party members regarded the affair as premature and hence
disastrous in effect. The Red press had begun to concern itself
with us and we were fortunate enough gradually to achieve its
hatred. We had begun to speak in the discussions at other
meetings. Of course, each of us was at once shouted down. There
was, however, some success. People got to know us and
proportionately as their knowledge of us deepened, the aversion
and rage against us grew. And thus we were entitled to hope that
in our first great mass meeting we would be visited by a good
many of our friends from the Red camp.
I, too, realized that there was great probability of the meeting
being broken up. But the struggle had to be carried through, if
not now, a few months later. It was entirely in our power to make
the movement eternal on the very first day by blindly and
ruthlessly fighting for it. I knew above all the mentality of the
adherents of the Red side far too well, not to know that resistance
to the utmost not only makes the biggest impression, but also
wins supporters. And so we just had to be resolved to put up this
resistance.
Herr Harrer,l then first chairman of the party, felt he could not
support my views with regard to the time chosen and
consequently, being an honest, upright man, he withdrew from
the leadership of the party. His place was taken by Herr Anton
Drexler. I had reserved for myself the organization of
propaganda and began ruthlessly to carry it out.
And so, the date of February 4, 19202 was set for the holding of
this first great mass meeting of the still unknown movement.
I personally conducted the preparations. They were very brief.
Altogether the whole apparatus was adjusted to make lightning
decisions. Its aim was to enable us to take a position on current
questions in the form of mass meetings within twentyfour hours.
They were to be announced by posters and leaflets whose content
was determined according to those guiding principles which in
rough outlines I have set down in my treatise on propaganda.
Effect on the broad masses, concentration on a few points,
constant repetition of the same, selfassured and selfreliant
framing of the text in the forms of an apodictic statement,
greatest perseverance in distribution and patience in awaiting the
effect.
On principle, the color red was chosen; it is the most exciting; we
knew it would infuriate and provoke our adversaries the most and
thus bring us to their attention and memory whether they liked it
or not.
In the following period the inner fraternization in Bavaria
between the Marxists and the Center as a political party was most
clearly shown in the concern with which the ruling Bavarian
People's Party tried to weaken the effect of our posters on the
Red working masses and later to prohibit them. If the police
found no other way to proceed against them, 'considerations of
traffic' had to do the trick, till finally, to please the inner, silent
Red ally, these posters, which had given back hundreds of
thousands of workers, incited and seduced by internationalism, to
their German nationality, were forbidden entirely with the
helping hand of a socalled German National People's Party. As
an appendix and example to our young movement, I am adding a
number of these proclamations. They come from a period
embracing nearly three years; they can best illustrate the mighty
struggle which the young movement fought at this time. They
will also bear witness to posterity of the will and honesty of our
convictions and the despotism of the socalled national
authorities in prohibiting, just because they personally found it
uncomfortable, a nationalization which would have won back
broad masses of our nationality.
They will also help to destroy the opinion that there had been a
national government as such in Bavaria and also document for
posterity the fact that the national Bavaria of 1919, 1920, 1921
1922, 1923 was not forsooth the result of a national government,
but that the government was merely forced to take consideration
of a people that was gradually feeling national The governments
themselves did everything to eliminate this process of recovery
and to make it impossible.
Here only two men must be excluded:
Ernst Pohner, the police president at that tirne, and Chief Deputy
frick his faithful advisor, were the only higher state officials who
even then had the courage to be first Germans and then officials.
Ernst Pohner was the only man in a responsible post who did not
curry favor with the masses, but felt responsible to his nationality
and was ready to risk and sacrifice everything, even if necessary
his personal existence, for the resurrection of the German people
whom he loved above all things. And for this reason he was
always a troublesome thorn in the eyes of those venal officials
the law of whose actions was prescribed, not by the interest of
their people and the necessary uprising for its freedom, but by the
boss's orders, without regard for the welfare of the national trust
confided in them.
