The whole purpose of public relations is to dupe the world. It is more surprising when it fails. At the same time we had Stalin' socialist fantasy which sucked in a generation of scholarship in the liberal arts and in economics particularly. Add in that Nazism claimed to be socialist (with a German face) and you see were this goes.
The adept use of his living arrangements kept everyone asleep until the bombs began to fall in earnest and the inevitability a war was apparent.
In the end, the public wants to believe the best even when it is completely obvious that the protagonist is not to be trusted at all. Recall that Saddam Husein ultimately died because no one could trust him. We run the same risks with the Iranians as well. There is no surer road to war.
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Hitler at Home: How the Nazi PR Machine Duped the World
Monday, 21 September 2015 00:00
By Despina Stratigakos,
http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/32885-hitler-at-home-how-the-nazi-pr-machine-duped-the-world
On March 16, 1941 - with European cities ablaze and Jews being herded
into ghettos - The New York Times Magazine featured an illustrated
story on Adolf Hitler's retreat in the Berchtesgaden Alps.
Adopting a neutral tone, correspondent C. Brooks Peters noted that
historians of the future would do well to look at the importance of "the
Führer's private and personal domain," where discussions about the war
front were interspersed with "strolls with his three sheep dogs along
majestic mountain trails."
For more than 70 years, we have ignored Peters's call to take
Hitler's domestic spaces seriously. When we think of the stage sets of
Hitler's political power, we are more apt to envision the Nuremberg
Rally Grounds than his living room.
Yet it was through the architecture, design and media depictions of
his homes that the Nazi regime fostered a myth of the private Hitler as
peaceable homebody and good neighbor.
In the years leading up to World War II, this image was used
strategically and effectively, both within Germany and abroad, to
distance the dictator from his violent and cruel policies. Even after
the war began, the favorable impression of the off-duty Führer playing
with dogs and children did not immediately fade.
A Radical Makeover
Nazi mythologies about Hitler's origins emphasized his poverty and
homelessness as a young man, as well as his disdain for creature
comforts.
But once Hitler became chancellor - and particularly after the
royalties from Mein Kampf made him a wealthy man - he focused
considerable energies on the redesign and furnishing of his residences:
the Old Chancellery in Berlin; his Munich apartment; and the Berghof,
his mountain home on the Obersalzberg.
The timing of these renovations in the mid-1930s coincided with
Hitler's public makeover as a statesman and diplomat, a transformation
also promoted by Leni Riefenstahl's Nazi propaganda films.
The rough edges of the extreme anti-Semite and agitator of the masses
were sanded away through the creation of a new, sophisticated persona
that emerged in carefully crafted domestic surroundings. With silk
curtains and porcelain vases, Hitler's designers suggested an internal
world that was both cultivated and peaceful.
Gerdy Troost, Hitler's interior decorator, played an important role
in conveying an image of her client as a man of taste and culture.
Inspired by British design reform movements, she emphasized quality of
materials and craftsmanship over showy display.
Hitler was an engaged client, and he admired her taste, although they
sometimes clashed over his tendency toward the grandiose. A woman both
respected and feared in Nazi Germany, Troost has been overlooked in
histories written about the period. However new archival sources reveal the surprising extent of her influence over Hitler and her prominence within Nazi elite circles.
Hitler's Chalet
With views of Germany on one side of the mountain and Austria on the other, the Berghof was the most public of Hitler's private homes, and it exerted a powerful hold on the Nazi imagination of empire.
Hitler and his publicists drew on mountain imagery from Germany's
literary and artistic movements (particularly Romanticism) to
mythologize the Führer as a mystic leader who immersed himself in - and
embodied - the terrible and magnificent forces of nature.
At the same time, the mountain served as a means to humanize
Germany's leader through his contact with animals as well as with
children. In officially produced postcards, magazines and books, Germans
consumed fantasies about an ideal domestic life rooted in the natural
landscape.
In the expansive Lebensraum and pure mountain air, where the sun
shone and blond children frolicked, the Nazis encouraged Germans to
envision a blissful future in exchange for sacrifices to their
pocketbooks and freedoms.
To the Foreign Press, a Bavarian Gentleman
The rise of celebrity culture in the 1920s and 1930s created a
voracious appetite for information about the daily lives of the rich and
famous. Hitler's team was quick to realize and exploit the public's
hunger, pioneering PR strategies that are commonplace today.
Journalists writing for the English-language press gobbled up the
propaganda, fueling a false image of Hitler by publishing glowing
stories of the Führer, even in the face of disturbing counter-realities.
On May 30, 1937 - a month after German planes bombed Guernica, Spain -
The New York Times Magazine published a front-page article on Adolf
Hitler's idyllic mountain retreat.
In this admiring piece, penned by foreign correspondent Otto
Tolischus, the skies were depicted not as a means of delivering
destruction, but as a rarified topos of meditation, beauty and the
simple life.
The article described how, surrounded by Alpine peaks, Germany's
leader communed with nature, contemplated the Reich and indulged his
sweet tooth for chocolate. Hitler's attack on Guernica and the suffering
of its victims, later memorialized by Pablo Picasso, went unmentioned.
In November 1938, shortly after the annexation of Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland - and the same month as the Night of Broken Glass
- Homes and Gardens published a feature titled Hitler's Mountain Home,
which credited Hitler with the design of the Berghof. Applauding his
taste, the article depicted his private life as one of refinement,
gentle repasts and congenial friendships.
And days before the signing of the Nazi-Soviet Pact in August 1939,
The New York Times Magazine published another enthusiastic article about
the residence, one that again chronicled the Führer's wholesome
domestic life, unpretentious hospitality and love of sweets.
Life, Vogue and other widely circulated publications similarly
offered readers the chance to pore over glossy photo essays of Hitler's
rooms.
But stories in the British press admiring Hitler's gentlemanly tastes
and pursuits evaporated with the start of hostilities. With German war
planes bombarding the nation's cities and towns, the Brits quickly lost
interest in how Herr Hitler took his tea.
American audiences, on the other hand, were slower to admit they had
been conned, which reflects the country's broader ambivalence about
involvement in another war.
During the final weeks of the war in Europe, the Berghof was bombed
by the Allied Air forces and set aflame by Hitler's departing SS troops.
What survived was looted by local residents and American and French
soldiers.
By 1947, the ruins had become a destination for throngs of curious
tourists. Authorities were more troubled by Hitler's loyalists, who made
pilgrimages to the site to pay homage to their fallen leader. With
approval from the American military, which occupied the Obersalzberg,
the Bavarian government demolished what remained of the Berghof; the
area was subsequently replanted with trees.
It was only in 2008 that an official sign was posted that identifies
the former location of Hitler's house. In English and German, it gives a
brief history of the residence, one that shatters the widely
propagated, simplistic view of its domestic function:
Hitler spent more than a third of his time in power here. Important political discussions and negotiations were conducted here and incisive decisions were made, which led to the catastrophes of the Second World War and the Holocaust, causing the death of millions.
Hitler's successful domestic makeover - engineered by his designers
and publicists - underscores the need to be far more critical of the
industries that focus on home or lifestyle news, which can have enormous
influence.
In recent years, Western media have fawned over Asma al-Assad,
Syria's First Lady, depicting her as a refining, domestic influence on
her husband. While some of these outlets, including Vogue, have
attempted to scrub online traces, the stories remain proudly posted on President Bashar al-Assad's website.
When it comes to someone's home, there's often more than meets the eye.
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