Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler
Volume One - A Reckoning
Chapter XII: The First Period of Development of the National Socialist German Workers' Party
IF AT THE END of this volume I describe the first period in
the development of our movement and briefly discuss a number of questions
it raises, my aim is not to give a dissertation on the spiritual aims of
the movement. The aims and tasks of the new movement are so gigantic that
they can only be treated in a special volume. In a second volume, therefore,
I shall discuss the programmatic foundations of the movement in detail and
attempt to draw a picture of what we conceive of under the word 'state.'
By 'us' I mean all the hundreds of thousands who fundamentally long for
the same thing without as individuals finding the words to describe outwardly
I what they inwardly visualize; for the noteworthy fact about all reforms
is that at first they possess but a single champion yet many million supporters.
Their aim has often been for centuries the inner longing of hundreds of
thousands, until one man stands up to proclaim such a general will, and
as a standard-bearer guides the old longing to victory in the form of the
new idea.
The fact that millions bear in their hearts the desire for a
basic change in the conditions obtaining today proves the deep discontent
under which they suffer. It expresses itself in thousandfold manifestations
with one in despair and hopelessness, with another in ill will, anger, and
indignation; with this man in indifference, and with that man in furious
excesses. As witnesses to this inner dissatisfaction we may consider those
who are weary of elections as well as the many who tend to the most fanatical
extreme of the Left.
The young movement was intended primarily to appeal to these
last. It is not meant to constitute an organization of the contented and
satisfied, but to embrace those tormented by suffering, those without peace,
the unhappy and the discontented, and above all it must not swim on the
surface of a national body, but strike roots deep within it.
In purely political terms, the following picture presented
itself in 1918: a people torn into two parts. The one, by far the smaller,
includes the strata of the national intelligentsia, excluding all the physically
active. It is outwardly national, yet under this word can conceive of nothing
but a very insipid and weak-kneed defense of so-called state interests,
which in turn seem identical with dynastic interests. They attempt to fight
for their ideas and aims with spiritual weapons which are as fragmentary
as they are superficial, and which fail completely in the face of the enemy's
brutality. With a single frightful blow this class, which only a short time
before was still governing, is stretched on the ground and with trembling
cowardice suffers every humiliation at the hands of the ruthless victor.
Confronting it is a second class, the broad mass of the laboring
population. It is organized in more or less radical Marxist movements, determined
to break all spiritual resistance by the power of violence. It does not
want to be national, but consciously rejects any promotion of national interests,
just as, conversely, it aids and abets all foreign oppression. It is numerically
the stronger and above all comprises all those elements of the nation without
which a national resurrection is unthinkable and impossible.
For in 1918 this much was clear: no resurrection of the German
people can occur except through the recovery of outward power. But the prerequisites
for this are not arms, as our bourgeois 'statesmen ' keep prattling, but
the forces of the will. The German people had more than enough arms before.
They were not able to secure freedom because the energies of the national
instinct of self-preservation, the will for self-preservation, were lacking.
The best weapon is dead, worthless material as long as the spirit is lacking
which is ready, willing, and determined to use it. Germany became defenseless,
not because arms were lacking, but because the will was lacking to guard
the weapon for national survival.
If today more than ever our Left politicians are at pains to
point out the lack of arms as the necessary cause of their spineless, compliant,
actually treasonous policy, we must answer only one thing: no, the reverse
is true. Through your anti-national, criminal policy of abandoning national
interests, you surrendered our arms. Now you attempt to represent the lack
of arms as the underlying cause of your miserable villainy. This, like everything
you do, is lees and falsification.
But this reproach applies just as much to the politicians on
the Right. For, thanks to their miserable cowardice, the Jewish rabble that
had come to power was able in 1918 to steal the nation's arms. They, too,
have consequently no ground and no right to palm off our present lack of
arms as the compelling ground for their wily caution (read ' cowardice ');
on the contrary, our defenselessness is the consequence of their cowardice.
Consequently the question of regaining German power is not:
How shall we manufacture arms? but: How shall we manufacture the spirit
which enables a people to bear arms? If this spirit dominates a people,
the will finds a thousand ways, every one of which ends in a weapon ! But
give a coward ten pistols and if attacked he will not be able to fire a
single shot. And so for him they are more worthless than a knotted stick
for a courageous man.
The question of regaining our people's political power is primarily
a question of recovering our national instinct of self preservation, if
for no other reason because experience shows that any preparatory foreign
policy, as well as any evaluation of a state as such, takes its cue less
from the existing weapons than from a nation's recognized or presumed moral
capacity for resistance. A nation1s ability to form alliances is determined
much less by dead stores of existing arms than by the visible presence of
an ardent national will for self-preservation and heroic death-defying courage.
For an alliance is not concluded with arms but with men. Thus, the English
nation will have to be considered the most valuable ally in the world as
long as its leadership and the spirit of its byroad masses justify us in
expecting that brutality and perseverance which is determined to fight a
battle once begun t04 victorious end, with every means and without consideration
of time and sacrifices; and what is more, the military armament existing
at any given moment does not need to stand in any proportion to that of
other states.
If we understand that the resurrection of the German nation
represents a question of regaining our political will for self-preservation,
it is also clear that this cannot be done by winning elements which in point
of will at least are already national, but only by the nationalization of
the consciously anti-national masses.
A young movement which, therefore, sets itself the goal of resurrecting
a German state with its own sovereignty will have to direct its fight entirely
to winning the broad masses. Wretched as our so-called ' national bourgeoisie
' is on the whole, inadequate as its national attitude seems, certainly
from this side no serious resistance is to be expected against a powerful
domestic and foreign policy in the future. Even if the German bourgeoisie,
for their well-known narrowminded and short-sighted reasons, should, as
they once did toward Bismarck, maintain an obstinate attitude of passive
resistance in the hour of coming liberation- an active resistance, in view
of their recognized and proverbial cowardice, is never to be feared.
It is different with the masses of our internationally minded
comrades. In their natural primitiveness, they are snore inclined to the
idea of violence, and, moreover, their Jewish leadership is more brutal
and ruthless. They will crush any German resurrection Just as they once
broke the backbone of the German army. But above all: in this state with
its parliamentary government they will, thanks to their majority in numbers,
not only obstruct any national foreign policy, but also make impossible
any higher estimation of the German strength, thus making us seem uradesirable
as an ally. For not only are we ourselves aware of the element of weakness
lying in our fifteen million Marxists, detmocrats, pacifists, and Centrists;
it is recognized even more by foreign countries, which measure the value
of a possible alliance with us according to the weight of this burden. No
one allies himself with a state in which the attitude of the active part
of the population toward any determined foreign policy is passive, to say
the least.
To this we must add the fact that the leaderships of these parties
of national treason must and will be hostile to any resurrection, out of
mere instinct of self-preservation. Historically it is just not conceivable
that the German people could recover its former position without settling
accounts with those who were the cause and occasion of the unprecedented
collapse which struck our state. For before the judgment seat of posterity
November, 1918, will be evaluated, not as high treason, but as treason against
the fatherland.
Thus, any possibility of regaining outward German independence
is bound up first and foremost with the recovery of the inner unity of our
people's will.
But regarded even from the purely technical point of view, the
idea of an outward German liberation seems senseless as long as the broad
masses are not also prepared to enter the service of this liberating idea.
