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Blood and soil

Blood and soil (German: Blut und Boden) is a nationalist slogan expressing Nazi Germany's ideal of a racially defined national body ("Blood") united with a settlement area ("Soil"). By it, rural and farm life forms are idealized as a counterweight to urban ones. It is tied to the contemporaneous German concept of Lebensraum, the belief that the German people were to expand into Eastern Europe, conquering and displacing the native Slavic and Baltic population via Generalplan Ost. [citation needed]

Logo of the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture, and the Blood and Soil ideology

"Blood and soil" was a key slogan of Nazi ideology. The nationalist ideology of the Artaman League and the writings of Richard Walther Darré guided agricultural policies which were later adopted by Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Himmler and Baldur von Schirach.

Rise edit

The German expression was coined in the late 19th century, in tracts which espoused racialism/racism and romantic nationalism. It produced a regionalist literature, with some social criticism.[1] This romantic attachment was widespread prior to the rise of the Nazis.[2] Major figures in 19th century German agrarian romanticism included Ernst Moritz Arndt and Wilhelm Heinrich Riehl, who argued that the peasantry represented the foundation of the German people and conservatism.[3]

Ultranationalists who predated the Nazis frequently supported country living by claiming that it was healthier than city living, with the Artaman League sending urban children to the countryside to work in the hope that they would be transformed into Wehrbauern (lit. "soldier peasants").[4]

Richard Walther Darré popularized the phrase at the time of the rise of Nazi Germany in his 1930 book Neuadel aus Blut und Boden (A New Nobility Based On Blood And Soil), in which he proposed the implementation of a systematic eugenics program, arguing that selective breeding would be a cure-all for the problems which were plaguing the state.[5] In 1928, he had also written the book, Peasantry as the Life Source of the Nordic Race, in which he presented his theory that the alleged difference between Nordic people and Southeastern Europeans was based in the Nordic people's connection to superior land.[6] Darré was an influential member of the Nazi Party and a noted race theorist who assisted the party greatly in gaining support among common Germans outside the cities. Prior to their ascension to power, Nazis called for a return from the cities to the countryside.[7] This agrarian sentiment allowed opposition to both the middle class and the aristocracy, and presented the farmer as a superior figure beside the moral swamp of the city.[8]

Nazi ideology edit

 
Richard Walther Darré addressing a meeting of the farming community in Goslar on 13 December 1937 standing in front of a Reichsadler and Swastika crossed with a sword and wheat sheaf labelled Blood and Soil (from the German Federal Archive)

The doctrine not only called for a "back to the land" approach and re-adoption of "rural values"; it held that German land was bound, perhaps mystically, to German blood.[9] Peasants were the Nazi cultural heroes, who held charge of German racial stock and German history—as when a memorial of a medieval peasant uprising was the occasion for a speech by Darré praising them as a force and purifier of German history.[10] Agrarianism was asserted as the only way to truly understand the "natural order."[11] Urban culture was decried as a weakness, labelled "asphalt culture" and partially coded as resulting from Jewish influence, and was depicted as a weakness that only the Führer's will could eliminate.[12]

The doctrine also contributed to the Nazi ideal of a woman: a sturdy peasant, who worked the land and bore strong children, contributing to praise for athletic women tanned by outdoor work.[13] That country women gave birth to more children than city ones was also a factor in the support.[14]

Carl Schmitt argued that a people would develop laws appropriate to its "blood and soil" because authenticity required loyalty to the Volk over abstract universals.[15]

Neues Volk displayed anti-Semitic demographic charts to deplore the alleged destruction of Aryan families' farmland and claim that the Jews were eradicating traditional German peasantry.[16] Posters for schools depicted the flight of people from the countryside to the city.[17] The German National Catechism, German propaganda widely used in schools, also spun tales of how farmers supposedly lost ancestral lands and had to move to the city, with all its demoralizing effects.[18]

Nazi implementation edit

The program received far more ideological and propaganda support than concrete changes.[19] When Gottfried Feder tried to settle workers in villages about decentralized factories, generals and Junkers successfully opposed him.[20] Generals objected because it interfered with rearmament, and Junkers because it would prevent their exploiting their estates for the international market.[21] It would also require the breakup of Junker estates for independent farmers, which was not implemented.[7]

The Reichserbhofgesetz, the State Hereditary Farm Law of 1933, implemented this ideology, stating that its aim was to: "preserve the farming community as the blood-source of the German people" (Das Bauerntum als Blutquelle des deutschen Volkes erhalten). Selected lands were declared hereditary and could not be mortgaged or alienated, and only these farmers were entitled to call themselves Bauern or "farmer peasant", a term the Nazis attempted to refurbish from a neutral or even pejorative to a positive term.[22] Regional custom was only allowed to decide whether the eldest or the youngest son was to be the heir. In areas where no particular custom prevailed, the youngest son was to be the heir.[23][24][25][26] During the Nazi era, the eldest son inherited the farm in most cases.[27] Priority was given to the patriline, so that, if there were no sons, the brothers and brothers' sons of the deceased peasant had precedence over the peasant's own daughters. The countryside was also regarded as the best place to raise infantry, and as having an organic harmony between landowner and peasant, unlike the "race chaos" of the industrial cities.[28] It also prevented Jewish people from farming: "Only those of German blood may be farmers."[29]

