By George Watson
Sunday, November 22, 1998
In April 1945, when Adolf Hitler died by his own hand in
the rubble of Berlin, nobody was much interested in what he had once believed.
That was to be expected. War is no time for reflection, and what Hitler had
done was so shattering, and so widely known through images of naked bodies
piled high in mass graves, that little or no attention could readily be paid to
National Socialism as an idea. It was hard to think of it as an idea at all.
Hitler, who had once looked a crank or a clown, was exposed as the leader of a
gang of thugs, and the world was content to know no more than that.
Half a century on, there is much to be said. Even
thuggery can have its reasons, and the materials that have newly appeared,
though they may not transform judgement, undoubtedly enrich and deepen it.
Confidants of Hitler. such as the late Albert Speer, have published their
reminiscences; his wartime table-talk is a book; early revelations like Hermann
Rauschning's Hitler Speaks of 1939 have been validated by painstaking research,
and the notes of dead Nazis like Otto Wagener have been edited, along with a
full text of Goebbels's diary.
It is now clear beyond all reasonable doubt that Hitler
and his associates believed they were socialists, and that others, including
democratic socialists, thought so too. The title of National Socialism was not
hypocritical. The evidence before 1945 was more private than public, which is
perhaps significant in itself. In public Hitler was always anti-Marxist, and in
an age in which the Soviet Union was the only socialist state on earth, and
with anti-Bolshevism a large part of his popular appeal, he may have been
understandably reluctant to speak openly of his sources. His megalomania, in
any case, would have prevented him from calling himself anyone's disciple. That
led to an odd and paradoxical alliance between modern historians and the mind
of a dead dictator. Many recent analysts have fastidiously refused to study the
mind of Hitler; and they accept, as unquestioningly as many Nazis did in the
1930s, the slogan "Crusade against Marxism" as a summary of his views.
An age in which fascism has become a term of abuse is unlikely to analyse it
profoundly.
His private conversations, however, though they do not
overturn his reputation as an anti-Communist, qualify it heavily. Hermann
Rauschning, for example, a Danzig Nazi who knew Hitler before and after his
accession to power in 1933, tells how in private Hitler acknowledged his
profound debt to the Marxian tradition. "I have learned a great deal from
Marxism" he once remarked, "as I do not hesitate to admit". He was
proud of a knowledge of Marxist texts acquired in his student days before the
First World War and later in a Bavarian prison, in 1924, after the failure of
the Munich putsch. The trouble with Weimar Republic politicians, he told Otto
Wagener at much the same time, was that "they had never even read
Marx", implying that no one who had failed to read so important an author
could even begin to understand the modern world; in consequence, he went on,
they imagined that the October revolution in 1917 had been "a private
Russian affair", whereas in fact it had changed the whole course of human
history! His differences with the communists, he explained, were less
ideological than tactical. German communists he had known before he took power,
he told Rauschning, thought politics meant talking and writing. They were mere
pamphleteers, whereas "I have put into practice what these peddlers and
pen pushers have timidly begun", adding revealingly that "the whole
of National Socialism" was based on Marx.
That is a devastating remark and it is blunter than
anything in his speeches or in Mein Kampf.; though even in the autobiography he
observes that his own doctrine was fundamentally distinguished from the Marxist
by reason that it recognised the significance of race - implying, perhaps, that
it might otherwise easily look like a derivative. Without race, he went on,
National Socialism "would really do nothing more than compete with Marxism
on its own ground". Marxism was internationalist. The proletariat, as the
famous slogan goes, has no fatherland. Hitler had a fatherland, and it was
everything to him.
Yet privately, and perhaps even publicly, he conceded
that National Socialism was based on Marx. On reflection, it makes consistent
sense. The basis of a dogma is not the dogma, much as the foundation of a
building is not the building, and in numerous ways National Socialism was based
on Marxism. It was a theory of history and not, like liberalism or social
democracy, a mere agenda of legislative proposals. And it was a theory of
human, not just of German, history, a heady vision that claimed to understand
the whole past and future of mankind. Hitler's discovery was that socialism
could be national as well as international. There could be a national
socialism. That is how he reportedly talked to his fellow Nazi Otto Wagener in
the early 1930s. The socialism of the future would lie in "the community
of the volk", not in internationalism, he claimed, and his task was to
"convert the German volk to socialism without simply killing off the old
individualists", meaning the entrepreneurial and managerial classes left
from the age of liberalism. They should be used, not destroyed. The state could
control, after all, without owning, guided by a single party, the economy could
be planned and directed without dispossessing the propertied classes.
That realisation was crucial. To dispossess, after all,
as the Russian civil war had recently shown, could only mean Germans fighting
Germans, and Hitler believed there was a quicker and more efficient route.
There could be socialism without civil war.
