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Adolph Hitler, born in Braunau am Inn (Austria)
April 20, 1889, died in Berlin, April 30,
1945. German Chancellor between 1933 and
1945, Fuehrer of the Third Reich from 1934
to 1945.
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| Adolph
Hitler, photograph dedicated To
His Excellency the Canadian Prime
Minister Dr. W.L. Mackenzie King
in friendly memory of his visit
29 June 1937. |
| National
Archives of Canada, C-011452. |
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In his youth, Adolph Hitler joined in the
animated, cosmopolitan life of Vienna. His
initial ambition was to be an artist; it
was never to be realized. When WWI broke
out he left Vienna for Munich and in 1914
enlisted in the Bavarian Army’s 16th
Regiment. He was awarded the Iron Cross,
First Class, for his bravery and discovered
the attraction of military grandeur, values
and comradeship. His dreams shattered by
Germany’s defeat he grew convinced
that Jews and Marxists had played a part
in the catastrophe.
In 1920, he founds the German Workers’
National Socialist Party (National Sozialistische
Deutsche Arbeiter Partei or NSDAP). Jailed
after a failed coup attempt against the
government of Bavaria, he writes Mein Kampf,
where he develops his neo-nationalist ideals,
based on the superiority of the Aryan race
and the creation of an armed elite. He regains
the direction of the Nazi Party after his
liberation, in 1925.
The Great Depression created a climate
of uncertainty favouring the rise of the
Nazi party. Left- and right-wing groups
fight while unemployment and poverty increase.
By striking an alliance with right-wing
industrialists, Hitler manages to reinforce
his position in the Reichstag where he captures
107 seats in 1930. The NSDAP is now the
second largest political party in Germany.
Making use of the prevailing climate of
violence, his paramilitary troops, the S.A.
(Sturmabteilung, the “Brown Shirts”)
take control of the streets. In April 1932,
he comes close to being elected to the Presidency.
Unaware of the threat that Hitler represents,
President von Hindenburg appoints him Chancellor
on January 30, 1933.
As Hindenburg’s death becomes imminent,
Hitler tightens up his grip on political
life by the systematic elimination of opponents,
as well as of all political groups other
than the Nazi Party; it is the “Night
of the Long Knives”, June 30, 1934.
Hindenburg dies on August 1st, and Hitler
appoints himself Fuehrer, or Leader, of
the Third Reich and the German People. The
move is ratified by a plebiscite on 19 August.
Whenever constitutional powers are insufficient,
Hitler uses propaganda and terror to reach
his goals. The SS (Schutzstaffel, or “Black
Shirts”) and the untouchable Gestapo
provide secret police services. A vast program
of public works, including a highway network
(Autobahn) revitalize the economy and reduce
unemployment; several foreign leaders are
favourably impressed by Hitler’s successes
against the economic depression.
Hitler’s foreign policy focuses on
the issues that he discussed in Mein Kampf:
to vindicate Germany and take revenge for
the humiliation imposed by the Treaty of
Versailles, to unite all ethnic Germans
into a common, single fatherland, to destroy
Bolshevism, to conquer and colonize Eastern
Europe. Cautious at first, Hitler withdraws
Germany from the Society of Nations, a radical
move that he skilfully balances by bilateral
agreements, including a non-aggression pact
with Poland (1934). Made stronger by the
hesitations of European nations, he becomes
increasingly demanding and aggressive. In
March 1935, he announces that Germany will
reconstruct its military power, against
the provisions of the Treaty of Versailles;
the following year German troops are stationed
in Rhineland, the demilitarized area bordering
on France and Belgium. Supported by Mussolini’s
Fascist regime in Italy and encouraged by
the meek reaction of Western democracies,
Hitler drafts a war plan which is presented
to military staff at a secret meeting in
November 1937. Hitler then undertakes to
incorporate neighbouring nations into the
Greater Germany: Austria in March 1938,
the Sudetenland in September 1938, Czechoslovakia
in March 1939, Poland in August 1939.
That last action bears the final blow to
Peace. Great Britain and France react. World
War II has started.
The War begins with a series of military
successes: Poland, Denmark, Norway, Belgium,
the Netherlands and France are occupied.
In October 1940, however, the Luftwaffe
loses the Battle of England, forcing Hitler
to postpone his plans for the invasion of
the British Isles. The new Hitlerian order
spreads its shadow over Europe, Jews are
eliminated, deported to concentration camps
and murdered.
In violation of the non-aggression pact
between the two countries, Hitler invades
the USSR in June 1941. Victorious at first,
German troops are defeated near Moscow in
December 1941. The Soviet Army and population
put up a fierce resistance and for the years
to come the Eastern Front will drain the
military resources of the Reich. Hitler
also underestimates the military strength
of the US and declares war against the Americans
just as the conflict with Japan —
a member of the Rome-Berlin-Tokyo Axis —
erupts.
The future is growing bleak for the German
invaders: defeat after defeat on the Russian
front, the loss of North Africa, the Allies
opening up another front in Sicily at first,
later in Italy. When the Allies invade Normandy
in June 1944, Germany is unable to fight
on all fronts. The senior military staff
is divided, to the point that a group of
officers try to assassinate Hitler in a
bomb attack on July 20, 1944. Exhausted,
embittered, Hitler is increasingly isolated.
On April 30, 1945, as the Russian Army is
marching on Berlin and US troops enter Nuremberg,
Hitler and his companion, Eva Braun, whom
he had married in the preceding hours, commit
suicide in their private quarters of the
Berlin Chancellery.
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