
|
Dr. Goebbels
and his Ministry The Source: Hans Fritzsche, "Dr. Goebbels und sein
Ministerium," in Hans Heinz Mantau-Sadlia, Deutsche Führer
Deutsches Schicksal. Das Buch der Künder und Führer des dritten
Reiches (Munich: Verlag Max Steinebach, 1934), pp. 330-342.
It takes only five minutes to
walk from Postdamer Straße 109 in Berlin to the Wilhelmplatz. Five
minutes from the more than modest first business office of the newly-named
National Socialist Gau leader of Berlin, Dr. Joseph Goebbels, to the
Leopold Palace, the current headquarters of the Reich Ministry for People's
Enlightenment and Propaganda.
It took Dr. Joseph Goebbels
six and one half years to cover the distance. It led him through the middle
of the Red hell of Berlin.
Dr. Goebbels came to Berlin in 1926
on Adolf Hitler's orders to reorganize the Berlin party, which was at the
edge of collapse. He came alone. He came as a fighter who had proved himself
against the French, separatists and Communists in three years in the Rhine
and Ruhr areas. He came without support; he had to build his own support.
The Red flag flew over
Berlin, and it seemed absurd to believe that the Red domination of the city
could even be threatened.
A few years later the Red lords
of Berlin had to build their courage against Adolf Hitler's ambassador, who
had come alone, with the slogan "Berlin Remains Red!" It was too
late by then, for the Gauleiter of the National Socialist German
Workers Party, Dr. Joseph Goebbels, had already conquered Red Berlin.
The NSDAP won twelve seats in
the Reichstag in the May, 1928 election. Dr. Goebbels was one of the twelve.
Adolf Hitler named him the National Propaganda Leader of the NSDAP. Two and a
half years later, on 14 November 1930, the National Socialists came to the
Reichstag with 107 men. And on 30 January 1933, after the unique evening mass
meeting of hundreds of thousands, Dr. Goebbels could with pleasure tell the
newly-named Reich Chancellor that the Berlin movement had organized the
event.
When Reich President von
Hindenburg appointed the National Propaganda Leader of the NSDAP the Minister
for People's Enlightenment and Propaganda, this man who already had behind
him the battles in the Rhineland and Berlin as well as enormous
accomplishments in the party leadership, was the youngest minister: only 36!
*
It is but five minutes from
the dark and smoky business office of 1926, which had the mocking name opium
den, to the Leopold Palace. The road took Dr. Joseph Goebbels through a sea
of poison and hate and lies. Each old follower of Adolf Hitler, each old
National Socialist had to withstand battles that no young party member will
have to endure, no matter how long he lives. But no one had to face as much
hate as Dr. Goebbels.
It was almost open season on
Dr. Goebbels during the six and a half year battle for Berlin. At first he
was called the "Chief Crook of Berlin" by the Communists — a title
he accepted without embarrassment and made a title of honor. Soon the middle
class newspapers and speakers declared open season on him too. He is a man of
sharp phrases and pitiless language. The danger he represented had long been
recognized. The entire artillery of the political battle, for which any means
is justified, was turned on him.
It also seemed easy to fight
a man who was under the constant fire of the state prosecutors of the day.
There seemed no risk in dumping piles of filth on the editor of a newspaper
that held the record for the number of times it was banned. No German
newspaper was in fact banned as often as Berlin's "Der Angriff."
The results of the
unprecedentedly bitter battle the organs of the Weimar state and the parties
were different than they had expected: He hardened his weapons in the fire of
this battle, and the masses his enemies attempted to mobilize against him
instead joined him. It is not surprising that those who feared the oncoming
National Socialism attacked with poison and gall. It is surprising that this
man, mocked, ridiculed and insulted as no one else, did not fall into deep
despair and spiritual misery after those years of struggle.
What most surprised his
opponents is his disarming honesty. One accused him with contempt of being a
propagandist, of being dishonest. The charge was loaded with the contempt and
accusations of dishonesty that had been earned by years of bad propaganda.
What did Dr. Goebbels do?
He said: "Propaganda?
Certainly! Good propaganda for a good cause!" We make propaganda not in
the pay of forces or men in the background, rather we make propaganda for our
own honest convictions. We advertise for our own ideal, and therefore we
fight using all good means to make good propaganda to win the soul of our
people."
Eugen Hadamovsky, the Reichsendeleiter
of German radio, put it this way: "Under the brilliant leadership of Dr.
Joseph Goebbels, the master of political propaganda, the neglected weapon of
German politics became a creative art."
The feared sharpness of Dr.
