Nazi racial ideology and the first persecutions (1933)
Nazi ideology made racial struggle the central organising idea of history; from 1933 it was translated into law and action against Jewish Germans.
The ideological foundation. The core of Nazi ideology was racial hierarchy and racial struggle. As set out in Hitler's Mein Kampf (1925-26) and developed by Nazi 'race scientists', this involved several claims:
- The 'Aryan' race — supposed Nordic-Germanic peoples — was the creator of civilisation and entitled to leadership of the world.
- Jews were the eternal enemy of the Aryan race, working through finance, Marxism and (in Nazi conspiracy theory) democracy itself to destroy Aryan civilisation.
- Other races (Slavs, Roma) were inferior; Africans were placed near the bottom.
- History was racial struggle — a Darwinian competition in which only the strongest race would survive.
This was not original to the Nazis. Antisemitism had deep roots in European thought (religious medieval antisemitism, late-19th-century racial antisemitism). Pseudo-scientific 'racial hygiene' was an international movement; eugenics was practised in many countries. But the Nazis made racial ideology the central organising idea of their state and policy.
Who counted as Jewish? The Nazi definition of a Jew was confused and inconsistent:
- Initially based on religion (a Jew was someone who practised Judaism).
- Then descent (a Jew was someone with Jewish grandparents).
- The Nuremberg Laws (1935) codified a complex grandparent-based definition: 'full Jews' (3-4 Jewish grandparents), 'half-Jews' (Mischlinge of first degree, 2 Jewish grandparents), 'quarter-Jews' (Mischlinge of second degree, 1 Jewish grandparent).
- Religious belief, marriage and self-identification all affected which category one fell into.
The result: Germans who had converted away from Judaism, or whose ancestors had converted generations earlier, were classified as Jews by the regime even if they had no connection with Jewish religion. The category was about 'race' as Nazi pseudoscience defined it, not about religion.
The Jewish population. Germany in 1933 had about 500,000 Jews out of a population of around 66 million — less than 1%. Most were highly assimilated middle-class Germans:
- Civil servants, lawyers, doctors, journalists, academics, businessmen, artists.
- Many had served in the German army in WWI.
- The Nazi claim that Jews 'dominated' Germany was a propaganda fiction; Jews were a small, integrated minority.
The boycott of Jewish businesses (1 April 1933). The first national antisemitic action came on 1 April 1933. Organised by the SA in response to international Jewish criticism of Nazi rule:
- SA men stood outside Jewish-owned shops, professional offices and department stores.
- Signs reading 'Don't buy from Jews!' (Kauft nicht bei Juden!) were posted.
- Yellow stars (a sign of Jewish ownership) were painted on windows.
- Customers were photographed for newspaper publication.
The boycott was officially limited to one day, but it had several consequences:
- It signalled that Jewish Germans were no longer protected by the state.
- It accustomed Germans to public antisemitism as official policy.
- Many Jewish businesses suffered lasting damage.
- It demonstrated SA mobilisation against a 'public enemy'.
International protest was strong, and the regime did not repeat a national boycott on this scale until Kristallnacht. But the boycott was the start of a process of progressive exclusion.
Civil-service exclusion (April 1933). A more lasting blow followed within a week. The Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service (7 April 1933) removed:
- Jewish civil servants (with some initial exemptions for WWI veterans).
- Political opponents (communists, social democrats).
Further laws over 1933-35 banned Jewish:
- Lawyers and judges.
- Doctors and dentists (with limited exemptions).
- University professors and teachers.
- Journalists, writers, artists, musicians (through exclusion from the Reich Chamber of Culture).
- Civil-service spouses (some women in mixed marriages also affected).
By 1935 most professional Jewish life in Germany had been destroyed.
The pattern of 1933-35. The pre-Nuremberg years established the pattern: escalating exclusion of Jews from public life through laws presented as 'restoring' German purity. The pace varied — sometimes the regime held back to avoid international protest, sometimes it pushed forward — but the direction was clear. Each measure normalised the next.
The boycott of April 1933 and the civil-service law of the same week were therefore not isolated events but the start of a sequence: legal discrimination → social exclusion → economic destruction → physical violence → murder. The Holocaust did not begin with Auschwitz; it began with the boycott of 1 April 1933.
- Nazi ideology: 'Aryan' supremacy, Jews as eternal enemy, history as racial struggle (Mein Kampf).
- Germany 1933: ~500,000 Jews (<1% of population), highly assimilated middle-class Germans.
- 1 April 1933: SA-organised boycott of Jewish shops — first national antisemitic action.
- 7 April 1933: Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service removed Jewish civil servants, judges, teachers.
- 1933-35: progressive exclusion of Jews from law, medicine, academia, journalism, arts — most professional Jewish life destroyed by 1935.