Abstract
A number of official party-sponsored social service organizations,
such as the Mother and Child Relief Agency of the National Socialist
People’s Welfare Organization
[NS-Volkswohlfahrt or NSV] or the
Reich Mothers’ Service of German Women’s Enterprise
[Deutsches Frauenwerk or DFW] were
supposed to encourage women to have more children and to prepare them
for their role as housewives and mothers. The Mother and Child Relief
Agency offered more than just education; for example, among other
services, it offered medical care and financial support for pregnant
women, as well as childcare in its own kindergartens. The Reich Mothers’
Service also offered a variety of courses that taught women about
pregnancy, housekeeping, child rearing, and racial hygiene. By the
spring of 1939, an estimated 1.7 million German women had taken part in
these programs. Behind the charitable façade of these organizations
lurked clear ideological and sociopolitical goals: women were to earn
their place in the national community by having as many healthy children
as possible and by giving them a proper Nazi upbringing.