61 pages • 2 hours read
Eleanor Ayer puts Alfons’s and Helen’s stories in a greater historical context. She notes Germany’s humiliating World War I loss and connects the dejection and disorder to the emergence of the Nazi leader (the Führer), Adolf Hitler. She shows how Hitler creates a compelling narrative that falsely blames Germany’s problems on many groups, especially Jews. Hitler takes Germany from a democracy to a totalitarian state, where he possesses absolute, unquestioning authority. He starts World War II and a genocide machine that aims to erase political enemies, Jehovah’s Witnesses, people with physical and mental disabilities, and Jews. The multiple genocides become known as the Holocaust, and 11 million people die—six million of them are Jews.
Ayer doesn’t say that the Nazis gained control of Germany through fair and free elections. They were one of many political parties, and when Hitler became the leader, he made them popular, compelling the other politicians to name him Chancellor. The veteran politicians thought they could manipulate the politically inexperienced Hitler, but they were wrong.
Ayer also omits the Reichstag Fire. On February 27, 1933, nearly a month after Hitler became Chancellor, someone—likely a communist acting on their own—burns down the Reichstag, the German parliament building.
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Challenging Authority
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