Goebbels's language was a result of his honesty. At a time when the word
"lie,"or even the direct term "liar" were thought
unrefined and unusable in the columns of the German press, although they
carried lies in their columns, Dr. Goebbels did not hesitate to call one who
lied a liar. When it is necessary to call things by their proper name, when
it is necessary to expose persons, then things are called by their name and
people are presented in such a way that even a dog will no longer take a bone
from them. The journalist and speaker Dr. Goebbels did not change his
impolite methods, even when he faced a certain ban or a certain legal
process.
His honesty and determined
stubbornness use a language and manner of expression that display crystal
clear clarity and irresistible logic. His clarity of thought won him the
respect of international journalists in Geneva in 1933, certainly the
toughest, most hard-boiled audience. It is impressive that, after Minister
Dr. Goebbels' speech in Geneva, the correspondent of the Paris
"Journal" wrote: "Dr. Goebbels combines German mysticism with
Latin logic."
In everything there is a good
portion of humor. Dr. Goebbels drew from humor the sharpness of irony, once
the scourge of Red Berlin. And satire too came from humor, which drove many
an opponent to lose his head.
A flood of clever ideas came
from his humor. Remember, for example, Dr. Goebbels humorous success with
Brüning! Dr. Goebbels had challenged the then Reich Chancellor over and
over again to a debate.
Brüning preferred to
speak in carefully prepared meetings. Dr. Goebbels had a recording of the
Brüning's radio speech in Königsberg, and took it to the Berlin
Sports Hall to debate an opponent who was unwilling to appear in any other
way.
Those are the weapons that
served the faithful National Socialism of Dr. Joseph Goebbels in the battle
for Berlin and the battle for Germany. Armed with these weapons, he succeeded
everywhere he attacked. If one asked a journalist, regardless of the camp in
which he stood, who was the best German journalist, one would get the answer,
however reluctant: Dr. Goebbels. In an era when hundreds of German newspapers
had given upon the familiar old institution of the lead article, since its
old platitudes no longer found readers, Dr. Goebbels wrote his lead articles
— and they were read. He wrote in a language that captivated the reader, who
otherwise looked only for sensation. If one asked for the name of a great
speaker in the Reichstag, honest people answered that no one since Friedrich
Naumann so held the attention of the Reichstag as Dr. Joseph Goebbels.
That is what is unique about
him: Dr. Goebbels says what he has to say in the way that it must be said to
those to whom he is speaking. Hundreds, even thousands of politicians travel
about giving the only speech than can give, using the only language that they
know how to use — regardless of whether they stand in the Reichstag or before
a mass meeting or in a political salon. Dr. Goebbels speaks every language.
He is at home in the north of Berlin as he is in the west of Berlin. He can
be understood by the average man and the educated. He speaks to the people in
mass meetings, to the representatives in the Reichstag. Once, long before the
beginning of the church's renewal at the time when the ecclesia militans
was just beginning to awake, I heard him speak to a small circle of Catholic
and Protestant clergy who were concerned with the political persecution they
were encountering in ministering to S.A. and Stahlhelm units. Dr. Goebbels,
the "noisy agitator," spoke to these clergy of both confessions
with a quietness and depth that gave these pastors new strength to endure all
the consequences of holding services for the Brown Shirts and Stahlhelm men.
They were again determined to stand in the pulpit and speak openly to the
needs of the day.
This man, uniquely successful
as the propaganda chief of Hitler's party, is now the Propaganda Minister of
Reich Chancellor Hitler.
The official building he took
over, the old Leopold Palace, had long been the seat of the Press Office of
the Reich government. It was dark and musty. Dark carpets and curtains
carried the dust of years. Only the Garden Room was cheerful and bright. But
for years the representatives of the German press had heard there only the
peculiar wishes of changing Reich governments; it was not a place with
pleasant memories.
After Dr. Goebbels had been
in office for a few days, the dusty old hangings had been removed from the
majority of the rooms, and simple, but friendly furniture filled bright
rooms. When Dr. Goebbels spoke for the first time to representatives of the
German press in the Garden Room of the Leopold Palace, no one failed to see
that the evil spirit of a press hostile to the people had been forever driven
out.
"There are two ways to make a revolution," the newly-named
Reich Minister said. "One can fire at the opponent with machine guns
until he recognizes the superiority of those who have the machine guns. That
is the simplest way. One can also transform a nation through a revolution of
the spirit, not destroying the opponent, but winning him over. We National
Socialists have gone the second way, and will continue on it. Our first task
in this ministry will be to win the whole people for the new state. We want
to replace liberal thinking with a sense of community that includes the whole
people."
Most memorable, however, was
a style of speaking never before been heard in this room: "Our
revolution will never stop."
