Life in Nazi Germany 1933-1939 - OCR ANazi policies towards women
Nazi Germany was a totalitarian state, meaning all aspects of Germans鈥 lives were controlled by the government. It was also one in which those deemed 鈥榚nemies of the state鈥 were ruthlessly persecuted.
The Nazis had clear ideas of what they wanted from women. They were expected to stay at home, look after the family and produce children in order to secure the future of the AryanA person of European descent - not Jewish - often with blond hair and blue eyes. The Nazis viewed Aryans as the superior human race. race.
Hitler believed women鈥檚 lives should revolve round the three 'Ks':
Goebbels said: The mission of women is to be beautiful and to bring children into the world.
Marriage and family
Hitler wanted a high birth rate so that the Aryan population would grow. He tried to achieve this by:
introducing the Law for the Encouragement of Marriage which gave newlywed couples a loan of 1,000 marks, and allowed them to keep 250 marks for each child they had
giving an award called the Mother鈥檚 Cross to women who had large numbers of children
allowing women to volunteer to have a baby for an Aryan member of the SS
Employment
Measures were introduced which strongly discouraged women from working, including:
the introduction of the Law for the Reduction of Unemployment, which gave women financial incentives to stay at home
not conscriptionA system where people are required to join a country鈥檚 war effort by law. women to help in the war effort until 1943
However, female labour was cheap and between 1933 and 1939 the number of women in employment actually rose by 2.4 million. As the German economy grew, women were needed in the workplace. Germany also needed women in work as production and manufacturing geared up in readiness for war.
Appearance
Women were expected to emulate traditional German peasant fashions - plain peasant costumes, hair in plaits or buns and flat shoes. They were not expected to wear make-up or trousers, dye their hair or smoke in public. They were discouraged from staying slim, because it was thought that thin women had trouble giving birth.