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Der Stürmer

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Der Stürmer



 
 
Der Stürmer (literally, "The Stormer;" or more accurately, "The Attacker") was a weekly Nazi
Nazism

Nazism, officially National Socialism , refers to the ideology and practices of the National Socialist German Workers? Party under Adolf Hitler, and the policies adopted by the dictatorial government of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945....
 newspaper
Newspaper

A newspaper is a publication containing news, information and advertising, usually printed on low-cost paper called newsprint. General-interest newspapers often feature articles on Politics, crime, business, art/entertainment, society and sports....
 published by Julius Streicher
Julius Streicher

Julius Streicher was a prominent Nazism prior to World War II. He was the founder and publisher of Der St?rmer newspaper, which became a central element of the Nazi propaganda machine....
 from 1923 to the end of World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
 in 1945, with brief suspensions in circulation due to legal difficulties. It was a significant part of the Nazi propaganda
Propaganda

Propaganda is the dissemination of information aimed at influencing the opinions or behaviors of large numbers of people. As opposed to Objectivity providing information, propaganda in its most basic sense presents information in order to influence its audience....
 machinery and was vehemently anti-Semitic
Anti-Semitism

Antisemitism is prejudice against or hostility towards Jews.This prejudice or hostility is usually characterized by a combination of Religion, Race , cultural and ethnic group biases....
.






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Stuermer1934
Der Stürmer (literally, "The Stormer;" or more accurately, "The Attacker") was a weekly Nazi
Nazism

Nazism, officially National Socialism , refers to the ideology and practices of the National Socialist German Workers? Party under Adolf Hitler, and the policies adopted by the dictatorial government of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945....
 newspaper
Newspaper

A newspaper is a publication containing news, information and advertising, usually printed on low-cost paper called newsprint. General-interest newspapers often feature articles on Politics, crime, business, art/entertainment, society and sports....
 published by Julius Streicher
Julius Streicher

Julius Streicher was a prominent Nazism prior to World War II. He was the founder and publisher of Der St?rmer newspaper, which became a central element of the Nazi propaganda machine....
 from 1923 to the end of World War II
World War II

World War II, or the Second World War , was a global military conflict which involved a Participants in World War II, including all of the great powers, organised into two opposing military alliances: the Allies of World War II and the Axis powers....
 in 1945, with brief suspensions in circulation due to legal difficulties. It was a significant part of the Nazi propaganda
Propaganda

Propaganda is the dissemination of information aimed at influencing the opinions or behaviors of large numbers of people. As opposed to Objectivity providing information, propaganda in its most basic sense presents information in order to influence its audience....
 machinery and was vehemently anti-Semitic
Anti-Semitism

Antisemitism is prejudice against or hostility towards Jews.This prejudice or hostility is usually characterized by a combination of Religion, Race , cultural and ethnic group biases....
. Unlike the Völkischer Beobachter
Völkischer Beobachter

The V?lkischer Beobachter was the newspaper of the Nazi Party from 1920. It first appeared weekly, then daily from February 8, 1923. For twenty-five years it formed part of the official public face of the Nazi party....
 (translatable as The People's Observer), the official party paper which gave itself an outwardly serious appearance, the tabloid
Tabloid

A tabloid is an industry term which refers to a smaller newspaper format per spread; to a weekly or semi-weekly alternative newspaper that focuses on local-interest stories and entertainment, often distributed free of charge ; or to a newspaper that tends to emphasize sensationalism crime stories, gossip columns repeating scandalous innuend...
-style Der Stürmer often ran obscene materials such as anti-Semitic caricature
Caricature

A caricature is either a portrait that exaggerates or distorts the essence of a person or thing to create an easily identifiable visual likeness, or in literature, a description of a person using exaggeration of some characteristics and oversimplification of others....
s and propaganda-like accusations of blood libel
Blood libel against Jews