From the purely military angle, every officer above all will realize after
a moment's thought that a foreign struggle cannot be carried on with student
battalions, that in addition to the brains of a people, the fists are also
needed. In addition, we must bear in mind that a national defense, which
is based only on the circles of the so-called intelligentsia, would squander
irreplaceable treasures. The absence of the young German intelligentsia
which found its death on the fields of Flanders in the fall of 1914 was
sorely felt later on. It was the highest treasure that the German nation
possessed and during the War its loss could no longer be made good. Not
only is it impossible to carry on the struggle itself if the storming battalions
do not find the masses of the workers in their ranks; the technical preparations
are also impracticable without the inner unity of our national will. Especially
our people, doomed to languish along unarmed beneath the thousand eyes of
the Versailles peace treaty, can only make technical preparations for the
achievement of freedom and human independence if the army of domestic stoolpigeons
is decimated down to those whose inborn lack of character permits them to
betray anything and everything for the well-known thirty pieces of silvery
For with these we can deal. Unconquerable by comparison seem the millions
who oppose the national resurrection out of political conviction-unconquerable
as long as the inner cause of their opposition, the international Marxist
philosophy of life, is not combated and torn out of their hearts and brains.
Regardless, therefore, from what standpoint we examine the possibility
of regaining our state and national independence, whether frost the standpoint
of preparations in the sphere of foreign policy, from that of technical
armament or that of battle itself, in every case the presupposition for
everything remains the previous winning of the broad masses of our people
for the idea of our national independence.
Without the recovery of our external freedom, however, any internal
reform, even in the most favorable case, means only the increase of our
productivity as a colony. The surplus of all socalled economic improvements
falls to the benefit of our international control commissions, and every
social improvement at best raises the productivity of our work for them.
No cultural advances will fall to the share of the German nation; they are
too contingent on the political independence and dignity of our nation.
Thus, if a favorable solution of the German future requires
a national attitude on the part of the broad masses of our people, this
must be the highest, mightiest task of a movement whose activity is not
intended to exhaust itself in the satisfaction of the moment, but which
must examine all its commissions and omissions solely with a view to their
presumed consequences in the future.
Thus, by 1919 we clearly realized that, as its highest aim,
the new movement must first accomplish the nationalization of the masses.
From a tactical standpoint a number of demands resulted from
this.
(1) To win the masses for a national resurrection, no social
sacrifice is too great.
Whatever economic concessions are made to our working class
today, they stand in no proportion to the gain for the entire nation if
they help to give the broad masses back to their nation. Only pigheaded
short-sightedness, such as is often unfortunately found in our employer
circles, can fail to recognize that in the long run there can be no economic
upswing for them and hence no economic profit, unless the inner national
solidarity of our people is restored.
If during the War the German unions had ruthlessly guarded the
interests of the working class, if even during the War they had struck a
thousand times over and forced approval of the demands of the workers they
represented on the dividend-hungry employers of those days; but if in matters
of national defense they had avowed their Germanism with the same fanaticism;
and if with equal ruthlessness they had given to the fatherland that which
is the fatherland's, the War would not have been lost. And how trifiing
all economic concessions, even the greatest, would have been, compared to
the immense importance of winning the War!
Thus a movement which plans to give the German worker back to
the German people must clearly realize that in this question economic sacrifices
are of no importance whatever as long as the preservation and independence
of the national economy are not threatened by them.
(2) The national education of the broad masses can only take
place indirectly through a social uplift, since thus exclusively can those
general economic premises be created which permit the individual to partake
of the cultural goods of the nation.
(3) The nationalization of the broad masses can never be achieved
by half-measures, by weakly emphasizing a socalled objective standpoint,
but only by a ruthless and fanatically onesided orientation toward the goal
to be achieved. That is to say, a people cannot be made 'national' in the
sense understood by our present-day bourgeoisie, meaning with so and so
many limitations, but only nationalistic with the entire vehemence that
is inherent in the extreme. Poison is countered only by an antidote, and
only the shallowness of a-bourgeois mind can regard the middle course as
the road to heaven.
The broad masses of a people consist neither of professors nor
of diplomats. The scantiness of the abstract knowledge they possess directs
their sentiments more to the world of feeling. That is where their positive
or negative attitude lies. It is receptive only to an expression of force
in one of these two directions and never to a half-measure hovering between
the two. Their emotional attitude at the same time conditions their extraordinary
stability. Faith is harder to shake than knowledge, love succumbs less to
change than respect, hate is more enduring than aversion, and the impetus
to the mightiest upheavals on this earth has at all times consisted less
in a scientific knowledge dominating the masses than in a fanaticism which
inspired them and sometimes in a hysteria which drove them forward. Anyone
who wants to win the broad masses must know the key that opens the door
to their heart. Its name is not objectivity (read weakness), but will and
power.
(4) The soul of the people can only be won if along with carrying
on a positive struggle for our own aims, we destroy the opponent of these
aims.
The people at all times see the proof of their own right in
ruthless attack on a foe, and to them renouncing the destruction of the
adversary seems like uncertainty with regard to their own right if not a
sign of their own unriglxt.
The broad masses are only a piece of Nature and their sentiment
does not understand the mutual handshake of people who daim that they want
the opposite things. What they desire is the victory of the stronger and
the destruction of the weak or his unconditional subjection.
The nationalization of our masses will succeed only when, aside
from all the positive struggle for the soul of our people, their international
poisoners are exterminated.
(5) All great questions of the day are questions of the moment
and represent only consequences of definite causes. Only one amongall of
them, however, possesses causal importance,land that is the question of
the racial preservation of the nation. In the blood alone resides the strength
as well as the weakness of man. As long as peoples do not recognize and
give heed to the importance of their racial foundation, they are like men
who would like to teach poodles the qualities of greyhounds, failing to
realize that the speed of the greyhound like the docility of the poodle
are not learned, but are qualities inherent in the race. Peoples which renounce
the preservation of their racial purity renounce with it the unity of their
soul in all its expressions. The divided state of their nature is the natural
consequence of the divided state of their blood, and the change in their
intellectual and creative force is only the effect of the change in their
racial foundations.
Anyone who wants to free the German blood from the manifestations
and vices of today, which were originally alien to its nature, will first
have to redeem it from the foreign virus of these manifestations.
Without the clearest knowledge of the racial problem and hence
of the Jewish problem there will never be a resurrection of the German nation.
The racial question gives the key not only to world history,
but to all human culture.
(6) Organizing the broad masses of our people which are today
in the international camp into a national people's community does not mean
renouncing the defense of justified class interests. Divergent class and
professional interests are not synonymous with class cleavages but are natural
consequences of our economic life. Professional grouping is in no way opposed
to a true national community, for the latter consists in the unity of a
nation in all those questions which affect this nation as such.
The integration of an occupational group which has become a
class with the national community, or merely with the state, is not accomplished
by the lowering of higher dasses but by uplifting the lower dasses. This
process in turn can never be upheld by the higher class, but only by the
lower class fighting for its equal rights. The present-day bourgeoisie was
not organized into the state by measures of the nobility, but by its own
energy under its own leadership.
The German worker will not be raised to the framework of the
German national community via feeble scenes of fraternization, but by a
conscious raising of his social and cultural situation until the most serious
differences may be viewed as bridged. A movement which sets this development
as its goal will have to take its supporters primarily from this camp.'
It may fall back on the intelligentsia only in so far as the latter has
completely understood the goal to be achieved. This process of transformation
and equalization will not be completed in ten or twenty years; experience
shows that it comprises many generations.
The severest obstade to the present-day worker's approach to
the national community lies not in the defense of his class interests, but
in his international leadership and attitude which are hostile to the people
and the fatherland. The same unions with a fanatical national leadership
in political and national matters would make millions of workers into the
most valuable members of their nation regardless of the various struggles
that took place over purely economic matters.
