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abroad were complaining above all about the legalized treatment of the Jews as

second-class citizens. 45

Thus the regime restricted itself at first to a further series of discrimination

measures against Jews in specific areas of life, but not against the Jews as a whole.

On the one hand, therefore, various legal regulations debarred Jews from

entering professions that required academic qualifications, such as the law, medi-

cine, dentistry, and pharmacy; those Jews already active in such professions were

prevented from continuing to practise them. 46 The foundation of the Reich Chamber of Culture in September 1933 gave the regime the means to exclude

Jews definitively from all the cultural professions. The first step was to declare

them ineligible to join the new organizations that were compulsory regulators of

all activity in the cultural sphere, on the grounds that they did not possess the

‘reliability’ and ‘suitability’ that the membership conditions prescribed. 47 The Editorial Law of October 1933 provided the same instrument to prevent Jews

from becoming journalists in future. 48

Displacement from Public Life, 1933–4

41

Legal exclusion conditions ensured that Jews could neither achieve the privil-

eged status of ‘Hereditary Peasant’ introduced by Nazi agricultural legislation, 49

nor gain access to the newly introduced marriage loans. 50 In July 1933 the army introduced a requirement that soldiers’ brides would have to prove their ‘Aryan’

descent. 51 In February 1934, on their own intiative the Armed Forces introduced the requirements of the Professional Civil Service Act. As a consequence, some

seventy soldiers had to leave the army for ‘racial’ reasons—which represented an

important intrusion by the new government into the army’s personnel manage-

ment, previously considered by the military top brass as their autonomous

domain, and therefore a symbolically important act of submission by the army

to the racist dogmas of the regime. 52

Deceptive Calm

Because there were no major new persecution measures taken during this period,

the second half of 1933 and 1934 are often described as a period of ‘relative calm’

for the German Jews. However, despite the official end of the ‘boycott’ the Party

grass-roots campaigns against Jews and Jewish businesses were in many cases

perpetuated, and Jewish citizens were the victims of petty policies on the part of

the state administration that were aimed at displacing or ousting them. The longer

this condition obtained, the more profoundly the financial basis of Jewish busi-

nesses was affected. Discrimination took various different forms: Jewish trades-

men were driven from marketplaces; 53 Jewish firms were disadvantaged when rationed goods were distributed; 54 farmers were under pressure to break off commercial connections with Jewish traders; 55 Jewish firms were banned from advertising in newspapers and elsewhere; 56 local government ceased all business contacts with Jews57 and subjected them to arbitrary harassment; 58 again and again the windows of Jewish businesses and apartments were smashed; 59 signs announcing a ‘ban on Jews’ were displayed; cemeteries were desecrated and

synagogues ransacked. 60 ‘Racial violators’ were physically attacked and mobs organized by the Party prevented the celebration of ‘mixed marriages’. 61

Party activists repeatedly—and successfully—attempted to force people to

boycott Jewish shops and required them to be specially marked out as such.

Whilst in many villages and small towns Jewish shops were subject to a permanent

blockade, in 1934 the militant small-business Party activists who had now formed

the National Socialist Trade Organization (NS-Hago) launched measures to

boycott Jewish shops within the context of a ‘spring campaign’ across the whole

of the Reich. Similarly comprehensive campaigns were undertaken during the

Christmas seasons of December 1933 and 1934. 62 Although both the Party headquarters in Munich and government agencies repeatedly resisted the excesses of

boycotts, they were not able to put a truly effective stop to the boycott movement

that emanated from the Party activists. 63

42

Racial Persecution, 1933–1939

These boycott campaigns and the numerous other discriminatory measures

taken against the Jews were always accompanied by violent attacks. 64 These anti-Semitic acts of violence reached a high point on Palm Sunday 1934 in the Upper

Bavarian town of Gunzenhausen, when more than a thousand of the inhabitants

of this small town marched through the streets, forcibly hauling Jews from their

homes and dragging them off to the town prison. One Jewish citizen was later

found hanged; another stabbed himself; a few weeks later one of the main

perpetrators, who had in the meantime been punished, albeit leniently, shot a

Jewish restaurant owner on his own premises. These excesses show how the anti-

Semitic hatred of Party activists was liable to explode at any point, even during the

phase of ‘relative calm’ that then supposedly characterized the Nazis’ persecution

of the Jews. 65

The Nazi government’s unbending severity with regard to the ‘Jewish

question’ was made obvious during an inter-ministerial briefing in November

1934, which at the same time manifested a notable readiness to compromise

in the treatment of non-European ‘alien races’. During this meeting it was

first established that ‘adverse consequences of German racial policy over

recent months had placed serious strain on relations with various foreign

states’. This meant mainly Germany’s relations with a series of Asiatic and

South American states, who were responding angrily to the discriminatory

treatment of their citizens resident in Germany and to the depiction of all

Artfremde (literally all those ‘foreign to the species’, i.e. all those of non-

European descent) as members of ‘inferior’ races by the publicity material of

the ‘Third Reich’. The meeting was agreed that ‘the principles underlying the

racial politics of the National Socialist world-view must not be compromised

even by strong pressure from outside’, but also that the ‘application of the

racial principle in practice should not be permitted to have adverse reper-

cussions in the area of foreign policy, if these were disproportionate to its

domestic political benefits’. 66

Following a suggestion made by Helmut Nicolai, the representative of the

Reich Ministry of the Interior, a solution to this problem was found: legislation

would in future avoid the term ‘non-Aryan’ in favour of ‘Jewish’. 67 The meeting agreed that in future all decisions about the application of legal requirements

against ‘foreigners of alien blood’ would be exclusively within the purview of the

Foreign Office. Any Artfremder could be ‘exempted from the racial legislation’,

according to a decree of the Reich Minister for the Interior issued in April 1935,

if reasons of foreign policy required this—but only in cases where these ‘aliens’

were of ‘non-Jewish blood’. 68 The aim of

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