Abstract
The Hitler Youth or HJ was founded in 1926 as a recruiting
organization for the NSDAP. Until 1933, however, it was relatively
unimportant, both in terms of size and its place within the
organization. At first, Hitler showed little interest in the National
Socialist youth movement. His attention was directed to the adult
electorate, which was supposed to bring him and the NSDAP to power. But
after Hitler took office and the Nazi dictatorship began to develop,
Nazi youth education was given the highest priority, because only
ideologically steadfast and physically hardened young people could
ensure the existence of the Thousand-Year Reich. With this in mind,
Reich Youth Leader Baldur von Schirach arranged for the dissolution of
almost all German youth associations by the end of 1933; their
memberships were incorporated into the Hitler Youth. Membership in the
Hitler Youth remained voluntary until 1936, but the organization used
various pressures and inducements to get children and young people to
join. HJ events such as scouting games, parades, and bike tours served
not only to occupy young people’s free time, but also to provide for the
ideological, physical, and increasingly militaristic training of HJ
members. The photo shows members of the Junior Hitler Youth
[Deutsches Jungvolk or DJ], the Nazi
organization for children ages ten to fourteen. Teenagers from fourteen
to eighteen belonged to the regular Hitler Youth.