Comment on What was life like for the "average" person living in Nazi Germany

<- View Parent
bjoern_tantau@swg-empire.de ⁨3⁩ ⁨days⁩ ago

Actually, thanks to @zelmon64@programming.dev recommending prism glasses I was able to read a little bit of her book.

I started somewhere in 1932 and am now in 1934. She came from a relatively poor family where they were used to make do. Unemployment was high, overall prospects were bad. She met the man who would become her first husband. He sometimes wrote theatre critics for a small struggling newspaper that often was banned for publishing anti-constitutional articles.

When in 1933 the Nazis took power they saw it as a positive thing and had hope for the future. The newspaper was picked up to be the prime paper in the area and so they could pay him more and his personal situation improved massively. He proposed to my grandma and gave her a ring with a swastika as a present.

Their interpersonal relationship crumbled a bit because he would spend so much time with his friends and neglect her. She moved away for a bit to get some distance and evaluate their relationship. This was planned for a year. But after a few weeks he surprised her with a visit and managed to sway her into marrying him for real.

He had left his job at the newspaper and become a Gauwart at the organisation Kraft durch Freude. Basically a regional manager of this Nazi organisation that is supposed to promote Nazism to the people by organising vacations and leisure events for the general public.

In 1934 they married and lived a nice life. The salary of Gauwarts was reduced from 1000 to 600 Marks and he was devastated but she managed to pick him up by reminding him that she was used to living with little money. But all in all their life seemed to be great. Better than before. And finally a baby was on. the way, lifting their spirits again.

In all these little stories not much of politics is to see. A cousin emigrated to the US with her Jewish husband. A famous actor she knew also moved to the US and got a new first name that’s not “Adolf” to avoid association.

But if I didn’t know this was all real I would think I was reading a good novel with some subtle foreshadowing. I’m really on edge to find out how the upcoming war will affect them.

But all in all it doesn’t feel like what is happening in the US right now. No idea if that is due to the better media connections we have nowadays or if I’m still too early in Germany’s history or if it’s because people are more aware in the US because they actually did learn from history.

I’m especially missing the positivity from the US. But that might also be because Lemmy is more of a left leaning echo chamber.

source
Sort:hotnewtop