The concept was a factor in the requirement of a year of land service for members of Hitler Youth and the League of German Girls.[30] This period of compulsory service was required after completion of a student's basic education, before they could engage in advanced studies or become employed. Although working on a farm was not the only approved form of service, it was a common one; the aim was to bring young people back from the cities, in the hope that they would then stay "on the land".[31] In 1942, 600,000 boys and 1.4 million girls were sent to help bring in the harvest.[citation needed]

Lebensraum edit

 
Origin of German colonisers in annexed Polish territories. Was set in action "Heim ins Reich"

Blood and soil was one of the foundations of the concept of Lebensraum, "living space".[9] By expanding eastward and transforming those lands into breadbaskets, another blockade, such as that of World War I, would not cause massive food shortages, as that one had, a factor that aided the resonance of "Blood and soil" for the German population.[32] Even Alfred Rosenberg, not hostile to the Slavs as such, regarded their removal from this land, where Germans had once lived, as necessary because of the unity of blood and soil.[2] Mein Kampf prescribed as the unvarying aim of foreign policy the necessity of obtaining land and soil for the German people (again, "German people" defined by the Nazi Party as racially pure).[33]

While discussing the question of Lebensraum to the east, Hitler envisioned a Ukrainian "breadbasket" and expressed particular hostility to its "Russian" cities as hotbeds of Russianness and Communism, forbidding Germans to live in them and declaring that they should be destroyed in the war.[34] Even during the war itself, Hitler gave orders that Leningrad was to be razed with no consideration given for the survival and feeding of its population.[35] This also called for industry to die off in these regions.[36] The Wehrbauer, or soldier-peasants, who were to settle there were not to marry townswomen, but only peasant women who had not lived in towns.[1] This would also encourage large families.[37]

Furthermore, this land, held by "tough peasant races", would serve as a bulwark against attack from Asia.[38]

Influence on art edit

Fiction edit

Prior to the Nazi take-over, two popular genres were the Heimat-Roman, or regional novel, and Schollen-Roman, or novel of the soil, which was also known as Blut-und-Boden.[39] This literature was vastly increased, the term being contracted into "Blu-Bo", and developed a mysticism of unity.[1] It also combined war literature with the figure of the soldier-peasant, uncontaminated by the city.[1] These books were generally set in the nominal past, but their invocation of the passing of the seasons often gave them an air of timelessness.[40] "Blood and soil" novels and theater celebrated the farmer's life and their fertility, often mystically linking them.[41]

One of the anti-Semitic fabrications in the children's book Der Giftpilz was the claim that the Talmud described farming as the most lowly of occupations.[42] It also included an account of a Jewish financier forcing a German to sell his farm as seen by a neighbor boy; deeply distressed, the boy resolved never to let a Jew into his house, for which his father praised him, on the grounds that peasants must remember that Jews will always take their land.[43]

Fine art edit

During the Nazi period in Germany, one of the charges put forward against certain works of art was that "Art must not be isolated from blood and soil."[44] Failure to meet this standard resulted in the attachment of the label "degenerate art" to offending pieces. In art of Nazi Germany, both landscape paintings and figures reflected blood-and-soil ideology.[45] Indeed, some Nazi art exhibits were explicitly titled "Blood and Soil".[46] Artists frequently gave otherwise apolitical paintings such titles as "German Land" or "German Oak".[47] Rural themes were heavily favored in painting.[48] Landscape paintings were featured most heavily in the Greater German Art Exhibitions.[49] While drawing on German Romantic traditions, painted landscapes were expected to be firmly based on real landscapes, the German people's Lebensraum, without religious overtones.[50] Peasants were also popular images, promoting a simple life in harmony with nature.[51] This art showed no sign of the mechanization of farm work.[52] The farmer labored by hand, with effort and struggle.[53]

The acceptance of this art by the peasant family was also regarded as an important element.[54]