A movement which wants honestly to give the German worker back
to his people and tear him away from the international delusion must sharply
attack a conception dominant above all in employer circles, which under
national community understands the unresisting economic surrender of the
employee to the employer and which chooses to regard any attempt at safeguarding
even justified interests regarding the employee's economic existence as
an attack on the national community. Such an assertion is not only untrue,
but a conscious lie, because the national community imposes its obligations
not only on one side but also on the other.
Just as surely as a worker sins against the spirit of a real
national community when, without regard for the common welfare and the survival
of a national economy, he uses his power to raise extortionate demands,
an employer breaks this community to the same extent when he conducts his
business in an inhuman, exploiting way, misuses the national labor force
and makes millions out of its sweat. He then has no right to designate himself
as national, no right to speak of a national community; no, he is a selfish
scoundrel who induces social unrest and provokes future conflicts which
whatever happens must end in harming the nation.
Thus, the reservoir from which the young movement must gather
its supporters will primarily be the masses of our workers. Its work will
be to tear these away from the international delusion, to free them from
their social distress, to raise them out of their cultural misery and lead
them to the national community as a valuable, united factor, national in
feeling and desire.
If, in the circles of the national intelligentsia, there are
found men with the warmest hearts for their people and its future, imbued
with the deepest knowledge of the importance of this struggle for the soul
of these masses, they will be highly welcome in the ranks of this movement,
as a valuable spiritual backbone. But winning over the bourgeois voting
cattle can never be the aim of this movement. If it were, it would burden
itself with a dead weight which by its whole nature would paralyze our power
to recruit from the broad masses. For regardless of the theoretical beauty
of the idea of leading together the broadest masses from below and from
above within the framework of the movement, there is the opposing fact that
by psychological propagandizing of bourgeois masses in general meetings,
it may be possible to create moods and even to spread insight, but not to
do away with qualities of character or, better expressed, vices whose development
and origin embrace centuries. The difference with regard to the cultural
level on both sides and the attitude on both sides toward questions raised
by economic interests is at present still so great that, as soon as the
intoxication of the meetings has passed, it would at once manifest itself
as an obstacle.
Finally, the goal is not to undertake a reskatification in the
camp that is national to begin with, but to win over the antinational camp.
And this point of view, finally, is determining for the tactical
attitude of the whole movement.
(7) This one-sided but thereby clear position must express itself
in the propaganda of the movement and on the other hand in turn is required
on propagandist grounds.
If propaganda is to be effective for the movement, it must be
addressed to only one quarter, since otherwise, in view of the difference
in the intellectual training of the two camps in question, either it will
not be understood by the one group, or by the other it would be rejected
as obvious and therefore uninteresting
Even the style and the tone of its individual products cannot
be equally effective for two such extreme groups. If propaganda renounces
primitiveness of expression, it does not find its way to
the feeling of the broad masses. If, however, in word and gesture, it uses
the masses' harshness of sentiment and expression, it will be rejected by
the so-called intelligentsia as coarse and vulgar. Among a hundred so-called
speakers there are hardly ten capable of speaking with equal effect today
before a public consisting of street.sweepers, locksmiths, sewer-cleaners,
etc., and tomorrow holding a lecture with necessarily the same thought content
in an auditorium full of university professors and students. But among a
thousand speakers there is perhaps only a single one who can manage to speak
to locksmiths and university professors at the same time, in a form which
not only is suitable to the receptivity of both parties, but also influences
both parties with equal effect or actually lashes them into a wild storm
of applause. We must always bear in mind that even the most beautiful idea
of a sublime theory in most cases can be disseminated only through the small
and smallest minds. The important thing is not what the genius who has created
an idea has in mind, but what, in what form, and with what success the proph
ets of this idea transmit it to the broad masses.
The strong attractive power of the Social Democracy, yes, of
the whole Marxist movement, rested in large part on the homogeneity and
hence one-sidedness of the public it addressed. The more seemingly limited,
indeed, the narrower its ideas were, the more easily they were taken up
and assimilated by a mass whose intellectual level corresponded to the material
offered.
Likewise for the new movement a simple and clear line thus resulted.
Propaganda must be adjusted to the broad masses in content and
in form, and its soundness is to be measured exdusively by its effective
result.
In a mass meeting of all classes it is not that speaker who
is mentally closest to the intellectuals present who speaks best, but the
one who conquers the heart of the masses.
A member of the intelligentsia present at such a meeting, who
carps at the intellectual level of the speech despite the speaker's obvious
effect on the lower strata he has set out to conquer, proves the complete
incapacity of his thinking and the worthlessness of his person for the young
movement. It can use only that intellectual who comprehends the task and
goal of the movement to such an extent that he has learned to judge the
activity of propaganda according to its success and not according to the
impressions which it leaves behind in himself. For propaganda is not intended
to provide entertainment for people who are national-minded to begin with,
but to win the enemies of our nationality, in so far as they are of our
blood.
In general those trends of thought which I have briefly summed
up under the heading of war propaganda should be determining and decisive
for our movement in the manner and execution of its own enlightenment work.
That it was right was demonstrated by its success
(8) The goal of a political reform movement will never be reached
by enlightenment work or by influencing ruling circles, but only by the
achievement of political power. Every world-moving idea has not only the
right, but also the duty, of securing, those means which make possible the
execution of its ideas. Success is the one earthly judge concerning the
right or wrong of such an effort, and under success we must not understand,
as in the year 1918, the achievement of power in itself, but an exercise
of that power that will benefit the nation. Thus, a coup d'etat must not
be regarded as successful if, as senseless state's attorneys in Germany
think today, the revolutionaries have succeeded in possessing themselves
of the state power, but only if by the realization of the purposes and aims
underlying such a revolutionary action, more benefit accrues to the nation
than under the past regime. Something which cannot very well be claimed
for the German revolution, as the gangster job of autumn 1918, calls itself.
If the achievement of political power constitutes the precondition
for the practical execution of reform purposes, the movement with reform
purposes must from the first day of its existence feel itself a movement
of the masses and not a literary tea-club or a shopkeepers' bowling society.
(9) The young movement is in its nature and inner organization
anti-parliamentarian; that is, it rejects, in general and in its own inner
structure, a principle of majority rule in which the leader is degraded
to the level of a mere executant of other people's will and opinion. In
little as well as big things, the movement advocates the principle of a
Germanic democracy: the leader is elected, but then enjoys unconditional
authority.
The practical consequences of this principle in the movement
are the following:
The first chairman of a local group is elected, but then he
is the responsible leader of the local group. All committees are subordinate
to him and not, conversely, he to a committee. There are no electoral committees,
but only committees for work. The responsible leader, the first chairman,
organizes the work. The first principle applies to the next higher organization,
the precinct, the district or county. The leader is always elected, but
thereby he is vested with unlimited powers and authority. And, finally,
the same applies to the leadership of the whole party. The chairman is elected,
but he is the exclusive leader of the movements All committees are subordinate
to him and not he to the committees. He makes the decisions and hence bears
the responsibility on his shoulders. Members of the movement are free to
call him to account before the forum of a new election, to divest him of
his office in so far as he has infringed on the principles of the movement
or served its interests badly. His place is then taken by an abler, new
man, enjoying, however} the same authority and the same responsibility.
It is one of the highest tasks of the movement to make this
principle determining, not only within its own ranks, but for the entire
state.
Any man who wants to be leader bears, along with the highest
unlimited authority, also the ultimate and heaviest responsibility.
Anyone who is not equal to this or is too cowardly to bear the
consequences of his acts is not fit to be leader; only the hero is cut out
for this.
