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Aim: What led to the rise of Fascism?

Aim: What led to the rise of Fascism? . Title: Fascist Dictatorships in Italy and Germany Do Now: 1. Work with your neighbor(s) to fill out the graphic organizer pertaining to totalitarianism throughout the post war era… work quietly, or “constructive talk.” .

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Aim: What led to the rise of Fascism?

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  1. Aim: What led to the rise of Fascism? Title: Fascist Dictatorships in Italy and Germany Do Now: 1. Work with your neighbor(s) to fill out the graphic organizer pertaining to totalitarianism throughout the post war era… work quietly, or “constructive talk.”

  2. Identify/recall some of the nonchalant/mundane choices you make every day - i.e., music, movies, clothes, transportation, food, drink, etc.

  3. Now, how would you feel about a government that decided most or all of the above choices in which you made daily? Such governments are called totalitarian (TOTAL (all) ITARIAN (power or form of government in power) = dictatorship, autocrat (AUTO = self control – think of Wall-E [yes, I am referring to the movie – I did say I was corny]; CRAT = government), selfish, greedy ruler.

  4. Confused?Think in terms of the central themes stemming from George Orwell’s 1984. “ Big Brother” = government is watching your every movement… - Think of all of the surveillance cameras practically everywhere… Stores, banks, places of business, TRCS!!!!! Look at how quick the government was able to locate the two “Boston Marathon Bombers” Think about that.

  5. Other forms of leadership/government you ought to know: • Theocracy:THEO (God/deity) + CRACY (form of government/authority) = Government orchestrated/ruled by religious leaders/clerics. Ex: think in terms of Persepolis or the Pope and the Vatican in Rome.

  6. Oligarchy (OLI = few/small group) + GARCHY (form of government/authority) = form of government where are strong/influential/wealthy few or group have all or most of the power. • Plutocracy (PLUTO = wealthy/elite group) + CRACY (form of government/authority) = government by wealthy/elite group.

  7. Totalitarianism • What is it? • Describe its characteristics…

  8. Deny Individual Rights - Extreme Nationalism Supremacy of The State TOTALITARIANISM Increasing influence of new political parties that emphasize state control-For example: Communism, Nazism, Fascism Total Controlof State by aDictator

  9. Totalitarianism • Government establishes complete control of all aspects of the state(political, military, economy, social, cultural) • Highly nationalistic (flags, salutes, rallies, uniforms) • Strict controls and laws • Military state (secret police, army, military) • Censorship (to examine printed materials to ban or delete information) • Propaganda (media – radio, newspapers, posters) • One leader (dictator); charismatic • Authoritarian (requiring absolute loyalty and obedience to the state • Terror and Fear

  10. What is Totalitarianism? • Totalitarianism: a system of government in which a leader (dictator) has complete control over his country and the lives of his people • Key Traits of Totalitarianism • Dictator: strong leader with total power • One party: ruling party is the only legal political party • Strict government control of all aspects of life • business, religion, the arts, education, etc. • use of propaganda, censorship, terror, and secret police to control people • Individuals have very few freedoms • No freedom of speech, religion, press, etc.

  11. Why Europe in the 1920’s and 1930’s? • Countries had no tradition of self-government before WWI – the new self-government was forced upon nations not ready for it • 1930’s saw a world wide depression, making struggling democracies face more problems

  12. Totalitarian Leaders • Why did they come to power? • People wanted strong leaders to get them out of the Great Depression • Nationalism—they promised to make their countries big and powerful • What did they want? • Total control over country and people • Strong military and economy • More land—they were willing to go to war for it!

  13. Compare & Contrast the two: Fascism vs. Nazism 1. What is Fascism?

  14. Fascism Fascism—a system of government based on extreme Nationalism. Nazism—a version of fascism that developed in Germany. Hitler added racism. Characteristics of Fascism/Nazism; 1. The state is more important that the people. 2. Individuals have no rights. Opposition suppressed by force. 3. Nation should have strong leaders with absolute power. 4. Reactionary (act first think later), irrational. 5. Not an economic theory. Private property is protected. Property owners have to do what the state orders. Communism is a hated enemy. 6. Have tended to be extremely militaristic. Shown by building up armies, leaders appearing in Uniform, favor military virtues of loyalty, obedience, order. Fascist Nations: former Iraq

  15. Fascist ideology & Mussolini • Italian dictator Benito Mussolini coined the term in 1919, referring to the Roman symbol for “power through unity” – a bundle of reeds called “fasces,” individually weak but collectively strong.

  16. Fasces: Symbol of Power in Ancient Rome

  17. Find the Fasces – Symbol of Civic AuthorityIn The U.S. House of Representatives

  18. Fascism • I am Benito Mussolini the leader (Il Duce) of Italy from 1922 to 1943. First • European fascist dictator of Italy • What is Fascism? • intense nationalism and elitism • totalitarian control • interests of the state more important than individual rights • maintain class system and private ownership

  19. Fascist Model Power Here I I I I I The State State casts aside all who do not serve its purpose State = eternal, lasting Individual = temporary, expendable Individual exists to serve the State (a tool)

  20. Democratic Model Power Here The State Individual is most important I I I I I State serves the individual and may be replaced as expendable if it violates personal right to life, liberty, property

  21. Fascist Principles • Anti-individualistic • Anti-democratic • Anti-egalitarian • Anti-capitalist • Anti-pacifist • Anti-internationalist • Anti-conservative • Anti-intellectual • Anti-Socialist/Communist