Thus Dr. Goebbels began his
task of being the constant intermediary between the National Socialist Reich
government that sprang from the people, and the people. At every moment and
in each individual measure, the Reich Ministry for People's Enlightenment and
Propaganda should maintain the living relationship between government and
people. "We have not become a minister to be above the people, rather we
are now more than ever the servant of the people."
The Propaganda Ministry is
not bureaucratic administrative apparatus, rather an spiritual center of
power that stays in constant touch with the whole people on political,
spiritual, cultural and economic matters. It is the mouth and ear of the
Reich government. *
Dr. Goebbels laid his hand on
all the powers that once made common front against him and against the idea
of Adolf Hitler that he represented. On radio, the press, literature,
theater, film. On the whole enormous apparatus of propaganda that once in the
Reich capital used the whole of its enormous power to make the unknown but
dangerous Dr. Goebbels from the Rhineland into a dreamer and crackpot, the
subject of public scorn. The same enormous apparatus that some others, using
enormous millions had attempted to influence without having any real success;
for decades only one had dominated it, the Jewish intellect.
This multifaceted apparatus
of modern propaganda, which Dr. Goebbels had faced without the weapon of
money, only with the strength of the idea even though the struggle seemed
foolish, fell into the hands of the people that Dr. Goebbels, as a colleague
of the Führer, had mobilized against this citadel of Jewish power.
Now he can begin the
reconstruction of German spiritual life after the foreign elements have been
eliminated.
Even during the very first
beginnings of the work on building the ministry, the new Reich Ministry for
People's Enlightenment and Propaganda could give the first evidence of what
it was capable of: The organization of the first Day of National Labor, 1 May
1933. Although its success was surpassed by 1 May 1934, Dr. Goebbels showed
then for the first time that once the path was made clear for National
Socialism, not hundreds of thousands, rather millions could gather at a
single place when it called.
Relatively little had to be
changed in 1934 on the Day of Labor after the example of 1 May 1933.
Organizationally, it had been done right the first time. The tradition had
been created, and after a year one could assume that the content German
national holiday needed only to be deepened. The waves of the first May mass
meeting rolled over the many unions and parties. 1 May awoke old May customs
in all the German Gaue had gave renewed life to the almost decayed
German cultural treasure. Department II, Propaganda (under Ministerialrat
Haegert) in the Propaganda Ministry has the task of carrying out such mass
meetings. One might call this department the general staff of practical
propaganda. But that is only part of the broad domain of Department II. To
name only a few areas, it includes positive propaganda for the worldview, the
structure of governmental life, youth and sports questions, economic
advertising of every form, agricultural advertising, propaganda in the area
of transportation and education in matters of public health.
Department III, Radio
(Ministerialrat Dreßler-Andreß) unites the whole of the German
radio system.
The radio, once a collection
of private broadcasters in which the influence of the Reich, the states,
political parties and private concerns battled, was united, cleansed and
clearly organized. The radio was not only placed under National Socialist
control, but also reconstructed on National Socialist lines.
The new people's radio has
proven on some "major days" that it is able literally to draw a
whole nation to the receiver. Occurrences such as the state visit of the
Führer and Reich Chancellor to Hamburg on 17 August 1934 have shown that
the new German radio can make such events festivals for the whole nation. The
radio allowed a whole nation to participate on the ceremony of the German
Reichstag for the deceased Reich President, and the world followed as the
General Field Marshal found his final resting place on the field of his
greatest victory.
A year after Dr. Goebbels had
taken the German radio in his hand, it was possible at noon on the first day
of spring that not even three people could be seen at a major point in
Berlin, the Potsdamer Platz, because the Führer was opening the second
great battle for work in Bavaria. He was speaking to a few thousand, but he
spoke over the radio to millions and millions. The new radio system, even in
a time when the economic crisis had not been completely overcome, was able to
win millions of new listeners and produce millions of new receivers, above
all the Volksempfänger [an inexpensive radio receiver].
Without exaggerating, one can
say that there is no country in the world where the radio is anywhere near as
intensive an intermediary between the government and the people as in
Germany.
A true labor of Sisyphus was
necessary in the area of the press. From the chaos of 3500 German newspapers,
of which only 120 were National Socialist in 1932, a responsible German press
had to be created.
Department IV, the Press
(Ministerialrat Dr. Jahnke) is the tool of the Propaganda Ministry in this
area. It is simultaneously the Press Office of the Reich government. Its head
is the Assistant Press Chief of the Reich government, State Secretary Walter
Funk of the Reich Ministry for People's Enlightenment and Propaganda.
The destructive effects of the
past liberal era had especially serious effects on the German newspaper
system. Anyone, even foreigners and those foreign to the German spirit, could
with no regard for the people or the state write whatever he wanted about any
political question, even if that which he wrote offered foreign opponents all
possible support and aid.
