. Explain why the Nazi propaganda was effective in creating rise of Hitler? *
Answers
Answer:
Propaganda is a specific type of message directly aimed at influencing the
opinion of people through the use of posters, films, speeches, etc. The Nazi
regime used language and media with care and often to great effect. They
used films, pictures, radio, posters, etc. to spread hatred for the Jews.
(i) Once in power, the Nazis quickly began to implement their dream
of creating an exclusive racial community of pure Germans by
physically eliminating all those who were seen as “undesirable”.
(ii) Jews remained the worst sufferers in Nazi Germany. They were
stereotyped as ‘killers of Christ and usurers’. Until medieval times,
Jews were barred from owning land.
(iii) They survived mainly through trade and moneylending/ They lived in
separately marked areas called ‘ghettos’. They were often persecuted
through periodic organised violence and expulsion from land.
(iv) All this had a precursor in the traditional Christian hostility towards
Jews for being the killers of Christ. However, Hitler’s hatred of the
Jews was based on pseudo-scientific theories of race, which held
that conversion was no solution to ‘the Jewish problem’. It could
be solved only through their total elimination.
Answer:
Propaganda is a specific type of message directly aimed at influencing the
opinion of people through the use of posters, films, speeches etc. The Nazi
regime used language and media with care and often to great effect. They
used films, pictures, radio, posters, etc. to spread hatred for the Jews.
(i) Once in power, the Nazis quickly began to implement their dream
of creating an exclusive racial community of pure Germans by
physically eliminating all those who were seen as “undesirable”.
(ii) Jews remained the worst sufferers in Nazi Germany. They were
stereotyped as ‘killers of Christ and usurers’. Until medieval times,
Jews were barred from owning land.
(iii) They survived mainly through trade and moneylending/ They lived in
separately marked areas called ‘ghettos’. They were often persecuted
through periodic organised violence and expulsion from land.
(iv) All this had a precursor in the traditional Christian hostility towards
Jews for being the killers of Christ. However, Hitler’s hatred of the
Jews was based on pseudo-scientific theories of race, which held
that conversion was no solution to ‘the Jewish problem’. It could
be solved only through their total elimination.
Explanation: