| The Rise of Fascism | ||||||||||
The economic depression that follows the 1929 stock market crash has a dramatic impact on European and American nations. In a climate of social turmoil and high unemployment, marxist and socialist parties rise against right-wing industrialists often supported by the Church. Taking advantage of the social and political crisis affecting Italy after the Great War, Benito Mussolini puts in place the Fascist regime, a totalitarian doctrine that combines nationalistic, productivist and elitist ideas. As long as the innate violence of this regime remains invisible, Mussolini will find many admirers, impressed by his ambitious public works programs and by the appearance of order and discipline which he has imprinted upon his country. Germany, humiliated by the Treaty of Versailles, stripped of its colonies and forced to compensate the allies for war damages, is also facing a major crisis. The economic situation results in a severe depression, which for many exemplifies the failure of capitalism. The National Socialist Party of German Workers (National-Sozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP ) strikes an alliance with extreme-right industrialists to counter the rise of communism. The NSDAP, or Nazi Party, is ruled by a charismatic leader, Adolph Hitler, who inflames the crowds by promising a strong Germany, freed from the humiliation of the Treaty of Versailles and reconciled with its past military grandeur. Through propaganda, manipulation and terror, Hitler eliminates all forms of opposition and on January 30, 1933, is named Chancellor. The following year, after a bloody repression, he takes on the title of Fuehrer (Supreme Leader) of the Third Reich and seeks popular approval of the move through the August 19 referendum.
In Canada, as in other countries facing the hardships of the Great Depression, there is a strong desire for order and prosperity. For many, Mussolini’s Italy, Hitler’s Germany are showing the way to economic and social reconstruction, through radical but — apparently — efficient doctrines.
In 1935, Hitler proclaims the Nuremberg Racial Laws that deprive Jews
of their civil rights and pave the way to their persecution. The brutality
and intolerance of the Fascist and Nazi regimes are now blatant but their
action still restricted to their national territories. Starting in 1935,
both dictators will launch attacks beyond their borders and threaten the
whole of Europe. |
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| Next: The
Treaty of Versailles |