Adolf Hitler
Introduction
Adolf Hitler was born in Austria on April 20, 1889. From an early age he wanted to be an artist, though he also considered entering the clerical life and becoming a priest (Shirer). His father was a practical man and wanted to see his son enter into government service and eke out a decent living for himself. His father had not had much luck with work, having tried farming and various other activities, and had been required to keep moving his family from place to place. Hitler did not have a practical vision, however. He was moved by a romantic vision of life and, deciding against the applying to the clergy, he insisted on becoming an artist, much to his father’s displeasure. Hitler relied upon his mother for moral support and when his father died in 1903, Hitler’s mother permitted him to leave school and pursue training as an artist in Vienna. His mother’s death in 1907 devastated the young man. He now had no parents and at 18 was without income. He lived in homeless shelters, never giving up his dream to be an artist. He painted watercolors and sketched, and many of these works still survive and show genuine charm. In Vienna, Hitler grew into a great fan of Wagner, commonly seen as the musical soul of contemporary Germany. Wagner infused his operas with epic splendor and romantic grandeur, and this would ultimately inform Hitler in his later passion to lead and transform Germany from a beaten down state following WWI back into a self-sustainable, proud nation in the 1930s. Most of all, however, it was Hitler’s intense nationalism, his fervent love for his country and his hatred for those who, he perceived, were destroying it from within, that compelled him to take action and become the ardent leader that he became. If there is one style of leadership that best applies to Hitler it is the visionary/charismatic leadership style.
Why Hitler Emerged as a Leader: Background
Having no sense of place or purpose in his young adulthood, Hitler found meaning in the armed forces when WWI broke out and Germany found itself fighting for its life. Hitler’s career as an artist had failed to materialize as the young man hoped, but now serving in the war he found a new passion as a soldier. He was awarded the Iron Cross for bravery twice, once in 1914 and once in 1918. He also received the Black Wound Badge in 1918. He was wounded twice, once by an exploding shell at the Battle of the Somme in 1916, and once in 1918 when temporarily blinded by mustard gas. It was while recovering in a hospital for the latter that he learned the war had ended and that Germany had surrendered. This news devastated and angered him more than anything in his whole life. He was convinced that Germany had been on the verge of victory against her enemies. He looked back on his time as a soldier as the best time of his life. He was known for his discipline—he never smoked or drank alcohol—and he was always willing to take on dangerous missions that running messages through combat zones. The war shaped Hitler immensely and gave him the confidence in himself that he would draw upon later in his speeches that would animate Germans during the years of the Weimar Republic.
After the war, Germany was forced to sign the Treaty of Versailles, which basically crippled Germany and obliged the nation to pay exploitative war reparations to the Allies. It had to give up vast territories of land and its overseas colonies. Millions of Germans were out of work and the hyperinflation of its currency caused poverty unlike anything seen before in the...
Works Cited
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Degrelle, Leon. Hitler Democrat. DC: Barnes Review, 2012.
Paxton, Robert. Anatomy of Fascism. NY: Vintage, 2005.
Shirer, William. The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. Simon & Schuster, 1960.
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