Refusal to salute

This pH๏τograph shows the launch of a new German navy vessel at the Blohm and Voss shipyard in Hamburg in 1936. In the top right-hand corner of the pH๏τograph, one man, believed to be August Landmesser, is not giving the Nazi salute like the rest of his colleagues. Landmesser was opposed to the Nazis and their racial worldview. His partner, Irma Eckler, was Jewish. Landmesser was later imprisoned in a concentration camp by the Nazis, and, upon his release, conscripted into the German Army where he was killed in action.
This pH๏τograph shows the launch of a new German navy vessel at the Blohm and Voss shipyard in Hamburg in 1936. In the top right-hand corner of the pH๏τograph, one man, believed to be August Landmesser, is not giving the Nazi salute like the rest of his colleagues. Landmesser was opposed to the Nazis and their racial worldview. His partner, Irma Eckler, was Jewish. Landmesser was later imprisoned in a concentration camp by the Nazis, and, upon his release, conscripted into the German Army where he was killed in action.

Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain].

The Nazi salute, also known as the Hitler salute, or the Heil Hitler salute, was an official greeting gesture performed in Nazi Germany. The salute was carried out by extending the right arm into the air and saying ‘Heil Hitler’.

Shortly after the Nazis came to power, the salute became the official German form of greeting. It quickly spread to public events – although its use in the private sphere was limited and declined throughout the 1930s.

By 1934, special courts had been established to punish those who refused to perform the salute. The punishments ranged from imprisonment in concentration camps to intimidation or fines.

Despite the Nazis punitive efforts, some people refused to perform the salute. August Landmesser publically refused to perform the salute at the launch of a new Germany navy vessel at the Blohm+Voss shipyard in Hamburg in 1936, where he worked.

This handwritten diary was used to record anti-Nazi jokes in Germany before the war. It belonged to Kitty Fehr, a 15-year-old schoolgirl who emigrated to Britain in 1939, bringing her diary with her.
This handwritten diary was used to record anti-Nazi jokes in Germany before the war. It belonged to Kitty Fehr, a 15-year-old schoolgirl who emigrated to Britain in 1939, bringing her diary with her.

Courtesy of The Wiener Holocaust Library.

Anti-Nazi jokes were used as a way of expressing discontent with the Nazi regime in general, or with specific policies. In a regime that demanded complete conformity and removed the freedom of the press, telling anti-Nazi jokes provided a way to criticise and resist the regime with a much smaller risk of punishment.

Anti-Nazi jokes were on a variety of subjects: anti-Jewish policies were mocked, as well as economic policies and even Hitler himself.

In 1939, Count Alfred Hessenstein (who was previously part of the German Grand Duchy of Hesse and had emigrated to Britain) collected and published a volume enтιтled The Joke’s on Hitler – Underground Whispers from the Land of the Concentration Camp [J.M Dent and Sons, England, 1939].

Two of the jokes from the collection are used as examples below. The first implies that Hitler has lost his mind and is unfit for office. The second suggests that only lunatics or the mentally ill would perform a Heil Hitler salute.

Brown Herrings:

I stepped into the popular Aschinger restaurant in Berlin and ordered a Bismarck herring. ‘I beg your pardon, sir’ apologized the waiter, ‘I can only serve you a Hitler herring’. ‘Well – what is the difference?’ ‘The Bismarck herring had a head, sir; the Hitler herring hasn’t’’.

Heil Hitler!:

The Führer visited a lunatic asylum. All the patients were told to stand in a row, and they were given instructions on how to salute him. When Hitler approached they all raised their right hands and shouted: ‘Heil Hitler!’ Only the last man in the row uttered no sound and did not raise his hand. Red with rage Hitler stepped up to him and shouted: ‘Don’t you know who I am? Why don’t you raise your hand?’ ‘I beg your pardon,’ replied the man politely, ‘I am the doctor. I’m not a lunatic’.’

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