi killing operations.
(ii) Concentration Camp :
- It was a camp where people were isolated and detained without due process of law. Typically, it was surrounded by electrified barbed wire fences.
- When Hitler became the Chancellor on 30th January 1933, he hurriedly packed off his arch-enemies, the communists to the newly established concentration camp.
(iii) Wall Street Exchange :
- It is the world’s biggest stock exchange located in the USA.
- In 1929, when the Wall Street Exchange crashed, Germans were very much affected because they were totally dependent on short-term loans, largely from the USA.
The USA had resisted involvement in the Second World War:
Answer:
- Drastic Fall in Industrial Production: By 1932, industrial production was reduced to 40 per cent of the 1929 level.
- Unemployment: Workers lost their jobs or were paid reduced wages. The number of unemployed touched an unprecedented 6 million. As jobs disappeared, the youth took to criminal activities and total despair became commonplace. The economic crisis created deep anxieties and fears in people.
- Loss of Saving: The middle classes, especially salaried employees and pensioners, saw their savings diminish when the currency lost its value.
- Impact on Peasants: The large mass of peasantry was affected by a sharp fall in agricultural prices and women, unable to fill their children’s stomachs, were filled with a sense of deep despair.
Answer:
The main causes of rise of Nazi dictatorship in Germany are as follows:
(i) The First World War defeat
(ii) Weakness of Weimar Republic
What were the main features of Hitler’s geopolitical concept of ‘Lebensraum’? Give five features.
Answer:
- Lebensraurp meaning ‘living space’ was an expansionist policies of Nazi Germany.
- Nazis believed that new territories had to be acquired for settlement. This would enhance the area of the mother country, while enabling the settlers on new lands to retain an intimate link with the place of their origin.
- It would also enhance the material resources and power of the German nation.
- Hitler intended to extend German boundaries by moving eastwards, to concentrate all Germans geographically in one place.
- Poland became the laboratory for this experimentation.
Answer:
- Germany lost its overseas colonies, a tenth of its population, 13 per cent of its territories, 75 per cent of its iron and 26 per cent of its coal to France, Poland, Denmark and Lithuania.
- The Allied Powers demilitarised Germany to weaken its power.
- The War Guijt Clause held Germany responsible for the war and damages the Allied countries suffered. Germany was forced to pay compensation amounting to around £ 6 billion.
- The Allied armies also occupied the resourcerich Rhineland for much of the 1920s.
Answer:
Consequences of Nazism :
- All schools were cleansed and purified. Teachers who were Jews were dismissed.
- Children were segregated i.e., Germans and Jews could not sit or play together. Undesirable children-Jews, handicapped were thrown out of the schools.
- School textbooks were re-written and social science was introduced. Children were taught to be loyal and submissive, hate Jews and worship Hitler.
- Jews were the worst sufferers as they were treated very badly.
- They were classified as undesirable. They were considered as racial inferiors.
- They were widely prosecuted. They were stereotyped as killers of Christ and usurers.
- They were banned from owing land. They lived in separately marked areas.
Answer:
Status of Women in Germany :
- Children in Nazi Germany were told that women were radically different from men.
- While boys were taught to be aggressive, masculine and steal hearted, girls were told to be good mothers and rear pure-blooded Aryan children. They have to teach Nazi values to their children.
- Women bearing undesirable children were punished and those bearing desirable were awarded.
- Girls had to maintain the purity of race.
- They had to keep distance from the Jews, look after their home and teach Nazi values to their children.
- To encourage women to produce more children, a bronze cross was given for four, silver for six and gold for eight or more children.
- Those who maintained contacts with the Jews, Poles or Russians were severely punished.
Answer:
(i) Various Codes: To eliminate ‘inferior races’ they always used code language. Nazis never used the words, ‘kill’ or ‘murder’ in their official communications. Mass killings were termed special treatment, final solution (for the Jews), euthanasia (for the disabled), selection and disinfections. ‘Evacuation’ meant deporting people to gas chambers. They were labelled ‘disinfection-areas’, and looked like bathrooms equipped with fake showerheads.
(ii) Use of Mass Media and Communication System: Media was carefully used to win support for the regime, and popularise its worldview. The Nazi ideas were spread through visual images, films, radio, posters, catchy slogans and leaflets. In posters, groups identified as the ‘enemies’ of Germans were stereotyped, mocked, abused and described as evil. Socialists and liberals were represented as weak and degenerate. They were attacked as malicious foreign agents.
(iii) Films: Propaganda films were made to create hatred for Jews. The most infamous film was The Eternal Jew.
(iv) New Education Policy in Schools Schools and education institutions were also used to spread the Nazi ideology. School textbooks were re-written. Racial science was introduced to justify the Nazi ideas of race.
(v) Inhuman Treatment to Jewish Students: ‘Undesirable children’ i.e., the Jews, Blacks and the Gypsies were thrown out of school. The Youth League of Nazis was founded in 1922.
Question 8.
How did the world come to know about the ‘Nazi holocaust’? Explain.
Answer:
(i) Information about Nazi practices had trickled out of Germany during the last years of the regime. But it was only after the war ended and Germany was defeated that the world came to realise the horrors of what had happened.
(ii) While the Germans were preoccupied with their own plight as a defeated nation emerging out of the rubble, the Jews wanted the world to remember the atrocities and sufferings they had endured during the Nazi killing operations — also called the holocaust.
(iii) The indomitable spirit to bear witness and to preserve the documents can be seen in many ghetto and camp inhabitants who wrote diaries, kept notebooks, and created archives.
(iv) The history and the memory of the holocaust live on in memoirs, fiction, documentaries, poetry, memorials and museums in many parts of the world today. These are a tribute to those who resisted it.
Question 9.
Explain any five features of Hitler’s policy towards the Polish under his rule.
Answer:
- Occupied Poland was divided up. Much of north-western Poland was annexed to Germany.
- Poles were forced to leave their homes and properties behind to be occupied by ethnic Germans brought in from occupied Europe.
- Poles were then herded like cattle in the other part called the General Government, the destination of all undesirables of the empire.
- Members of the Polish intelligentsia were murdered in large numbers in order to keep the entire people intellectually and spiritually servile.
- Polish children who looked like Aryans were forcibly snatched from their mothers and examined by race experts. If they passed the race tests they were raised in German families and if not, they were deposited in orphanages where most perished. With some of the largest ghettos and gas chambers, the General Government also served as the killing fields for the Jews.
Explain Hitler’s foreign policy.
Answer:
Hitler was always in favour of an aggressive foreign policy. To implement his policies, he took the following steps :
- He pulled Germany out of League of Nations in 1933.
- He reoccupied the Rhineland in 1936 and integrated Austria and Germany in 1938 under the slogan One people, One empire and One leader.
- In the same year i.e., in 1938, he seized the German speaking Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia.
- Hitler was of the opinion that the resources were to be accumulated through the expansion of territory. In September 1939, Germany invaded Poland. Thus, started a war with France and England.
- In September 1940, a Tripartite Pact was signed between Germany, Italy and Japan, strengthening Hitler’s claim to international power. Puppet regimes, supportive of Nazi Germany, were installed in a large part of Europe. By the end of 1940, Hitler was at the pinnacle of his power.
- Hitler now moved to achieve his long-term aim of conquering Eastern Europe. He wanted to ensure food supplies and living space for Germans. He attacked the Soviet Union in June 1941. In this historic blunder, Hider exposed the German western front to British aerial bombing, and the eastern front to the powerful Soviet armies.
- Germany was surrounded from all sides by the Allied powers and she was forced to surrender in 1945.
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