Title: Ch 29 The Collapse of the Old Order
1Ch 29 The Collapse of the Old Order
2The Stalin Revolution
3Five-Year Plans
- Stalin set about the task of industrializing the
Soviet Union in such a way as to increase the
power of the Communist Party domestically and to
increase the power of the Soviet Union in
relation to other countries.
4Industrial Production
- Emphasis on development of major industries (oil,
coal, steel, electricity) - Lack of attention to production of consumer goods
(housing, clothing, furniture) - Persistent shortages
- Use of forced labor to meet industrial targets
Steel workers
5Collectivization of Agriculture
- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vFcumJNNX0qc
6- The Second Five-Year Plan (19331937) was
originally intended to increase the output of
consumer goods - However fear of the Nazi regime in Germany
prompted Stalin to shift the emphasis to heavy
industries and armaments.
7Terror and Opportunities
- industrialization and collectivization
- threats and force.
- Stalin used the NKVD (secret police) in order to
create a climate of terror
8- Many Soviet citizens supported Stalins regime in
spite of the fear and hardships. - Stalinism created
- new opportunities for women to join the
workforce - obedient, unquestioning people to rise within the
ranks of the Communist Party,
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10- In the late 1930s the contrast between the
economic strength of the Soviet Union and the
Depression troubles of the capitalist nations
gave many the impression that Stalins planned
economy was a success.
11The Depression
12Economic Crisis
- New York stock market October 29, 1929 caused a
chain reaction in which - consumers cut their purchases
- companies laid off workers
- small farms failed.
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14- On the international scale, the stock-market
collapse led New York banks to recall their loans
to Germany and Austria, thus ending their payment
of reparations to France and Britain, who then
could not repay their war loans to the United
States
15- In the United States, Britain, and France,
governments used economic programs. - In Germany and Japan, radical politicians devoted
their economies to military build-up,
16Depression in Nonindustrial Regions
- The Depression spread to Asia, Africa, and Latin
American - India and China were not dependent on foreign
trade and thus were little affected. - In Latin America the Depression led to the
establishment of military dictatorships
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18- Southern Africa boomed during the 1930s.
- The increasing value of gold and the relatively
cheaper copper deposits of Northern Rhodesia and
the Belgian Congo led to a mining boom that
benefited European and South African mine owners.
19The Rise of Fascism
20Mussolinis Italy
- In postwar Italy thousands of unemployed veterans
and violent youths banded together in fasci di
combattimento to demand action, - Benito Mussolini, a former socialist, became
leader of the Fascist Party and used the fasci di
combattimento to force the government to appoint
him to the post of prime minister.
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22- In power, Mussolini installed Fascist Party
members in all government jobs and crushed all
sources of opposition. - Mussolini and the Fascist movement excelled at
propaganda and glorified war
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24- http//www.youtube.com/watch?vq7CT5TDwxEc
25Hitlers Germany
- Germany had been hard-hit by
- Treaty of Versailles
- The hyperinflation of 1923, and the Depression.
- So who do you blame?
26- socialists, Jews, and foreigners
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28ADOLF HITLER
29ESSENTIAL QUESTION
- What led to Adolf Hitlers rise to power and the
Nazis ruling Germany?
30A DICTATOR IS BORN
- Adolf Hitler was born in Braunau am Inn, near
Linz, Austria on April 20, 1889
31KLARA and ALOIS THE PARENTS OF A MONSTER
32HITLER AS A YOUTH
Adolf was an intelligent child, but a poorly
performing student, both of Adolfs parents died
when he was a teenager, leaving him with a modest
inheritance Adolf sought to become an artist
LEFT Hitler at age 13 BELOW Hitler, part of a
church choir group
33THE YEARS IN VIENNA
- In January 1908, the 19 year old Adolf moved to
the city of Vienna, the capital of Austria - Adolf tries to enter the Academy of Arts, but is
rejected his audition painting was deemed not
good enough
THE ACADEMY OF ARTS IN VIENNA
34SAMPLES OF HITLERS ART
This 1914 painting is titled"The Courtyard of
the Old Residency in Munich."
A 1914 painting "Ruins of a Cloister
in Messines."
