History, asked by neeloferanjel, 1 year ago

What is Nazi youth policy

Answers

Answered by nikkusing09876543
2
your answer

Youth in Nazi Germany were subjected to intense Nazi ideology (hatred, aggression, violence, etc.) both in and out of school and in youth organisations which they were forced to join.

i. The 10-year-olds had to join 'Jungvolk' and 14-year-olds 'Hitler Youth'.

ii. Children were segregated from 'undesirables', school textbooks were rewritten and racial science introduced to justify Nazi ideas on race.

iii. Children were taught to be loyal, submissive, hate Jews and worship Hitler. Stereotypes about Jews were popularised through various subjects and deceptive use of propaganda.


Answered by ChehraMasoom
0
Nazis wanted to control young people and sure their support for the future. They did this by changing what children learnt in school and creating ‘out of school’ youth movements.

EDUCATION

The German Minister of Education (Bernhard Rust) said “The whole purpose of education is to create Nazis.” To do this the Nazis changed the school curriculum to contain what they saw as the main needs, military skills for boys and domestic skills for the girls.

The Nazis placed great emphasis on the learning of:
• History – to show the greatness of the Nazis.
• Biology – to teach ‘race science’ which highlighted the superiority of the Aryans.
• PE – to get boys fit for the Army and girls fit to be mothers.

To ensure that the German youth were taught corrected, all teachers had to swear loyalty to Hitler and join the Nazis Teachers League.

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