The progress and culture of humanity are not a product of the
majority, but rest exclusively on the genius and energy of the personality.
To cultivate the personality and establish it in its rights
is one of the prerequisites for recovering the greatness and power of our
nationality.
Hence the movement is anti-parliamentarian, and even its participation
in a parliamentary institution can only imply activity for its destruction,
for eliminating an institution in which we must see one of the gravest symptoms
of mankind's decay.
(10) The movement decisively rejects any position on questions
which either lie outside the frame of its political work or, being not of
basic importance, are irrelevant for it. Its task is not a religious reformation,
but a political reorganization of our people. In both religious denominations
it sees equally valuable pillars for the existence of our people and therefore
combats those parties which want to degrade this foundation of an ethical,
moral, and religious consolidation of our national body to the level of
an instrument of their party interests.
The movement finally sees its task, not in the restoration of
a definite state form and in the struggle against another, but in the creation
of those basic foundations without which neither republic nor monarchy can
endure for any length of time. Its mission lies not in the foundation of
a monarchy or in the reinforcement of a republic, but in the creation of
a Germanic state.
The question of the outward shaping of this state, its crowning,
so to speak, is not of basic importance, but is determined only by questions
of practical expediency.
For a people that has once understood the great problems and tasks of its
existence, the questions of outward formalities will no longer lead to inner
struggle.
(11) The question of the movement's inner organization is one
of expediency and not of principle.
The best organization is not that which inserts the greatest, but that which
inserts the smallest, intermediary apparatus between the leadership of a
movement and its individual adherents. For the function of organization
is the transmission of a definite idea-which always first arises from the
brain of an individual -to a larger body of men and the supervision of its
realization.
Hence organization is in all things only a necessary evil. In
the best case it is a means to an end, in the worst case an end in itself.
Since the world produces more mechanical than ideal natures,
the forms of organization are usually created more easily than ideas as
such.
The practical development of every idea striving for realization
in this world, particularly of one possessing a reform character, is in
its broad outlines as follows:
Some idea of genius arises in the brain of a man who feels called
upon to transmit his knowledge to the rest of humanity. He preaches his
view and gradually wins a certain circle of adherents. This process of the
direct and personal transmittance of a man's ideas to the rest of his fellow
men l is the most ideal and natural. With the rising increase in the adherents
of the new doctrine, it gradually becomes impossible for the exponent of
the idea to go on exerting a personal, direct influence on the innumerable
supporters, to lead and direct them. Proportionately as, in consequence
of the growth of the community, the direct and shortest communication is
excluded, the necessity of a connecting organization arises: thus, the ideal
condition is ended and is replaced by the necessary evil of organization.
Little sub-groups are formed which in the political movement, for example,
call themselves local groups and constitute the germ-cells of the future
organization.
If the unity of the doctrine is not to be lost, however, this
subdivision must not take place until the authority of the spiritual founder
and of the school trained by him can be regarded as unconditional. The geo-political
significance of a focal center in a movement cannot be overemphasized. Only
the presence of such a place, exerting the magic spell of a Mecca or a Rome,
can in the long run give the movement a force which is based on inner unity
and the recognition of a summit representing this unity.
Thus, in forming the first organizational germ-cells we must
never lose sight of the necessity, not only of preserving the importance
of the original local source of the idea, but of making it paramount. This
intensification of the ideal, moral, and factual immensity of the movement's
point of origin and direction must take place in exact proportion as the
movement's germcells, which have now become innumerable, demand new links
in the shape of organizational forms.
For, as the increasing number of individual adherents makes
it impossible to continue direct communication with them for the formation
of the lowest bodies, the ultimate innumerable increase of these lowest
organizational forms compels in turn creation of higher associations which
politically can be designated roughly as county or district groups.
Easy as it still may be to maintain the authority of the original
center toward the lowest local groups, it will be equally difficult to maintain
this position toward the higher organizational forms which now arise. But
this is the precondition for the unified existence of the movement and hence
for carrying out an idea.
If, finally, these larger intermediary divisions are also combined
into new organizational forms, the difficulty is further increased of safeguarding,
even toward them, the unconditional leading character of the original founding
site, its school, etc.
Therefore, the mechanical forms of an organization may only
be developed to the degree in which the spiritual ideal authority of a center
seems unconditionally secured. In political formations this guaranty can
often seem provided only by practical power.
From this the following directives for the inner structure of
the movement resulted:
(a) Concentration for the time being of all activity in a single
place: Munich. Training of a community of unconditionally reliable supporters
and development of a school for the subsequent dissemination of the idea.
Acquisition of the necessary authority for the future by the greatest possible
visible successes in this one place.
To make the movement and its leaders known, it was necessary,
not only to shake the belief in the invincibility of the Marxist doctrine
in one place for all to see, but to demonstrate the possibility of an opposing
movement.
(b) Formation of local groups only when the authority of the
central leadership in Munich may be regarded as unquestionably recognized.
(c) Likewise the formation of district, county, or provincial
groups depends, not only on the need for them, but also on certainty that
an unconditional recognition of the center has been achieved.
Furthermore, the creation of organizational forms is dependent on the men
who are available and can be considered as leaders
This may occur in two ways:
(a) The movement disposes of the necessary financial means for the training
and schooling of minds capable of future leadership. It then distributes
the material thus acquired systematically according to criteria of tactical
and other expediency.
This way is the easier and quicker; however, it demands great financial
means, since this leader material is only able to work for the movement
when paid.
(b) The movement, owing to the lack of financial means, is not in a position
to appoint official leaders, but for the present must depend on honorary
officers.
This way is the slower and more difficult.
Under certain circumstances the leadership of a movement must
let large territories lie fallow, unless there emerges from the adherents
a man able and willing to put himself at the disposal of the leadership,
and organize and lead the movement in the district in question.
It may happen that in large territories there will be no one,
in other places, however, two or even three almost equally capable. The
difficulty that lies in such a development is great and can only be overcome
in the course of years.
The prerequisite for the creation of an organizational form
is and remains the man necessary for its leadership.
As worthless as an army in all its organizational forms is without
officers, equally worthless is a political organization without the suitable
leader.
Not founding a local group is more useful to the movement when
a suitable leader personality is lacking than to have its organization miscarry
due to the absence of a leader to direct and drive it forward.
Leadership itself requires not only will but also ability, and
a greater importance must be attached to will and energy than to intelligence
as such, and most valuable of all is a combination of ability, determination,
and perseverance.
(12) The future of a movement is conditioned by the fanaticism
yes, the intolerance, with which its adherents uphold it as the sole correct
movement, and push it past other formations of a similar sort.
It is the greatest error to believe that the strength of a movement
increases through a union with another of similar character. It is true
that every enlargement of this kind at first means an increase in outward
dimensions, which to the eyes of superficial observers means power; in truth,
however, it only takes over the germs of an inner weakening that will later
become effective.
For whatever can be said about the like character of two movements,
in reality it is never present. For otherwise there would actually be not
two movements but one. And regardless wherein the differences lie-even if
they consisted only in the varying abilities of the leadership-they exist.
But the natural law of all development demands, not the coupling of two
formations which are simply not alike, but the victory of the stronger and
the cultivation of the victor's force and strength made possible alone by
the resultant struggle.
Through the union of two more or less equal political party
formations momentary advantages may arise, but in the long run any success
won in this way is the cause of inner weaknesses which appear later.
The greatness of a movement is exclusively guaranteed by the
unrestricted development of its inner strength and its steady growth up
to the final victory over all competitors.
