particularly to be avoided as long as a movement is still fighting
for victory. For would it be possible to inspire people with blind
faith in the truth of a doctrine if doubt and uncertainty are
encouraged by continual alterations in its external formulation?
The essentials of a teaching must never be looked for in its
external formulas, but always in its inner meaning. And this
meaning is unchangeable. And in its interest one can only wish
that a movement should exclude everything that tends towards
disintegration and uncertainty in order to preserve the unified
force that is necessary for its triumph.
Here again the Catholic Church has a lesson to teach us. Though
sometimes, and often quite unnecessarily, its dogmatic system is
in conflict with the exact sciences and with scientific discoveries,
it is not disposed to sacrifice a syllable of its teachings. It has
rightly recognized that its powers of resistance would be
weakened by introducing greater or less doctrinal adaptations to
meet the temporary conclusions of science, which in reality are
always vacillating. And thus it holds fast to its fixed and
established dogmas which alone can give to the whole system the
character of a faith. And that is the reason why it stands firmer
today than ever before. We may prophesy that, as a fixed pole
amid fleeting phenomena, it will continue to attract increasing
numbers of people who will be blindly attached to it the more
rapid the rhythm of changing phenomena around it.
Therefore whoever really and seriously desires that the idea of
the People's State should triumph must realize that this triumph
can be assured only through a militant movement and that this
movement must ground its strength only on the granite firmness
of an impregnable and firmly coherent programme. In regard to
its formulas it must never make concessions to the spirit of the
time but must maintain the form that has once and for all been
decided upon as the right one; in any case until victory has
crowned its efforts. Before this goal has been reached any
attempt to open a discussion on the opportuneness of this or that
point in the programme might tend to disintegrate the solidity
and fighting strength of the movement, according to the measures
in which its followers might take part in such an internal dispute.
Some 'improvements' introduced today might be subjected to a
critical examination tomorrow, in order to substitute it with
something better the day after. Once the barrier has been taken
down the road is opened and we know only the beginning, but
we do not know to what shoreless sea it may lead.
This important principle had to be acknowledged in practice by
the members of the National Socialist Movement at its very
beginning. In its programme of twentyfive points the National
Socialist German Labour Party has been furnished with a basis
that must remain unshakable. The members of the movement,
both present and future, must never feel themselves called upon
to undertake a critical revision of these leading postulates, but
rather feel themselves obliged to put them into practice as they
stand. Otherwise the next generation would, in its turn and with
equal right, expend its energy in such purely formal work within
the party, instead of winning new adherents to the movement and
thus adding to its power. For the majority of our followers the
essence of the movement will consist not so much in the letter of
our theses but in the meaning that we attribute to them.
The new movement owes its name to these considerations, and
later on its programme was drawn up in conformity with them.
They are the basis of our propaganda. In order to carry the idea
of the People's State to victory, a popular party had to be
founded, a party that did not consist of intellectual leaders only
but also of manual labourers. Any attempt to carry these theories
into effect without the aid of a militant organization would be
doomed to failure today, as it has failed in the past and must fail
in the future. That is why the movement is not only justified but
it is also obliged to consider itself as the champion and
representative of these ideas. Just as the fundamental principles
of the National Socialist Movement are based on the folk idea,
folk ideas are National Socialist. If National Socialism would
triumph it will have to hold firm to this fact unreservedly, and
here again it has not only the right but also the duty to emphasize
most rigidly that any attempt to represent the folk idea outside of
the National Socialist German Labour Party is futile and in most
cases fraudulent.
If the reproach should be launched against our movement that it
has 'monopolized' the folk idea, there is only one answer to give.
Not only have we monopolized the folk idea but, to all practical
intents and purposes, we have created it.
For what hitherto existed under this name was not in the least
capable of influencing the destiny of our people, since all those
ideas lacked a political and coherent formulation. In most cases
they are nothing but isolated and incoherent notions which are
more or less right. Quite frequently these were in open
contradiction to one another and in no case was there any internal
cohesion among them. And even if this internal cohesion existed
it would have been much too weak to form the basis of any
movement.
Only the National Socialist Movement proved capable of
fulfilling this task.
All kinds of associations and groups, big as well as little, now
claim the title völkisch. This is one result of the work which
National Socialism has done. Without this work, not one of all
these parties would have thought of adopting the word völkisch
at all. That expression would have meant nothing to them and
especially their directors would never have had anything to do
with such an idea. Not until the work of the German National
Socialist Labour Party had given this idea a pregnant meaning
did it appear in the mouths of all kinds of people. Our party
above all, by the success of its propaganda, has shown the force
of the folk idea; so much so that the others, in an effort to gain
proselytes, find themselves forced to copy our example, at least
in words.
Just as heretofore they exploited everything to serve their petty
electoral purposes, today they use the word völkisch only as an
external and hollowsounding phrase for the purpose of
counteracting the force of the impression which the National
Socialist Party makes on the members of those other parties.
Only the desire to maintain their existence and the fear that our
movement may prevail, because it is based on a philosophy that
is of universal importance, and because they feel that the
exclusive character of our movement betokens danger for them –
only for these reasons do they use words which they repudiated
eight years ago, derided seven years ago, branded as stupid six
years ago, combated five years ago, hated four years ago, and
finally, two years ago, annexed and incorporated them in their
present political vocabulary, employing them as war slogans in
their struggle.
And so it is necessary even now not to cease calling attention to
the fact that not one of those parties has the slightest idea of what
the German nation needs. The most striking proof of this is
represented by the superficial way in which they use the word
völkisch.
Not less dangerous are those who run about as semifolkists
formulating fantastic schemes which are mostly based on nothing
else than a fixed idea which in itself might be right but which,
because it is an isolated notion, is of no use whatsoever for the
formation of a great homogeneous fighting association and could
by no means serve as the basis of its organization. Those people
who concoct a programme which consists partly of their own
ideas and partly of ideas taken from others, about which they
have read somewhere, are often more dangerous than the
outspoken enemies of the völkisch idea. At best they are sterile
theorists but more frequently they are mischievous agitators of
the public mind. They believe that they can mask their
intellectual vanity, the futility of their efforts, and their lack of
stability, by sporting flowing beards and indulging in ancient
German gestures.
In face of all those futile attempts, it is therefore worth while to
recall the time when the new National Socialist Movement began
its fight.
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