Explain What Was Life Like In Nazi Germany From 1933-1939

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Kyle Tse 9C

What was life like in Nazi Germany from 1933-1939?

One might conjure the image of savages and barbaric men when they think of the nazis during the Second World War, although this image isn’t all false, life in Nazi Germany was somewhat “normal”. The rise of the nazi party started when Adolf Hitler, a former failed artist from Vienna and veteran of the First World War joined the German’s Worker Party. Using his charisma he managed to drive the once small party into a leading powerhouse of the state. In December 1924, the nazi party, which stands for “Nationalsozialist" or the full name of the party "Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei" - the National Socialist German Worker's Party, took twenty-four seats in the Reichstag …show more content…

Such an act needed three-quarters of the members of the Reichstag to vote in its favour. All the active members of the Communist Party, were in concentration camps, in hiding, or had left the country (an estimated 60,000 people left Germany during the first few weeks after the election). This was also true of most of the leaders of the other left-wing party, Social Democrat Party (SDP). However, Hitler still needed the support of the Catholic Centre Party (BVP) to pass this legislation. Hitler therefore offered the BVP a deal: vote for the bill and the Nazi government would guarantee the rights of the Catholic Church. The BVP agreed and when the vote was taken, only 94 members of the SDP voted against the Enabling …show more content…

Established in April 1933, it is normally associated with SS Leader Heinrich Himmler but was actually founded by Hermann Göring. Hitler and other party officials liked to ramp up the power and freedom that the Gestapo had throughout the years, they could search anyone and put anyone in jail for reasons that are vague and nonsense.

On February 10, 1936, the Nazi Reichstag passed the 'Gestapo Law' which included the following paragraph: "Neither the instructions nor the affairs of the Gestapo will be open to review by the administrative courts." This meant the Gestapo was now above the law and there could be no legal appeal
German citizens are stopped and searched by plain-clothes and uniformed police in March 1933 under the pretext they might be concealing weapons. Below: Gestapo Headquarters in Berlin, located at No. 8 Prinz-Albrecht-Strasse - a frightful address from 1933 onward. regarding anything it did.

Gestapo interrogation methods included: repeated near drownings of a prisoner in a bathtub filled with ice-cold water; electric shocks by attaching wires to hands, feet, ears and genitalia; crushing a man's testicles in a special vice; securing a prisoner's wrists behind his back then hanging him by the arms causing shoulder dislocation; beatings with rubber nightsticks and cow-hide whips; and burning flesh with matches or a soldering