Young German Order Explained

Young German Order
Native Name:Jungdeutscher Orden
Colorcode:
  1. C0C0C0
Ideology:German nationalism
National liberalism
Antisemitism
Anti-communism
National:German State Party
People's National Reich Association

The Young German Order (German: German: Jungdeutscher Orden, shortened form German: Jungdo) was a nationalist and antisemitic association founded by Artur Mahraun in the early years of the Weimar Republic. It grew out of a Freikorps unit but kept its paramilitary structure for only a few years before it turned away from the political Right. It differed from other similar associations in its organisation and customs, which were based on the medieval Teutonic Order, and in its political aims. Mahraun hoped to overcome class and social differences in German society by instilling it with the camaraderie that front-line soldiers had experienced during World War I.

Most of its members belonged to the middle classes. It was antisemitic and elitist and in favour of reconciliation with France. It achieved its historical prominence through its brief merger with the left-liberal German Democratic Party to form the German State Party in 1930. It was banned when the Nazi Party came to power in 1933.

Structure and uniforms

The organisation of the Jungdo was hierarchical and based on the medieval Teutonic Order. There were local groups called brotherhoods or sisterhoods. Young members between the ages of 10 and 15 were grouped together in junior troops. For 16- to 19-year-olds, the groups were called junior fellowships . Several brotherhoods and sisterhoods made up a formation called a . The leaders of the individual groups were elected and had to be confirmed by the next higher authority, a process known as a "cure". The chairmen of the local groups were known as Grand Masters and those of the as Commanders . The individual Grand Commanders formed the High Chapter, which was presided over by a Grand Master and was the supreme body of the Order.[1] [2]

The uniform dress of the Jungdo was the field-grey soldier's uniform, the jacket of which was replaced by a windbreaker. There were no rank insignia.[3] <

History

The Young German Order was founded in Kassel on 10 January 1920 by retired captain Artur Mahraun. It grew out of the Freikorps unit, which Mahraun had founded one year earlier. Mahraun wanted to recreate the camaraderie experienced by soldiers at the front during World War I in order to overcome class and social differences in German society. Estimates of the Jungdo's membership vary widely, from 70,000 in the summer of 1921,[4] 200,000 in 1925, to over a million at peak. Mahraun, however, stated in an interview with the magazine Der Spiegel in 1949 that membership had never exceeded 37,000.[5]

Initially the Jungdo was a nationalist defense association with ties to the political Right through such groups as the paramilitary Organisation Escherich.[6] It kept the underlying structure of a paramilitary for a number of years,[7] although during the Kapp Putsch of 1920, its leadership declared its solidarity with the legitimate government of Chancellor Gustav Bauer of the Social Democrats (SPD).[8] As late as 1923 the Jungdo took part in the resistance to the occupation of the Ruhr.

Mahraun broke away from right-wing groups after only a few years. Historian Ernst Maste wrote:

The initial character of the "middle-class peasant self-protection organisation" was very soon shed; the more general character of the defense association then faded to the extent that the Young German Order, without joining the ranks of the parties, became a political factor comparable to them, although the terms "right" and "left" were soon no longer applicable to its position.
The Jungdo declared its goal to be a "true democratic state structure" from the "compact spaces of neighbourhoods or residential quarters". Mahraun criticised the influence of investors who only supported certain political parties – above all Alfred Hugenberg of the right-wing German National People's Party – which he saw as a constant attempt to distort the true will of the people.[9] [10] In northern Bavaria in particular, the Young German Order was notably antisemitic, partly due to its strong personal ties with the Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutzbund (German Nationalist Protection and Defiance Federation). Jews were not permitted to join the organisation beginning in 1922.[11] The Schutz- und Trutzbund district leader for northern Bavaria from 1920 to 1923, Hans Dietrich, was the second commander of the Young German Ballei of Franconia. The German nationalists among the Young Germans in Franconia worked closely with the National Socialists at an early stage, which was an isolated case in the history of the Order. After Hitler's Beer Hall Putsch of 1923, there was a break between the Franconian Ballei and the leadership of the Young German Order, which had declared that it would not actively participate in the Hitler Putsch. Since the Ballei in Franconia nevertheless supported the putsch, Mahraun expelled it from the Jungdo.