Blood libels against Jews are false accusations that Jews use human blood in certain aspects of their religious rituals and religious holidays. Although the first known instance of blood libel against Jews was in the writings of Apion, an early 1st century Paganism Greeks-Egyptians who claimed that the Jews sacrificed Greek people victims in...
, pornography
Pornography

Pornography or porn is the explicit depiction of sexual subject matter with the sole intention of sexually exciting the viewer. It is to a certain extent similar to erotica, which is the use of sexually arousing imagery....
, anti-Catholic, anti-capitalist
Anti-capitalism

Anti-capitalism describes a wide variety of movements, ideas, and attitudes which oppose capitalism. Anti-capitalists, in the strict sense of the word, are those who wish to completely replace capitalism with another system; however, there are also ideas which can be characterized as partially anti-capitalist in the sense that they only...
 and anti-"reactionary"
Monarchism

Monarchism is the advocacy of the establishment, preservation, or restoration of a monarchy as a form of government in a nation. A monarchist is an individual who supports this form of government out of principle, independent from the person, the Monarch....
 propaganda too, in order to appeal to a larger public of readers, especially among the lower class
Lumpenproletariat

Lumpenproletariat is a term first defined by Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels in The German Ideology and later elaborated on in works by Marx....
.

Racist caricatures

In his propaganda work, Streicher furthered old myths from the middle ages, e.g. that Jews killed children, sacrificed them and drank their blood. These claims were accompanied by vulgar anti-semitic caricatures. Der Stürmer featured cartoons which portrayed Jews as ugly characters with exaggerated facial features and misshapen bodies. Philipp Rupprecht
Philipp Rupprecht

Philipp Rupprecht was a German cartoonist best known for his antisemitic caricatures in the Nazi publication Der St?rmer, under the pen-name Fips....
, known as Fips, was one of the best-known anti-Semitic cartoonists, his virulent attacks wedding "Jewish capitalists
Capitalism

Capitalism is an economic system in which wealth, and the means of producing wealth, are private property and controlled rather than commonly, publicly, or state-owned and controlled....
" with "Jewish Communism
Communism

Communism is a socioeconomic structure and political ideology that promotes the establishment of an egalitarianism, classlessness, stateless society based on common ownership and control of the means of production and property in general....
" etc.

At the bottom of the title page there was always the motto "Die Juden sind unser Unglück!" ("The Jews are our misfortune!"), coined by Heinrich von Treitschke
Heinrich von Treitschke

Heinrich Gotthard von Treitschke was a nationalism Germany historian and political writer during the time of the German Empire....
 in the 1880s. In the nameplate was the motto "Deutsches Wochenblatt zum Kampfe um die Wahrheit" ("German Weekly Newspaper in the Fight for Truth").

Circulation

1933]] Most of its readers were young people and people from the lowest strata of German society. Copies of der Stürmer were displayed in prominent display cases throughout the Reich
Nazi Germany

Nazi Germany and the Third Reich are the colloquial English names for Germany under the regime of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party , which established a Totalitarianism dictatorship that existed from 1933 to 1945....
. In 1927, it sold about 27,000 copies every week; by 1935, its circulation had reached around 480,000.

Hermann Göring
Hermann Göring

Hermann Wilhelm G?ring was a Germany politician, military leader and a leading member of the Nazi Party. Among many offices, he was Hitler's designated successor and commander of the Luftwaffe ....
 forbade the Stürmer in all of his departments, and Baldur von Schirach
Baldur von Schirach

Baldur Benedikt von Schirach was a Nazism youth leader later convicted of being a war criminal. Schirach was the head of the Hitler Youth and Gauleiter and Reichsstatthalter of Vienna....
 banned it as a means of education in the Hitlerjugend (HJ)
Hitler Youth

The Hitler Youth was a paramilitary organization of the Nazi Party. It existed from 1922 to 1945. The HJ was the second oldest paramilitary Nazi group, founded one year after its adult counterpart, the Sturmabteilung ....
-hostels and other HJ-education facilities by a "Reichsbefehl", i.e. Reich command (IMT vol. XIII/XIV).