Now that the age of individualism had ended, he told
Wagener, the task was to "find and travel the road from individualism to
socialism without revolution". Marx and Lenin had seen the right goal, but
chosen the wrong route - a long and needlessly painful route - and, in
destroying the bourgeois and the kulak, Lenin had turned Russia into a grey
mass of undifferentiated humanity, a vast anonymous horde of the dispossessed;
they had "averaged downwards"; whereas the National Socialist state
would raise living standards higher than capitalism had ever known. It is plain
that Hitler and his associates meant their claim to socialism to be taken
seriously; they took it seriously themselves.
For half a century, none the less, Hitler has been
portrayed, if not as a conservative - the word is many shades too pale - at
least as an extreme instance of the political right. It is doubtful if he or
his friends would have recognised the description. His own thoughts gave no
prominence to left and right, and he is unlikely to have seen much point in any
linear theory of politics. Since he had solved for all time the enigma of
history, as he imagined, National Socialism was unique. The elements might be
at once diverse and familiar, but the mix was his.
Hitler's mind, it has often been noticed, was in many
ways backward-looking: not medievalising, on the whole, like Victorian
socialists such as Ruskin and William Morris, but fascinated by a far remoter
past of heroic virtue. It is now widely forgotten that much the same could be
said of Marx and Engels.
It is the issue of race, above all, that for half a
century has prevented National Socialism from being seen as socialist. The
proletariat may have no fatherland, as Lenin said. But there were still, in
Marx's view, races that would have to be exterminated. That is a view he
published in January-February 1849 in an article by Engels called "The
Hungarian Struggle" in Marx's journal the Neue Rheinische Zeitung, and the
point was recalled by socialists down to the rise of Hitler. It is now becoming
possible to believe that Auschwitz was socialist-inspired. The Marxist theory
of history required and demanded genocide for reasons implicit in its claim
that feudalism was already giving place to capitalism, which must in its turn
be superseded by socialism. Entire races would be left behind after a workers'
revolution, feudal remnants in a socialist age; and since they could not
advance two steps at a time, they would have to be killed. They were racial
trash, as Engels called them, and fit only for the dung-heap of history.
That brutal view, which a generation later was to be
fortified by the new pseudo-science of eugenics, was by the last years of the
century a familiar part of the socialist tradition, though it is understandable
that since the liberation of Auschwitz in January 1945 socialists have been
eager to forget it. But there is plenty of evidence in the writings of HG
Wells, Jack London, Havelock Ellis, the Webbs and others to the effect that
socialist commentators did not flinch from drastic measures. The idea of ethnic
cleansing was orthodox socialism for a century and more.
So the socialist intelligentsia of the western world
entered the First World War publicly committed to racial purity and white
domination and no less committed to violence. Socialism offered them a blank
cheque, and its licence to kill included genocide. In 1933, in a preface to On
the Rocks, for example, Bernard Shaw publicly welcomed the exterminatory
principle which the Soviet Union had already adopted. Socialists could now take
pride in a state that had at last found the courage to act, though some still
felt that such action should be kept a secret. In 1932 Beatrice Webb remarked
at a tea-party what "very bad stage management" it had been to allow
a party of British visitors to the Ukraine to see cattle-trucks full of
starving "enemies of the state" at a local station. "Ridiculous
to let you see them", said Webb, already an eminent admirer of the Soviet
system. "The English are always so sentimental" adding, with
assurance: "You cannot make an omelette without breaking eggs." A few
years later, in 1935, a Social Democratic government in Sweden began a eugenic
programme for the compulsory sterilisation of gypsies, the backward and the
unfit, and continued it until after the war.
The claim that Hitler cannot really have been a socialist
because he advocated and practised genocide suggests a monumental failure,
then, in the historical memory. Only socialists in that age advocated or
practised genocide, at least in Europe, and from the first years of his
political career Hitler was proudly aware of the fact. Addressing his own
party, the NSDAP, in Munich in August 1920, he pledged his faith in
socialist-racialism: "If we are socialists, then we must definitely be
anti-semites - and the opposite, in that case, is Materialism and Mammonism,
which we seek to oppose." There was loud applause. Hitler went on:
"How, as a socialist, can you not be an anti-semite?" The point was
widely understood, and it is notable that no German socialist in the 1930s or
earlier ever sought to deny Hitler's right to call himself a socialist on
grounds of racial policy. In an age when the socialist tradition of genocide
was familiar, that would have sounded merely absurd. The tradition, what is
more, was unique. In the European century that began in the 1840s from Engels's
article of 1849 down to the death of Hitler, everyone who advocated genocide
called himself a socialist, and no exception has been found.
The first reactions to National Socialism outside Germany
are now largely forgotten. They were highly confused, for the rise of fascism
had caught the European left by surprise. There was nothing in Marxist
scripture to predict it and must have seemed entirely natural to feel baffled.
Where had it all come from? Harold Nicolson, a democratic socialist, and after
1935 a Member of the House of Commons, conscientiously studied a pile of
pamphlets in his hotel room in Rome in January 1932 and decided judiciously
that fascism (Italian-style) was a kind of militarised socialism; though it
destroyed liberty, he concluded in his diary, "it is certainly a socialist
experiment in that it destroys individuality". The Moscow view that
fascism was the last phase of capitalism, though already proposed, was not yet
widely heard. Richard remarked in a 1934 BBC talk that many students in Nazi
Germany believed they were "digging the foundations of a new German
socialism".
