The Germans are vigorously submissive.
They employ philosophical reasonings to explain what is the least
philosophic thing in the world, respect for force and the fear which
transforms that respect into admiration. ---Madame de Stael
It is too easy to say that the
German soul was predisposed to totalitarianism. Even if the people were
inured to submissiveness through iron discipline for generations, they
were never, before Hitler, genocidal maniacs.
Since World War II, several books have appeared which, while not dealing
directly with the Nazis, are of invaluable aid in explaining how ordinary
people can be transformed into automata, devoid of conscience or reason.
They help us to understand, not only the Nazis but millions of disciples
of movements in Western countries today who, almost overnight, are weaned
from their customary behavior and attachments and indoctrinated with
irrational beliefs. They are
The True Believer by Eric Hoffer,
The Mind Possessed by William Sargant, and
The Rape of the Mind
by Joost Meerloo.
What is the formula for producing pliant followers?
Take people, not wholly preoccupied with subsistence, who despair of being
happy either in the present or in the future. 'They feel the sharp cutting
edge of frustration. Either through some personal defect or because
external conditions do not permit growth, they are eager to renounce
themselves, since the self is insupportable.
Many German men were in this position at the end of World War I. They came
home to a civilian life without purpose, in which they had no part. In the
chaos and collapse, vast armies of uprooted people felt threatened by the
war's economic and social aftermath. National Socialism gave them a chance
for a fresh start. As Eric Hoffer points out:
People who see their lives as
irremediably spoiled cannot find a worthwhile purpose in self-advancement.
The prospect of an individual career cannot stir them to a mighty effort,
nor can it evoke in them faith and a single-minded dedication. They look
on self-interest as on something tainted and evil; something unclean and
unlucky. Anything undertaken under the auspices of the self seems to them
foredoomed. Nothing that has its roots and reasons in the self can be good
and noble. 'Their innermost craving is for a new life-a rebirth-or,
failing this, a chance to acquire new elements of pride, confidence, hope,
a sense of purpose and worth by an identification with a holy cause. An
active mass movement offers them opportunities for both. If they join the
movement as full converts they are reborn to a new life in its close-knit
collective body, or if attracted as sympathizers they find elements of
pride, confidence and purpose by identifying themselves with the efforts,
achievements and prospects of the movement.
To the frustrated a mass movement offers substitutes either for the
whole self or for the elements which make life bearable and which they
cannot evoke out of their individual resources.
The movement, in turn, encourages
self-renunciation. It does not attract the individual who believes in
himself, nor does it care to; on the contrary, he is precisely the
individual whom it ridicules. It popularizes the idea that the private
person who finds his own satisfactions is halting the progress of
civilization. But to the person with the unwanted self, unable to believe
in himself, the movement provides something larger to believe in. As
Hitler pointed out: "Monkeys put to death any members of their community
who show a desire to live apart. And what the apes do, men do too, in
their own manner."
The movement also provides justification. To those who find no meaning or
purpose in life, it says: "The world is out of joint, not you" or "The
world that most people inhabit is an illusion. "No longer alone in its
misery, the frustrated mind now has company, which includes even those who
protest that they are happy, because it is taught to see through that
so-called happiness.
As one Nazi, Karl-Heinz Schwenke, a tailor, described it:
I had ten suits of my own when
I married. Twenty-five years later, when their "democracies" got through
with me in 1918, 1 had none, not one. I had my sweater and my pants. Even
my Army uniform was worn out. My medals were sold. I was nothing. Then,
suddenly, I was needed. National Socialism had a place for me. I was
nothing -- then I was needed.
The movement also provides a
suitable outlet for the pent-up rage which frustrated people feel, against
themselves and the world. It fans that rage and honors it. The believer's
rage may actually increase in proportion to what he has had to give up to
become part of the movement: his former life, his friends, his family, his
privacy, his judgment, sometimes even his name and worldly goods. He is
willing, even eager, to make these sacrifices and more, of course, because
by making them he can slough off the undesirable self. He receives, in
return, an artificial sense of worth. His stature grows through
involvement with the group. He is assured that he is great, one of the
chosen.
SS men were held together by the idea that they were a sworn brotherhood
of the elect. Their mystic rituals gave them special obligations, some too
abhorrent to contemplate, but also special privileges.
The believer becomes a fanatic. As a frustrated person, incapable of
acting in his own best interests, he never had a firm grip on reality. He
can enter into the fantasy life of the movement and act on behalf of
impossible dreams, which impose less risk on his fragile ego than he would
encounter if he were to tussle with personal hurdles. He gets a sense of
omnipotence, too, from tackling world-shaking tasks.
Running away from an acceptance of his own nature and the world as it is,
the believer is prone to credulity. He believes because it is impossible.
He can be persuaded by the irrational and led by the nose by charlatans.
It is easy for him to become irresponsible, since he is not following his
own will.
Rudolf Hoess, commandant of Auschwitz, was the perfect exemplar of will-lessness.
As he confessed at Nuremberg: "I had nothing to say. I could only say
Jawohl! We could only execute orders without thinking about it… from our
entire training the thought of refusing an order just didn't enter one's
head, regardless of what kind of order it was."
Since life has been irremediably spoiled for the believer, he has
relatively little hesitation about spoiling it for others. This gives him
an advantage. He can be unscrupulous under the disguise of idealism. His
self-righteousness permits him to convince himself that he is destroying
people for their own good. Josef Goebbels felt it his duty "to unleash
volcanic passions, outbreaks of rage, to set masses of people on the
march, to organize hatred and despair with ice-cold calculation." Eric
Hoffer explains such inhumanity:
It seems that when we are
oppressed by the knowledge of our worthlessness we do not see ourselves as
lower than some and higher than others, but as lower than the lowest of
mankind. We hate then the whole world, and we would pour our wrath upon
the whole of creation.
There is a deep reassurance for the frustrated in witnessing the downfall
of the fortunate and the disgrace of the righteous. They see in a general
downfall an approach to the brotherhood of all. Chaos, like the grave, is
a haven of equality. Their burning conviction that there must be a new
life and a new order is fueled by the realization that the old will have
to be razed to the ground before the new can be built. Their clamor for a
millennium is shot through with a hatred for all that exists, and a
craving for the end of the world.
This recalls Alfred Rosenberg's
argument that "the denial of the world needs a still longer time in order
to grow so that it will acquire a lasting predominance over affirmation of
the world," and his equation of the Jew with world affirmation.
To be bored is also to be potentially an easy mark for a movement. It
provides the meaning and purpose which are gone from the fife of the
isolated individual, burdened with freedom. As one young Nazi put it just
before World War U, "We Germans are so happy. We are free of freedom."
What sort of social milieu is it that breeds people who want to be free of
freedom?
Precisely that which has increasingly prevailed since the nineteenth
century: a mass society in which the individual is atomized and counts for
very little. He stands completely alone. His ties with the community, the
family, the kinship group have been broken. Paradoxically, he needs them
more than ever, because individual life becomes increasingly absurd and
incoherent the more mass society advances.
Uprooted from village and ancestral loyalties and shifted to the anonymous
city, the individual suffers culture shock: The old values are out of
place in the hostile, competitive world. As an isolated person, no longer
part of a settled group whose norms he accepted, he is uncertain and
empty-unless he is an independent thinker or a creative spirit, in which
case he may feel himself well rid of the influence of the group. But with
the encroachment of mass society, it is less and less likely that he will
be able to or create. A philologist, specializing in Middle High German,
described the situation candidly to Milton Mayer, They Thought They Were
Free:
... suddenly, I was plunged
into all the new activity, as the university was drawn into the new
situation; meetings, conferences, interviews, ceremonies, and, above all,
papers to be filled out, reports, bibliographies, lists, questionnaires.
And on top of that were the demands in the community, the things in which
one had to, was "expected to" participate that had not been there or had
not been important before.... it consumed all one's energies…. You can see
how easy it was, then, not to think about fundamental things. One had no
time… 'The dictatorship, and the whole process of its coming into being,
was above all diverting. It provided an excuse not to think for people who
did not want to think anyway… Most of us did not want to think about
fundamental things and never had. There was no need to. Nazism gave us
some dreadful, fundamental things to think about--we were decent
people-and kept us so busy with continuous changes and "crises" and so
fascinated, yes, fascinated, by the machinations of the "national
enemies," without and within, that we had no time to think about these
dreadful things that were growing, little by little, all around us.
Unconsciously, I suppose, we were grateful. Who wants to think?
Through mass education and mass
communication, the individual is propagandized and molded into conditioned
responses, like one of Pavlov's dogs. His innate ability to figure things
out for himself atrophies, with predictable consequences.
To soften the pain of emptiness, he is drowned in entertainment, which
offer him hero-surrogates who are able to live for him. Eternally occupied
either as hustler, machine, or spectator, he seldom has a moment to notice
that he cannot think, feel or live; that his life is petty, shabby, and
totally without meaning; that his authorities are deceitful and
manipulative, his society disintegrating, his relationships hollow, and
worst of all, that nothing is being done to remedy these horrors.
The irony is that the individual in mass society has only himself. The
authority of his parents has been undermined. He has moved from the soil
where he was born and experienced certain local allegiances. His work is
inhuman and mechanical. No meaning, responsibility, or dignity attaches to
it. It requires his participation, but actually develops passivity. It
regiments him, and he remains an apathetic machine. He is dependent on his
job, and in periods of economic insecurity, glad to have it, but he feels
diminished by it.
His relationships lack intimacy and affection. He can no longer trust
anyone. He must have answers that will explain the problems of his life.
Yet, because he has been trained not to think for himself, he faces a
void, and his life becomes unendurable.
Human beings can't stand being unimportant. Most will readily accept the
idea of further and further "massification" the greater leveling and
equality which is evidence of greater democracy--as a sign of progress.
Mass society is symbolized by modernism and egalitarianism, two popular
myths of progress. In Germany, this egalitarianism culminated in Hitler's
boast that:
Sixty thousand men have
outwardly become almost a unit, that actually these men are uniform not
only in ideas, but that even the facial expression is almost the same.
Look at these laughing eyes, this fanatical enthusiasm, and you will
discover how a hundred thousand men in a movement become a single type.
What does the movement offer the
faithful?
Nothing less than a new life. His rebirth is sometimes symbolized in a new
name, exotic and foreign, to make the change of identity tangible. Now
there is certainty. He knows exactly what is expected of him. Within a
circumscribed set of rules, all is permitted rage without guilt, relief
from responsibility, the assertion of superiority over others.
He knows what action is required of him in the present and can look
forward to a millennial future as well. There is no more ambiguity. The
conflicts, tensions, self-criticisms, and doubts that assail the rest of
us are washed away, and he enjoys a state of equilibrium. He is no longer
a passive participant. Righteously, he looks down at those whom he
formerly felt to be superior. The same society which scorned him now is
forced to recognize that his beliefs are important. The mass man becomes a
power in the world. Rudolf Hess, the melancholy student who became deputy
leader of the Third Reich, remained grateful to the end. As he testified
at Nuremberg:
It was granted to me for many
years of my life to live and work under the greatest son whom my nation
has produced in the thousand years of its history. Even if I could I would
not expunge this period from my existence. I regret nothing. If I were
standing once more at the beginning I should act once again as I did then,
even if I knew that at the end I should be burnt at the stake. No matter
what men do, I shall one day stand before the judgment seat of the
Almighty. I shall answer to him, and I know that he will acquit me.
In exchange for this miraculous
transformation, the individual willingly subjects himself to a thorough
brainwashing, through which his old beliefs and personality are
eradicated. He may never be aware that he is being brainwashed. It may
happen instantly or gradually, but he puts absolute trust in the leaders
of the movement. The group becomes the good father he may never have had,
the proxy whom he depends on to solve all his problems, the authority to
which he owes obedience. From the moment he is captured, he identifies
with the group and begins to think as they do. Their common undertaking
insures that he will never have to shoulder any personal blame for failure
or shortcomings. So long as he behaves according to the rules, he will be
accepted. The rules are clear and consistent, or seem to be.
The Germans were used to compulsion from early childhood. Rudolf Hoess's
reminiscence is fairly typical, and makes his subsequent acquiescence in
running Auschwitz more plausible:
It was constantly impressed upon
me in forceful terms that I must obey promptly the wishes and commands of
my parents, teachers, priests, etc., and indeed of all grown-up people,
including servants, and that nothing must distract me from this duty.
Whatever they said was always right.
These basic principles on which I was brought up became part of my flesh
and blood. I can still clearly remember how my father, who on account of
his fervent Catholicism, was a determined opponent of the Reich Government
and its policy, never ceased to remind his friends that, however strong
one's opposition might be, the laws and decrees of the State had to be
obeyed unconditionally.
From my earliest youth I was brought up with a strong awareness of duty.
In my parents' house it was insisted that every task be exactly and
conscientiously carried out. Each member of the family had his own special
duties to perform.
The group is beyond criticism.
Its realm is sacred. Even if a man has convictions which run counter to
those of the movement, he can still be led to act in a manner which
contradicts his own beliefs, either because his will is weak or because he
is the victim of certain techniques which cause his will to be
transcended. He can say, with Hermann Goring, "I have no conscience! Adolf
Hitler is my conscience!" or "It is not I who live, but the Fuhrer who
lives in me. "
It is important to examine these techniques if we are to understand how
people can be made to follow a Fuhrer wherever he may lead.
The proselyte is isolated at first. No free exchange with unbelievers is
allowed. He is cut off from ties of loyalty with the past. His family and
friends are discredited. Feelings of exclusivity are encouraged.
His mind is barraged with repetitive propaganda until it is made weary.
The indoctrination may go on uninterruptedly for sixteen hours or more a
day, for weeks on end. Even if the proselyte rejects what he hears, argues
against it, or falls into apathy, the Pavlovian conditioning ultimately
seduces him, and he surrenders to the training.
Mechanical drill, rhythmical marches, dance rituals, and repetitive
chanting are also effective in breaking down resistance.
The English psychiatrist William Sargant could better grasp how Hitler was
able to bring even intelligent Germans into "a condition of intellectual
and emotional subjection" through "mass rallies, marching and martial
music, chanting and slogans and highly emotional oratory and ceremony"
after witnessing the subservience of certain African tribes to their
leaders and seeing their powerful initiation rites:
Whether in a "primitive" tribe
or at school or in the army, the process is essentially the same. Severe
stress is imposed on the new recruit, by subjecting him to arbitrary and
frightening authority, by bewildering him, abusing or ill-treating him, by
telling him that his old values and sentiments are childish, and so
inducing in him a state of unease and suggestibility in which new values
can easily be drummed into him, and he recovers his self-confidence by
accepting them. The initial conditioning techniques may have to be
reinforced from time to time by further conditioning procedures, and
follow-up indoctrination is considered most important in all types of
religious or other conversion.
Once the proselyte has been
broken down and sensitized, his thinking and feelings can be manipulated,
and delusions implanted. He falls under the suggestive power of the group
and accepts its distortions as objective truth.
Most people are suggestible and can be hypnotized against their will,
obeying commands even when they go against the grain. Dr. Sargant
observes:
It is not the mentally ill but
ordinary normal people who are most susceptible to "brainwashing,"
"conversion," "possession," "the crisis" . . . and who . . . fall readily
under the spell of the demagogue or the revivalist, the witch-doctor or
the pop group, the priest or the psychiatrist, or even in less extreme
ways the propagandist or the advertiser.
In the suggestible state, the
proselyte may attribute divine powers to his leader and accept dogmas
which he might have rejected in a more normal state. Some of the men
closest to Hitler, for example, acknowledged that they believed in his
divinity. Himmler's masseur, Felix Kersten, relates that he once answered
the phone and heard Hitler's voice before passing the phone on to Himmler,
who exclaimed: "You have been listening to the voice of the Fuhrer, you're
a very lucky man." Himmler told Kersten that Hitler's commands came "from
a world transcending this one" and "possessed a divine power." It was the
"Karma" of the German people that they should be "saved" by "a figure of
the greatest brilliance" which had "become incarnate" in Hitler's person.
And even disbelievers and scoffers can also come to accept irrational
dogmas-through contagion, imitation or sudden conversion.
Beliefs have the power to infect. The onlookers at a mass rally, where
emotions are being stiffed up, often feel the same intensity of excitement
that the participants feel. We can "catch" ideas that are completely
foreign to us. In early Judaism, for example, there was no concept of a
demonic force. God was responsible for both good and evil. But with
influences from Iran, Egypt, and Greece came a tendency to explain evil as
the work of demons. Soon after, people began to see manifestations of evil
spirits everywhere, and "every misfortune, every illness, and
particularly, under the name of possession, all disorders of the nervous
system were ascribed to them," according to Charles Guignebert in The
Jewish World in the Time of Jesus.
Hitler's early speeches were so
mesmerizing that even people who were repelled by his ideas felt
themselves being swept along. The playwright Eugene Ionesco mentions in
his autobiography that he received the inspiration for Rhinoceros when he
felt himself pulled into the Nazi orbit at a mass rally and had to
struggle to keep from developing "rhinoceritis. "
We "catch" ideas, too, because we want to be like others, particularly
when we want not to be our despised selves. If we're satisfied, we don't
need to conform, but if we're not, we imitate people whom we admire for
having greater judgment, taste, or good fortune than we do. Obedience
itself is a kind of imitation. Through conformity, the person who feels
inferior is in no danger of being exposed. He's indistinguishable from the
others. No one can single him out and examine his unique being.
Conformity, in turn, sets him up to be further canceled out as an
individual, to have no life apart from his collective purpose. This gives
a movement tremendous power over the individual. Even intelligent people
are not immune from the desire to conform. Heinrich Hildebrandt, a
schoolteacher who was anxious to hide his liberal past, joined the Nazi
party, and to his own disgust, found himself "proud to be wearing the
insignia. It showed I 'belonged,' and the pleasure of 'belonging,' so soon
after feeling excluded, isolated, is very great…. I belonged to the 'new
nobility.' "
Hoffer observes:
Above all, he [the true
believer] must never feel alone. Though stranded on a desert island, he
must still feel that he is under the eyes of the group. To be cast out
from the group should be equivalent to being cut off from life.
This is undoubtedly a primitive state of being, and its most perfect
examples are found among primitive tribes. Mass movements strive to
approximate this primitive perfection, and we are not imagining things
when the anti-individualist bias of contemporary mass movements strikes us
as a throwback to the primitive.
Sudden conversions, which may
happen through hypnosis, emotional shock, despair, or exhaustion, can
bring people into movements. William Sargant believes an apparently
well-balanced person, "dominated by hypnoid and slightly suggestible brain
activity," may suddenly give up his "previous intellectual training and
habits of rational thought," to accept "ideas which he would normally find
repellent or even patently nonsensical." Sargant is convinced that a
heightened state of suggestibility accounts for many cases of demonic
possession, or for sudden salvation. The history of mysticism offers
instances of extreme opinions instantly reversed. The critical faculty is
suspended, and what was formerly believed to be black is now white, and
vice-versa.
