British war historian Richard Overy published an unusual
polemic this month (see
http://www.historytoday.com/richard-overy/goodbye-nazis
complaining about the
"indiscriminate use of the term 'Nazi' to describe anything
to do with German institutions or behaviour in the years of
the dictatorship between 1933 and 1945. . . . The NSDAP
incorporated only a fraction of the German population. Even
those in the notorious SA (Sturmabteilung) did not have to
be members of the party. . . . The blanket assumption of 'Nazi'
characteristics obscures the wide variety of institutions,
organisations, cultural events and social tensions that can
be found at every level under the Hitler regime."
Prof. Overy omits Gleichschaltung (uniformity), the general
policy of the one-party Third Reich of extending Nazi party
control over all social institutions -- ranging past the Boy
Scouts to church associations and clubs for all sports,
from gliding to chess. To the extent that a "wide variety
of institutions, organisations, cultural events and social
tensions" persisted without Nazi control, it was not for
want of trying. Even if Gleichschaltung.failed to capture
every citizen and every club, Nazi party control of German
thought and German culture remained the national policy.
--
Don Phillipson
Carlsbad Springs
(Ottawa, Canada)