The Order's leadership also took a clearly antisemitic stance with regard to the "Jewish question". Mahraun stated in a letter on 9 July 1922: "In Germany there is a Jewish question which has an extraordinarily fragmenting effect, especially in patriotic associations. With the admission of Jews, the ideal of the Order, unity in a fraternal sense, would never be possible. Quarrels and disputes would thwart the best intentions." As a result, an Aryan paragraph excluding non-Aryans (meaning primarily Jews) was introduced into the Young German Order's statutes.[12]

In 1925 the Young German Order campaigned for reconciliation with France and Great Britain and thus distanced itself from reactionary and nationalist groups. For his efforts, Artur Mahraun was accused of high treason by nationalist circles but won the court case. Politicians such as Gustav Stresemann of the German People's Party saw Artur Mahraun and his Young German Order as a respectable political partner.

In 1930 the Young German Order and its subsidiary organisation (People's National Reich Association), founded in 1929, merged with the liberal German Democratic Party to form the German State Party (DStP).[13] As a result of the merger, almost the entire left wing of the DDP split off and founded its own party.

The DStP committed itself to equal rights for all citizens. The electoral alliance confronted the Order with the issue of the Aryan Paragraph and the antisemitic stance of the organisation. While the Nazi Party denounced the antisemitism of the Order and the as unreliable, the Left, liberals and Jewish organisations accused them of a coverup. Prominent DDP politicians such as Gertrud Bäumer took a stand against them.[14] In July 1930 Mahraun claimed that his organisations were far removed from antisemitism in any form.[15] The Young German Order nevertheless did not allow the Aryan paragraph to be shaken as the ethnic and racial basis of its membership, and Mahraun said that it was not antisemitism. The Order and the VNR fought "demagogic antisemitism" for reasons of national unity and pacification and supported the principles of civic equality. The credibility of his statements was frequently attacked.

The historians and political scientists Gideon Botsch and Christoph Kopke consider antisemitism to be a characteristic of the Jungdo, although it was "never at the centre of the Order's ideology and propaganda". There were always disputes between the "more moderate" leadership and regional organisations on the issue.[16]

Activities

Mahraun sought a general compulsory labour service to replace unproductive military service with productive work.[17] He wrote a paper on the subject in March 1924 and sought a referendum to introduce the measure into law, but it failed.

To disseminate its political ideas, the Order maintained its own publishing house, the, which published several magazines[18] and as a daily newspaper from 1 June 1924. In particular, it published the writings of Artur Mahraun. His book (The National Peace on the Rhine), which advocated rapprochement with France, came out on 20 November 1926.

Prohibition

After the Nazis came to power in 1933, the Young German Order was banned since it could not be brought into line or integrated into a National Socialist organisation. The Order avoided a ban in Prussia and the associated expropriation by dissolving itself on 3 July 1933 and working underground and in resistance.

Notable members in the Nazi era

The following people were members of the Young German Order in their youth:[22]

After 1945

After the war, Artur Mahraun opposed the immediate re-establishment of the Young German Order since, in his opinion, the time was not yet ripe for an "order-like" association. He explained his view to his old comrades-in-arms in personal letters and expressly emphasised:[23]

The Young German Order will arise again at a later date. It will then be the bearer of the ideas of the Young German doctrine. Anyone who has ever been a Young German with all his heart has seen the level on which the great saving deed that fate imposes on all German contemporaries must take place. He has seen from afar the political homeland in which the German nomads of the intellectual mass migration are to be settled again.
Until his death, Artur Mahraun devoted himself to building neighbourhoods in local communities.[24]

Publications

Notes and References

  1. Web site: 27 January 2023 . Jungdeutscher Orden, Bruderschaften Leer und Rheiderland . Young German Order, Leer and Rheiderland Brotherhoods . 25 July 2024 . Archivportal-D . de.
  2. Tiemann . Dieter . 1985 . Der Jungdeutsche Orden und Frankreich . The Young German Order and France . Francia 12. Forschungen zur westeuropäischen Geschichte . 12 . de . 425–456. 10.11588/fr.1984.0.51449 .
  3. Lohmüller . Wolfgang . May 2004 . Der Jungdeutsche Orden . Neue Politik . de . 48.
  4. Web site: 17 March 2023 . Gründung des Jungdeutschen Ordens in Kassel, 17. März 1920 . Founding of the Young German Order in Kassel, 17 March 1920 . 25 July 2024 . Zeitgeschichte in Hessen . de.
  5. News: 25 February 1949 . Auf gute Nachbarschaft . To Being Good Neighbours . 25 July 2024 . . de.
  6. Web site: Vogt . Stefan . September 2009 . Review of Ganyard, Clifton, Artur Mahraun and the Young German Order: An Alternative to National Socialism in Weimar Political Culture . 28 July 2024 . H-German, H-Net Reviews.
  7. Maste . Ernst . 6 August 1977 . Der Jungdeutsche Orden und sein Führer . The Young German Order and its Leader . Aus Politik und Zeitgeschichte . de . 31 . 16–17.
  8. The article from "Zeitgeschichte in Hessen" (citation #4) states that the Young German Order took part in March 1920 in the suppression of the Ruhr uprising. No other source supports the claim.
  9. Book: Mahraun, Artur . Artur Mahraun . Das Jungdeutsche Manifest. Volk gegen Kaste und Geld, Sicherung des Friedens durch Neubau der Staaten . Jungdeutscher Verlag . 1927 . Berlin . de . The Young German Manifesto. People against Caste and Money, Securing Peace through the Reorganisation of Countries.
  10. Book: Mahraun, Artur . Artur Mahraun . Politische Reformation. Vom Werden einer neuen deutschen Ordnung. . Nachbarschafts-Verlag . 1949 . Gütersloh . de . Political Reformation. On the Creation of a New German Order.
  11. Book: Benz, Wolfgang . [{{Google books|nYn8XmoBxCEC|page=343|plainurl=yes}} Organisationen, Institutionen, Bewegungen. ]. Walter de Gruyter . 2012 . 978-3-11-027878-1 . Berlin . 343–344 . de . Organisations, Institutions, Movements.
  12. Book: Lohalm, Uwe . Völkischer Radikalismus. Die Geschichte des Deutschvölkischen Schutz- und Trutz-Bundes, 1919–1923 . Leibniz-Verlag . 1970 . 978-3-874-73000-6 . Hamburg . 211–213 . de . Ethnic Radicalism. The History of the Deutschvölkischer Schutz- und Trutz-Bund, 1919–1923.
  13. Web site: Volksnationale Vereinigung . 26 July 2024 . 100(0) Schlüsseldokumente zur deutschen Geschichte im 20. Jahrhundert.
  14. News: Bäumer . Gertrud . Gertrud Bäumer . Mahraun . Artur . Artur Mahraun . 8 August 1930 . Rasse und Staatsbürgertum (Bäumer); Artur Mahraun über seine Stellung zum Judentum (Mahraun) . Race and Citizenship (Bäumer); Artur Mahraun on his Position towards Judaism (Mahraun) . 26 July 2024 . Central-Verein-Zeitung . 422 . de.
  15. News: 31 July 1930 . Staatspartei statt Demokratischer Partei . State Party instead of Democratic Party . 26 July 2024 . Saale-Zeitung . 1 . de.
  16. Book: Botsch . Gideon . [{{Google books|nYn8XmoBxCEC|page=343|plainurl=yes}} Organisationen, Institutionen, Bewegungen ]. Kopke . Christoph . DeGruyter . 2012 . 5 . Berlin . 343–344 . de . Organisations, Institutions, Movements . Jungdeutscher Orden.
  17. Book: Kohler, Henning . [{{Google books|bIcku9cKR1kC|page=149|plainurl=yes}} Arbeitsdienst in Deutschland ]. Duncker & Humblot . 1929 . Munich . 149 . de . Labour Service in Germany.
  18. Book: Tiemann, Dieter . Le milieu intellectueervateur en Allemagne, sa presse et ses réseaux (1890–1960) . Peter Lang . 2003 . Grunewald . Michel . Bern . 469–479 . fr . The Intellectual ConservativeMmilieu in Germany, Its Press and Its Networks (1890–1960) . Der Jungdeutsche Orden und sein „Schrifttum“ . The Young German Order and its "Literature" . Puschner . Uwe.
  19. Web site: 7 April 2021 . Die Geburt des Managements aus dem NS-Geist . The Birth of Management from the NS Spirit . 27 July 2024 . Deutschlandfunk Kultur . de.
  20. Book: Das Deutsche Führerlexikon . Stollberg . 1934 . Berlin . 498 . de . The German Leader Lexicon.
  21. Web site: Harro Schulze-Boysen . 27 July 2024 . Gedenkstätte Deutscher Widerstand .
  22. Book: Wildt, Michael . Generation des Unbedingten: Das Führungskorps des Reichssicherheitshauptamtes . Hamburger Edition . 2003 . 978-3-930-90887-5 . Hamburg . 57–59 . de . Generation of the Absolute: The Leadership Corps of the Reich Security Office.
  23. Web site: Mahraun . Artur . Das Jungdeutsche Manifest: Volk gegen Kaste und Geld (Amazon synopsis) . The Young German Manifesto: People against Caste and Money . 27 July 2024 . Amazon . de.
  24. Web site: Maste . Ernst . 1987 . Mahraun, Artur . 27 July 2024 . Neue Deutsche Biographie 15 (1987) . 693–694.