Nazi Propaganda during 1941: The Fight for Control of the German Populace
During a war, there are always two aspects of the fight: there is a war on one or more fronts against a declared enemy, and there is a war at home to win the hearts and minds of the citizenry. This can be difficult to maintain, even in an extremely patriotic and free society, at a time when food and material shortages, manpower shortages, and curfews exist in order to meet wartime needs. In Nazi Germany, the government faced even greater opposition as it actively persecuted a percentage of its own populace. Given time to think for themselves and use reason to dictate their opinions, the German populace could very well become an internal threat to the Nazi government. Therefore, controlling the populace was a matter of the utmost importance.
Victor Klemperer, a German Jew who lived in Nazi Germany, kept a journal in which he recorded events that occurred in Germany during 1941. As a college professor and a Jew, he had access to people from many different walks of life. As such, his recordings are extremely valuable, as they provide secondhand insight from a variety of sources, as well as his own opinions. Among other valuable information Klemperer provides, of particular interest is his information on German war propaganda during 1941. Klemperer provides detailed information on the German government?s attempts to control information related to military successes and setbacks, economic hardships caused by the war, and counters to anti-Nazi propaganda spread from sources both inside and outside of Germany.
Much of the control that the Nazi government exerted over the German people stemmed from the belief that Nazi Germany under Hitler was a righteous, unstoppable machine that would spread German values across Europe. In order to sustain this, official German war reports had to be extremely positive in order to retain support, both physically and via morale, for the Eastern Front. The most obvious method to accomplish this was to over-embellish German victories over Russian armies. According to Klemperer?s journal, on July 18th, German military bulletins stated that ?Bialystok was recently ?the greatest battle of attrition and annihilation in world history.?? A similar example of the use of superlative in a German military bulletin occurs on August 22nd, when it describes the Russians? ??unimaginable bloody losses.?? As if this was not extreme enough, on December 9th Klemperer recalls how many times the government has stated ?Russia [is] completely beaten,? despite the fact that the Russian counteroffensive, plus the arrival of winter, had completely stopped the German advance.
Using grandiose verbiage in these media releases was not the only means by which the totalitarian regime attempted to assure the populace of Germany?s inevitable victory. German war reports frequently inflated the numbers of enemy casualties. On August 22nd, Klemperer recorded the reports as estimating over one million Russian casualties, an astounding number for only two months of fighting. It seems extremely unlikely, considering that the pre-war Russian military numbered five million and the German military on the Eastern front numbered only three million. On September 27th and 28th, Klemperer gives a possible method for arriving at this number. After speaking with an acquaintance named Loeben, Klemperer learns that, of a more than 600,000 Russians that the German military claimed to have taken prisoner at Kiev, approximately two-thirds of them were civilians living in Kiev. Thus, it seems that the German war bulletins provided statistics that were grossly exaggerated in order to increase the popular opinion of German war actions.
The Nazi government also countered sources of anti-Nazi war propaganda. In one instance, the newspapers declared that one of Winston Churchill?s statements regarding the Eastern front were nothing but ?lies about Russian victories.? Foreign propaganda was not the only target of the Nazi-controlled state, however. On October 27th, the German media announced the confiscation of typewriters from all individuals (having previously confiscated typewriters from businesses). This prevented anyone from having a legal means to quickly make and distribute any papers that might counter German propaganda.
German propagandists also attempted to deceive the Germans regarding the state of their economy. Klemperer recorded constantly his personal experiences with shortages of food. He detailed the distribution of ration cards and the establishment of a ?scarce commodities? category that Jews were not allowed to purchase. He referenced the severe tobacco shortage, as both he and his wife smoked regularly. He described the lack of food (and resultant high prices) in restaurants, and stated that he and his wife were only able to cook at home twice weekly. In addition, he revealed that steel shortages led to inefficient airplane manufacturing (using lighter metals for the construction), wool shortages led to poor quality coats for the troops, and leather shortages resulted in a shoe shortage for the entire populace. However, against this the government still attempted to maintain control. On September 2nd, Klemperer records the government?s message that, although ?foodstuffs are in short supply, in very short supply for us, but no one is starving.? Later, on September 28th, the newspaper stated that the economy was ??greater than ever??based ?on the strength of the whole of Europe.?? Even though most Germans saw and felt the effects of Germany?s worsening economy, the Nazi-controlled media continued to print these lies in an effort to limit the damage to morale.
Many Germans did not believe the propaganda spread by the official media outlets, and sought other sources of information. Klemperer received much of his information from other individuals. An acquaintance named Kreidl (the informant of steel and wool shortages) helped Klemperer. A member of ?senior medical authority? provided true casualty numbers from the front on September 2nd, totaling a million and a half dead, wounded, and sick German casualties on the Eastern Front. This information was extremely helpful to other German citizens, because the German war reports, while highly embellishing German successes, did not list German casualties.
German propaganda did not always achieve its intended goal of preserving the blind obedience and patriotism to the Nazi state. However, many Germans did believe the information given by the official media outlets. Their numbers were enough to prolong the German war efforts for years, and ensure the deaths of millions. Klemperer voiced the issue best, when speaking of Hitler and his followers: ?How many people calculate, believe like him? Millions perhaps?How was it possible that they could incense the believing population in such a fashion in this war, in which so many are suffering?? It was possible through the Nazi propaganda, inciting millions to follow a power-hungry dictator wherever he would lead them.