Goebbels and the Nazi Attack on Jewish-owned Department Stores
1 2017-05-03T16:26:54-07:00 Caroline Luce 15876dd2f73462af784ac961ee54f3b5170890ce 218 17 "Walter Arlen and the Dichter Department Store" by Bill Katin, Part 3 plain 2018-04-27T04:50:02-07:00 Caroline Luce 15876dd2f73462af784ac961ee54f3b5170890cePage
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Version 17
resource | rdf:resource | https://scalar.usc.edu/hc/es-geht-wohl-anders-things-turn-out-differently-the-unexpected-life-of-walter-arlen/goebbels-and-the-nazi-attack-on-jewish-owned-department-stores.17 |
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title | dcterms:title | Goebbels and the Nazi Attack on Jewish-owned Department Stores |
description | dcterms:description | "Walter Arlen and the Dichter Department Store" by Bill Katin, Part 3 |
content | sioc:content | Goebbels begins his propaganda campaign Propagandist Joseph Goebbels published this cartoon in the fifth issue of Der Angriff (The Attack), a paper he founded after he became the leader of the Nazi Party’s Berlin branch. The paper attacked the Weimar Republic and Jews, often drawing links between the two. As seen in this cartoon, Jewish-owned department stores were a favorite target of his ire. Here he lampoons two Jewish-owned department store chains, Tietz and Wertheim, and the Aryan Germans who supported them, portraying a fat Jewish owner sitting atop an emporium advertising an end-of-season sale to suggest that the Jewish owners had both the capital to invest in advertising and lacked moral consciousness to publish indecent notices in newspapers. On the right side of the image, the truly “patriotic” German populace streams into an Aryan middle-class shop next door. In December 1927, Goebbels published his first of five special editions dedicated to opposing the Jewish-owned department stores. No other theme of Nazi propaganda was blazoned across the masthead of the newspaper so frequently. Under the front-page headline, “Berlin Department Stores Tax Evasion,” the article read: Even though he viewed himself as the editor of a major “metropolitan tabloid,” Goebbels' shrill and aggressive tone towards Jews was early evident in his targeting of the Jewish-owned department stores. But his expanded diatribes about the Jewish responsibility for the failures of the Weimar Republic broadly, may have masking his frustrations about the insufficiencies of the National Socialists' program. His efforts at the newspaper led to victories at the polls, but Goebbels’s efforts were not immediately rewarded by Hitler. During the months from 1929 until September 1930, Hitler fluctuated between giving Strasser and Goebbels support for a Nazi newspaper in Berlin, at which time Goebbels made an agreement with Max Amann of the Eher Publishing House. The Party intrigues with Strasser in 1930, and then with Stennes in 1931, only increased Goebbels’s exasperation with National Socialists, which reached their peak in March 1931 when Otto Wagener’s economic platform envisioned a pro-business perspective, supported by Göring, which excluded all Goebbels’s pro-Socialism views. The years of political infighting only ended in June 1932 when Goebbels realized that his radical backing of SA violence, in contrast with Hitler’s pursuit of apparent legal means to power, were detrimental to both the Party and his own propaganda career.[1] His attacks on German Jews and Jewish-owned department stores, however, continued throughout, fueling anti-Semitism among Berliners and National Socialists throughout Europe. German Businessmen’s Hostile Takeovers of Department Stores After the National Socialists took power in Germany, they developed a wide variety of legal and extra-legal strategies aimed at removing Jews from economic life entirely. This Aryanization process included new laws that prevented Jews from operating businesses, participating in trades, and from selling goods and services, and ones that restricted their access to savings and bank accounts, as well as extrajudicial murders and deportations. Subsequent