35ONE OF HITLERS GREAT LOVES THE MUSIC
OF RICHARD WAGNER
- Adolf enjoyed the opera music of Richard Wagner,
whose stirring music glorified Germany and often
had warlike themes (such as Ride of the
Valkyries) - Wagners music had a profound effect on the
young Adolf Hitler
GERMAN COMPOSER RICHARD WAGNER
36FIRST EXPOSURE TO POLITICS
KARL LUEGER
GEORG VON SCHOENERER
Galician Jews are present in Vienna. As with much
of Europe, there are anti-Semitic feelings in
Vienna (it was Adolfs first exposure to
anti-Semitism). The politics of Georg von
Schoenerer (an anti-Semite) and Viennas mayor,
Karl Lueger (who said the public would do without
freedoms for security), would have an influence
on young Hitler.
37POLITICIZATION OF HITLER
It is while living in Vienna that Adolf first
learns of the ideas of mystical German
nationalism and the Aryan ideal these ideas
would shape the Nazi ideology decades later, as
exemplified in this 1930s poster
38When World War I breaks out, Adolf Hitler finds a
purpose he volunteers to be a soldier for the
country he adored Germany
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41- Hitler served as a dispatch runner (messenger)
on the Western Front, carrying messages from
headquarters to the trenches by bicycle. - It was often a dangerous assignment Hitler was
wounded twice in one week in 1916 and sent to
Germany to recover. - Awarded medals for bravery (including the Iron
Cross), he returned to fight in 1917.
42AN ANGRY YOUNG MAN
- Adolf Hitler never forgot the humiliation that
Germany was served at the hands of the Allies.
Corporal Hitler (right) with two fellow German
soldiers, one of whom is missing a leg
43- As he recovered at a Stettin hospital from
eye injuries suffered in an Allied poison gas
attack in Ypres, Hitler heard about Germanys
defeat. His reaction - The burning in my eyes could not match the
hate burning in my heart. From that moment, I
knew I should enter politics.
44GERMANY AFTER THE GREAT WAR (1919-1923)
- Many Germans were disillusioned after the defeat
in the Great War and hated the democratic
government that took power after WWI (the Weimar
Republic) - Ex-soldiers like Hitler felt that they had been
stabbed in the back by Jews and Communists back
home in Germany they felt that they had not been
defeated on the battlefield
An anti-Communist poster
45A SOLDIER WITHOUT A WAR
- Hitler learned of the Germans destiny as the
master race and of the economic conspiracy of
the worlds Jews against the Fatherland - Hitler, now 30 years old, also discovered while
at Munich that he had a flair for public
speaking, delivering several passionate speeches
at the local university and transfixing audiences
46 PARTY MEMBER 55
- Hitler agreed with the Nazis partys views and
became a member in 1920 - Later on, he became a party leader, recruiting
many German soldiers from his barracks Hitlers
goal was to seize the German Workers Party and
reshape it to his own ends
47THE NAZI PARTY
With Hitler becoming its new leader, the German
Workers Party later became the National
Socialist German Workers Party (in German
Nazional Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter
Partei). The partys name was abbreviated as
NSDAP and shortened to Nazi
48THE SWASTIKA
49NAZI USE OF THE SWASTIKA
- The swastika is an ancient symbol that has been
used for over 3,000 years by many cultures,
representing life, strength, and good luck.
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51HITLER ON TRIAL FOR SEDITION
- In February 1924, Hitler was brought to trial.
- The trial was a political circus the judge was
sympathetic to Hitler and allowed him to express
his political views. - Hitler made statements during the trial that made
him well-known nationally and increased his
popularity with Germans.
Hitler and several of his fellow Nazis during a
break in the trial
- Charged of treason against the unpopular Weimar
Republic, Hitler proclaimed There is no such
thing as treason against the traitors of 1918.
52MEIN KAMPF MY STRUGGLE
- Hitler received a light sentence and only served
9 months in a minimum security prison. He spent
most of his time writing his autobiography. - Mein Kampf expressed Hitlers beliefs
- Two of the major issues he addressed in Mein
Kampf were - Lebensraum (living space) Germany must take
over other countries, especially Russia, for the
use of the German master race. - 2. Anti-Semitism inferior races, especially the
Jews, must be destroyed.
53When times are badpeople turn to extremes for
answers
54The Nazis Power Increases
55CHANCELLOR HITLER
- The aging German President Paul von Hindenburg
appoints Hitler as chancellor in January 1933.
- Hitlers power was increasing (over one million
members of the Nazi Party and 400,000 men in his
private army), so Hindenburg thought to contain
the Nazis by offering Hitler a position in the
government.