Film edit

Under Richard Walther Darré, The Staff Office of Agriculture produced the short propaganda film Blut und Boden, which was displayed at Nazi party meetings as well as in public cinemas throughout Germany. Other Blut und Boden films likewise stressed the commonality of Germanness and the countryside.[55] Die goldene Stadt has the heroine running away to the city, resulting in her pregnancy and abandonment; she drowns herself, and her last words beg her father to forgive her for not loving the countryside as he did.[56] The film Ewiger Wald (The Eternal Forest) depicted the forest as being beyond the vicissitudes of history, and the German people the same because they were rooted in the story; it depicted the forest sheltering ancient Aryan Germans, Arminius, and the Teutonic Knights, facing the peasants wars, being chopped up by war and industry, and being humiliated by occupation with black soldiers, but culminated in a neo-pagan May Day celebration.[57] In The Journey to Tilsit, the Polish seductress is portrayed as an obvious product of debased "asphalt culture" (urbanity) but the virtuous German wife is a country-dweller in traditional costume.[58] Many other commercial films of the Nazi era featured gratuitous, lingering shots of the German landscape and idealized 'Aryan' couples.[59]

Japanese usage edit

An Investigation of Global Policy with the Yamato Race as Nucleus made extensive use of the term, usually in quotation marks, and showing an extensive debt to the Nazi usage.[60]

Modern usage edit

North American white supremacists, white nationalists, Neo-Nazis and members of the alt-right have adopted the slogan. It gained widespread public prominence as a result of the August 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville, Virginia, when participants carrying torches marched on the University of Virginia campus on the night of 11 August 2017 and were recorded chanting the slogan, among others.[61] The rally was organized to protest the town's planned removal of a statue of Robert E. Lee.[62] The rally remained in national news through December 2018 thanks to the trial of James Alex Fields, a white supremacist who purposefully ran his car into a crowd of counter-protestors, killing 32-year old paralegal Heather Heyer.[63] The chant was also heard in October 2017 at the "White Lives Matter" rally in Shelbyville, Tennessee.[64]

In his 2018 farewell letter, US Senator John McCain stated that America is "a nation of ideals, not blood and soil", specifically rejecting such notions.[65]