laws required the registration of Jewish businesses and empowered the state to set the sales value of Jewish firms at a fraction of their market worth, enabling non-Jews to purchase businesses at far below their value from Jews desperate to flee the country. Finally, in November, 1938, the Nazi regime passed new regulations that forced the sale of all Jewish-owned businesses, stocks, and property, with the proceeds to go directly to the state. Many of Germany's largest Jewish-owned department stores were Aryanized when Germany's two biggest banks, Deutsche Bank and the Dresdner Bank, suddenly recalled loans. Department store owners often relied on loans to acquire new merchandise, as most adopted the tactic of selling their entire inventories several times a year and reinvesting the profits into expanding their chains. That meant very few retained large amounts of Marks in cash, and so when the loans were recalled, most found it impossible to pay. Non-Jews, using various degrees of coercion, would then acquire the companies at massively reduced costs, using the patently unjust Nazi legal system to their advantage. Such was the case with the hostile takeover of Hermann Tietz's Department Store chain, a process engineered by one of their own employees, Georg Karg. Karg had been a salesman for the Jewish-owned Jandorf Department Stores in 1908 and eventually became the business manager for the Wilmersdorfer Straβe branch. In 1926, the Tietz company purchased all of the Jandorf stores, and Karg became the director for all textile purchasing in the larger chain. In 1933, Tietz' lenders recalled their loans, and the company found itself desperate for cash. Karg worked with Baron von der Tann to secure a new 14 million Marks loan from a consortium including the prior lenders but used it to force a restructuring of the company. Hermann Tietz' sons, Georg and Martin, were removed from their positions as private owners of the company and instead placed in positions on the Board of Directors alongside Tann and Karg who claimed they would only assume decisive power in case of split decisions. But the Tietz brothers maintained responsibility for all liabilities and by 1934, Georg and Martin were forced to relinquish their entire financial investment in the Hermann Tietz department store chain. Similar methods were used by Josef Neckermann to acquire Siegmund Ruschkewitz’s department store in Wurzburg. Ruschkewitz owned both the department store and a single-price store in Wurzburg, but in 1935, when he attempted to obtain new funding for more merchandise, the Dresdner Bank recalled all loans. Josef Neckermann, a coal supplier had been on the lookout to buy a Jewish firm at a depressed price. He seized the opportunity and obtained an early inheritance of 200,000 Marks (RM) from his mother. He then claimed that the inventory of the two stores consisted of scraps, using the pretense to push the price down even further to 100,000 RM. His assertion about the merchandise clearly had no basis, since he later maintained that he earned his first million in Wurzburg. Not satisfied with taking over just one Jewish-owned company, Neckermann took control of Karl Amson Joel’s mail order business in 1937. Although the price had been set at 2.3 million RM, Neckermann only paid 1.14 million from his trust account.[2] Meanwhile, Aryanizers like Georg Karg survived largely unscathed. After they were Aryanized, the Tietz stores took on a new name, "Hertie" (a contraction of Hermann Tietz) to mask their ties to their Jewish founders, and while only three of the large “palaces of consumption” Karg acquired in Berlin were still standing after the war, stores in Hamburg, Munich, Stuttgart and Karlsruhe survived. In a private restitution settlement after the war, Karz was forced to pay rent for the Munich, Stuttgart and Karlsruhe facilities to the Tietz family. But by then he had expanded his retail empire: having purchased several more department stores in Austria, by 1960, Karg had 35 branches in operation. West Germans viewed him as an economic hero, since 83% of his pre-war realm would lie in East Germany after the wall was built.