56CHANCELLOR HITLER
- When Hindenburg dies of old age, Chancellor
Hitler takes the Presidents role and power as
well. - Combining the titles of president and chancellor,
Adolf Hitler becomes Der Fuhrer (The Leader)
57THE REICHSTAG FIRE
Within a disaster lay an opportunity for Hitler
an opportunity to eliminate his worst political
enemies the Communists
58ELIMINATING POLITICAL ENEMIES
- On February 27, 1933, a feeble minded Dutch
Communist named Martinus van der Lubbe set the
Reichstag (Germanys government) building on fire - Hitler used this fire as a reason outlaw the
Communist Party and arrest their leaders - With the Enabling Act, the Reichstag gave Hitler
dictatorial powers because of this crisis - CONSPIRACY The Nazis may have helped start the
fire in the Reichstag building - Hitler used his new powers to outlaw all other
political parties and abolish trade unions - Hitler was now Der Fuhrer both in name and in
fact
59ELIMINATING RIVAL NAZIS
June 30, 1934 The Night of the Long Knives
Hitlers black-shirted SS murderers killed over
1000 Nazis who were seen as threats to Hitlers
power in the Nazi Party
60THE THIRD REICH
- The Nazis identified their rule as the
successor to the Holy Roman Empire (the First
Reich) and the Bismarck-created German Empire of
1871 (the Second Reich) - The Nazis called their new empire the Third
Reich
61VICIOUS ANTI-SEMITISM
- Hitlers racial views were put in everything
Germans read or saw - In this German childrens book, a pious mother
teaches her little son, - The Jew is the most poisonous mushroom in
existence.
The childrens book Der Giftpilz (The Poisonous
Mushroom)
62HITLERS FIERY SPEECHES
- One of the greatest weapons in Hitlers arsenal
as he battled for power was his ability to
deliver apocalyptic and convincing speeches - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vOwj7Sg_xJr4
63If the international Jewish financiers in and
outside Europe should succeed in plunging the
nations once more into a world war, then the
result will not be the Bolshevizing of the Earth,
and thus the victory of Jewry, but the
annihilation of the Jewish race in Europe!"
Adolf Hitler on January 30, 1939
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67This Nazi propaganda poster reads, Behind the
enemy powers the Jew
68East Asia, 19311945
69The Manchurian Incident of 1931
70The Chinese Communists and the Long March
71http//www.youtube.com/watch?vYAPddtJNbEc
72The Sino-Japanese War, 19371945
- On July 7, 1937 Japanese troops attacked Chinese
forces near Beijing, forcing the Japanese
government to initiate a full-scale war of
invasion against China. - The United States and the League of Nations made
no efforts to stop the Japanese invasion,
73- In the conduct of the war, the Japanese troops
proved to be incredibly violent, committing
severe atrocities when they took Nanjing in the
winter of 19371938 and initiating a kill all,
burn all, loot all campaign in 1940.
74- Chiang Kai-shek escaped to the mountains of
Sichuan, where Chiang built up a large army to
prepare for future confrontation with the
Communists. - In Shaanxi province, Mao built up his army,
formed a government, and skillfully presented the
Communist Party as the only group in China that
was serious about fighting the Japanese.
75The Second World War
76The War of Movement
- World War I was a war of defensive maneuvers, but
in World War II the introduction of motorized
weapons gave back the advantage to the offensive,
as may be seen in Germanys blitzkrieg (lightning
war) and in American and Japanese use of aircraft
carriers.
77War in Europe and North Africa
- It took less than a month for Germany to conquer
Poland. - After a lull during the winter of 19391940,
Hitler went on an offensive in March that made
him the master of all of Europe between Spain and
Russia by the end of June.
78- Hitlers attempt to invade Britain was foiled by
the British Royal Air Forces victory in the
Battle of Britain (JuneSeptember 1940). - In 1941 Hitler launched a massive invasion of the
Soviet Union his forces, successful at first,
were stopped by the winter weather of 19411942
and finally defeated at Stalingrad in February
1943.
79- In Africa, the Italian offensive in British
Somaliland and Egypt, although initially
successful, was turned back by a British
counterattack. - German forces came to assist the Italians, but
they were finally defeated at Al Alamein in
northern Egypt by the British, who had the
advantage of more plentiful weapons and supplies
and better intelligence.
80War in Asia and the Pacific
- In July 1941 France allowed Japan to occupy
Indochina the United States and Britain
responded by stopping shipments of steel, scrap
iron, oil, and other products that Japan needed.
81- In response, the Japanese chose to go to war,
hoping that a surprise attack on the United
States would be so shocking that the Americans
would accept Japanese control over Southeast Asia
rather than continuing to fight against Japan. - Japan attacked American forces at Pearl Harbor on
December 7, 1941 and proceeded to occupy all of
Southeast Asia and the Dutch East Indies within
the next few months.