Other senior Nazi officials however, including Heinrich Himmler
Heinrich Himmler

Heinrich Luitpold Himmler was a Nazi Germany German politician and head of the Schutzstaffel. He was one of the most powerful men in Nazi Germany, competing with Hermann G?ring, Martin Bormann and Joseph Goebbels....
 (Head of the SS), Robert Ley
Robert Ley

Dr. Robert Ley was a Nazi Germany politician and head of the German Labour Front from 1933 to 1945. He committed suicide while awaiting trial for war crimes....
 (Leader of the DAF
German Labour Front

The German Labour Front was the amalgamated Nazism trade union organisation which replaced the free and diverse Weimar Republic trade unions that Adolf Hitler outlawed on 2 May 1933, after Hitler's rise to power....
), and Max Amann
Max Amann

Max Amann was a Nazism official with the honorary rank of SS-Obergruppenf?hrer, politician and journalist.Amann was born in Munich on November 24 1891; during World War I he was Adolf Hitler's Sergeant; he became chairman of the Germany NSDAP in 1922 and president of the Reichspressekammer in 1933....
 (Proprietor of the Zentral Verlag, comprising 80 percent of the German press in 1942), endorsed the publication, and their statements were often published in Der Stürmer. Albert Forster
Albert Forster

Albert Maria Forster was a Nazi Germany politician....
, Gauleiter of Danzig (Gdansk
Gdansk

Gdansk is the city at the centre of the fourth-largest metropolitan area in Poland. It is Poland's principal seaport as well as the capital of the Pomeranian Voivodeship....
), wrote in 1937:

"With pleasure I say that the Stürmer, more than any other daily or weekly newspaper, has made clear to the people in simple ways the danger of Jewry. Without Julius Streicher and his Stürmer, the importance of a solution to the Jewish question would not be seen to be as critical as it actually is by many citizens. It is therefore to be hoped that those who want to learn unvarnished truth about the Jewish question will read the Stürmer."


Hitler considered Streicher's ‘primitive methods’ to be effective in influencing the man on the street. A senior Nazi politician in said the mid-1930s:

"Anti-Semitism … was beyond question the most important weapon in his propagandist arsenal, and almost everywhere it was of deadly efficiency. That was why he had allowed Streicher, for example, a free hand. The man’s stuff, too, was amusing, and very cleverly done. Wherever, he wondered, did Streicher get his constant supply of new material? He, Hitler, was simply on thorns to see each new issue of the Stürmer. It was the one periodical that he always read with pleasure, from the first page to the last".


During the war, the paper's circulation dropped because of paper shortages, as well as Streicher's exile from Nuremberg for corruption. More ominously, perhaps, the Jews, its main target, had begun to disappear
The Holocaust

The Holocaust , also known as , Churben is the term generally used to describe the genocide of approximately six million European Jews during World War II, as part of a program of deliberate extermination planned and executed by Nazi Germany under Adolf Hitler....
 from everyday life, which diminished the paper's relevance. Hitler, however, insisted that Streicher receive sufficient support to continue publishing Der Stürmer.

After the war, Streicher was tried at the Nuremberg trials
Nuremberg Trials

The Nuremberg Trials were a series of trials, or tribunals, most notable for the prosecution of prominent members of the political, military, and economic leadership of Nazi Germany after its defeat in World War II....
 for crimes against humanity for his role in inciting Germans to exterminate Jews
Julius Streicher

Julius Streicher was a prominent Nazism prior to World War II. He was the founder and publisher of Der St?rmer newspaper, which became a central element of the Nazi propaganda machine....
. His publishing activities were a major part of the evidence presented against him. Streicher was found guilty and hanged.

See Also

  • Kangura
    Kangura

    Kangura was a Kinyarwanda- and French languagelanguage magazine in Rwanda that served to stoke ethnic hatred in the run-up to the Rwandan Genocide....


External links