Bans could not help deal with
the general decay of the German newspaper system. They are only a temporary
means to deal with the worst manifestations. Dr. Goebbels therefore created
the new Editor's Law, which laid the foundation for a complete transformation
of the German newspaper system in the moral, political, and economic areas.
The law gave the German editor major rights, but also major duties.The German
editor is now the representative of the whole people, and must as such give
account for all his actions and inactions. For the first time in the world,
this law makes the interests of the people and the state the supreme law for
the whole press.
Some foreign newspapers
thought this was the end of press freedom. Within a year, even those abroad
realized that true freedom stabilizes a decent and nationally-conscious
journalist class.
Department IV, which supports
the press, holds a daily press conference. It provides constant information
for the never-ending work of domestic and foreign newspapers, news agencies
and correspondents.
It also incorporates the
Drahloser Dienst, the news agency of the German radio that provides all Reich
stations with news and broadcasts as well in four languages over shortwave.
Since the most modern
ministry works with the most modern methods, the Drahtlosen Dienst has an
excellent teletype system that transmits its news to all German stations in a
form ready for broadcast.
Department V (Ministerialrat
Dr. Seeger) is responsible for all matters regarding the film system, the
film industry and film technology.
Department VI (Ministerialrat
Laubinger) handles the broad areas of theater, music and the arts.
Department VII
(Ministerialrat Demann) is responsible finally for defense.
That is the staff that the
Reich Minister for People's Enlightenment and Propaganda called to work
closely with the National Socialist Party leadership. From here come the new
slogans for the people, who are to be formed into a new unity and set to the
work of reconstruction.
It is surprising how rapidly
Dr. Goebbels became a cultural organizer after the years of struggle. He
succeeded in bringing order to the most difficult of all areas of public
life, culture, in the form of the Reich Chamber of Culture.
The Reich Chamber of Culture
includes the Reich Chamber of Film, the Reich Chamber of the Visual Arts, the
Reich Chamber of Theater, the Reich Chamber of Radio, the Reich Chamber of
the Press, the Reich Chamber of Music, and the Reich Chamber of Literature.
In these chambers, all those
German creators of culture are united in a rational manner and without
unnecessary compulsion in the place where they can most effectively work for
cultural reconstruction.
Speaking to the presidents of
the specialized chambers of the Reich Chamber of Culture, Dr. Goebbels
explained: "If professional thinking is really the great sociological
idea of the Twentieth Century, then Germany is breaking new ground." Dr.
Goebbels discussed the foundation of the National Socialist state: Art is
free, and one may never attempt to replace a lack of intuition with
organization. He warned against bureaucratizing the Chamber of Culture. He
explained its duties in this way: "It is a fundamental mistake to think
that the task of the Reich Chamber of Culture is to produce art. It cannot,
it will not, and it may not. Its task is to bring culture-creating people
together, to organize them, to remove the restrictions and contradictions
that surface and to assist in administering existing art, the art being
produced today, and the art that will be produced in the future for the
benefit of the German people."
Dr. Goebbels, who came to know
writers, journalists, theater agents, film managers, politicians and so on
during the years of struggle, is at home in these areas. To film producers
who complained about a lack of material, he replied: "There is no shortage
of material, rather the courage to use it is lacking." To the press he
said: "The more unified the national ability of a people to concentrate
is, the more effective national discipline will be." Speaking of the
tasks of German theater: "We do not want the pendulum of the times to
stop at the door of the theater, rather that it strike deep into every
artist's soul, and the artist does not merely see the new era as an
unpleasant but unavoidable necessity, rather that he understands the time and
sees in it a powerful national drama of historic-artistic scale, an event
that will give impulse, material and drive to German artists for three or
four generations."
Or as he said to booksellers:
"As long as the book remains the privilege of a small, elite class and
does not find reception by the people, one will not be able to speak of real
benefits to the nation through the book."
It is obvious that the
creative artist Joseph Goebbels is a bitter enemy of any form of Kitsch. Where
inappropriate means are used, and where ability is not able to achieve the
greatness and dignity of the task, he intervenes. Dr. Goebbels, the first to
expose the presumed objectivity of creative activity, rather openly affirms
the goal of constantly serving the whole of the people, is the declared and
sworn enemy of incompetence. He does not want to place the intellectual
creations of the nation under censorship from above. The artist, the writer,
each creative artist is free. He wants to bind them from below; after years
of unrestrained influence streaming in from foreign directions, he wants art
to again be rooted in the soil of the homeland, in the soil of the people.
This binding is no chain, rather liberation and fruitfulness.
For each German, ethnicity
must be the decisive reality. From this ground and no other creative artistic
and cultural forces must rise. The deeper art's roots are in the soil of the
nation, the greater will be its international significance. |