And above all he was one of those natures who, contrasting with
most of the guardians of our socalled state authority, do not fear
the enmity of traitors to the people and the nation, but long for it
as for a treasure which a decent man must take for granted. The
hatred of Jews and Marxists, their whole campaign of lies and
slander, were for him the sole happiness amid the misery of our
people.
A man of granite honesty, of antique simplicity and German
straightforwardness, for whom the words 'Sooner dead than a
slave ' were no phrase but the essence of his whole being.
He and his collaborator, Dr. Frick, are in my eyes the only men
in a state position who possess the right to be called cocreators of
a national Bavaria.
Before we proceeded to hold our first mass meeting, not only did
the necessary propaganda material have to be made ready, but the
main points of the program also had to be put into print.
In the second volume I shall thoroughly develop the guiding
principles which we had in mind, particularly in framing the
program. Here I shall only state that it was done, not only to give
the young movement form and content, but to make its aims
understandable to the broad masses.
Circles of the socalled intelligentsia have mocked and ridiculed
this and attempted to criticize it. But the soundness of our point
of view at that time has been shown by the effectiveness of this
program.
In these years I have seen dozens of new movements arise and
thev have all vanished and evaporated without trace. A single
one remains: The National Socialist German Workers' Party. And
today more than ever I harbor the conviction that people can
combat it, that they can attempt to paralyze it, that petty party
ministers can forbid us to speak and write, but that they will
never prevent the victory of our ideas.
When not even memory will reveal the names of the entire
presentday state conception and its advocates, the fundamentals
of the National Socialist program will be the foundations of a
coming state.
Our four months' activities at meetings up to January, 1920, had
slowly enabled us to save up the small means that we needed for
printing our first leaflet, our first poster, and our program.
If I take the movement's first large mass meeting as the
conclusion of this volume, it is because by it the party burst the
narrow bonds of a small club and for the first time exerted a
determining infiuence on the mightiest factor of our tirne, public
opinion.
I myself at that time had but one concern: Will the hall be filled,
or will we speak to a yawning hall? 1 I had the unshakable l inner
conviction that if the people came, the day was sure to be a great
success for the young movement. And so I anxiously looked
forward to that evening.
The meeting was to be opened at 7:30. At 7:15 I entered the
Festsaal of the Hofbrauhaus on the Platzl in Munich, and my
heart nearly burst for joy. The gigantic hallfor at that time it still
seemed to me giganticwas overcrowded with people, shoulder to
shoulder, a mass numbering almost two thousand people. And
above allthose people to whom we wanted to appeal had come.
Far more than half the hall seemed to be occupied by
Communists and Independents. They had resolved that our first
demonstration would come to a speedy end.
But it turned out differently. After the first speaker had finished, I
took the floor. A few minutes later there was a hail of shouts,
there were violent dashes in the hall, a handful of the most
faithful war comrades and other supporters battled with the
disturbers, and only little by little were able to restore order.
I was able to go on speaking. After half an hour the applause
slowly began to drown out the screaming and shouting.
I now took up the program and began to explain it for the first
time.
From minute to minute the interruptions were increasingly
drowned out by shouts of applause. And when I finally submitted
the twentyfive theses, point for point, to the masses and asked
them personally to pronounce judgment on them, one after
another was accepted with steadily mounting joy, unanimously
and again unanimously, and when the last thesis had found its
way to the heart of the masses, there stood before me a hall full
of people united by a new conviction, a new faith, a new will.
When after nearly four hours the hall began to empty and the
crowd, shoulder to shoulder, began to move, shove, press toward
the exit like a slow stream, I knew that now the principles of a
movement which could no longer be forgotten were moving out
among the German people.
A fire was kindled from whose flame one day the sword must
come which would regain freedom for the Germanic Siegfried
and life for the German nation.
And side by side with the coming resurrection, I sensed that the
goddess of inexorable vengeance for the perjured deed of
November 9, 1919, was striding forth.
Thus slowly the hall emptied.
The movement took its course.
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