  22. How does Mussolini gain popularity in Italy? People are disappointed over the failure to win territorial gains in the Paris Peace conference after WWI Inflation is rising and people want help Unemployment is increasing and people want it FIXED! The people were looking for someone to take action

  23. What did Mussolini do once he was in power in Italy? MADE BIG PROMISES to revive the economy and rebuild the armed forces Founded the fascist party Criticized the current government Gained the support from the middle class, artisans and the Industrial leaders

  24. Results with Mussolini in Charge in Italy: Abolished democracy Outlawed political parties Established his own secret police Censored the radio, all publications, Outlawed strikes Allied with Industrialists and large land owners against the “little guys”

  25. What did Mussolini do once he was in power in Italy? Italians constantly threatened violence and uprising if things didn’t change Mussolini had the support of the popular vote so King Victor Emmanuel III puts Mussolini in charge of the government

  26. Two Types of Totalitarianism:Fascism & Nazism • Fascism • Extreme nationalism – the nation is more important than the individual • Charismatic leader – big personality, good public speaker, inspires people • Different social classes – rich, middle class, poor • Anti-communism

  27. Nazism • I am Adolf Hitler the leader (der Fuhrer) or dictator of Germany from 1933 to 1945. • What is Nazism? German fascism • extremely fascist , nationalistic and totalitarian • based on beliefs of the National Socialist German Workers Party • belief in the racial superiority of the Aryan, the “master race” • belief that all Germans should have “lebensraum” or living space in Europe • Violent hatred towards Jews and blamed Germany’s problems on them

  28. Nazism • Fascism taken to its extreme form. • Racist and anti-Semitic elements that did not appear in Italian fascism.

  29. Nazi Military State • GESTAPO: the Secret State Police • SS(Schutzstaffel): Defense Corps “black shirts”, an elite guard unit formed out of the SA • SA (Sturmabteilung):Stormtroopers (STAR WARS!!!!) "brown-shirts" early private Nazi army that protected leaders and opposed rival political parties • Lebensraum (living space): concept that emphasized need for territorial expansion of Germany into east • Wehrmacht: German army • Einstazgruppen: Nazi Death Squad; mobile killing units

  30. Nazi Controls Anti-semitism: Hostility and discrimination against the jews Territorial integrity: Territorial domain of a State Armed Aggression: Military invasion, a War of conquest

  31. Mein Kampf (1924) The title means My Struggle, and it expounds on Hitler’s anti‑Semitism, worship of power, scorn for morality, and plan for world domination. Hitler wrote it in prison after a failed attempt to overthrow the German government

  32. Questions from Mein Kampf • What is his central point in the selection you read?

  33. Questions from Mein Kampf • That the blood of the highest race must be kept pure from intermingling with other races if human culture is to advance; corruption of blood leads to the destruction of culture.

  34. Nazi racial theory Three races: • Aryans (Germanic) – culture creating • Jews – culture destroying • Middle – culture maintaining • At various levels of hierarchy between Aryans and Jews.

  35. Nazi racial theory • The belief that Germans were threatened the most from an internal enemy led to the Holocaust, the extermination of 6 million Jewish people in Europe. • Everything was sublimated to the need to purify the German race. In fact, it even drove Nazi policies that worked against the war effort.

  36. Genocide • Nazi extermination of the Jews is considered to be Genocide ‑ the systematic extermination of a whole people or race.  • The U.S. government has called the killing of Sudanese in Darfur by government-sponsored militia a “genocide.”

  37. Nazi racial theory Hitler wrote, “The Jew has always been a people with definite racial characteristics and never a religion.” To him, the Jewish religion is not the problem. If their religious faith is not a threat, why should Non-Jews worry about Jews?

  38. The Jewish “Problem” • Seek to pollute Aryan blood. • Cunning (not smart), with strong will to survive. • Seek to destroy higher cultures. • Not “idealistic;” no selfless or noble attitudes. • No original contributions to art or science. • In league with communists. • Betrayed German state during WWI. • Not human but subhuman.

  39. Questions from Mein Kampf • How did Hitler make the argument about racial superiority?

  40. Questions from Mein Kampf • 1. Natural law: “one of the most patent principles of Nature's rule: the inner segregation of the species of all living beings on this earth.” • 2. History: historical experience offers countless proofs, e.g., the purity of the race in North America has led to greater achievements than in Central & South America. • 3. Religion: “sin against the will of the creator. He refers to a sin against the will of eternal Providence.”

  41. Questions from Mein Kampf • What metaphors does Hitler use to refer to the Jewish people?

  42. Questions from Mein Kampf • a horde of rats • parasites in the body of other peoples • subhuman

  43. MEIN KAMPF : Book written by Hitler, set his ideas and goals: Germans were a master race, that jews , latins, black people, gypsies, Homosexuals, were inferior and should be destroyed LEBENSRAUM: living space for Germans VERSAILLES TREATY : should be destroyed

  44. Both • Totalitarian dictatorship –required absolute obedience to leader • Anti-democracy • Extreme militarism – glorification of military

  45. Germany

  46. Italy

  47. Adolph Hitler • Hitler considered himself superior, eventhough he was a drifter & failed artist during his youth. • A corporal during WWI, he was devastated by Germany’s loss & blamed it on the Jews. • He started his political career at age 30, joining the German Workers Party. He had exceptional speaking skills & came to be revered by others in the party. He was chosen its leader in 1921, and renamed it the National Socialist German Workers Party.

  48. ENABLING ACT: Act that Gave Hitler Absolute Power in Germany for four Years-

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