[3] [1] Peter Longerich, Goebbels; A Biography (New York: Random House, 2015): 88-92, 121-126, 139-146, 199. [2] Hans Steidle, Neckermann & Co. Die Ausplünderung der Würzburger Judn im Dritten Reich (Wurburg: Echter Verlag GmbH, 2014): 81. Thomas Veszelits, Die Neckermanns; Licht und Schatten einer deutschen Unternehmerfamilie (Bergisch Gladbach: Verlagsgruppe Lübbe GmbH, 2008): 27, 75, 80-83. Toni Pierenkemper, “Josef Neckermann (1912-1992) – Anmerkungen zur Autobiographie,” Jahrbuch für Wirtschaftsgeschichte, Vol 2 (1996): 237-238. [3] Friedrich W. Köhler, Zur Geschichte der Warenhäuser. Seenot und Untergang des Hertie-Konzerns (Frankfurt am Main: Haag und Herchen, 1997): 26-29. Peterle, Op. Cit., 195. |
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- 1 media/_1574815214.jpg 2017-05-03T16:18:02-07:00 Caroline Luce 15876dd2f73462af784ac961ee54f3b5170890ce "The Dichter Department Store and Jewish Retailers in Vienna" by William M. Katin Caroline Luce 7 splash 2017-09-29T13:22:01-07:00 Caroline Luce 15876dd2f73462af784ac961ee54f3b5170890ce
This page references:
- 1 2017-10-03T11:58:17-07:00 Warenhaus Ruschkewitz Würzburg 2 Sigmund Ruschkewitz founded his department store on Schönbornstrasse in Wurzberg in 1898 and soon it was one of the most successful textile stores in the area. His son Ernst Ruschkewitz, who ran the store at the time it was acquired from Neckerman, was murdered in the Buchenwald concentration camp in March 1945. His diary, which documents Jewish life in Wurzberg, was smuggled out of the camp and sent to his brother, Hans who survived. Along the other family documents and photographs, the diary has been preserved in the archives of the Johanna Stahl Center for Jewish History and Culture in Unterfranken. media/Warenhaus-Ruschkewitz-Schönbornstraße.jpg plain 2017-10-03T12:04:33-07:00
- 1 2017-10-02T16:43:38-07:00 SA Members in front of the Tietz Department Store in Berlin, 1933 1 On April 1, 1933, during the boycott of Jewish shops called for by Goebbels, SA members eagerly posted boycott notices and planted themselves in front of Jewish shops to intimidate the owners and their customers., including the Tietz Department Store in Berlin, as seen here. One of the signs featured in this famous photograph conveys a message in both German and English: "Germans, defend yourselves against Jewish atrocity propaganda – buy only at German shops!" echoing Goebbels' propaganda in Der Angriff. Image from Bildarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz, accessed at "German History in Documents and Images" (GHDI, http://germanhistorydocs.ghi-dc.org). media/GHDINaziTietz.jpg plain 2017-10-02T16:43:38-07:00 bpk 1933 Keine Veröffentlichung ohne Copyright und Honorar! bpk Berlin, Foto: Fotograf unbek Berlin Berlin Germany Geschichte / Deutschland / 20. Jh. / NS-Zeit / Rassenpolitik / Juden / Boykott / Berlin bpk Berlin, 2003 SA-Angehörige als Boykottposten vor dem Berliner Kaufhaus Tietz; Foto: Fotograf unbekannt, Berlin, 1.April 1933; bpk 30.001.737 Post 9 DE www.bpk.biz 30.001.737
- 1 2017-10-03T12:33:28-07:00 Hertie stores bag, 1980s 1 The slogan on the bag reads "Good is not good enough for us." By the 1980s, when the Tietz stores (by then known as Hertie stores) celebrated their 100th anniversary, there were 123 stores and branches in Germany and Austria, generating some 6 billion Marks of sales annually. The stores were acquired by the Karstadt AG investment group in 1994. Image courtesy of Wikiwand. media/Hertieslogan.JPG plain 2017-10-03T12:33:28-07:00
- 1 2018-04-27T04:46:31-07:00 Der Angriff, Aug. 1, 1927 1 Anti-Tietz and Wertheim Cartoon, Der Angriff, August 1st, 1927 media/Bill_Article_IMG Tietz Wertheim cartoon (crop).jpg plain 2018-04-27T04:46:33-07:00
- 1 2018-04-27T04:49:20-07:00 “Berlin Department Stores Tax Evasion,” Der Angriff (The Attack), Dec. 12, 1927 1 "Berlin Department Stores Tax Evasion,” Der Angriff, December 12th, 1927 media/Bill_Article_IMG_Steuerhinterziehung (crop).jpg plain 2018-04-27T04:49:20-07:00