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Why Hitler was such a successful orator

Published by Business Insider on Wed, 13 May 2015


"I know that men are won over less by the written than by the spoken word, that every great movement on this earth owes its growth to great orators and not to great writers," Adolf Hitler, Mein Kampf, 1925.One of the world's most influential orators created the largest German political party, conquered a dozen nations, and slaughtered as many as 21 million people during his brutal 12-year-longThird Reich.In more than 5,000 persuasive speeches, Nazi leader Adolf Hitler bewitched his audiences andpromised them that his empire would reign for 1,000 years.Professor Bruce Loebs, who has taught Rhetoric of Hitler and Churchill for the last 46 years at Idaho State University, credits the Fhrer'soratory success to his charisma."He learned how to become a charismatic speaker, and people for whatever reason, became enamored with him," Loebs told Business Insider."People were most willing to follow him because he seemed to have the right answers in a time ofenormous economic upheaval."Plagued with enormous World War Ireparationsin addition to an increasingly depressed global economy,Germany's economyprompted Hitler's rise in the 1930s.Hitler took advantage of the brewing discontent and found himself at the forefront of an opportunistic political ideology, theNational Socialist German Workers'party.Hitler's political arenaBefore the Nazi's rapid ascent to the world stage, Hitler's party was largely unknown, winninga trivial 3% of votes in Germany's 1924 elections."When Hitler decided to compete in the Reichstag (German parliament), he knew that meant that he had to give speeches and that meant that he had to speak to as many people as he could in order to get votes," Loebs told Business Insider.Eight years later, the Nazi's were undeniably the largest party in theReichstag.By 1934, Hitler and his frightening political agenda was leadingthe German government.In short, as historian Robert Waite writes, "Hitler was Nazidom. Seldom in the history of western civilization has so much depended on one man's personality. He created his own political theory and a government that could notexist without him."Hitler's speech writing processNazi Propaganda MinisterJoseph Goebbels wrote inhis diarythat Hitler was known to write his own speeches andedit them up tofive different times.He would "work deep into the night, several evenings running, occupying three secretaries taking dictationstraight into the typewriters before carefully correcting the drafts,"according toBritish historianIan Kershaw."He simply did not want to rely on anyone to write his speeches," Loebs told Business Insider."For Adolf Hitler, public speaking was so important that he would never trust anyone to write his speeches for him."Loebs also noted that Hitler's great foe, Winston Churchill, also preferred to write his own speeches, something rare among leaders of the time (and today).Hitler's voice was 'mesmeric'In Ron Rosenbaum'sbookExplaining Hitler, French-American novelistGeorge Steiner describes theNazi leader's voice as overwhelmingly powerful and 'spellbinding.'"I was born in 1929, so from '33 on my earliest memories are sitting in the kitchen hearing The Voice [of Hitler] on the radio," Steiner shared with Rosenbaum."It's a hard thing to describe, but the voice itself was mesmeric ... The amazing thing is that the body comes through on the radio. I can't put it any other way. You feel you're following the gestures," Steiner said."In the German language, Hitler drew on a kind of rhetorical power which ' in a way is perhaps a little bit peculiar to German 'allies highly abstract concepts with political, physical violence in a most unusual way. And Hitler was easily a genius at that, absolutely no doubt about it."Furthermore,American psychologistHenry Murraydescribesthe Fhrer's overall presence as "hypnotic" in his229-page report,"The Personality of Adolf Hitler," which was commissioned in 1943by theOffice of Strategic Services, a precursor to the CIA.According toMurray's report, Hitler received frequent compliments on his grayish-blue eyes, even though they were described as "dead, impersonal, and unseeing."The Fhrerwas slightly under average in height, had a receding hairline, thin lips, and well-shaped hands.Murray also notes thatthe merciless Nazi leader was known to offer a weak handshake with "moist and clammy" palms and was awkward at making small talk. 'He had to add animation to his language'Hitler also workshopped his delivery, hand gestures, and body language while practicing his speeches. "He absolutely had to work at his presentation since it was half of his message," Loebs told Business Insider. "He had to to addanimation to his language in order to successfully communicate his ideas."Hitler's personal photographer Heinrich Hoffmancapturedtwo million images of the bellicose leader and was advised to never release a specificseries to the public,according to his memoir, "Hitler was my Friend."In1925, Hoffman took several photos of Hitler'sfacial expressions and gestures while he rehearsed upcoming speeches in a mirror.After studying the images, the Nazi leader reportedly asked for them to be destroyed.Secretly Hoffman saved the photos and published them 30 years later in his memoir."No other photographer in history landed the scoop that he [Hoffman] did: intimate and exclusive access to a major head of state ' and importantly, the chance to work with a subject who knew very well how to 'work' the camera, and paid painstaking attention to the cultivation of his public image,"historian Roger Moorhouse later wrote in the republished introduction of Hoffman's memoir.Here is a video of one of Hitler's speeches with English subtitles:Hitler's Third Reich officially ended on April 30, 1945, when the Fhrer committed suicide in his bunker with his new wife after learning Allied Forces had surrounded Berlin.SEE ALSO:Here's what US intelligence thought could happen to Hitler in 1943Join the conversation about this storyNOW WATCH: 11 Facts That Show How Different Russia Is From The Rest Of The World
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