Volksgemeinschaft, in Nazi Germany, a racially unified and hierarchically organized body in which the interests of individuals would be strictly subordinate to those of the nation, or Volk. Like a military battalion, the people’s community would be permanently prepared for war and would accept the discipline that this required.
Although the Nazis had not given specific indications of the shape that German politics and society would take under their rule, Adolf Hitler and his propagandists had communicated clearly that the changes would be fundamental and would come at the expense of Germany’s racial enemies. Hitler regarded inequality between races and individuals as part of an unchangeable natural order, and he exalted the “Aryan race” as the sole creative element of mankind. For Hitler the natural unit of mankind was the Volk, of which the German was the greatest, and the state existed only to serve the Volk—a mission that the Weimar Republic had betrayed, according to the Nazis. All morality and truth was judged by this criterion: whether it was in accordance with the interest and preservation of the Volk. For this reason democratic government stood doubly condemned. It assumed an equality within the Volk which the Nazis believed did not exist, and it supposed that what was in the interests of the Volk could be decided by discussion and voting. In fact, the unity of the Volk found its incarnation in the Führer, endowed with absolute authority. Below the Führer, the party (which Hitler often called the “movement,” to distinguish it from democratic parties) supposedly was drawn from the best elements of the Volk and was in turn its safeguard.
Thus, the establishment of a Volksgemeinschaft was perhaps the main purpose and goal of the Nazi revolution. Its creation required the purification and increase of the German “race” as well as its biological separation from the Jews, whose infusion of evil into the German bloodstream, the Nazis claimed, served to pollute and undermine Germany’s well-being. Under National Socialism alone, the Nazis insisted, could Germans unify under “Ein Reich, ein Volk, ein Führer” (“One empire, one people, one leader”) and get on with the task of combating Germany’s real enemies: socialists, Jews, and those defeatists who had “stabbed in the back” the German army during World War I. This amalgam of fervent nationalism, anti-Semitism, and populism, not to mention the charismatic spell of Hitler’s oratory and the hypnotic pomp of Nazi rallies, was psychologically appealing to a populace gripped by the effects of the Great Depression.
Nazi efforts to purify and unify the German “race” were cloaked in an air of scientific respectability from the pseudoscience of eugenics and coated with a patina of legality through the structures of the Nazi police state. The Law for the Protection of Hereditary Health (July 14, 1933) allowed for the eventual sterilization of as many as two million people deemed unworthy of propagating. The Marriage Subsidy Law of July 1933 aimed to stimulate the “Aryan” birth rate by granting loans to newly married couples; these loans would be forgiven incrementally with the birth of each additional child. The Nazi idealization of mothers and the celebration of motherhood as a special service to the Reich had the same objective. Hitler spoke of an eventual doubling of the German population through these measures. The most notorious of the steps taken to purify the German “race” was also a milestone in the anti-Jewish legislation promulgated by the Nazis: the infamous Nürnberg Laws of September 1935, which forbade marriage or sexual relations between Jews and Germans and assigned to Jews a lower class of citizenship. The legal and political framework that was created to establish the Volksgemeinschaft was, in essence, the foundation upon which the Holocaust was carried out.