In 2023, the leading Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump revived the rhetoric of "blood and soil" as part of his campaign to "Make America Great Again". At a campaign rally in New Hampshire, former President Trump decried immigrants stating that "They're poisoning the blood of the country. That's what they’ve done".[66]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Pierre Aycoberry The Nazi Question, p. 8 Pantheon Books New York 1981
  2. ^ a b Robert Cecil, The Myth of the Master Race: Alfred Rosenberg and Nazi Ideology p. 165 ISBN 0-396-06577-5. Marie-Luise Heuser, Was Grün begann endete blutigrot. Von der Naturromantik zu den Reagrarisierungs- und Entvölkerungsplänen der SA und SS, in: Dieter Hassenpflug (Hrsg.), Industrialismus und Ökoromantik. Geschichte und Perspektiven der Ökologisierung, Wiesbaden 1991, S. 43–62, ISBN 3-8244-4077-6.
  3. ^ Paul Brassley, Yves Segers, Leen Van Van Molle (ed.) (2012). War, Agriculture, and Food: Rural Europe from the 1930s to the 1950s. p. 197. Routledge, ISBN 0-415-52216-1
  4. ^ Heather Pringle, The Master Plan: Himmler's Scholars and the Holocaust, p. 39 ISBN 0-7868-6886-4
  5. ^ Barbara Miller Lane, Leila J. Rupp, Nazi Ideology Before 1933: A Documentation pp. 110–111 ISBN 0-292-75512-0
  6. ^ Gustavo Corni, "Richard Walther Darré: The Blood and Soil Ideologue," in Ronald Smelser and Rainer Zitelman, eds., The Nazi Elite (New York: New York University Press, 1993), p. 19.
  7. ^ a b Grunberger 1995, p. 151.
  8. ^ David Schoenbaum, Hitler's Social Revolution: Class and Status in Nazi Germany, 1933–1939, pp. 161–162, Garden City, NY Doubleday, 1966.
  9. ^ a b "Blood & Soil: Blut und Boden[permanent dead link]"
  10. ^ George Lachmann Mosse, Nazi culture: intellectual, cultural and social life in the Third Reich p. 134 ISBN 978-0-299-19304-1
  11. ^ "Not Empty Phrases, but Rather Clarity 2011-09-29 at the Wayback Machine"
  12. ^ Koonz 2003, p. 59.
  13. ^ Leila J. Rupp, Mobilizing Women for war, pp. 45–46, ISBN 0-691-04649-2 OCLC 3379930
  14. ^ Richard Bessel, Nazism and War, p. 61 ISBN 0-679-64094-0
  15. ^ Koonz 2003, p. 60.
  16. ^ Koonz 2003, p. 119.
  17. ^ "Nazi Racial School Charts Archived 2011-07-16 at Wikiwix"
  18. ^ "Nazi anti-Semitic Catechism 2011-06-08 at the Wayback Machine"
  19. ^ Grunberger 1995, p. 153.
  20. ^ Grunberger 1995, pp. 153–154.
  21. ^ Grunberger 1995, p. 154.
  22. ^ Grunberger 1995, pp. 156–157.
  23. ^ webmaster@verfassungen.de. "Reichserbhofgesetz (1933)". www.verfassungen.de. from the original on 18 October 2017. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  24. ^ Nationalsozialistische Agrarpolitik und Bauernalltag Written by Daniela Münkel, p. 116, at Google Books
  25. ^ Galbraith, J. K. (1939). "Hereditary Land in the Third Reich". The Quarterly Journal of Economics. 53 (3): 465–476. doi:10.2307/1884418. JSTOR 1884418.
  26. ^ Der praktische Nutzen der Rechtsgeschichte: Hans Hattenhauer zum 8 ... written by Jörn Eckert, Hans Hattenhauer, p. 326, at Google Books
  27. ^ German Law and Legislation https://archive.org/stream/GermanLawAndLegislation_762/GermanLawAndLegislation_djvu.txt
  28. ^ Robert Cecil, The Myth of the Master Race: Alfred Rosenberg and Nazi Ideology p. 166 ISBN 0-396-06577-5
  29. ^ Bytwerk, Randall. "Hitler Youth Handbook". www.calvin.edu. from the original on 10 April 2014. Retrieved 4 May 2018.
  30. ^ Grunberger 1995, pp. 159–160.
  31. ^ Lynn H. Nicholas, Cruel World: The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web pp. 110–111 ISBN 0-679-77663-X
  32. ^ Richard Bessel, Nazism and War, p. 60 ISBN 0-679-64094-0
  33. ^ Andrew Roberts The Storm of War, p. 144 ISBN 978-0-06-122859-9
  34. ^ Karel C. Berkhoff, Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule pp. 35–36 ISBN 0-674-01313-1
  35. ^ Edwin P. Hoyt, Hitler's War p. 187 ISBN 0-07-030622-2
  36. ^ Karel C. Berkhoff, Harvest of Despair: Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule p. 45 ISBN 0-674-01313-1
  37. ^ Gerhard L. Weinberg, Visions of Victory: The Hopes of Eight World War II Leaders p. 23 ISBN 0-521-85254-4
  38. ^ Michael Sontheimer, "When We Finish, Nobody Is Left Alive 2012-05-09 at the Wayback Machine" 05/27/2011 Spiegel
  39. ^ Grunberger 1995, p. 351.
  40. ^ Grunberger 1995, pp. 351–352.
  41. ^ Grunberger 1995, pp. 366–367.
  42. ^ "What is the Talmud? 2011-05-14 at the Wayback Machine"
  43. ^ "How a German Peasant Was Driven from House and Farm 2010-10-20 at the Wayback Machine"
  44. ^ Adam 1992, p. 67.
  45. ^ The Greater German Art Exhibitions 2010-01-31 at the Wayback Machine
  46. ^ Adam 1992, p. 66.
  47. ^ Adam 1992, p. 109.
  48. ^ Adam 1992, p. 111.
  49. ^ Frederic Spotts, Hitler and the Power of Aesthetics, p. 176 ISBN 1-58567-345-5
  50. ^ Adam 1992, p. 130.
  51. ^ Adam 1992, p. 132.
  52. ^ Adam 1992, p. 133.
  53. ^ Adam 1992, p. 134.
  54. ^ George Mosse, Nazi culture: intellectual, cultural and social life in the Third Reich p. 137 ISBN 978-0-299-19304-1
  55. ^ Romani 2001, p. 11.
  56. ^ Romani 2001, p. 86.
  57. ^ Pierre Aycoberry The Nazi Question, p. 11 Pantheon Books New York 1981
  58. ^ Romani 2001, pp. 84–86.
  59. ^ David Welch, Propaganda and the German Cinema, 1933–1945 (London: I.B. Tauris Publishers, 1984), p. 84.
  60. ^ John W. Dower, War Without Mercy: Race & Power in the Pacific War p. 265 ISBN 0-394-50030-X
  61. ^ Meg Wagner (12 August 2017). "'Blood and soil': Protesters chant Nazi slogan in Charlottesville". CNN. from the original on 2017-08-13. Retrieved 2017-08-14.
  62. ^ Hansen, Lauren (15 August 2017). "48 hours in Charlottesville: A visual timeline of Charlottesville's harrowing weekend of violence". THE WEEK. from the original on 26 August 2017. Retrieved 26 August 2017.
  63. ^ James, Mike (7 December 2018). "Neo-Nazi convicted of murder in Charlottesville car assault that killed Heather Heyer". USA Today. Retrieved 28 February 2019.
  64. ^ Tamburin, Adam; Wadhwani, Anita (28 October 2017). "Murfreesboro rally canceled as counterprotesters outnumber White Lives Matter activists". The Tennessean. Retrieved 29 October 2017.
  65. ^ "Sen. John McCain's words of farewell". Washington Week. PBS/WETA. 27 August 2018.
  66. ^ "Trump revives 'blood and soil' rhetoric at New Hampshire rally". The Independent. 17 December 2023.

