German Youth and Nazis: Supporters and Registers (Μικρή συλλογή άρθρων)
Α)League of German Girls, the Nazi Organisation To Teach Girls Their Duties As Bearers Of Aryan Heirs (Pictures)
BDM Girls march by during a gymnastics exercise – 1941
The
League of German Girls (German: Bund Deutscher Mädel, BDM) was the
girls’ wing of the Nazi Party youth movement, the Hitler Youth. It was
the only female youth organization in Nazi Germany.
Eventually,
the League consisted of 3 sections. Young Girls for ages 10 to 14, the
League Proper for girls aged 14 to 18 and the Faith and Beauty society
for girls ages 17 to 21. The Bund Deutscher Mädel (BDM) had its origins
as early as the 1920s, in the first Mädchenschaften or Mädchengruppen.
In
1930, it was founded as the female branch of the Hitler Youth
movement. After the Nazi’s were defeated the organization ceased to
exist and was outlawed by the Allies in October 1945.
What follows
are pictures of the BDM during the early stages of Nazism up to 1943,
you can click on the pictures for a larger version. BDM Girls march in a parade with 80.000 BDM and Hitler Youth in the Lüstgarten in Berlin, 19 August 1933
BDM Girls put up a recruitment poster, it says “Girls join us, you belong to us” in 1933 BDM Girls and boys from the Hitler Jugend (Hitler Youth) celebrate Midsummer in 1933. BDM Girls are sewing clothes in an “Arbeitsraum”, work room in 1933. August 1942, the BDM girls are sewing clothes. Not the Hitler poster on the wall wit the caption “we follow you”. BDM grirls in a forest outside Worms looking for May Beetles, 1933. Portraits of a BDM Girls, 1933 / 1935 BDM Girls getting ready for a parade at an unknown location, 1933.
BDM Girls march in a parade in Worms, 1933.
One of the more sinister pictures, BDM girls visit Dachau Concentration camp in 1936 BDM Girls and Hitler Youth in the Olympic Stadium in Berlin celebrate Labourday – May 1st 1937
On the same day in Worms, different Hitler Youth and BDM girls present the Hitler salute. BDM
and Hitleryouth on a visit to Wuxi, Jiangsu, China. The German Caption
says they are on a Easter egg hunt at the second picture. The
BDM was also used in more formal settings, here a BDM girl presents
flowers to the Italian Dictator Mussolini on the railway station in
Munich. Also visible are Goring (right) and Hitler (right center) . 30
September 1938.
September
1939, the war has started so many men are at the front. The BDM is
called upon to help work the land and replace the men. In
1943 when Hitler was fighting his “total war” more men were needed thus
it was necessary for the German mothers to have as many children as
possible. Here a mother is presented the “Ehrenkreuz der deutschen
Mutter”. The cross of honor for German Mothers was presented in Bronze
for having 4 children, Silver for 6 children and Gold for 8 children.
May 15th 1943. A signed certificate and a closeup of the “Cross of Honor for German Mothers”. A
large family as the Nazi party loved to see it, a Nazi official, the
mother wearing the Mother Cross and their 12 kids. 5 of them in the
German Army (wehrmacht) and 1 in the Reichs-Arbeidsdienst, the German
Workers force. The oldest girl is a member of the BDM.
===================================
B)Edelweiss Pirates: Nazi Germany’s Youth Resistance With Song, Dance And Sabotage
Every
generation has its punk rock all-stars and the Edelweiss Pirates, the
counter culture to the Hitler Youth, bring that to mind with an added
heroic edge. They weren’t all of noble intention, but they did thwart
Nazi control knowing the risks, and that’s something.
This
sort of confederation of smaller groups that were lumped together under
a common name was known for basically being the opposite of the Hitler
Youth. Ranging from 12-17 years old, they avoided being conscripted,
usually by dropping out of school, and took on a social mission of doing
everything they weren’t supposed to be doing as young Aryan men, or in a
few cases, young Aryan women.
They drank, they smoked, danced to
Jazz and Blues, and went hiking and camping – which was strictly
forbidden. Free in the wilderness, they were able to cut up and sing
verboten songs and do as they pleased. They listened to the BBC news for
outside information when listening to a foreign radio station was
illegal. The Pirates had fun with criminal pranks like pouring sugar in
petrol tanks, graffiti, and general vandalism.
Some
groups took on specific names, like The Navajos, the Kittelbach, and
the Farhtenstenze (traveling dudes). While that seems to parallel a gang
culture, unlike gangs, they respected and supported each other. Most of
them wore a badge picturing the edelweiss flower, and there were shared
fashion trends among the groups.