Yes, we can say that its strength and hence the justification
of its existence increases only so long as it recognizes the principle of
struggle as the premise of its development, and that it has passed the high
point of its strength in the moment when complete victory inclines to its
side.
Therefore, it is only profitable for a movement to strive for
this victory in a form which does not lead to an early momentary success,
but which in a long struggle occasioned by absolute intolerance also provides
long growth.
Movements which increase only by the so-called fusion of similar
formations, thus owing their strength to compromises, are like hothouse
plants. They shoot up, but they lack the strength to defy the centuries
and withstand heavy storms.
The greatness of every mighty organization embodying an idea
in this world lies in the religious fanaticism and intolerance with which,
fanatically convinced of its own right, it intolerantly imposes its will
against all others. If an idea in itself is sound and, thus armed, takes
up a struggle on this earth, it is unconquerable and every persecution will
only add to its inner strength.
The greatness of Christianity did not lie in attempted negotiations
for compromise with any similar philosophical opinions in the ancient world,
but in its inexorable fanaticism in preaching and fighting for its own doctrine.
The apparent head start which movements achieve by fusions is
amply caught up with by the steady increase in the strength of a doctrine
and organization that remain independent and fight their own fight.
(13) On principle the movement must so educate its members that
they do not view the struggle as something idly cooked up, but as the thing
that they themselves are striving ford Therefore, they must not fear the
hostility of their enemies, but must feel that it is the presupposition
for their own right to exist. They must not shun the hatred of the enemies
of our nationality and our philosophy and its manifestations; they must
long for them. And among the manifestations of this hate are lies and slander.
Any man who is not attacked in the Jewish newspapers, not slandered
and vilified, is no decent German and no true National Socialist. The best
yardstick for the value of his attitude, for the sincerity of his conviction,
and the force of his will is the hostility he receives from the mortal enemy
of our people.
It must, over and over again, be pointed out to the adherents
of the movement and in a broader sense to the whole people that the Jew
and his newspapers always lie and that even an occasional Ruth is only intended
to cover a bigger falsification and is therefore itself in turn a deliberate
untruth. The Jew is the great master in lying, and lies and deception are
his weapons in struggle.
Every Jewish slander and every Jewish lie is a scar of honor on the body
of our warriors.
The man they have most reviled stands closest to us and the
man they hate worst is our best friend.
Anyone who picks up a Jewish newspaper in the morning and does
not see himself slandered in it has not made profitable use of the previous
day; for if he had, he would be persecuted, reviled, slandered, abused}
befouled. And only the man who combats this mortal enemy of our nation and
of all Aryan humanity and culture most effectively may expect to see the
slanders of this race and the struggle of this people directed against him.
When these principles enter the flesh and blood of our supporters,
the movement will become unshakable and invincible.
(14) The movement must promote respect for personality by all
means; it must never forget that in personal worth lies the worth of everything
human; that every idea and every achievement is the result of one man's
creative force and that the admiration of greatness constitutes, not only
a tribute of thanks to the latter, but casts a unifying bond around the
grateful.
Personality cannot be replaced; especially when it embodies
not the mechanical but the cultural and creative element. No more than a
famous master can be replaced and another take over the completion of the
half-finished painting he has left behind can the great poet and thinker,
the great statesman and the great soldier, be replaced. For their activity
lies always in the province of art. It is not mechanically trained, but
inborn by God's grace.
The greatest revolutionary changes and achievements of this
earth its greatest cultural accomplishments the immortal deeds in the field
of statesmanship, etc., are forever inseparably bound up with a name and
are represented by it. To renounce doing homage to a great spirit means
the loss of an immense strength which emanates from the names of all great
men and women.
The Jew knows this best of all. He, whose great men are only
great in the destruction of humanity and its culture, makes sure that they
are idolatrously admired. He attempts only to represent the admiration of
the nations for their own spirits as unworthy and brands it as a 'personality
cult.'
As soon as a people becomes so cowardly that it succumbs to
this Jewish arrogance and effrontery, it renounces the mightiest power that
it possesses; for this is based, not on respect for the masses, but on the
veneration of genius and on uplift and enlightenment by his example.
When human hearts break and human souls-despair, then from the
twilight of the past the great conquerors of distress and care, of disgrace
and misery, of spiritual slavery and physical compulsion, look down on them
and hold out their eternal hands to the despairing mortals!
Woe to the people that is ashamed to take them!
In the first period of our movement's development we suffered
from nothing so much as from the insignificance, the unknownness of our
names, which in themselves made our success questionable. The hardest thing
in this first period, when often only six, seven, or eight heads met together
to use the words of an opponent, was to arouse and preserve in this tiny
circle faith in the mighty future of the movement.
Consider that six or seven men, all nameless poor devils, had
joined together with the intention of forming a movement hoping to succeed-where
the powerful great mass parties had hitherto failed-in restoring a German
Reich of greater power and glory. If people had attacked us in those days,
yes, even if they had laughed at us, in both cases we should have been happy.
For the oppressive thing was neither the one nor the other; it was the complete
lack of attention we found in those days.
When I entered the circle of these few men, there could be no
question of a party or a movement. I have already described my impressions
regarding my first meeting with this little formation. In the weeks that
followed, I had time and occasion to study this so-called 'party' which
at first looked so impossible. And, by God the picture was depressing and
discouraging. There was nothing here, really positively nothing. The name
of a party whose committee constituted practically the whole membership,
which, whether we liked it or not, was exactly what it was trying to combat,
a parliament on a small scale. Here, too, the vote ruled; if big parliaments
yelled their throats hoarse for months at a time, it was about important
problems at least, but in this little circle the answer to a safely arrived
letter let loose an interminable argument!
The public, of course, knew nothing at all about this. Not a
soul in Munich knew the party even by name, except for its few supporters
and their few friends.
Every Wednesday a so-called committee meeting took place in
a Munich cafe, and once a week an evening lecture. Since the whole membership
of the 'movement' was at first represented in the committee, the faces of
course were always the same. Now the task was at last to burst the bonds
of the small circle, to win new supporters, but above all to make the name
of the movement known at any price.
In this we used the following technique:
Every month, and later every two weeks, we tried to hold a 'meeting.'
The invitations to it were written on the typewriter or sometimes by hand
on slips of paper and the first few times were distributed, or handed out,
by us personally. Each one of us turned to the circle of his friends, and
tried to induce someone or other to attend one of these affairs.
The result was miserable.
I still remember how I myself in this first period once distributed
about eighty of these slips of paper, and how in the evening we sat waiting
for the masses who were expected to appear.
An hour late, the ' chairman ' finally had to open the 'meeting.' We were
again seven men, the old seven.
We changed over to having the invitation slips written on a
machine and mimeographed in a Munich stationery store. The result at the
next meeting was a few more listeners. Thus the number rose slowly from
eleven to thirteen, finally to seventeen, to twenty-three, to thirty-four
listeners.
By little collections among us poor devils the funds were raised
with which at last to advertise the meeting by notices in the then independent
Munchener Beobachter in Munich. And this time the success was positively
amazing. We had organized the meeting in the Munich Hofbrauhauskeller (not
to be confused with the Munich Hofbrauhaus-Festsaal), a little room with
a capacity of barely one hundred and thirty people. To me personally the
room seemed like a big hall and each of us was worried whether we would
succeed in filling this 'mighty' edifice with people.
At seven o'clock one hundred and eleven people were present
and the meeting was opened.
A Munich professor made the main speech, and I, for the first
time, in public, was to speak second.