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Gies, Horst (2019). Richard Walther Darré: Der "Reichsbauernführer", die nationalsozialistische "Blut und Boden"-Ideologie und Hitlers Machteroberung (in German). Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht. ISBN 978-3-412-51280-4.

External links edit

  • Fascist Ecology: The "Green Wing" of the Nazi Party and its Historical Antecedents
  • Blood and Soil (Harpers) (subscription required)

blood, soil, book, kiernan, blood, soil, book, german, blut, boden, nationalist, slogan, expressing, nazi, germany, ideal, racially, defined, national, body, blood, united, with, settlement, area, soil, rural, farm, life, forms, idealized, counterweight, urban. For the book by Ben Kiernan see Blood and Soil book Blood and soil German Blut und Boden is a nationalist slogan expressing Nazi Germany s ideal of a racially defined national body Blood united with a settlement area Soil By it rural and farm life forms are idealized as a counterweight to urban ones It is tied to the contemporaneous German concept of Lebensraum the belief that the German people were to expand into Eastern Europe conquering and displacing the native Slavic and Baltic population via Generalplan Ost citation needed Logo of the Reich Ministry of Food and Agriculture and the Blood and Soil ideology Blood and soil was a key slogan of Nazi ideology The nationalist ideology of the Artaman League and the writings of Richard Walther Darre guided agricultural policies which were later adopted by Adolf Hitler Heinrich Himmler and Baldur von Schirach Contents 1 Rise 2 Nazi ideology 3 Nazi implementation 3 1 Lebensraum 4 Influence on art 4 1 Fiction 4 2 Fine art 4 3 Film 5 Japanese usage 6 Modern usage 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksRise editThe German expression was coined in the late 19th century in tracts which espoused racialism racism and romantic nationalism It produced a regionalist literature with some social criticism 1 This romantic attachment was widespread prior to the rise of the Nazis 2 Major figures in 19th century German agrarian romanticism included Ernst Moritz Arndt and Wilhelm Heinrich Riehl who argued that the peasantry represented the foundation of the German people and conservatism 3 Ultranationalists who predated the Nazis frequently supported country living by claiming that it was healthier than city living with the Artaman League sending urban children to the countryside to work in the hope that they would be transformed into Wehrbauern lit soldier peasants 4 Richard Walther Darre popularized the phrase at the time of the rise of Nazi Germany in his 1930 book Neuadel aus Blut und Boden A New Nobility Based On Blood And Soil in which he proposed the implementation of a systematic eugenics program arguing that selective breeding would be a cure all for the problems which were plaguing the state 5 In 1928 he had also written the book Peasantry as the Life Source of the Nordic Race in which he presented his theory that the alleged difference between Nordic people and Southeastern Europeans was based in the Nordic people s connection to superior land 6 Darre was an influential member of the Nazi Party and a noted race theorist who assisted the party greatly in gaining support among common Germans outside the cities Prior to their ascension to power Nazis called for a return from the cities to the countryside 7 This agrarian sentiment allowed opposition to both the middle class and the aristocracy and presented the farmer as a superior figure beside the moral swamp of the city 8 Nazi ideology edit nbsp Richard Walther Darre addressing a meeting of the farming community in Goslar on 13 December 1937 standing in front of a Reichsadler and Swastika crossed with a sword and wheat sheaf labelled Blood and Soil from the German Federal Archive This section is missing information about the ideological relations to Ecofascism and Organicism Please expand the section to include this information Further details may exist on the talk page March 2021 The doctrine not only called for a back to the land approach and re adoption of rural values it held that German land was bound perhaps mystically to German blood 9 Peasants were the Nazi cultural heroes who held charge of German racial stock and German history as when a memorial of a medieval peasant uprising was the occasion for a speech by Darre praising them as a force and purifier of German history 10 Agrarianism was asserted as the only way to truly understand the natural order 11 Urban culture was decried as a weakness labelled asphalt culture and partially coded as resulting from Jewish influence and was depicted as a weakness that only the Fuhrer s will could eliminate 12 The doctrine also contributed to the Nazi ideal of a woman a sturdy peasant who worked the land and bore strong children contributing to praise for athletic women tanned by outdoor work 13 That country women gave birth to more children than city ones was also a factor in the support 14 Carl Schmitt argued that a people would develop laws appropriate to its blood and soil because authenticity required loyalty to the Volk over abstract universals 15 Neues Volk displayed anti Semitic demographic charts to deplore the