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How did Hitler rise to power? - Alex Gendler and Anthony Hazard

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    How did Adolf Hitler,
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    a tyrant who orchestrated one of the
    largest genocides in human history,
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    rise to power in a democratic country?
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    The story begins at the end
    of World War I.
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    With the successful
    Allied advance in 1918,
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    Germany realized the war was unwinnable
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    and signed an armistice
    ending the fighting.
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    As its imperial government collapsed,
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    civil unrest and worker strikes
    spread across the nation.
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    Fearing a Communist revolution,
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    major parties joined
    to suppress the uprisings,
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    establishing the parliamentary
    Weimar Republic.
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    One of the new government's first tasks
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    was implementing the peace treaty
    imposed by the Allies.
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    In addition to losing over a tenth
    of its territory and dismantling its army,
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    Germany had to accept full responsibility
    for the war and pay reparations,
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    debilitating its already weakened economy.
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    All this was seen as a humiliation
    by many nationalists and veterans.
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    They wrongly believed the war
    could have been won
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    if the army hadn't been betrayed
    by politicians and protesters.
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    For Hitler, these views became obsession,
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    and his bigotry and paranoid delusions
    led him to pin the blame on Jews.
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    His words found resonance in a society
    with many anti-Semitic people.
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    By this time, hundreds
    of thousands of Jews
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    had integrated into German society,
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    but many Germans continued to perceive
    them as outsiders.
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    After World War I, Jewish success led
    to ungrounded accusations
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    of subversion and war profiteering.
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    It can not be stressed enough that these
    conspiracy theories
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    were born out of fear,
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    anger,
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    and bigotry,
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    not fact.
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    Nonetheless, Hitler found
    success with them.
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    When he joined a small nationalist
    political party,
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    his manipulative public speaking
    launched him into its leadership
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    and drew increasingly larger crowds.
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    Combining anti-Semitism with
    populist resentment,
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    the Nazis denounced both Communism
    and Capitalism
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    as international Jewish conspiracies
    to destroy Germany.
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    The Nazi party was not initially popular.
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    After they made an unsuccessful attempt
    at overthrowing the government,
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    the party was banned,
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    and Hitler jailed for treason.
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    But upon his release about a year later,
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    he immediately began to rebuild
    the movement.
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    And then, in 1929,
    the Great Depression happened.
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    It led to American banks withdrawing
    their loans from Germany,
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    and the already struggling German economy
    collapsed overnight.
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    Hitler took advantage
    of the people's anger,
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    offering them convenient scapegoats
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    and a promise to restore Germany's
    former greatness.
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    Mainstream parties proved
    unable to handle the crisis
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    while left-wing opposition was too
    fragmented by internal squabbles.
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    And so some of the frustrated public
    flocked to the Nazis,
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    increasing their parliamentary votes from
    under 3% to over 18% in just two years.
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    In 1932, Hitler ran for president,
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    losing the election to decorated war hero
    General von Hindenburg.
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    But with 36% of the vote, Hitler had
    demonstrated the extent of his support.
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    The following year, advisors
    and business leaders
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    convinced Hindenburg to appoint Hitler
    as Chancellor,
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    hoping to channel his popularity
    for their own goals.
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    Though the Chancellor was only
    the administrative head of parliament,
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    Hitler steadily expanded the power
    of his position.
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    While his supporters formed
    paramilitary groups
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    and fought protestors in streets.
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    Hitler raised fears
    of a Communist uprising
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    and argued that only he could restore
    law and order.
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    Then in 1933,
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    a young worker was convicted of
    setting fire to the parliament building.
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    Hitler used the event to convince
    the government
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    to grant him emergency powers.
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    Within a matter of months,
    freedom of the press was abolished,
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    other parties were disbanded,
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    and anti-Jewish laws were passed.
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    Many of Hitler's early radical supporters
    were arrested and executed,
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    along with potential rivals,
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    and when President Hindenburg died
    in August 1934,
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    it was clear there would be
    no new election.
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    Disturbingly, many of Hitler's early
    measures didn't require mass repression.
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    His speeches exploited
    people's fear and ire
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    to drive their support behind him
    and the Nazi party.
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    Meanwhile, businessmen and intellectuals,
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    wanting to be on the right side
    of public opinion,
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    endorsed Hitler.
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    They assured themselves and each other
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    that his more extreme rhetoric
    was only for show.
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    Decades later, Hitler's rise remains
    a warning
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    of how fragile democratic institutions
    can be in the face of angry crowds
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    and a leader willing to feed their anger
    and exploit their fears.
Title:
How did Hitler rise to power? - Alex Gendler and Anthony Hazard
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TED-Ed
Duration:
05:37

English subtitles

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