In the eyes of Herr Harrer, then first chairman of the party,
the affair seemed a great adventure. This gentleman, who was certainly otherwise
honest, just happened to be convinced that I might be capable of doing certain
things, but not of speaking. And even in the time that followed he could
not be dissuaded from this opinion. "
Things turned out differently. In this first meeting that could
be called public I had been granted twenty minutes' speaking time.
I spoke for thirty minutes, and what before I had simply felt
within me, without in any way knowing it, was now proved by reality: I could
speak After thirty minutes the people in the small room were electrified
and the enthusiasm was first expressed by the fact that my appeal to the
self-sacrifice of those present led to the donation of three hundred marks.
This relieved us of a great worry. For at this time the financial stringency
was so great that we were not even in a position to have slogans printed
for the movement, or even distribute leaflets. Now the foundation was laid
for a little fund from which at least our barest needs and most urgent necessities
could be defrayed. But in another respect as well, the success of this first
larger meeting was considerable.
At that time I had begun to bring a number of fresh young forces into the
committee. During my many years in the army I -had come to know a great
number of faithful comrades who now slowly, on the basis of my persuasion,
began to enter the movement. They were all energetic young people, accustomed
to discipline, and from their period of service raised in the principle:
nothing at all is impossible, everything can be done if you only want it.
How necessary such a transfusion of new blood was, I myself
could recognize after only a few weeks of collaboration.
Herr Harrer, then first chairman of the party, was really a
journalist and as such he was certainly widely educated. But for a party
leader he had one exceedingly serious drawback: he was no speaker for the
masses. As scrupulously conscientious and precise as his work in itself
was, it nevertheless lacked-perhaps because of this very lack of a great
oratorical gift-the great sweep. Herr Drexler, then chairman of the Munich
local group, was a simple worker, likewise not very significant as a speaker,
and moreover he was no soldier. He had not served in the army, even during
the War he had not been a soldier, so that feeble and uncertain as he was
in his whole nature, he lacked the only schooling which was capable of turning
uncertain and soft natures into men. Thus both men were not made of stuff
which would have enabled them not only to bear in their hearts fanatical
faith in the victory of a movement, but also with indomitable energy and
will, and if necessary with brutal ruthlessness, to sweep aside any obstacles
which might stand in the path of the rising new idea. For this only beings
were fitted in whom spirit and body had acquired those military virtues
which can perhaps best be described as follows: swift as greyhounds, tough
as leather, and hard as Krupp steel.
At that time I myself was still a soldier. My exterior and interior
had been whetted and hardened for well-nigh six years, so that at first
I must have seemed strange in this circle. I, too, had forgotten how to
say: 'that's impossible,' or 'it won't work'; 'we can't risk that,' 'that
is too dangerous,' etc.
For of course the business was dangerous. Little attention as
the Reds paid to one of your bourgeois gossip clubs whose inner innocence
and hence harmlessness for themselves theyknew better than its own members,
they were determined to use every means to get rid of a movement which did
seem dangerous to them. Their most effective method in such cases has at
all times been terror or violence.
In the year 1920, in many regions of Germany, a national meeting
that dared to address its appeal to the broad masses and publicly invite
attendance was simply impossible. The participants in such a meeting were
dispersed and driven away with bleeding heads. Such an accomplishment, to
be sure, did not require much skill: for after all the biggest so-called
bourgeois mass meeting would scatter at the sight of a dozen Communists
like hares running from a hound.
Most loathsome to the Marxist deceivers of the people was inevitably
a movement whose explicit aim was the winning of those masses which had
hitherto stood exclusively in the service of the international Marxist Jewish
stock exchange parties. The very name of ' German Workers' Party ' had the
effect of goading them. Thus one could easily imagine that on the first
suitable occasion the conflict would begin with the Marxist inciters who
were then still drunk with victory.
In the small circle that the movement then was a certain fear
of such a fight prevailed. The members wanted to appear in public as little
as possible, for fear of being beaten up. In their mind's eye they already
saw the first great meeting smashed and go the movement finished for good.
I had a hard time putting forward my opinion that we must not dodge this
struggle, but prepare for it, and for this reason acquire the armament which
alone offers protection against violence. Terror is not broken by the mind,
but by terror. The success of the first meeting strengthened my position
in this respect. We gained courage for a second meeting on a somewhat larger
scale.
About October, 1919, the second, larger meeting took place in
the Eberlbraukeller. Topic: Brestlitovsk and Versailles. Four gentlemen
appeared as speakers. I myself spoke for almost an hour and the success
was greater than at the first rally. The audience had risen to more than
one hundred and thirty. An attempted disturbance was at once nipped in the
bud by my comrades. The diturbers flew down the stairs with gashed heads.
Two weeks later another meeting took place in the same hall.
The attendance had risen to over one hundred and seventy and the room was
well filled. I had spoken again, and again the success was greater than
at the previous meeting.
I pressed for a larger hall. At length we found one at the other
end of town in the 'Deutsches Reich' on Dachauer Strasse. The first meeting
in the new hall was not so well attended as the previous one: barely one
hundred and forty persons. In the committee, hopes began to sink and the
eternal doubters felt that the excessive repetition of our 'demonstrations'
had to be considered the cause of the bad attendance. There were violent
arguments in which I upheld the view that a city of seven hundred thousand
inhabitants could stand not one meeting every two weeks, but ten every week,
that we must not let ourselves be misled by failures, that the road we had
taken was the right
one, and that sooner or later, with steady perseverance, success was bound
to come. All in all, this whole period of winter 1919-20 was a single struggle
to strengthen confidence in the victorious might of the young movement and
raise it to that fanaticism of faith which can move mountains.
The next meeting in the same hall showed me to be right. The
attendance had risen to over two hundred; the public as well as financial
success was brilliant.
I urged immediate preparations for another meeting. It took
place barely two weeks later and the audience rose to over two hundred and
seventy heads.
Two weeks later, for the seventh time, we called together the
supporters and friends of the new movement and the same hall could barely
hold the people who had grown to over four hundred.
It was at this time that the young movement received its inner
form. In the small circle there were sometimes more or less violent disputes.
Various quarters-then as today-carped at designating the young movement
as a party. In such a conception I have always seen proof of the critics'
practical incompetence and intellectual smallness. They were and always
are the men who cannot distinguish externals from essentials, and who try
to estimate the value of a movement according to the most bombastic-sounding
titles, most of which, sad to say, the vocabulary of our forefathers must
provide.
It was hard, at that time, to make it clear to people that every
movement, as long as it has not achieved the victory of its ideas, hence
its goal, is a party even if it assumes a thousand different names.
If any man wants to put into practical effect a bold idea whose
realization seems useful in the interests of his fellow men, he will first
of all have to seek supporters who are ready to fight for his intentions.
And if this intention consists only in destroying the existing parties,
of ending the fragmentation, the exponents of this view and propagators
of this determination are themselves a party, as long as this goal has not
been achieved. It is hair-splitting and shadow-boxing when some antiquated
folkish theoretician, whose practical successes stand in inverse proportion
to his wisdom, imagines that he can change the party character which every
young movement possesses by changing this term.
On the contrary.
If anything is unfolkish, it is this tossing around of old Germanic
expressions which neither fit into the present period nor represent anything
definite, but can easily lead to seeing the significance of a movement in
its outward vocabulary. This is a real menace which today can be observed
on countless occasions.