alleged destruction of Aryan families farmland and claim that the Jews were eradicating traditional German peasantry 16 Posters for schools depicted the flight of people from the countryside to the city 17 The German National Catechism German propaganda widely used in schools also spun tales of how farmers supposedly lost ancestral lands and had to move to the city with all its demoralizing effects 18 Nazi implementation editThe program received far more ideological and propaganda support than concrete changes 19 When Gottfried Feder tried to settle workers in villages about decentralized factories generals and Junkers successfully opposed him 20 Generals objected because it interfered with rearmament and Junkers because it would prevent their exploiting their estates for the international market 21 It would also require the breakup of Junker estates for independent farmers which was not implemented 7 The Reichserbhofgesetz the State Hereditary Farm Law of 1933 implemented this ideology stating that its aim was to preserve the farming community as the blood source of the German people Das Bauerntum als Blutquelle des deutschen Volkes erhalten Selected lands were declared hereditary and could not be mortgaged or alienated and only these farmers were entitled to call themselves Bauern or farmer peasant a term the Nazis attempted to refurbish from a neutral or even pejorative to a positive term 22 Regional custom was only allowed to decide whether the eldest or the youngest son was to be the heir In areas where no particular custom prevailed the youngest son was to be the heir 23 24 25 26 During the Nazi era the eldest son inherited the farm in most cases 27 Priority was given to the patriline so that if there were no sons the brothers and brothers sons of the deceased peasant had precedence over the peasant s own daughters The countryside was also regarded as the best place to raise infantry and as having an organic harmony between landowner and peasant unlike the race chaos of the industrial cities 28 It also prevented Jewish people from farming Only those of German blood may be farmers 29 The concept was a factor in the requirement of a year of land service for members of Hitler Youth and the League of German Girls 30 This period of compulsory service was required after completion of a student s basic education before they could engage in advanced studies or become employed Although working on a farm was not the only approved form of service it was a common one the aim was to bring young people back from the cities in the hope that they would then stay on the land 31 In 1942 600 000 boys and 1 4 million girls were sent to help bring in the harvest citation needed Lebensraum edit Main article Lebensraum nbsp Origin of German colonisers in annexed Polish territories Was set in action Heim ins Reich Blood and soil was one of the foundations of the concept of Lebensraum living space 9 By expanding eastward and transforming those lands into breadbaskets another blockade such as that of World War I would not cause massive food shortages as that one had a factor that aided the resonance of Blood and soil for the German population 32 Even Alfred Rosenberg not hostile to the Slavs as such regarded their removal from this land where Germans had once lived as necessary because of the unity of blood and soil 2 Mein Kampf prescribed as the unvarying aim of foreign policy the necessity of obtaining land and soil for the German people again German people defined by the Nazi Party as racially pure 33 While discussing the question of Lebensraum to the east Hitler envisioned a Ukrainian breadbasket and expressed particular hostility to its Russian cities as hotbeds of Russianness and Communism forbidding Germans to live in them and declaring that they should be destroyed in the war 34 Even during the war itself Hitler gave orders that Leningrad was to be razed with no consideration given for the survival and feeding of its population 35 This also called for industry to die off in these regions 36 The Wehrbauer or soldier peasants who were to settle there were not to marry townswomen but only peasant women who had not lived in towns 1 This would also encourage large families 37 Furthermore this land held by tough peasant races would serve as a bulwark against attack from Asia 38 Influence on art editFiction edit Prior to the Nazi take over two popular genres were the Heimat Roman or regional novel and Schollen Roman or novel of the soil which was also known as Blut und Boden 39 This literature was vastly increased the term being contracted into Blu Bo and developed a mysticism of unity 1 It also combined war literature with the figure of the soldier peasant uncontaminated by the city 1 These books were generally set in the nominal past but their invocation of the passing of the seasons often gave them an air of timelessness 40 Blood and soil novels and theater celebrated the farmer s life and their fertility often mystically linking them 41 One of the anti Semitic fabrications in the children s book Der Giftpilz was the claim that the Talmud described farming as the most lowly of occupations 42 It also included an account of a Jewish financier forcing a German to sell his farm as seen by a