82- The United States joined Britain and the Soviet
Union in an alliance called the United Nations
(or the Allies). - By June 1942 the United States had destroyed four
of Japans six largest aircraft carriers
aircraft carriers were the key to victory in the
Pacific, and since Japan did not have the
industrial capacity to replace the carriers, the
Japanese were now faced with a long and hopeless
war.
83The End of the War
- By 1943 the Soviet Red Army was receiving
supplies from factories in Russia and the United
States. - The Soviet offensive in the east combined with
Western invasions of Sicily and Italy in 1943 and
of France in 1944 to defeat Germany in May 1945.
84- By May 1945 American bombing and submarine
warfare had devastated the Japanese economy and
cut Japan off from its sources of raw materials,
while Asians who had initially welcomed the
Japanese as liberators from white colonialism
were now eager to see the Japanese leave. - The atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki in
August 1945 convinced Japan to sign terms of
surrender early the next month.
85Chinese Civil War and Communist Victory
- After the Japanese surrender in September 1945
the Guomindang and Communist forces began a civil
war that lasted until 1949. - The Guomindang had the advantage of more troops
and weapons and American support, but its brutal
and exploitative policies and its printing of
worthless paper money eroded popular support.
86- The Communists built up their forces with
Japanese equipment gained from the Soviets and
American equipment gained from deserting
Guomindang soldiers and won popular support,
especially in Manchuria, by carrying out a
radical land reform program. - On October 1, 1949 Mao Zedong announced the
founding of the Peoples Republic of China as
Chiang Kai-sheks Guomindang forces were being
driven off the mainland to Taiwan.
87The Character of Warfare
88Why was it the War of Science?
- World War II was different from previous wars
both in its enormous death toll and in the vast
numbers of refugees that were generated during
the war. - The unprecedented scale of human suffering during
the war was due to a change in moral values and
to the appearance of new technologies of warfare.
89- Science had a significant impact on the
technology of warfare. - This may be seen in the application of scientific
discoveries to produce synthetic rubber and
radar, in developments in cryptanalysis and
antibiotics, in the development of aircraft and
missiles, and in the United States governments
organization of physicists and engineers in order
to produce atomic weapons.
90Whats the importance of bombingf Bombing Raids
- The British and Americans excelled at bombing
raids that were intended not to strike individual
buildings, but to break the morale of the
civilian population. - Massive bombing raids on German cities caused
substantial casualties, but armament production
continued to increase until late 1944, and the
German people remained obedient and hard-working.
91The Holocaust
- Nazi killings of civilians were part of a
calculated policy of exterminating whole races of
people. - German Jews were deprived of their citizenship
and legal rights and herded into ghettoes, where
many died of starvation and disease. - In early 1942 the Nazis decided to apply modern
industrial methods in order to slaughter the
Jewish population of Europe in concentration
camps like Auschwitz. - This mass extermination, now called the
Holocaust, claimed some 6 million Jewish lives.
92Holocaust
- Holocaust is a word of Greek origin meaning
"sacrifice by fire."
93The Problem
- Based on your prior knowledge, what are some of
the injustices the Jewish population faced?
94Gathering Evidence
- You will be viewing six photographs and a short
video - As you watch please gather evidence of injustices
that the Jewish population faced during the
Holocaust. - Record your observations on the note sheet
provided. - We will have a class discussion based on the
evidence you gathered.
95Evidence SheetTask Directions
- Please use the evidence sheet provided to record
your observations as you view the following
slides. - Evidence Sheet
96Photograph One
Imagine the conditions on those trains. What
would it be like?
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Photo
Archives
97Photograph Two
- Notice their clothing. What do you see? What
does that mean?
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Photo
Archives
98Photograph Three
- What does this picture say about humanity?
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Photo
Archives
99Photograph Four
- Look at the details of this picture. How are the
prisoners dressed? How are they standing? What
inferences can you make?
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Photo
Archives
100Photograph Five
Based on this photo, what inferences can you make
about the treatment in the camps?
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Photo
Archives
101Photograph 6
Imagine sleeping in these quarters.
United States Holocaust Memorial Museum Photo
Archives
102Video
- Link to video from the United States Holocaust
Memorial Museum website about the liberation of
death camp known as Auschwitz. - Video
- Maximize the Real Player video screen to view the
video.
103Conclusive Statements
- What statements can you make about the treatment
of the Jewish population based on the evidence
gathered while looking at the photographs and
video?
104War and the Environment?