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On the Art of
Speaking to the World by Hans Schwarz von Beck The source: Die Zeit ohne Beispiel (Munich:
Zentralverlag der NSDAP., 1941), a collection of Goebbels' speeches and
writings from January 1939 to September 1941.
In the Minister's office
there is a long map table in front of the window facing the Wilhelmplatz.
Some maps are of the sort on which General Staff officers measure with their
compasses and sketch their plans. There are others that belong to a chapter
of the war that is unequaled in the history of warfare.
One map shows the radio transmitters
that have been conquered in Europe. Another shows on numerous pages the
movements and locations of the propaganda companies. A world map shows the
zones reached by shortwave transmissions in many languages. Still another
shows the movements and performances of front theater companies. Another
compares the cities in England and Germany that have been bombed. Whenever
Dr. Goebbels meets with officers, war reporters, editors, radio people and
artists around the table, the ways the war has mobilized the spirit and the
soul become evident.
Once or twice each week the
room is empty, and Dr. Goebbels wanders around the table. He dictates an
article or a speech. This is in the middle of the day's work, and often
happens so quickly that those in the waiting room are surprised when the
stenographer leaves after only fifteen minutes. There have been days of such
high tension and concentration that he has dictated a three column article in
twelve minutes. But that is not the rule. When Dr. Goebbels polemicizes, he
does so in a way few others can equal. He dictates sharp and pointed phrases,
as well as ones that are elegant and powerful. He needs no long preparation.
As a revolutionary, he is at ease with all forms of political eloquence. As a
result, most of these articles read as if they had just been spoken. His
essays that treat the great problems of the day or have a particular foreign
policy aim, are different. Such pieces are written with the requisite
thoroughness. Files and evidence are gathered, quotations checked against the
original, quotations from Eden or Roosevelt or Pitman or Ickes are
double-checked. When a manuscript has been worked over numerous times it may
be set aside for a week or longer, after which every word is once more
weighed. A war cannot be won by temperament alone, even temperament as great
as Dr. Goebbels has. Few know that he follows a stringent daily plan. He
begins each day with the diary he has kept since 1920, and ends late in the
night with a preview of the footage for the next newsreel, 3,000 copies of
which will go out to all the world.
The precise daily routine was
harder and harder to follow as the first signs of a real danger of war in
Europe began to appear. That was a few months after the Munich Conference,
December/January of 1938/39. England was arming, the United States opened its
press and diplomacy to incitement, France was drawn in, Poland was driven
down the path to insanity. It became essential to be propagandistically alert
and to show our own people as well as those of the world what was happening.
The Ministry needed to prepare the radio, the press, film and the party for
whatever might come. German propaganda was preparing for its baptism by fire.
Dr. Goebbels held to his daily
routine. The trivial was shoved aside. Visitors had to be more concise. The
documents and proposals that reached his desk became even briefer. But more
time was given to reading the press and confidential news, enemy leaflets and
brochures, and the transcripts of foreign radio stations. The Minister's work
room became once more like his editorial office in the years he was fighting
for Berlin, but now he was no longer leading a newspaper, rather the entire
news system, the radio, oral propaganda, and brochures.
These changed circumstances
once again testified to his journalistic abilities. Everything that Dr.
Goebbels heard or read was transformed into war leadership. Most matters he
passed on to others with a few brief instructions. Much of his dictation appeared
abroad, without betraying his name. The emphasis was always on timeliness.
Lengthy pamphlets, thick tomes, deep academic discussions of the sort one
used during the World War were almost always rejected. The important thing
was to keep at the enemy's heels. There could be no trench warfare in
propaganda. Each of Churchill's blunders, each of his defeats and
embarrassments had to be responded to immediately. Dr. Goebbels commented
week after week on the state of things. His essays appeared in the "Völkischer
Beobachter" and in "Das Reich."
Some ask why he does not
direct the entire press. He obviously has the ability. But Dr. Goebbels makes
a clear distinction between what he does as Minister and what he does as a
journalist. As a journalist he does his own work. He wants people to see his
articles as his personal opinion. He wants them to have weight, to stand out,
to speak to the readers. Political writing, political arguments, and
political persuasion stand alongside the news, the dispatches from the army
command, the propaganda company reports.
His personal writing and
speeches come in the midst of his war work. So much has happened in this
"unique time" since the critical year 1939—the achievements of our soldiers
and the changes in the map brought about by our campaigns are of such
enormous scale that a speech or essay can be forgotten. When however one
considers the items collected in this book, which are only a part of what he
produced in these years, one is reminded of the scale of the war. They show
that we have approached this war as a political people and that we see it as
a political whole. We have never lacked something to say. We have avoided
high-flown boasting and careless words. There is no sign of a patriotic
bombast that conceals the real difficulties and challenges of the war. Dr.
Goebbels has also determined where the language should be pointed. He knows
and shares the collective and sensible mood of our people. He might speak
with biting irony about men like Churchill or Halifax, Eden or Roosevelt, but
never forgot the reality of the enemy's strength. When he makes
predictions—and now and again in this book he does—they depend not on
careless hopes for a happy accident, the kind of thing Churchill does to
conceal from the English the seriousness of their defeats. Instead, he
reveals the enemy's secret intentions and points out their responsibility.
For example, what Dr. Goebbels wrote about American warmongers in January
1939 has come true step by step.
In one of his essays on
Churchill, Dr. Goebbels characterized him as a gambler who each time hopes
his luck will improve, while all the while he is gambling away his whole
empire. The Führer and Mr. Churchill differ most clearly in their
relationship to luck. This theme appears regularly, always in the only way
that corresponds to our way of thinking. As Moltke put it, in the long run
only those are lucky who deserve to be. Miracles and luck will not decide
this war. Victory will depend on the achievements of our people, on our
weapons and on the resoluteness of our hearts, against which all the words of
the enemy are in vain. In a language that the educated and the uneducated can
understand, Dr. Goebbels has expressed the war doctrine of a young socialist
people, a people that knows that everything that happens follows a higher
necessity. That is the essence of the war. No hope or waiting, no
renunciation or obligation is in vain. Nothing unnecessary is asked of us, no
drop of blood is shed for reasons of prestige. Everything follows a secret
plan in the hands of the Führer. This sum of these essays and speeches
makes clear the logic of the war. It depends on a consciousness of German
security and superiority. Our whole thinking in this war is contained in this
one sentence: "Germany has always been as strong as it is today, but
never knew it." |