neighbor boy deeply distressed the boy resolved never to let a Jew into his house for which his father praised him on the grounds that peasants must remember that Jews will always take their land 43 Fine art edit During the Nazi period in Germany one of the charges put forward against certain works of art was that Art must not be isolated from blood and soil 44 Failure to meet this standard resulted in the attachment of the label degenerate art to offending pieces In art of Nazi Germany both landscape paintings and figures reflected blood and soil ideology 45 Indeed some Nazi art exhibits were explicitly titled Blood and Soil 46 Artists frequently gave otherwise apolitical paintings such titles as German Land or German Oak 47 Rural themes were heavily favored in painting 48 Landscape paintings were featured most heavily in the Greater German Art Exhibitions 49 While drawing on German Romantic traditions painted landscapes were expected to be firmly based on real landscapes the German people s Lebensraum without religious overtones 50 Peasants were also popular images promoting a simple life in harmony with nature 51 This art showed no sign of the mechanization of farm work 52 The farmer labored by hand with effort and struggle 53 The acceptance of this art by the peasant family was also regarded as an important element 54 Film edit Under Richard Walther Darre The Staff Office of Agriculture produced the short propaganda film Blut und Boden which was displayed at Nazi party meetings as well as in public cinemas throughout Germany Other Blut und Boden films likewise stressed the commonality of Germanness and the countryside 55 Die goldene Stadt has the heroine running away to the city resulting in her pregnancy and abandonment she drowns herself and her last words beg her father to forgive her for not loving the countryside as he did 56 The film Ewiger Wald The Eternal Forest depicted the forest as being beyond the vicissitudes of history and the German people the same because they were rooted in the story it depicted the forest sheltering ancient Aryan Germans Arminius and the Teutonic Knights facing the peasants wars being chopped up by war and industry and being humiliated by occupation with black soldiers but culminated in a neo pagan May Day celebration 57 In The Journey to Tilsit the Polish seductress is portrayed as an obvious product of debased asphalt culture urbanity but the virtuous German wife is a country dweller in traditional costume 58 Many other commercial films of the Nazi era featured gratuitous lingering shots of the German landscape and idealized Aryan couples 59 Japanese usage editAn Investigation of Global Policy with the Yamato Race as Nucleus made extensive use of the term usually in quotation marks and showing an extensive debt to the Nazi usage 60 Modern usage editNorth American white supremacists white nationalists Neo Nazis and members of the alt right have adopted the slogan It gained widespread public prominence as a result of the August 2017 Unite the Right rally in Charlottesville Virginia when participants carrying torches marched on the University of Virginia campus on the night of 11 August 2017 and were recorded chanting the slogan among others 61 The rally was organized to protest the town s planned removal of a statue of Robert E Lee 62 The rally remained in national news through December 2018 thanks to the trial of James Alex Fields a white supremacist who purposefully ran his car into a crowd of counter protestors killing 32 year old paralegal Heather Heyer 63 The chant was also heard in October 2017 at the White Lives Matter rally in Shelbyville Tennessee 64 In his 2018 farewell letter US Senator John McCain stated that America is a nation of ideals not blood and soil specifically rejecting such notions 65 In 2023 the leading Republican Presidential candidate Donald Trump revived the rhetoric of blood and soil as part of his campaign to Make America Great Again At a campaign rally in New Hampshire former President Trump decried immigrants stating that They re poisoning the blood of the country That s what they ve done 66 See also editEthnic nationalism Irredentism Jus soli Jus sanguinis Nativism politics Race human categorization Reichsnahrstand Volkisch movement Volkstaat White ethnostateReferences edit a b c d Pierre Aycoberry The Nazi Question p 8 Pantheon Books New York 1981 a b Robert Cecil The Myth of the Master Race Alfred Rosenberg and Nazi Ideology p 165 ISBN 0 396 06577 5 Marie Luise Heuser Was Grun begann endete blutigrot Von der Naturromantik zu den Reagrarisierungs und Entvolkerungsplanen der SA und SS in Dieter Hassenpflug Hrsg Industrialismus und Okoromantik Geschichte und Perspektiven der Okologisierung Wiesbaden 1991 S 43 62 ISBN 3 8244 4077 6 Paul Brassley Yves Segers Leen Van Van Molle ed 2012 War Agriculture and Food Rural Europe from the 1930s to the 1950s p 197 Routledge ISBN 0 415 52216 1 Heather Pringle The Master Plan Himmler s Scholars and the Holocaust p 39 ISBN 0 7868 6886 4 Barbara Miller Lane Leila J Rupp Nazi Ideology Before 1933 A Documentation pp 110 111 ISBN 0 292 75512 0 Gustavo Corni Richard Walther Darre The Blood and Soil Ideologue in Ronald Smelser and Rainer Zitelman eds The Nazi Elite New York New York University Press 1993 p 19 a b Grunberger 1995 p 151 David Schoenbaum Hitler s Social Revolution Class and Status in Nazi Germany 1933 1939 pp 161 162 Garden City NY Doubleday 1966 a b Blood amp Soil Blut und Boden permanent dead link George Lachmann Mosse Nazi culture intellectual cultural and social life in the Third Reich p 134 ISBN 978 0 299 19304 1 Not Empty Phrases but Rather Clarity Archived 2011 09 29 at the Wayback Machine Koonz 2003 p 59 Leila J Rupp Mobilizing Women for war pp 45 46 ISBN 0 691 04649 2 OCLC 3379930 Richard Bessel Nazism and War p 61 ISBN 0 679 64094 0 Koonz 2003 p 60 Koonz 2003 p 119 Nazi Racial School Charts Archived 2011 07 16 at Wikiwix Nazi anti Semitic Catechism Archived 2011 06 08 at the Wayback Machine Grunberger 1995 p 153 Grunberger 1995 pp 153 154 Grunberger 1995 p 154 Grunberger 1995 pp 156 157 webmaster verfassungen de Reichserbhofgesetz 1933 www verfassungen de Archived from the original on 18 October 2017 Retrieved 4 May 2018 Nationalsozialistische Agrarpolitik und Bauernalltag Written by Daniela Munkel p 116 at Google Books Galbraith J K 1939 Hereditary Land in the Third Reich The Quarterly Journal of Economics 53 3 465 476 doi 10 2307 1884418 JSTOR 1884418 Der praktische Nutzen der Rechtsgeschichte Hans Hattenhauer zum 8 written by Jorn Eckert Hans Hattenhauer p 326 at Google Books German Law and Legislation https archive org stream GermanLawAndLegislation 762 GermanLawAndLegislation djvu txt Robert Cecil The Myth of the Master Race Alfred Rosenberg and Nazi Ideology p 166 ISBN 0 396 06577 5 Bytwerk Randall Hitler Youth Handbook www calvin edu Archived from the original on 10 April 2014 Retrieved 4 May 2018 Grunberger 1995 pp 159 160 Lynn H Nicholas Cruel World The Children of Europe in the Nazi Web pp 110 111 ISBN 0 679 77663 X Richard Bessel Nazism and War p 60 ISBN 0 679 64094 0 Andrew Roberts The Storm of War p 144 ISBN 978 0 06 122859 9 Karel C Berkhoff Harvest of Despair Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule pp 35 36 ISBN 0 674 01313 1 Edwin P Hoyt Hitler s War p 187 ISBN 0 07 030622 2 Karel C Berkhoff Harvest of Despair Life and Death in Ukraine Under Nazi Rule p 45 ISBN 0 674 01313 1 Gerhard L Weinberg Visions of Victory The Hopes of Eight World War II Leaders p 23 ISBN 0 521 85254 4 Michael Sontheimer When We Finish Nobody Is Left Alive Archived 2012 05 09 at the Wayback Machine 05 27 2011 Spiegel Grunberger 1995 p 351 Grunberger 1995 pp 351 352 Grunberger 1995 pp 366 367 What is the Talmud Archived 2011 05 14 at the Wayback Machine How a German Peasant Was Driven from House and Farm Archived 2010 10 20 at the Wayback Machine Adam 1992 p 67 The Greater German Art Exhibitions Archived 2010 01 31 at the Wayback Machine Adam 1992 p 66 Adam 1992 p 109 Adam 1992 p 111 Frederic Spotts Hitler and the Power of Aesthetics p 176 ISBN 1 58567 345 5 Adam 1992 p 130 Adam 1992 p 132 Adam 1992 p 133 Adam 1992 p 134 George Mosse Nazi culture intellectual cultural and social life in the Third Reich p 137 ISBN 978 0 299 19304 1 Romani 2001 p 11 Romani 2001 p 86 Pierre Aycoberry The Nazi Question p 11 Pantheon Books New York 1981 Romani 2001 pp 84 86 David Welch Propaganda and the German Cinema 1933 1945 London I B Tauris Publishers 1984 p 84 John W Dower War Without Mercy Race amp Power in the Pacific War p 265 ISBN 0 394 50030 X Meg Wagner 12 August 2017 Blood and soil Protesters chant Nazi slogan in Charlottesville CNN Archived from the original on 2017 08 13 Retrieved 2017 08 14 Hansen Lauren 15 August 2017 48 hours in Charlottesville A visual timeline of Charlottesville s harrowing weekend of violence THE WEEK Archived from the original on 26 August 2017 Retrieved 26 August 2017 James Mike 7 December 2018 Neo Nazi convicted of murder in Charlottesville car assault that killed Heather Heyer USA Today Retrieved 28 February 2019 Tamburin Adam Wadhwani Anita 28 October 2017 Murfreesboro rally canceled as counterprotesters outnumber White Lives Matter activists The Tennessean Retrieved 29 October 2017 Sen John McCain s words of farewell Washington Week PBS WETA 27 August 2018 Trump revives blood and soil rhetoric at New Hampshire rally The Independent 17 December 2023 Bibliography edit Adam Peter 1992 Art of the Third Reich H N Abrams ISBN 978 0 8109 1912 9 Grunberger Richard 1995 The 12 year Reich A Social History Of Nazi Germany 1933 1945 Hachette Books ISBN 978 0 306 80660 5 Koonz Claudia 2003 The Nazi Conscience Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01172 4 Romani Cinzia 2001 Tainted Goddesses Female Film Stars of the Third Reich Gremese ISBN 978 88 7301 463 8 Further reading editGies Horst 2019 Richard Walther Darre Der Reichsbauernfuhrer die nationalsozialistische Blut und Boden Ideologie und Hitlers Machteroberung in German Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 978 3 412 51280 4 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Blood and Soil The Doctrine of Blut und Boden Fascist Ecology The Green Wing of the Nazi Party and its Historical Antecedents Blood and Soil Harpers subscription required Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Blood and soil amp oldid 1221259797, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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