Altogether then, and also in the period that followed, I had
to warn again and again against those deutschvolkisch wandering scholars
whose positive accomplishment is always practically nil, but whose conceit
can scarcely be excelled. The young movement had and still has to guard
itself against an influx of people whose sole recommendation for the most
part lies in their declaration that they have fought for thirty and even
forty years for the same idea. Anyone who fights for forty years for a so-called
idea without being able to bring about even the slightest success, in fact,
without having prevented the victory of the opposite, has, with forty years
of activity, provided proof of his own incapacity. The danger above all
lies in the fact that such natures do not want to fit into the movement
as links, but keep shooting off their mouths about leading circles in which
alone, on the strength of their age-old activity, they can see a suitable
place for further activity. But woe betide if a young movement is surrended
to the mercies of such people. No more than a business man who in forty
years of activity has steadily run a big business into the ground is fitted
to be the founder of a new one, is a folkish Methuselah, who in exactly
the same time has gummed up and petrified a great idea, fit for the leadership
of a new, young movement!
Besides, only a fragment of all these people come into the new
movement to serve it, but in most cases, under its protection or through
the possibilities it offers, to warm over their old cabbage
They do not want to benefit the idea of the new doctrine, they
only expect it to give them a chance to make humanity miserable with their
own ideas. For what kind of ideas they often are, it is hard to tell.
The characteristic thing about these people is that they rave
about old Germanic heroism, about dim prehistory, stone axes spear and shield,
but in reality are the greatest cowards that can be imagined. For the same
people who brandish scholarly imitations of old German tin swords, and wear
a dressed bearskin with bull's horns over their bearded heads, preach for
the present nothing but struggle with spiritual weapons, and run away as
fast as they can from every Communist blackjack. Posterity will have little
occasion to glorify their own heroic existence in a new epic.
I came to know these people too well not to feel the profoundest
disgust at their miserable play-acting. But they make a ridiculous impression
on the broad masses, and the Jew has every reason to spare these folkish
comedians, even to prefer them to the true fighters for a coming German
state. With all this, these people are boundlessly conceited; despite all
the proofs of their complete incompetence, they daim to know everything
better and become a real plague for all straightforward and honest fighters
to whom heroism seems worth honoring, not only in the past, but who also
endeavor to give posterity a similar picture by their own actions.
And often it can be distinguished only with difficulty which
of these people act out of inner stupidity or incompetence and which only
pretend to for certain reasons. Especially with the so-called religious
reformers on an old Germanic basis, I always have the feeling that they
were sent by those powers which do not want the resurrection of our people.
For their whole activity leads the people away from the common struggle
against the common enemy, the Jew, and instead lets them waste their strength
on inner religious squabbles as senseless as they are disastrous. For these
very reasons the establishment of a strong central power implying the unconditional
authority of a Kadership is necessary in the movement. By it alone can such
ruinous elements be squelched. And for this reason the greatest enemies
of a uniform, strictly led and conducted movement are to be found in the
circles of these folkish wandering Jews. In the movement they hate the power
that checks their mischief.
Not for nothing did the young movement establish a definite
program in which it did not use the word 'folkish.' The concept folkish,
in view of its conceptual boundlessness, is no possible basis for a movement
and offers no standard for membership in one. The more indefinable this
concept is in practice, the more and broader interpretations it permits,
the greater becomes the possibility of invoking its authority. The insertion
of such an indefinable and variously interpretable concept into the political
struggle leads to the destruction of any strict fighting solidarity, since
the latter does not permit leaving to the individual the definition of his
faith and will.
And it is disgraceful to see all the people who run around today
with the word 'folkish' on their caps and how many have their own interpretation
of this concept. A Bavarian professor by the name of Bayer,l a famous fighter
with spiritual weapons, rich in equally spiritual marches on Berlin, thinks
that the concept folkish consists only in a monarchistic attitude. This
learned mind, however, has thus far forgotten to give a closer explanation
of the identity of our German monarchs of the past with the folkish opinion
of today. And I fear that in this the gentleman would not easily succeed.
For anything less folkish than most of the Germanic monarchic state formations
can hardly be imagined. If this were not so, they would never have disappeared,
or their disappearance would offer proof of the unsoundness of the folkish
outlook.
And so everyone shoots off his mouth about this concept as he
happens to understand it. As a basis for a movement of political struggle,
such a multiplicity of opinions is out of the question.
I shall not even speak of the unworldliness of these folkish
Saint Johns of the twentieth century or their ignorance of the popular soul.
It is sufliciently illustrated by the ridicule with which they are treated
by the Left, which lets them talk and iaughs at them.
Anyone in this world who does not succeed in being hated by
his adversaries does not seem to me to be worth much as a friend. And thus
the friendship of these people for our young movement was not only worthless,
but solely and always harmful, and it was also the main reason why, first
of all, we chose the name of 'party'-we had grounds for hoping that by this
alone a whole swarm of these folkish sleepwalkers would be frightened away
from us-and why in the second place we termed ourselves National Socialist
German Workers' Party.
The first expression kept away the antiquity enthusiasts, the
big-mouths and superficial proverb-makers of the so-called folkish idea,'
and the second freed us from the entire host of knights of the 'spiritual
sword,' all the poor wretches who wield the 'spiritual weapon' as a protecting
shield to hide their actual cowardice.
It goes without saying that in the following period we were
attacked hardest especially by these last, not actively, of course, but
only with the pen, just as you would expect from such folkish goose-quills.
For them our principle, 'Against those who attack us with force we will
defend ourselves with force,' had something terrifying about it. They persistently
reproached us, not only with brutal worship of the blackjack, but with lack
of spirit as such. The fact that in a public meeting a Demosthenes can be
brought to silence if only fifty idiots, supported by their voices and their
fists, refuse to let him speak, makes no impression whatever on such a quack.
His inborn cowardice never lets him get into such danger. For he does not
work 'noisily' and 'obtrusively,' but in 'silence.'
Even today r cannot warn our young movement enough against falling
into the net of these so-called 'silent workers.' They are not only cowards,
but they are also always incompetents and do-nothings. A man who knows a
thing, who is aware of a given danger, and sees the possibility of a remedy
with his own eyes, has the duty and obligation, by God, not to work 'silently,'
but to stand up before the whole public against the evil and for its cure.
If he does not do so, he is a disloyal, miserable weakling who fails either
from cowardice or from laziness and inability. To be sure, this does not
apply at all to most of these people, for they know absolutely nothing,
but behave as though they knew God knows what; they can do nothing but try
to swindle the whole world with their tricks; they are lazy, but with the
'silent' work they claim to do, they arouse the impression of an enormous
and conscientious activity; in short, they are swindlers, political crooks
who hate the honest work of others. As soon as one of these folkish moths
praises the darkness 1 of silence, we can bet a thousand to one that by
it he produces nothing, but steals, steals from the fruits of other people's
work.
To top all this, there is the arrogance and conceited effrontery with which
this lazy, light-shunning rabble fall upon the work of others, trying to
criticize it from above, thus in reality aiding the mortal enemies of our
nationality.
Every last agitator who possesses the courage to stand on a tavern table
among his adversaries, to defend his opinions with manly forthrightness,
does more than a thousand of these lying, treacherous sneaks. He will surely-
be able to convert one man or another and win him for the movement. It will
be possible to examine his achievement and establish the effect of his activity
by its results. Only the cowardly swindlers who praise their 'silent' work
and thus wrap themselves in the protective cloak of a despicable anonymity,
are good for nothing and may in the truest sense of the word be considered
drones in the resurrection of ourpeople.