Once the believer has been taken over by one of these means, it is
difficult for him to revert to his former self. In a sense, collective
totalitarian thinking can be compared with schizophrenia. In both, there
is, says Joost Meerloo in The Rape of the Mind, a "loss of an
independent, verifiable reality, with a consequent relapse into a more
primitive state of awareness." In both, thought and action are arrested at
an infantile level of development.
Since the totalitarian denies man's dynamic nature, views him simply as a
submissive robot, and provides this robot with one single, simple answer
to all the ambivalence, doubts, conflicts, and warring drives within him,
all attempts to dislodge the official clichés clash with those same
clichés. The believer's isolation in a fortress of other delusional
thinkers gives him no opportunity for clear thought or contact with other
influences. He is immune to reasonable propositions. He is convinced that
he is reasonable, and that his enemies are not. Having burned his bridges
behind him, broken with his family and old friends, he cannot go back. He
is committed to his involvement in the group. To renounce it would be to
repudiate himself. It would also mean giving up all the psychic benefits
of omnipotence. His personality and prejudices have become crystallized
around a set of actions and dogmas. They are irreversible. Any external
stimulus which threatens to penetrate his armor and make him see the
absurdity or injustice of his position is rationalized to further harden
his rigidity. He has joined the movement at least partly because it handed
him stereotypes in place of his vague notions and saved him from having to
think things out for himself. Any stimulus which evokes a symbol causes a
reflex action. With his weakened conscience and consciousness, he can no
longer respond spontaneously, however he may appear to be doing so. He has
become the movement. All thoughts and feelings that are at odds with it
are snuffed out. This is what gives the believer the air of a
one-dimensional man. He lacks depth. There is a limited range of
possibilities open to him. If one wants, therefore, to convert him back to
an autonomous human being, one finds that there is nobody at home. His
mind is shut tight against new ideas. The slogans and ready-made judgments
he has absorbed stretch forward into infinity. The believer is protected
for all time. Within his sacred circle, all other knowledge is taboo. One
might say that the most telltale sign of a believer is his refusal to
examine ideas other than the divine commandments which have been implanted
in him. One can't get to him because he will not and cannot engage in
dialogue. What is particularly maddening about him is that, sterile and
unimaginative, he masquerades as an exemplary man, an objective guide
eager to spread enlightenment.
The ability to exercise his own judgment, having atrophied, is never
restored. Even if he should drop out of one group, he will quickly seek
and find another. Like a drug addict who needs his fix, he cannot live
without his clichés.
At Nuremberg after the war, Allied examiners were shocked to see how
unrepentant some of the Nazis were. Julius Streicher cried "Heil Hitler!
Heil Hitler! Heil Hitler!" at his execution, until the opening of the trap
door muffled his voice. Arthur Seyss-Inquart declared, to the last, that
Hitler remained "the man who made Greater Germany a reality in history."
Rudolf Hoess, by his own admission "completely filled, indeed obsessed"
with his monstrous goal, was not guilty of arrogance when he proudly
declared that "Auschwitz became the greatest human extermination center of
all time." He was one of the countless ordinary men who had been turned
into a believer. He gave validity to Hitler's contention "that by the
clever and continuous use of propaganda a people can even be made to
mistake heaven for hell, and vice versa, the most miserable life for
Paradise." As Hitler knew better than perhaps anyone else: "The essence of
propaganda consists in winning people over to an idea so sincerely, so
vitally, that in the end they succumb to it utterly and can never again
escape from it."
We need not, however, look as far back as Nazi Germany for examples of
people undergoing personality changes and extreme shifts in ideology. We
can learn from present-day American groups.
END of chapter--
Now back to the Worldwide Church of God (OIU FIVE)............................
Please read this book in
its entirety.
THE NAZIS AND THE OCCULT
DUSTY SKLAR
DOREST PRESS, NEW YORK
1989
ISBN 0-88029-412-4
Disclaimer: Printed with permission and
distributed freely as research and educational material.
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