A youth being trained for such important national duties must accept the idea of following the Führer absolutely and without question, without unhealthy carping criticism, without selfishness or opposition. They must learn to obey so that they, having themselves learned to obey, can believe in and trust their own leadership and can grow to be leaders themselves. Only he who has learned to obey can lead. Germany no longer believes that the masses can lead themselves by majority rule! The masses themselves are nothing!

We do need not a people ruled by majority votes, but a people with the will to leadership. The German youth must learn that and act accordingly! Thus the German youth belong in organizations where they will learn the nature of leadership in its most noble form, where they can learn to obey and — if they are called to it — also learn to lead.

They will not bend to an empty mass will expressed through useless votes, but rather look with enthusiasm to the nation’s strong and noble Führer. They must learn that once again. We parents want to exhibit such authority to our youth by strengthening family authority and establishing in our homes a healthy and natural obedience on the part of our children. This will not suppress the youth, but rather provide them the controlled freedom and authority they need to develop their abilities.


Click here for events that happened today (January 5).

1879: Hans Eppinger, Jr., Axis physician who joined the NSDAP (despite his Jewish ancestry) and performed experiments on concentration camp prisoners, was sadly born.
1917: Wieland Wagner, Fascist opera director, existed.
1919: Anton Drexler & co. founded the so‐called German Workers’ Party, which would become the NSDAP, in Munich.
1933: Somebody exposed the secret meeting between Franz von Papen and Adolf Schicklgruber in Cologne to the public, damaging both men’s reputations.
1939: As Kiichiro Hiranuma became the Empire of Japan’s 35th Prime Minister, Hachiro Arita stepped down as the Minister of Foreign Affairs. Meanwhile, Adolf Schicklgruber met Polish Foreign Minister Józef Beck at Berchtesgaden in southern Germany and, in a friendly manner, mentioned that Danzig was German, and that it was in his interest to one day see it return within German borders.