# #
At the beginning of 1920, I urged the holding of the first great
mass meeting. Differences of opinion arose. A few leading party members
regarded the affair as premature and hence disastrous in effect. The Red
press had begun to concern itself with us and we were fortunate enough gradually
to achieve its hatred. We had begun to speak in the discussions at other
meetings. Of course, each of us was at once shouted down. There was, however,
some success. People got to know us and proportionately as their knowledge
of us deepened, the aversion and rage against us grew. And thus we were
entitled to hope that in our first great mass meeting we would be visited
by a good many of our friends from the Red camp.
I, too, realized that there was great probability of the meeting
being broken up. But the struggle had to be carried through, if not now,
a few months later. It was entirely in our power to make the movement eternal
on the very first day by blindly and ruthlessly fighting for it. I knew
above all the mentality of the adherents of the Red side far too well, not
to know that resistance to the utmost not only makes the biggest impression,
but also wins supporters. And so we just had to be resolved to put up this
resistance.
Herr Harrer,l then first chairman of the party, felt he could
not support my views with regard to the time chosen and consequently, being
an honest, upright man, he withdrew from the leadership of the party. His
place was taken by Herr Anton Drexler. I had reserved for myself the organization
of propaganda and began ruthlessly to carry it out.
And so, the date of February 4, 19202 was set for the holding
of this first great mass meeting of the still unknown movement.
I personally conducted the preparations. They were very brief.
Altogether the whole apparatus was adjusted to make lightning decisions.
Its aim was to enable us to take a position on current questions in the
form of mass meetings within twenty-four hours. They were to be announced
by posters and leaflets whose content was determined according to those
guiding principles which in rough outlines I have set down in my treatise
on propaganda. Effect on the broad masses, concentration on a few points,
constant repetition of the same, self-assured and self-reliant framing of
the text in the forms of an apodictic statement, greatest perseverance in
distribution and patience in awaiting the effect.
On principle, the color red was chosen; it is the most exciting;
we knew it would infuriate and provoke our adversaries the most and thus
bring us to their attention and memory whether they liked it or not.
In the following period the inner fraternization in Bavaria
between the Marxists and the Center as a political party was most clearly
shown in the concern with which the ruling Bavarian People's Party tried
to weaken the effect of our posters on the Red working masses and later
to prohibit them. If the police found no other way to proceed against them,
'considerations of traffic' had to do the trick, till finally, to please
the inner, silent Red ally, these posters, which had given back hundreds
of thousands of workers, incited and seduced by internationalism, to their
German nationality, were forbidden entirely with the helping hand of a so-called
German National People's Party. As an appendix and example to our young
movement, I am adding a number of these proclamations. They come from a
period embracing nearly three years; they can best illustrate the mighty
struggle which the young movement fought at this time. They will also bear
witness to posterity of the will and honesty of our convictions and the
despotism of the so-called national authorities in prohibiting, just because
they personally found it uncomfortable, a nationalization which would have
won back broad masses of our nationality.
They will also help to destroy the opinion that there had been
a national government as such in Bavaria and also document for posterity
the fact that the national Bavaria of 1919, 1920, 1921 1922, 1923 was not
forsooth the result of a national government, but that the government was
merely forced to take consideration of a people that was gradually feeling
national
The governments themselves did everything to eliminate this
process of recovery and to make it impossible.
Here only two men must be excluded:
Ernst Pohner, the police president at that tirne, and Chief
Deputy frick his faithful advisor, were the only higher state officials
who even then had the courage to be first Germans and then officials. Ernst
Pohner was the only man in a responsible post who did not curry favor with
the masses, but felt responsible to his nationality and was ready to risk
and sacrifice everything, even if necessary his personal existence, for
the resurrection of the German people whom he loved above all things. And
for this reason he was always a troublesome thorn in the eyes of those venal
officials the law of whose actions was prescribed, not by the interest of
their people and the necessary uprising for its freedom, but by the boss's
orders, without regard for the welfare of the national trust confided in
them.
And above all he was one of those natures who, contrasting with
most of the guardians of our so-called state authority, do not fear the
enmity of traitors to the people and the nation, but long for it as for
a treasure which a decent man must take for granted. The hatred of Jews
and Marxists, their whole campaign of lies and slander, were for him the
sole happiness amid the misery of our people.
A man of granite honesty, of antique simplicity and German straightforwardness,
for whom the words 'Sooner dead than a slave ' were no phrase but the essence
of his whole being.
He and his collaborator, Dr. Frick, are in my eyes the only
men in a state position who possess the right to be called cocreators of
a national Bavaria.
Before we proceeded to hold our first mass meeting, not only
did the necessary propaganda material have to be made ready, but the main
points of the program also had to be put into print.
In the second volume I shall thoroughly develop the guiding
principles which we had in mind, particularly in framing the program. Here
I shall only state that it was done, not only to give the young movement
form and content, but to make its aims understandable to the broad masses.
Circles of the so-called intelligentsia have mocked and ridiculed
this and attempted to criticize it. But the soundness of our point of view
at that time has been shown by the effectiveness of this program.
In these years I have seen dozens of new movements arise and
thev have all vanished and evaporated without trace. A single one remains:
The National Socialist German Workers' Party. And today more than ever I
harbor the conviction that people can combat it, that they can attempt to
paralyze it, that petty party ministers can forbid us to speak and write,
but that they will never prevent the victory of our ideas.
When not even memory will reveal the names of the entire present-day
state conception and its advocates, the fundamentals of the National Socialist
program will be the foundations of a coming state.
Our four months' activities at meetings up to January, 1920,
had slowly enabled us to save up the small means that we needed for printing
our first leaflet, our first poster, and our program.
If I take the movement's first large mass meeting as the conclusion
of this volume, it is because by it the party burst the narrow bonds of
a small club and for the first time exerted a determining infiuence on the
mightiest factor of our tirne, public opinion.
I myself at that time had but one concern: Will the hall be
filled, or will we speak to a yawning hall? 1 I had the unshakable l inner
conviction that if the people came, the day was sure to be a great success
for the young movement. And so I anxiously looked forward to that evening.
The meeting was to be opened at 7:30. At 7:15 I entered the
Festsaal of the Hofbrauhaus on the Platzl in Munich, and my heart nearly
burst for joy. The gigantic hall-for at that time it still seemed to me
gigantic-was overcrowded with people, shoulder to shoulder, a mass numbering
almost two thousand people. And above all-those people to whom we wanted
to appeal had come. Far more than half the hall seemed to be occupied by
Communists and Independents. They had resolved that our first demonstration
would come to a speedy end.
But it turned out differently. After the first speaker had finished,
I took the floor. A few minutes later there was a hail of shouts, there
were violent dashes in the hall, a handful of the most faithful war comrades
and other supporters battled with the disturbers, and only little by little
were able to restore order.
I was able to go on speaking. After half an hour the applause
slowly began to drown out the screaming and shouting.
I now took up the program and began to explain it for the first
time.
From minute to minute the interruptions were increasingly drowned
out by shouts of applause. And when I finally submitted the twenty-five
theses, point for point, to the masses and asked them personally to pronounce
judgment on them, one after another was accepted with steadily mounting
joy, unanimously and again unanimously, and when the last thesis had found
its way to the heart of the masses, there stood before me a hall full of
people united by a new conviction, a new faith, a new will.
When after nearly four hours the hall began to empty and the
crowd, shoulder to shoulder, began to move, shove, press toward the exit
like a slow stream, I knew that now the principles of a movement which could
no longer be forgotten were moving out among the German people.
A fire was kindled from whose flame one day the sword must come which would
regain freedom for the Germanic Siegfried and life for the German nation.
And side by side with the coming resurrection, I sensed that
the goddess of inexorable vengeance for the perjured deed of November 9,
1919, was striding forth.
Thus slowly the hall emptied.
The movement took its course.
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