By the outbreak of civil war in Spain, in 1936, sides had
been taken, and by then most western intellectuals were certain that Stalin was
left and Hitler was right. That sudden shift of view has not been explained,
and perhaps cannot be explained, except on grounds of argumentative
convenience. Single binary oppositions - cops-and-robbers or cowboys-and-indians
- are always satisfying. The Molotov-Ribbentrop pact was seen by hardly anybody
as an attempt to restore the unity of socialism. A wit at the British Foreign
Office is said to have remarked that all the "Isms" were now
"Wasms", and the general view was that nothing more than a cynical
marriage of convenience had taken place.
By the outbreak of world war in 1939 the idea that Hitler
was any sort of socialist was almost wholly dead. One may salute here an odd
but eminent exception. Writing as a committed socialist just after the fall of
France in 1940, in The Lion and the Unicorn, Orwell saw the disaster as a
"physical debunking of capitalism", it showed once and for all that
"a planned economy is stronger than a planless one", though he was in
no doubt that Hitler's victory was a tragedy for France and for mankind. The
planned economy had long stood at the head of socialist demands; and National
Socialism, Orwell argued, had taken from socialism "just such features as
will make it efficient for war purposes". Hitler had already come close to
socialising Germany. "Internally, Germany has a good deal in common with a
socialist state." These words were written just before Hitler's attack on
the Soviet Union. Orwell believed that Hitler would go down in history as
"the man who made the City of London laugh on the wrong side of its
face" by forcing financiers to see that planning works and that an
economic free-for-all does not.
At its height, Hitler's appeal transcended party
division. Shortly before they fell out in the summer of 1933, Hitler uttered
sentiments in front of Otto Wagener, which were published after his death in
1971 as a biography by an unrepentant Nazi. Wagener's Hitler: Memoirs of a
Confidant, composed in a British prisoner-of-war camp, did not appear until
1978 in the original German, and arrived in English, without much acclaim, as
recently as 1985. Hitler's remembered talk offers a vision of a future that
draws together many of the strands that once made utopian socialism
irresistibly appealing to an age bred out of economic depression and
cataclysmic wars; it mingles, as Victorian socialism had done before it, an
intense economic radicalism with a romantic enthusiasm for a vanished age
before capitalism had degraded heroism into sordid greed and threatened the
traditional institutions of the family and the tribe.
Socialism, Hitler told Wagener shortly after he seized
power, was not a recent invention of the human spirit, and when he read the New
Testament he was often reminded of socialism in the words of Jesus. The trouble
was that the long ages of Christianity had failed to act on the Master's
teachings. Mary and Mary Magdalen, Hitler went on in a surprising flight of
imagination, had found an empty tomb, and it would be the task of National Socialism
to give body at long last to the sayings of a great teacher: "We are the
first to exhume these teachings." The Jew, Hitler told Wagener, was not a
socialist, and the Jesus they crucified was the true creator of socialist
redemption. As for communists, he opposed them because they created mere herds,
Soviet-style, without individual life, and his own ideal was "the
socialism of nations" rather than the international socialism of Marx and
Lenin. The one and only problem of the age, he told Wagener, was to liberate
labour and replace the rule of capital over labour with the rule of labour over
capital.
These are highly socialist sentiments, and if Wagener
reports his master faithfully they leave no doubt about the conclusion: that
Hitler was an unorthodox Marxist who knew his sources and knew just how
unorthodox the way in which he handled them was. He was a dissident socialist.
His programme was at once nostalgic and radical. It proposed to accomplish
something that Christians had failed to act on and that communists before him
had attempted and bungled. "What Marxism, Leninism and Stalinism failed to
accomplish," he told Wagener, "we shall be in a position to
achieve."
That was the National Socialist vision. It was seductive,
at once traditional and new. Like all so- cialist views it was ultimately
moral, and its economic and racial policies were seen as founded on universal
moral laws. By the time such conversations saw the light of print, regrettably,
the world had put such matters far behind it, and it was less than ever ready
to listen to the sayings of a crank or a clown.
That is a pity. The crank, after all, had once offered a
vision of the future that had made a Victorian doctrine of history look
exciting to millions. Now that socialism is a discarded idea, such excitement
is no doubt hard to recapture. To relive it again, in imagination, one might
look at an entry in Goebbels's diaries. On 16 June 1941, five days before
Hitler attacked the Soviet Union, Goebbels exulted, in the privacy of his diary,
in the victory over Bolshevism that he believed would quickly follow. There
would be no restoration of the tsars, he remarked to himself, after Russia had
been conquered. But Jewish Bolshevism would be uprooted in Russia and
"real socialism" planted in its place - "Der echte
Sozialismus". Goebbels was a liar, to be sure, but no one can explain why
he would lie to his diaries. And to the end of his days he believed that
socialism was what National Socialism was about.
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