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4 - From Civil Rights to Civic Death: Dismantling Rights in Nazi Germany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 January 2013

Manfred Berg
Affiliation:
Freie Universität Berlin
Martin H. Geyer
Affiliation:
Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität Munchen
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Summary

When Adolf Hitler and the National Socialists came to power in January 1933 they launched an immediate assault on the legal structures that protected the civil and human rights of Germany's citizens. They began with physical harassment, to which they quickly added legislation that discriminated against those they deemed enemies of their cause. The assault ended with the mass murders effected in the death factories of eastern Europe. No political movement in modern times has more fundamentally rejected the belief in human rights than the Nazis - a belief they claimed reached its full expression in the Enlightenment of the eighteenth century and its actualization in the French Revolution of 1789. Nazi leaders soon made clear their intention to erase from the pages of history the rights proclaimed by the French Revolution. For them 1789 was the juncture at which history took the wrong turn. The events in France that year were rooted in concepts they considered abhorrent, including the right to political participation, civic and legal equality, the emancipation of the Jews, and that rights were inherent in the individual and therefore limited the authority of the community or group. They viewed every one of these ideas as foreign constructs that had been transplanted to German soil during the previous century and had then, quite illegitimately, been enshrined in the detested Weimar constitution of 1919.

Type
Chapter
Information
Two Cultures of Rights
The Quest for Inclusion and Participation in Modern America and Germany
, pp. 77 - 94
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2002

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