They wore colorful and patterned
clothes, some wore lederhosen, they kept their hair longer than the
norm and wore white stockings and neck scarves. Once they caught the eye
of the Gestapo, many had their heads shaved in punishment, and this
became an identifying feature, but not a universal one. Hitler’s power may lay us low, And keep us locked in chains, But we will smash the chains one day, We’ll be free again We’ve got fists and we can fight, We’ve got knives and we’ll get them out We want freedom, don’t we boys? We’re the fighting Navajos!
They
didn’t just have fun – they committed subversive acts that were a bit
more targeted than singing a few songs. Allied planes would drop
propaganda, and the Edelweiss Pirates would make sure they weren’t
scooped up and thrown away. The Pirates collected them and shoved them
in letterboxes and under doors.
They were feared by the Hitler
Youth and local Nazi officials because a very few Pirates were known to
have ambushed these groups and beat them. Some groups claim to have only
wanted to be left alone by the Hitler Youth and that they had nothing
against the boys conscripted, but a common phrase was “Eternal War on
the Hitler Youth.”
Although many adults saw them as punk kids too
lazy to work and up to nothing but mischief, they tried and succeeded at
making an impact against the regime. They destroyed and sabotaged Nazi
equipment and ammunition. They stole supplies and bicycles from the
Hitler Youth. They assisted deserters of the German Army.
They
were also often armed, killing one army informer and doing several armed
raids on Nazi military depots. The Pirates derailed ammunition trains
and supplied adult resistance groups with food, supplies, and ammunition
that they had stolen or looted.
Many of their acts were kind – they gave refuge to concentration, labor, and POW camp escapees.
Captured
Pirates faced much more than a slap on the wrist, and yet knowing the
consequences, they continued their resistance. Parents also came under
scrutiny when Pirates were caught, although many were unattached to
their families or didn’t have them at all.
At
first, punishments were meant to demoralize them. Heinrich Himmler knew
that the Pirates took pride in their subversive appearance,
particularly their hairstyle, so when they were captured they went for a
short while to a detention camp and their heads were shaved when they
were released. We march by banks of Ruhr and Rhine And smash the Hitler Youth in twain. Our song is freedom, love and life, We’re the Pirates of the Edelweiss.
Over
time, however, punishments became more and more severe and eventually
ended in death. At first it was severe beatings (girls fared no better
than guys), then concentration camps or solitary confinement or both,
and finally public hangings. Thirteen youths were hanged in Cologne and
of those thirteen, six were Pirates.
Memorial in Cologne for the hanged youthFollowing
the war, they denounced any political affiliation with the Allies or
the communists saying that politics shouldn’t take center stage. In
fact, because they did not conform and remained social outcasts, the
Allies took a negative view of them.
Perhaps in some cases, it was
justified as there were reports of groups identifying themselves as
Pirates that were terrorizing displaced Russians and Poles and possibly
women on Allied bases. However, that would have only been a very small
subset if they were even affiliated at all.
As for their fate,
Pirates that fell on the Soviet side of the wall were automatically
sentenced to 25 years in prison just for being suspected of association.
Even after the fall of the Berlin Wall, surviving Pirates still have
criminal records that state that they were guilty of war crimes. They
were finally annulled in 2005.
In that year, they were finally
officially recognized as resistance fighters. A female Pirate, Gertrud
Koch (a.k.a. Mucki – her Pirate code name) said, “After the war there
were no judges in Germany so the old Nazi judges were used and they
upheld the criminalization of what we did and who we were.”
Jean
Juelich, who had escaped the hanging in Cologne, felt the recognition
was long overdue. “This should have happened 40 years ago . . . The
families of those who were murdered have been denied any kind of justice
until now. They were killed as criminals.”
At the time of the
annulment, there were five remaining members in Cologne including Koch
and Juelich. Most have since died. That day, however, they performed the
songs of the Pirates in remembrance and celebration. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edelweiss_Pirates http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/nazi-germany/the-edelweiss-pirates/ http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/fritz-theilen-member-of-the-edelweiss-pirates-the-children-who-resisted-hitler-7707378.html http://www.raoulwallenberg.net/saviors/others/edelweiss-pirates-story/ http://www.teenagefilm.com/archives/archive-fever/edelweiss-pirates http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/1492771/Teenage-rebels-who-fought-Nazis-are-honoured-at-last.html
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου