Brutal Execution of the Nazi War Criminal Convicted at Nuremberg: Julius Streicher

which later shaped his hot tempered, domineering personality and his constant desire to make others obey him. In 1904, after completing teacher training, Streicher began working as a school teacher like his father. He quickly became known among local educators, not for his teaching ability, but for his violent temper and authoritarian behavior.
Students feared him, while colleagues described him as a man who could not control his emotions. Nevertheless, Streicher was recognized for his gift of speech, a talent he would later use to manipulate the masses. In 1909, Streicher moved to Nuremberg, the city that would be forever tied to his life. Four years later, in 1913, he married Kunigunde Roth, a woman from the same Bavarian region.
The marriage was peaceful in its early years, and they had two sons, but the relationship gradually grew distant as Streicher became involved in extremist political activities after the war. When World War I broke out in 1914, Streicher volunteered for the German army. On the Western Front, he served in the infantry and took part in several battles in France and Belgium.
Despite reports of poor discipline, Streicher rose to the rank of lieutenant and received both the first class and second class Iron Cross awards for bravery. However, those small victories could not erase the trauma he felt when Germany surrendered in 1918. Like many other veterans, Streicher carried a sense of humiliation and resentment.
The defeat was not only the collapse of an empire, but also the shattering of his inner beliefs. It was the psychological turning point that pushed him toward extremism. After being discharged, he returned to Nuremberg amid a chaotic Germany. The economy had collapsed, inflation was soaring, and returning soldiers could no longer find their place in society.
Many believed the nation had been stabbed in the back, a widespread conspiracy theory at the time that blamed Jews and communists for Germany’s downfall. Streicher was among those who embraced that idea. In 1919, he joined the Schutz- und Trutzbund, a right-wing paramilitary organization that opposed the newly formed socialist government of the Bavarian Republic.
During rallies, Streicher displayed an exceptional talent for oratory. His voice was hoarse, but powerful, and his fiery, dramatic speeches stirred intense emotions among the crowd. This was the first time he openly and aggressively expressed anti-Semitic views. That same year, Streicher helped establish the Nuremberg branch of the German Socialist Party, DSP, an ultra-nationalist, far-right organization that opposed communism and Catholicism.
The party competed with Hitler’s emerging Nazi Party for the support of veterans and the discontented lower middle class. Though small in size, the DSP was an important environment where Streicher honed his propaganda skills and expanded his political influence. From a provincial school teacher, he quickly became one of the leading figures of the radical nationalist movement in Bavaria.
In 1921, Streicher was elected leader of the DSP’s Nuremberg branch and frequently organized public rallies attended by hundreds of people. His speeches revolved around a single message. The Jews are the cause of all suffering. This was the formative period of Julius Streicher’s worldview, a mixture of personal bitterness, political frustration, and hatred fueled by Germany’s postwar collapse.
His speeches began attracting attention from members of the Nazi Party, particularly a rising figure in Munich, Adolf Hitler. From that encounter, Streicher’s fate was sealed. He would no longer be a school teacher or a local agitator, but would become one of the most notorious propagandists of the future Reich.
From here, the story of the number one hate-monger of Nazi Germany officially began. Joining the Nazi Party. After several years of activity in the German Socialist Party, Julius Streicher became increasingly radical. His rhetoric against the Jews grew so intense that even his allies within the same political camp began to worry.
The leader of the German Working Community, an organization in which Streicher once participated, publicly criticized him for an obsessive hatred of Jews and foreign races. But instead of stopping, Streicher took it as a sign that he was on the right path. In 1922, when Adolf Hitler began expanding the National Socialist German Workers’ Party, NSDAP, Streicher realized this was a movement perfectly aligned with his own ideology.
He met Hitler at a political meeting in Munich. The admiration that the crowd showed for Hitler convinced Streicher that he had found the savior of Germany. Only a few weeks later, Streicher decided to dissolve his own organization and persuaded all his supporters to merge into the Nazi Party. Upon officially joining the NSDAP, Streicher became one of its earliest members, belonging to the group known as Alte Kämpfer, or the old fighters.
Hitler highly valued his fanaticism and soon assigned Streicher to organize rallies in Nuremberg, which would later become the spiritual capital of the Nazi Party. In April 1923, Streicher launched his own newspaper, Der Stürmer, the attacker. It marked a turning point in his life. From the very first issue, the paper made its purpose clear, to spread hatred and instill fear of Jews in the minds of Germans.
Each edition was filled with baseless accusations, fabricated stories, and offensive illustrations. Der Stürmer was unlike ordinary political propaganda publications. It was designed to provoke the darkest instincts of human nature. Thanks to its crude language and sensational style, Der Stürmer quickly drew attention.
Streicher printed thousands of copies per issue and distributed them for free in taverns, train stations, or pasted them publicly on bulletin boards across the city. The paper became a perfect tool for him to spread prejudice and hatred, something Hitler considered essential to uniting the psychology of the German nation. In November 1923, Streicher joined Hitler in the Beer Hall Putsch in Munich, made Streicher trusted by Hitler, for the Führer valued absolute loyalty above political competence. By combining the pen, the
stage of propaganda, and the fury of the masses, Julius Streicher secured his place in the Nazi power structure. He was not a thinker, nor a statesman, but a man who knew how to say what the crowd wanted to hear, even when those words were the most toxic lies. From 1925 onward, Julius Streicher’s name became inseparable from Nuremberg, which he turned into the heart of extremist propaganda.
And within less than a decade, the words he spread in small printed sheets had become the foundation of a massive propaganda machine, one that would destroy every trace of humanity. The boycott of 1933. On the 30th of January 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany by President Paul von Hindenburg.
Within weeks, the entire power structure of the nation was reshaped. Opposition parties were dissolved, the free press was brought under control, and a new regime based on propaganda, violence, and fear officially came into being. Amid the euphoria of Nazi supporters, Julius Streicher believed that his time had come.
Immediately after the Nazi Party took power, Streicher was appointed chairman of the Central Committee for the reaction to the so-called Jewish crimes and economic boycott, a special body established to organize the nationwide campaign against the Jews. Under the pretext of responding to slander from the foreign press, Streicher turned this campaign into the regime’s first public assault on the Jewish community.
On the 1st of April 1933, the boycott order was issued. Thousands of members of the SA, the paramilitary force loyal to Hitler, were mobilized. In Berlin, Munich, Frankfurt, and Nuremberg, they stood guard in front of stores, offices, pharmacies, and clinics owned by Jews. The black and yellow Star of David symbol was painted on shop windows.
The slogans “Do not buy from Jews” and “The Jew is our misfortune” were plastered everywhere. In Nuremberg, Streicher personally directed the campaign. He stood on the balcony of the town hall delivering a speech to the crowd, shouting, “Germans, protect the honor of your nation. Teach the enemy that they no longer have the right to live in this country.
” Cheers erupted throughout the square. Hundreds of shops closed their doors, and many citizens, fearful, stayed off the streets. A few isolated violent incidents occurred, but the police did not intervene. In reality, the law enforcement apparatus was already completely under Nazi control. The campaign lasted only one day.
Economically, it achieved little, as many Germans quietly continued to shop at their familiar Jewish-owned stores. But psychologically, it marked a turning point. For the first time, discrimination and hatred were legalized and organized as state policy. The silence of society became complicity. A week after the boycott, the government enacted the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, which stipulated that only those of Aryan descent were allowed to work in state institutions. Thousands of Jewish
teachers, doctors, civil servants, and lawyers were dismissed. Universities quickly removed Jewish professors from their faculties as well. Streicher regarded the boycott campaign as the first step in the rebirth of the German nation. In later issues of Der Stürmer, he wrote that the Jews will destroy themselves through their own greed and deceit, while calling for similar measures to be expanded nationwide.
He saw this as a personal triumph, proof that propaganda could transform words into collective action. For the Jews of Germany, the 1st of April 1933 marked the beginning of a dark decade. For Streicher, it was the moment he believed himself to have become a vanguard soldier in the struggle for a pure Germany.
But for history, it was the day German morality began its descent, when a campaign lasting only 24 hours opened the door to the atrocities that would follow. The machine of hateful propaganda, after 1933, when the Nazi regime took full control of the media system, Julius Streicher’s Der Stürmer was regarded as an independent yet powerful propaganda tool.
Although it was not part of the Ministry of Propaganda directed by Joseph Goebbels, this newspaper held a special place in Hitler’s heart. The Führer repeatedly declared that Der Stürmer was the only paper brave enough to tell the truth about Germany’s enemies. With such praise, Streicher was able to continue operating without censorship, even when other party agencies considered him vulgar and disgraceful.
Glass display cases known as Stürmerkasten were erected across Germany in schools, squares, tram stations, and railway depots, allowing citizens to read the paper for free. This method of propaganda was simple but effective. It turned lies into habits, repeated so often that people eventually believed them.
In Streicher’s view, the press was not merely a tool to deliver information but a weapon of the mind. Der Stürmer did not discuss politics or strategy. It focused on emotional agitation, fear, hatred, and contempt. The newspaper was filled with articles mocking and accusing Jews of causing every social problem, from unemployment and economic crisis to crime.
Each issue was accompanied by crude caricatures portraying Jews as deceitful, dangerous, and inhuman. At its peak in 1935, Der Stürmer reached a circulation of over 600,000 copies per issue, an enormous figure for that time. While other newspapers followed Goebbels’ formal propaganda guidelines, Streicher took a different route.
He targeted human instincts. He understood that fear and hatred spread faster than any argument. One distinctive feature of Der Stürmer was its blend of anti-Semitic content and suggestive elements. He believed that fear of moral corruption would stir the masses more effectively. The paper often published articles accusing Jews of defiling German women and poisoning the Aryan race, accompanied by offensive illustrations.
Streicher called it political erotica, something he claimed was necessary to awaken the public. Streicher’s extremism went far beyond ordinary propaganda. In hundreds of his writings, he tried to prove that Jews were not truly human but a biological threat to Germany. These baseless arguments played a crucial role in dehumanizing the Jewish population, making violence against them appear acceptable to the public.
Not content with influencing adults, Streicher also sought to corrupt the minds of children. He published three propaganda books for young readers, most notably The Giftpilz, The Poisonous Mushroom in 1938, and Trust No Fox on His Green Heath and No Jew on His Oath in 1936. These publications depicted Jews as demonic figures, while portraying Aryans as the embodiment of virtue and strength.
With bright and appealing illustrations, Streicher’s books were placed in school libraries, where German children read them weekly. More than 70,000 copies were printed and distributed, becoming a direct propaganda weapon for the youth. Through Der Stürmer, Streicher turned journalism into an instrument of dehumanization.
He issued no orders, wielded no weapon, yet his pen made millions believe that eradicating an entire people was an act of righteousness. In Germany at that time, hatred was no longer a private emotion. It had been legitimized as a national ideology. To Under the pretext of confiscating Jewish property, Streicher seized countless houses, shops, and valuable assets for himself.
Reports sent to Berlin indicated that most of the property confiscated in the Middle Franconia region ended up in his hands or those of his close associates. In August 1938, Streicher ordered the demolition of the Nuremberg Grand Synagogue, an ancient religious and cultural landmark of the city. He declared that the temple spoiled the landscape of a pure German city.
This act caused outrage even within Nazi ranks. Göring and Himmler both objected, arguing that such behavior was too blatant and counterproductive for international propaganda. However, Hitler continued to protect him, claiming that Streicher acted out of conviction, not self-interest. In November 1938, during Kristallnacht, SA and SS forces across Germany simultaneously destroyed Jewish homes, shops, and synagogues.
In the Franconia region, Streicher turned the event into his own opportunity. Under his authority, many Jews were forced to sell their property to investors appointed by him at only 5 to 10% of its actual value. When Göring received detailed reports, he immediately ordered an investigation. It was not out of sympathy for the victims, but because he believed Streicher had violated the rule that confiscated property belonged to the state, not individuals.
The investigation committee led by Göring uncovered a series of violations. Streicher was accused of corruption, embezzlement of state property, spreading false information, and moral depravity. Those who had worked with him testified that Streicher kept valuable items, gold, paintings, and even religious artifacts.
At the same time, his private life became the subject of gossip within the party. Hermann Göring spread rumors that Streicher was a sexual deviant who had abused political prisoners and exploited his power to coerce women in the Franconia region. These rumors, though never officially investigated, spread quickly and severely damaged his credibility.
In addition, Streicher was accused of having numerous extra-marital affairs and openly associating with female subordinates, violating the moral standards the Nazi party itself preached. Other Gauleiters accused him of spreading false claims about Göring, saying that Göring was physically impotent and unfit to lead.
This was considered a serious offense in a system that worshipped absolute loyalty. Witnesses also described how Streicher often wandered the streets of Nuremberg carrying a whip, verbally abusing passersby, behavior seen as out of control and unworthy of leadership. On the 16th of February 1940, the Supreme Court of the Nazi party ruled that Julius Streicher was unfit to lead and had damaged the honor of the party.
He was stripped of all his positions, lost control of Middle Franconia, and was banned from appearing in public. For many, it marked the end of his political career, but Hitler did not allow that to happen. Under the direct order of the Führer, Streicher was permitted to retain the honorary title of Gauleiter, to wear his uniform, and to continue publishing Der Stürmer.
Hitler declared during an internal meeting, “Streicher may be wrong, but he never betrays.” That statement was enough to guarantee his survival within the shadows of power for a few more years. After being stripped of authority, Streicher withdrew to his Streicherhof estate near Nuremberg. He lived in isolation, maintaining contact only with a few loyal assistants.
Although cut off from political life, he remained wealthy through the income from Der Stürmer, which continued to be published regularly across Germany. In 1943, his wife, Kunigunde Roth, died after a long illness. The death of the only woman ever close to him pushed Streicher into a state of instability. He became irritable, suspicious, and rarely interacted with anyone.
Nevertheless, he continued sending articles to the editorial office, often filled with hatred and delusion, blaming the international Jewish conspiracy for every failure of Germany during the war. While other Nazi leaders held power and commanded armies, Julius Streicher was left only with a newspaper and an empty title.
He lived under the illusion that he still played a role in the spiritual war of the German people. In reality, he had already been cast aside by the very system he had once served. To Hitler, Streicher remained a symbol of absolute loyalty. But to the rest of the Reich, he was nothing more than a forgotten man, an obsolete tool of propaganda left behind amid the storm of war.
Nuremberg trial, 1946. In May 1945, when Germany surrendered, Julius Streicher did not choose suicide like many other Nazi leaders. He decided to escape. As the Allied forces advanced toward Nuremberg, Streicher and his secretary, Adele Tappe, fled south to seek refuge in the Alps.
Adele, who had served him for many years, became his second wife during the final days of the collapsing Reich. For 2 weeks, they moved through small villages in Bavaria, carrying a few small bags and forged papers. Streicher gave himself the name Joseph Sailer and disguised himself as a landscape painter.
He grew a beard, dressed as a civilian, and carried a few of his own paintings as proof of his false identity. But, the escape did not last long. On the 23rd of May, 1945, he was captured in a small village near Waidring in the Tyrol region of Austria. The man who arrested him was Major Henry Plitt, an officer of the 101st Airborne Division of the United States, a Jewish American.
When discovered, Streicher tried to remain calm, introducing himself as a simple painter. But, when asked to paint a picture to prove it, he hesitated and was immediately recognized by a local resident who had seen his face many times on issues of Der Stürmer. News spread quickly. The propagandist of hate captured by a Jew.
Western newspapers called it the bitter irony of fate. Streicher was taken to the Wiesbaden detention camp, then transferred to Nuremberg prison, where the top Nazi war criminals were held. At the Nuremberg trial, Streicher was charged with two counts, conspiracy to commit crimes against peace and crimes against humanity.
From the very first day, his behavior shocked the courtroom. Unlike other defendants such as Göring, Ribbentrop, or Hess, who tried to appear calm, Streicher entered the courtroom with a fanatical demeanor, constantly attacking the court and repeating anti-Jewish slogans. He shouted that he was a victim of an international conspiracy, that the Jews control the world, and that history will prove me right.
The judges repeatedly ordered him to be silent and at times had him removed from the courtroom. The other defendants, even those who were once his allies, avoided him. Göring called him a madman, while Hans Frank said, “Streicher disgraces the entire German nation.” Throughout the trial, Streicher claimed he had been mistreated after his arrest.
He accused the guards of stripping him, burning him with cigarettes, forcing him to drink dirty water, and making him kneel before black soldiers. However, these accusations were never verified. The prison’s medical records only noted that he showed signs of severe psychological disturbance and paranoia.
When confronted with evidence, Streicher denied all responsibility for the Holocaust. He claimed he never ordered anyone to be arrested or killed, that he was merely a lover of nature who wanted foreigners to leave Germany. However, the prosecutors presented more than 20 years of writings, speeches, and publications from Der Stürmer, all filled with messages of hatred that directly incited violence and extermination.
For 25 years, Julius Streicher spoke, wrote, and preached hatred against the Jews. He planted the seeds of crime through his words, making destruction seem inevitable. Streicher did not need to give orders because his words did the work for him. On the 1st of October, 1946, the International Military Tribunal announced the verdict.
Julius Streicher was acquitted of the charge of conspiracy against peace, as there was no evidence that he took part in planning the war. But, he was found guilty of crimes against humanity on the grounds that his pen contributed directly to the crime of genocide. The sentence imposed on him was death by hanging, ending the life of a man who had turned words into instruments of hatred and death.
Before that, Streicher had been widely known as the number one Jew hater of Nazi Germany. His weekly publications had clearly fueled and legitimized mass acts of violence. He never carried a gun, but his words had prepared the minds of millions to do so. By the 16th of October, 1946, the sentence was carried out at Nuremberg prison.
The execution was conducted by Sergeant John C. Woods of the United States Army. Streicher was the sixth man called that night. As he stepped onto the platform, he raised his head high and shouted, “Heil Hitler!” He continued screaming, “Bolsheviks will hang you one day! And Purim Fest, 1946.” A reference to the Jewish holiday of Purim as his final act of mockery.
Before the black hood was placed over his head, he whispered, “Adele, my dear wife.” When the trapdoor opened, the rope was too short to break his neck. Streicher died by suffocation, struggling for more than 15 minutes. Witnesses described him as groaning and writhing before his body finally went still.
His remains, along with those of the other executed war criminals, were taken to the Munich crematorium and secretly incinerated. The ashes were scattered into the River Isar to prevent any grave or monument from being built. Lesson from the gallows. The end of Julius Streicher was not the end of a politician, but the end of words turned into weapons.
He proved that propaganda can kill without ever touching. And thus, the sentence given to Streicher was not only the verdict of a court, but the judgment of history upon a man who used his pen to pave the way for evil. The downfall of Julius Streicher was not merely the fall of a man, but a warning about the destructive power of words when they are used to feed hatred.
As a historian, I believe what made him truly frightening was not his power or position, but his ability to turn lies into belief and evil into something ordinary. A society does not fall into darkness overnight. It decays little by little when people stop questioning and allow men like Streicher to define right and wrong for them. On the 7th of June, 1951, in the cold courtyard of Landsberg prison, where the footsteps of top Nazi leaders had once echoed, a man walked slowly toward the gallows.
There was no shouting, no fear, only a cold gaze and hands slightly trembling with age. His name was Oswald Pohl, Oss-volt Pohl, an administrative officer who did not directly wield a weapon nor fight on the battlefield, yet held in his hands the entire system that executed death. From the amount of bread allocated to prisoners to the price assigned to their bodies after being worked to exhaustion.
He did not order anyone shot, yet he made millions disappear as if they were numbers in an accounting ledger. He was the administrative mind that turned all of Europe into an industrial killing machine, where humans were reduced to ID numbers, forced to labor until utterly depleted, exploited to their final breath.
And when their bodies failed, they were disposed of like items of no remaining value. If one killed with a gun, it was a clear crime, immediately visible to others. But, killing with paperwork, with procedure, with production schedules, in cold, precise tables, that was totalitarianism at its most sophisticated.
And Oswald Pohl, Oss-volt Pohl, was the architect of that machine. The irony was that to many who believed in Nazi ideals, Pohl had never looked like a killer. They called him an excellent manager, someone who optimized the system and the one who brought order to chaos. The most terrifying brutality did not come from screaming fanatics, but from people who looked like office workers sitting at desks, signing decisions that erased entire populations.
What transforms a military accountant into the operator of the largest network of concentration camps in human history? Loyalty, ambition, trained indifference, or merely a perfect cog in a machine whose moral compass had been misprogrammed? The salaried worker of the machine of human slaughter. Oswald Pohl, Oss-volt Pohl, was not the type of character associated with the typical fascist image.
He did not give speeches, did not raise his hand in salute, did not appear in propaganda photographs of adoration. He was quieter, more ordinary, and that was precisely what made him so terrifying. He was born on the 30th of June, 1892, in a well-off family. His father was a blacksmith.
His full name was Hermann Otto Emil Pohl, Hermann Otto Emil Pohl. And his mother was Auguste Pohl, née Seifert, née Seifert. Intelligent by nature, he attended a real gymnasium, studying classical Greek and Latin texts. A young man passionate about science, logic, and order. That very belief in order would later turn him into the optimizer of a system that exterminated humanity.
Yet, the defeat of Germany in the First World War altered the trajectory of his life. He joined the Freikorps, semi-military right-wing units in Berlin, Upper Silesia, and the Ruhr. There, he believed that Germany had been betrayed by the Weimar government and by the Jews. From that point, obedience became an ideal, efficiency a goal, and decency was replaced by service to the Nazi regime.
When Hitler came to power, Oswald Pohl, Oss-volt Pohl, joined the SS, not out of fanaticism, but ambition and belief in the machinery. Himmler saw in him something Hitler valued, a person of spreadsheets, someone who understood the worth of the system more than the worth of human life. Pohl was tasked with building the SS administrative machinery, where each column of numbers represented a human life, and financial optimization equaled optimization of death.
From 1939, Pohl directed the SS Main Economic and Administrative Office, WVHA, controlling finances, logistics, construction, and the entire concentration camp system. He turned the network of camps into a forced labor accounting system, payroll for prisoners, calorie limits to maintain minimal productivity, and procedures to exploit the human breath to generate output.
Under his command were more than 20 concentration camps and 165 forced labor camps, including Auschwitz, O W V E T Z V I T Z, Ravensbruck, R A H, Venbrook, Majdanek, M A I D A N E K, and Mauthausen, M O W T H A U S E N. At WVHA, humans were converted into production units. Death became depreciation. In reports, he even calculated the average value of a prisoner as 1,630 Reichsmark and an effective working life as 9 months.
The higher the labor efficiency, the lower the subsistence cost, the greater the profit for the SS. Pohl once proudly stated that WVHA helped utilize human resources most effectively. And that efficiency was the purest form of crime in a modern system. No executioner needed, only formulas, ledgers, and a red stamp. Oswald Pohl, O S V O L T P O H L, had become the first spreadsheet killer of the 20th century.
A cold ledger had turned Auschwitz into an industrial death line, where each stone, each ration, each body had a measurable economic value. When morality was replaced by efficiency, for Oswald Pohl, O S V O L T P O H L, efficiency was not only a working principle, but the sole measure of human value. During his time running the SS Economic and Administrative Office, WVHA, he repeatedly emphasized the concept of Rationalisierung, R A T Z I O N A L I S I E R A T Z I O N A L I S I E R U N G, rationalization.
All activities, even genocide, must achieve maximum output at minimal cost. From 1942, Pohl oversaw the restructuring of the concentration camp system into a self-sustaining model. Prisoners became production labor for the SS. Their deaths were not losses, but natural attrition recorded in accounting books. An internal WVHA report from 1943 noted, “Mortality among laborers is an unavoidable consequence of war, not affecting production goals.
” Oswald Pohl signed off on the DEST project, Deutsche Erd und Steinwerke GmbH, D E U T S C H E E R D U N D S T E I N E W E R K, in Mauthausen, M A U T H A U S E N. Mauthausen, Gross-Rosen, and Flossenbürg, F L O S S E N B U R G. Prisoners were forced to carry stones over 40 kg, 12 hours a day, without rest, working until utterly exhausted.
Historical reports indicate extremely high mortality rates in these quarries, run like death conveyor belts. During the same period, he expanded Ostindustrie GmbH, an SS company exploiting Jewish property in occupied Poland. Those stripped of assets were classified as economically valueless, a cold bureaucratic term replacing the word human.
Not brutality, but rationality was central to Pohl’s thinking. In a 1944 report, he stated that the camps were not only detaining the state’s enemies, but were models of cost-effective and efficient production. That was the moment when morality completely vanished from the Third Reich’s administrative structure. No slogans of hatred, no propaganda were necessary.
A simple economic formula made crime a procedure. Pohl saw no humans in the reports, only existing numbers. He even ordered a 10% reduction in prisoner rations to balance energy expenditure. And therein lies the tragedy of industrialized cruelty. When an administration can turn efficiency into the highest value, all humanitarian principles become secondary costs.
Oswald Pohl, O S V O L T P O H L, killed with reason devoid of soul, a rationality that made evil neat, tidy, and quantifiable. A soulless system, where the mechanism kills instead of humans. In 1942, as the war entered total mobilization, Pohl transformed the WVHA into the administrative brain of the entire concentration camp system.
Under him were over 500 officers coordinating 20 functional departments and a network of more than 20 SS-controlled companies. From his Berlin office, Pohl could sign papers that would make tens of thousands of people vanish from the workforce. In this structure, everything had an identification number.
Prisoners were assigned codes. Corpses recorded as units no longer fit for labor, hair and teeth cataloged as recycled materials. No one spoke of crime, only technical and managerial language remained. Here, evil became invisible, no longer an act, but the result of a perfectly designed chain of procedures. Pohl called this philosophy Verwaltung ohne Gefühl, V A L T U N G O H N E G E F U H L, administration without feeling.
In internal records, he wrote that labor must be exploited to maximum efficiency, unaffected by emotion. That seemingly reasonable statement was the foundation of a mass killing mechanism. When emotion is removed from management, people become replaceable resources. By mid-1943, Pohl expanded the SS production network, establishing more than 150 satellite subcamps around factories such as IG Farben, Krupp, and Siemens.
Hundreds of thousands of prisoners worked 14 to 16 hours daily in near starvation conditions. They were not executed by bullets, but died gradually under the concept of productivity optimization, a notion born at the WVHA desk. Not Himmler, not Hitler, but Pohl’s production plans kept the camps running continuously like a soulless machine.
Terrifyingly, in the eyes of the bureaucracy, everything was legal. Reports were made, budgets approved, numbers tallied, as if it were a normal production line. Pohl did not incite murder. He ensured that system efficiency was always at its peak. Yet that professional coldness made the crime comprehensive, leaving no gaps. Oswald Pohl, O S V O L T P O H L, exemplified the corruption of administrative intellect, a learned managerial individual using knowledge to serve an inhuman system.
The WVHA needed no fanatics, only rule followers. That is what made it more dangerous than anything else, because when humans no longer feel responsible, the system kills in their place. When crime is legitimized by stamps and signatures, no screams, no smell of crematorium smoke, only top secret stamped documents, detailed plans bearing the signature of Oswald Pohl.
They were not execution orders, but production contracts, financial proposals, logistical directives. Yet each sheet indirectly sent tens of thousands of people to their deaths. Moreover, in the year 1942, the events were nearly forgotten. After the restructuring of the WVHA into the SS War Economy Apparatus.
Under his authority, a series of state-controlled companies were established. DEST, D E S T, Ostindustrie GmbH, O S T Industrie A, specializing in stone quarrying, brick production, weapons, and military uniforms. The primary labor force consisted of concentration camp prisoners, identified by numbers, easily replaceable when they died.
A prisoner transferred from Buchenwald, B O O K E N V A L D, to Mauthausen, M O W T H A U S E N, would be accompanied by a personnel allocation slip, a transport invoice, and a biological status report. From an administrative perspective, the system was perfectly chilling. Pohl called it Rationalisierung, R A H T O N A L I S I E R U N G, rationalization of production.
In a report to Himmler, H I M M L E R, he wrote, “Prisoners are no longer a burden on the state, but a resource to be exploited to the fullest.” The wording sounded like a corporate meeting, but behind it lay the deaths of millions. What distinguished Pohl from Hitler or Himmler was not ideology, but his belief that procedures could make crime appear legal.
In May 1944, when 437,000 Hungarian Jews were sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau, O W I E S C H W I T Z B E E R K N A U, the WVHA under Pohl approved all transport costs, food for the prisoners, and even the budget for four new crematoria to handle increased capacity. In just 8 weeks, more than 320,000 people were killed. And in Pohl’s administrative system, all were recorded as target figures achieved.
His orders also called for the confiscation of prisoners’ property. They confiscated everything from clothes, watches, to gold teeth, all for the purpose of being placed in the SS warehouse in Berlin. Not blood, but a stream of books and reports that turned crime into formal accounting. As the Third Reich expanded its power and built a war apparatus, there were those who did not carry guns directly, but contributed profoundly to the brutal mechanism through documents, seals, and spreadsheets.
Among them, Oswald Pohl, the senior SS financial officer, embodied most clearly the type of crime disguised under the veil of efficient administration. The final trial, when the price of efficiency is judged. After the collapse of Nazi Germany in May 1945, Oswald Pohl fled to northern Germany with false papers.
Three weeks later, he was arrested by British forces near Bremen, not with weapons in hand, but a suitcase full of SS financial reports. The very papers that had helped him run one of the largest forced labor systems in the world. In April 1947, in Nuremberg N O O R U M B E R G, the Pohl trial, one of 12 subsequent Nuremberg trials.
Oswald Pohl sat in courtroom number two, no longer in uniform, and with no power in his hands. In front of him were more than 7,000 pages of evidence, seals, reports, and signatures, all belonging to Oswald Pohl himself. Here, when questioned about his role, Pohl said, “I only signed administrative documents.
I did not kill anyone directly.” But the prosecutor dismissed this, and presented hundreds of documents bearing his signature. From expanding the crematoria at Auschwitz, transferring gold and human teeth to Berlin, to rationing plans to optimize productivity. Each red stamp represented a death sentence carried out without trial.
The court made it clear that no one could legalize crime under administrative pretext. At the trial, the prosecutor read the payrolls and reports submitted by the WVHA to Himmler. In the fourth quarter of 1943, labor losses due to death were 29%. Output still met targets. Not a single line mentioned human beings, only numbers.
And when morality was replaced by data, the system entirely supplanted the soul of those who operated it. The prosecutor described this as crime not born of hatred, but of efficiency. Pohl merely nodded. He still defended himself, believing he was merely performing official duties. But for the first time, the world refused to accept that excuse.
In the six-count indictment, the court charged him with organizing and running the concentration camp system, forced labor, confiscation of prisoner property, and contributing to systematic genocide. On the 3rd of November, 1947, Oswald Pohl was sentenced to death by hanging. He appealed, claiming he had not killed anyone, only performed administrative work.
The appellate court rejected this, affirming that administrative responsibility cannot be separated from systematic crime. For the first time in history, efficiency was condemned as a form of organized indifference. The sentence was carried out on the 8th of June, 1951, at Landsberg Landsberg prison, a place that had executed many other war criminals.
The man who had turned humans into numbers ended his life with a file just three lines long about loyalty and duty. “I have served more than 30 years as a soldier. I’ve always followed orders and kept my oath of loyalty. I was ready.” His death did not close the crimes, but closed an era that believed systems could replace morality.
Since then, in all post-war political and administrative doctrines, the name Oswald Pohl has become a symbol of inhumanity when efficiency surpasses conscience. This was not only a sentence for Oswald Pohl, but a warning to an entire civilization that efficiency could replace morality. For when a hand does not hold a gun, but signs plans that make others pull the trigger, it is no longer obedience, but systematic complicity.
The paradoxical legacy, a verdict for all ages. Pohl was not a fanatic like Himmler or Heydrich, nor like the executioners on the battlefield. On the contrary, he was a model bureaucrat, punctual, precise, efficient. In his world, morality became a cost, and performance the measure of human value.
The most frightening aspect of the 20th century fatam 20th century was not the guns, but the abstraction of crime when humans could take millions of lives without ever seeing them. And that was also Pohl’s tragedy, a man who believed that following procedures was enough to be considered innocent. More than seven decades later, the world has entered the era of data, artificial intelligence, and automation creeping into every corner of life and story.
Humanity once again faces the question once posed to Pohl. When every decision is systematized, are we recreating a soulless machine? Were Pohl living in the 21st century fatam 21st century, he might say, “I only operate the algorithm. I do not make decisions.” But history has taught that any system, however intelligent, can become cruel if the humans within it stop questioning.
From concentration camps to data pipelines, the line between efficiency and indifference has never been thinner. Oswald Pohl died for war crimes, but his legacy, a model of inhuman governance, still exists in modern society. His death did not close history, but opened a warning. When humans let processes replace ethics, and let performance overshadow compassion, crime returns in more sophisticated forms.
And perhaps the final question for us is not, did Oswald Pohl deserve to die, but rather, today, in the systems we still call normal, how many Oswald Pohls quietly exist? If you believe history is not only to be remembered, but to understand the present, subscribe to the channel now. Each video here not only recounts the past, In the winter of 1942, black smoke from the cities of eastern Germany kept rising without end.
Trains followed one after another leaving the stations, filled with numbered people whose gaunt faces pressed against the cold metal bars. Along the tracks, guards stood motionless in the freezing air, with only the sound of iron wheels grinding on the rails, and the long whistle tearing through the night.
Amidst that scene, one name was mentioned at rallies, in newspapers, and across public squares. Julius Streicher, founder of the newspaper Der Stürmer, the man who devoted his entire life to spreading hatred and redefining the idea of the enemy of Germany. He never fired a single shot, but his words sent millions away in silence.
As the war spread across Europe, Streicher believed that his pen had created a pure Germany. Yet in that very moment, he was writing the sentence of his own condemnation, one that history would never erase. Origins and early career. Julius Streicher was born on the 12th of February, 1885, in the village of Fleinhausen, in the Swabia region of southern Germany.
He was the ninth child in a large family. His father was a strict and conservative elementary school teacher. From an early age, Streicher was deeply influenced by that rigid environment, which later shaped his hot-tempered, domineering personality, and his constant desire to make others obey him.
In 1904, after completing teacher training, Streicher began working as a school teacher like his father. He quickly became known among local educators, not for his teaching ability, but for his violent temper and authoritarian behavior. Students feared him, while colleagues described him as a man who could not control his emotions.
Nevertheless, Streicher was recognized for his gift of speech, a talent he would later use to manipulate the masses. In 1909, Streicher moved to Nuremberg, the city that would be forever tied to his life. Four years later, in 1913, he married Kunigunde Roth, a woman from the same Bavarian region.
The marriage was peaceful in its early years, and they had two sons, but the relationship gradually grew distant as Streicher became involved in extremist political activities after the war. When World War I broke out in 1914, Streicher volunteered for the German army. On the western front, he served in the infantry, and took part in several battles in France and Belgium.
Despite reports of poor discipline, Streicher rose to the rank of lieutenant, and received both the first class and second class Iron Cross awards for bravery. However, those small victories could not erase the trauma he felt when Germany surrendered in 1918. Like many other veterans, Streicher carried a sense of humiliation and resentment.
The defeat was not only the collapse of an empire, but also the shattering of his inner beliefs. It was the psychological turning point that pushed him toward extremism. After being discharged, he returned to Nuremberg amidst a chaotic Germany. The economy had collapsed, inflation was soaring, and returning soldiers could no longer find their place in society.
Many believed the nation had been stabbed in the back, a widespread conspiracy theory at the time that blamed Jews and communists for Germany’s downfall. Streicher was among those who embraced that idea. In 1919, he joined the Schutz und Trutzbund, a right-wing paramilitary organization that opposed the newly formed socialist government of the Bavarian Republic.
During rallies, Streicher displayed an exceptional talent for oratory. His voice was hoarse, but powerful, and his fiery, dramatic speeches stirred intense emotions among the crowd. This was the first time he openly and aggressively expressed anti-Semitic views.
That same year, Streicher helped establish the Nuremberg branch of the German Socialist Party, DSP, an ultra-nationalist, far-right organization that opposed communism and Catholicism. The party competed with Hitler’s emerging Nazi party for the support of veterans and the discontented lower middle class. Though small in size, the DSP was an important environment where Streicher honed his propaganda skills and expanded his political influence.
From a provincial school teacher, he quickly became one of the leading figures of the radical nationalist movement in Bavaria. In 1921, Streicher was elected leader of the DSP’s Nuremberg branch and frequently organized public rallies attended by hundreds of people. His speeches revolved around a single message: The Jews are the cause of all suffering.
This was the formative period of Julius Streicher’s worldview, a mixture of personal bitterness, political frustration, and hatred fueled by Germany’s post-war collapse. His speeches began attracting attention from members of the Nazi party, particularly a rising figure in Munich, Adolf Hitler. From that encounter, Streicher’s fate was sealed.
He would no longer be a school teacher or a local agitator, but would become one of the most notorious propagandists of the future Reich. From here, the story of the number one hatemonger of Nazi Germany officially began. Joining the Nazi party. After several years of activity in the German Socialist party, Julius Streicher became increasingly radical.
His rhetoric against the Jews grew so intense that even his allies within the same political camp began to worry. The leader of the German working community, an organization in which Streicher once participated, publicly criticized him for an obsessive hatred of Jews and foreign races. But instead of stopping, Streicher took it as a sign that he was on the right path.
In 1922, when Adolf Hitler began expanding the National Socialist German Workers Party, NSDAP, Streicher realized this was a movement perfectly aligned with his own ideology. He met Hitler at a political meeting in Munich. The admiration that the crowd showed for Hitler convinced Streicher that he had found the savior of Germany. Only a few weeks later, Streicher decided to dissolve his own organization and persuaded all his supporters to merge into the Nazi party.
Upon officially joining the NSDAP, Streicher became one of its earliest members, belonging to the group known as Alt Kämpfer, or the old fighters. Hitler highly valued his fanaticism and soon assigned Streicher to organize rallies in Nuremberg, which would later become the spiritual capital of the Nazi party.
In April 1923, Streicher launched his own newspaper, Der Stürmer, the attacker. It marked a turning point in his life. From the very first issue, the paper made its purpose clear: To spread hatred and instill fear of Jews in the minds of Germans. Each edition was filled with baseless accusations, fabricated stories, and offensive illustrations.
Der Stürmer was unlike ordinary political propaganda publications. It was designed to provoke the darkest instincts of human nature. Thanks to its crude language and sensational style, Der Stürmer quickly drew attention. Streicher printed thousands of copies per issue and distributed them for free in taverns, train stations, or pasted them publicly on bulletin boards across the city.
The paper became a perfect tool for him to spread prejudice and hatred, something Hitler considered essential to uniting the psychology of the German nation. In November 1923, Streicher joined Hitler in the beer hall putsch in Munich, and after the Nazi party was banned, Streicher founded a substitute organization called the German Frontline Fighters Union, maintaining a network of Hitler supporters in Franconia.
He continued publishing Der Stürmer secretly, cleverly changing the publisher’s name to avoid prosecution. Each article carried a more extreme tone than before, filled with claims that Jews were poisoning German society from within. When Hitler was released from prison after eight months and reestablished the Nazi party in 1925, Streicher immediately returned.
To recognize his loyalty and dedication during the most difficult period, Hitler appointed him Gauleiter of Middle Franconia, a position equivalent to a regional administrative leader of the party. With his new authority, Streicher controlled all of Nuremberg and its surrounding areas. He reorganized the local party structure, oversaw propaganda and demonstrations, and personally directed large-scale rallies.
Under his command, Der Stürmer was no longer just a local paper, but a political weapon. Each article was used to justify discrimination and the exclusion of Jews from the German national community. In Hitler’s eyes, Streicher was a man who fought with words, someone willing to use any means that made Streicher trusted by Hitler, for the Führer valued absolute loyalty above political competence.
By combining the pen, the stage of propaganda, and the fury of the masses, Julius Streicher secured his place in the Nazi power structure. He was not a thinker, nor a statesman, but a man who knew how to say what the crowd wanted to hear, even when those words were the most toxic lies. From 1925 onward, Julius Streicher’s name became inseparable from Nuremberg, which he turned into the heart of extremist propaganda.
And within less than a decade, the words he spread in small printed sheets had become the foundation of a massive propaganda machine, one that would destroy every trace of humanity. The boycott of 1933. On the 30th of January 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany by President Paul von Hindenburg.
Within weeks, the entire power structure of the nation was reshaped. Opposition parties were dissolved, the free press was brought under control, and a new regime based on propaganda, violence, and fear officially came into being. Amid the euphoria of Nazi supporters, Julius Streicher believed that his time had come.
Immediately after the Nazi party took power, Streicher was appointed chairman of the Central Committee for the reaction to the so-called Jewish crimes and economic boycott, a special body established to organize the nationwide campaign against the Jews. Under the pretext of responding to slander from the foreign press, Streicher turned this campaign into the regime’s first public assault on the Jewish community.
On the 1st of April 1933, the boycott order was issued. Thousands of members of the SA, the paramilitary force loyal to Hitler, were mobilized. In Berlin, Munich, Frankfurt, and Nuremberg, they stood guard in front of stores, offices, pharmacies, and clinics owned by Jews. The black and yellow star of David symbol was painted on shop windows.
The slogans “Do not buy from Jews” and “The Jew is our misfortune” were plastered everywhere. In Nuremberg, Streicher personally directed the campaign. He stood on the balcony of the town hall delivering a speech to the crowd shouting, “Germans, protect the honor of your nation.
Teach the enemy that they no longer have the right to live in this country.” Cheers erupted throughout the square. Hundreds of shops closed their doors, and many citizens, fearful, stayed off the streets. A few isolated violent incidents occurred, but the police did not intervene. In reality, the law enforcement apparatus was already completely under Nazi control.
The campaign lasted only one day. Economically, it achieved little, as many Germans quietly continued to shop at their familiar Jewish-owned stores. But psychologically, it marked a turning point. For the first time, discrimination and hatred were legalized and organized as state policy. The silence of society became complicity.
A week after the boycott, the government enacted the law for the restoration of the professional civil service, which stipulated that only those of Aryan descent were allowed to work in state institutions. Thousands of Jewish teachers, doctors, civil servants, and lawyers were dismissed. Universities quickly removed Jewish professors from their faculties as well.
Streicher regarded the boycott campaign as the first step in the rebirth of the German nation. In later issues of Der Stürmer, he wrote that “The Jews will destroy themselves through their own greed and deceit” while calling for similar measures to be expanded nationwide. He saw this as a personal triumph, proof that propaganda could transform words into collective action.
For the Jews of Germany, the 1st of April 1933 marked the beginning of a dark decade. For Streicher, it was the moment he believed himself to have become a vanguard soldier in the struggle for a pure Germany. But for history, it was the day German morality began its descent, when a campaign lasting only 24 hours opened the door to the atrocities that would follow.
The machine of hateful propaganda. After 1933, when the Nazi regime took full control of the media system, Julius Streicher’s Der Stürmer was regarded as an independent yet powerful propaganda tool. Although it was not part of the Ministry of Propaganda directed by Joseph Goebbels, this newspaper held a special place in Hitler’s heart.
The Führer repeatedly declared that Der Stürmer was the only paper brave enough to tell the truth about Germany’s enemies. With such praise, Streicher was able to continue operating without censorship, even when other party agencies considered him vulgar and disgraceful. Glass display cases known as Sturmer Kasten were erected across Germany in schools, squares, tram stations, and railway depots allowing citizens to read the paper for free.
This method of propaganda was simple but effective. It turned lies into habits repeated so often that people eventually believed them. In Streicher’s view, the press was not merely a tool to deliver information but a weapon of the mind. Der Sturmer did not discuss politics or strategy.
It focused on emotional agitation, fear, hatred, and contempt. The newspaper was filled with articles mocking and accusing Jews of causing every social problem from unemployment and economic crisis to crime. Each issue was accompanied by crude caricatures portraying Jews as deceitful, dangerous, and inhuman.
At its peak in 1935, Der Sturmer reached a circulation of over 600,000 copies per issue, an enormous figure for that time. While other newspapers followed Goebbels’ formal propaganda guidelines, Streicher took a different route. He targeted human instincts. He understood that fear and hatred spread faster than any argument.
One distinctive feature of Der Sturmer was its blend of anti-Semitic content and suggestive elements. He believed that fear of moral corruption would stir the masses more effectively. The paper often published articles accusing Jews of defiling German women and poisoning the Aryan race accompanied by offensive illustrations.
Streicher called it political erotica, something he claimed was necessary to awaken the public. Streicher’s extremism went far beyond ordinary propaganda. In hundreds of his writings, he tried to prove that Jews were not truly human but a biological threat to Germany. These baseless arguments played a crucial role in dehumanizing the Jewish population making violence against them appear acceptable to the public.
Not content with influencing adults, Streicher also sought to corrupt the minds of children. He published three propaganda books for young readers, most notably Der Giftpilz, The Poisonous Mushroom, in 1938 and Trust No Fox on His Green Heath and No Jew on His Oath in 1936. These publications depicted Jews as demonic figures while portraying Aryans as the embodiment of virtue and strength.
With bright and appealing illustrations, Streicher’s books were placed in school libraries where German children read them weekly. More than 70,000 copies were printed and distributed becoming a direct propaganda weapon for the youth. Through Der Sturmer, Streicher turned journalism into an instrument of dehumanization. He issued no orders, wielded no weapon, yet his pen made millions believe that eradicating an entire people was an act of righteousness.
In Germany at that time, hatred was no longer a private emotion. It had been legitimized as a national ideology. To Hitler, under the pretext of confiscating Jewish property, Streicher seized countless houses, shops, and valuable assets for himself. Reports sent to Berlin indicated that most of the property confiscated in the Middle Franconia region ended up in his hands or those of his close associates.
In August 1938, Streicher ordered the demolition of the Nuremberg Grand Synagogue, an ancient religious and cultural landmark of the city. He declared that the temple spoiled the landscape of a pure German city. This act caused outrage even within Nazi ranks. Goering and Himmler both objected arguing that such behavior was too blatant and counterproductive for international propaganda.
However, Hitler continued to protect him claiming that Streicher acted out of conviction, not self-interest. In November 1938, during Kristallnacht, SA and SS forces across Germany simultaneously destroyed Jewish homes, shops, and synagogues. In the Franconia region, Streicher turned the event into his own opportunity.
Under his authority, many Jews were forced to sell their property to investors appointed by him at only 5 to 10% of its actual value. When Goering received detailed reports, he immediately ordered an investigation. It was not out of sympathy for the victims but because he believed Streicher had violated the rule that confiscated property belonged to the state, not individuals.
The investigation committee led by Goering uncovered a series of violations. Streicher was accused of corruption, embezzlement of state property, spreading false information, and moral depravity. Those who had worked with him testified that Streicher kept valuable items, gold, paintings, and even religious artifacts.
At the same time, his private life became the subject of gossip within the party. Hermann Goering spread rumors that Streicher was a sexual deviant who had abused political prisoners and exploited his power to coerce women in the Franconia region. These rumors, though never officially investigated, spread quickly and severely damaged his credibility.
In addition, Streicher was accused of having numerous extramarital affairs and openly associating with female subordinates violating the moral standards the Nazi party itself preached. Other Gauleiters accused him of spreading false claims about Goering saying that Goering was physically impotent and unfit to lead.
This was considered a serious offense in a system that worshipped absolute loyalty. Witnesses also described how Streicher often wandered the streets of Nuremberg carrying a whip verbally abusing passersby behavior seen as out of control and unworthy of leadership. On the 16th of February 1940, the Supreme Court of the Nazi party ruled that Julius Streicher was unfit to lead and had damaged the honor of the party.
He was stripped of all his positions, lost control of Middle Franconia, and was banned from appearing in public. For many, it marked the end of his political career, but Hitler did not allow that to happen. Under the direct order of the Fuhrer, Streicher was permitted to retain the honorary title of Gauleiter, to wear his uniform, and to continue publishing Der Sturmer.
Hitler declared during an internal meeting, “Streicher may be wrong, but he never betrays.” That statement was enough to guarantee his survival within the shadows of power for a few more years. After being stripped of authority, Streicher withdrew to his Streicherhof estate near Nuremberg. He lived in isolation maintaining contact only with a few loyal assistants.
Although cut off from political life, he remained wealthy through the income from Der Sturmer, which continued to be published regularly across Germany. In 1943, his wife, Kunigunde Roth, died after a long illness. The death of the only woman ever close to him pushed Streicher into a state of instability.
He became irritable, suspicious, and rarely interacted with anyone. Nevertheless, he continued sending articles to the editorial office often filled with hatred and delusion blaming the international Jewish conspiracy for every failure of Germany during the war. While other Nazi leaders held power and commanded armies, Julius Streicher was left only with a newspaper and an empty title.
He lived under the illusion that he still played a role in the spiritual war of the German people. In reality, he had already been cast aside by the very system he had once served. To Hitler, Streicher remained a symbol of absolute loyalty. But to the rest of the Reich, he was nothing more than a forgotten man, an obsolete tool of propaganda left behind amid the storm of war.
Nuremberg trial, 1946. In May 1945, when Germany surrendered, Julius Streicher did not choose suicide like many other Nazi leaders. He decided to escape. As the Allied forces advanced toward Nuremberg, Streicher and his secretary, Adele Tappe, fled south to seek refuge in the Alps. Adele, who had served him for many years, became his second wife during the final days of the collapsing Reich.
For 2 weeks, they moved through small villages in Bavaria carrying a few small bags and forged papers. Streicher gave himself the name Josef Sailer and disguised himself as a landscape painter. He grew a beard, dressed as a civilian, and carried a few of his own paintings as proof of his false identity.
But the escape did not last long. On the 23rd of May 1945, he was captured in a small village near Waidring in the Tyrol region of Austria. The man who arrested him was Major Henry Plitt, an officer of the 101st Airborne Division of the United States, a Jewish American. When discovered, Streicher tried to remain calm introducing himself as a simple painter.
But when asked to paint a picture to prove it, he hesitated and was immediately recognized by a local resident who had seen his face many times on issues of Der Sturmer. News spread quickly. The propagandist of hate captured by a Jew. Western newspapers called it the bitter irony of fate. Streicher was taken to the Wiesbaden detention camp, then transferred to Nuremberg prison where the top Nazi war criminals were held.
At the Nuremberg trial, Streicher was charged with two counts, conspiracy to commit crimes against peace and crimes against humanity. From the very first day, his behavior shocked the courtroom. Unlike other defendants such as Goering, Ribbentrop, or Hess, who tried to appear calm, Streicher entered the courtroom with a fanatical demeanor constantly attacking the court and repeating anti-Jewish slogans.
He shouted that he was a victim of an international conspiracy, that the Jews control the world, and that history will prove me right. The judges repeatedly ordered him to be silent, and at times had him removed from the courtroom. The other defendants, even those who were once his allies, avoided him. Göring called him a madman, while Hans Frank said, “Streicher disgraces the entire German nation.
” Throughout the trial, Streicher claimed he had been mistreated after his arrest. He accused the guards of stripping him, burning him with cigarettes, forcing him to drink dirty water, and making him kneel before black soldiers. However, these accusations were never verified. The prison’s medical records only noted that he showed signs of severe psychological disturbance and paranoia.
When confronted with evidence, Streicher denied all responsibility for the Holocaust. He claimed he never ordered anyone to be arrested or killed, that he was merely a lover of nature who wanted foreigners to leave Germany. However, the prosecutors presented more than 20 years of writings, speeches, and publications from Der Stürmer, all filled with messages of hatred that directly incited violence and extermination.
For 25 years, Julius Streicher spoke, wrote, and preached hatred against the Jews. He planted the seeds of crime through his words, making destruction seem inevitable. Streicher did not need to give orders, because his words did the work for him. On the 1st of October, 1946, the International Military Tribunal announced the verdict.
Julius Streicher was acquitted of the charge of conspiracy against peace, as there was no evidence that he took part in planning the war. But he was found guilty of crimes against humanity on the grounds that his pen contributed directly to the crime of genocide. The sentence imposed on him was death by hanging, ending the life of a man who had turned words into instruments of hatred and death.
Before that, Streicher had been widely known as the number one Jew hater of Nazi Germany. His weekly publications had clearly fueled and legitimized mass acts of violence. He never carried a gun, but his words had prepared the minds of millions to do so. By the 16th of October, 1946, the sentence was carried out at Nuremberg Prison.
The execution was conducted by Sergeant John C. Woods of the United States Army. Streicher was the sixth man called that night. As he stepped onto the platform, he raised his head high and shouted, “Heil Hitler!” He continued screaming, “Bolsheviks will hang you one day!” and Purim Fest, 1946, a reference to the Jewish holiday of Purim, as his final act of mockery.
Before the black hood was placed over his head, he whispered, “Adele, my dear wife.” When the trapdoor opened, the rope was too short to break his neck. Streicher died by suffocation, struggling for more than 15 minutes. Witnesses described him as groaning and writhing before his body finally went still.
His remains, along with those of the other executed war criminals, were taken to the Munich crematorium and secretly incinerated. The ashes were scattered into the River Isar to prevent any grave or monument from being built. Lesson from the gallows. The end of Julius Streicher was not the end of a politician, but the end of words turned into weapons.
He proved that propaganda can kill without ever touching. And thus, the sentence given to Streicher was not only the verdict of a court, but the judgment of history upon a man who used his pen to pave the way for evil. The downfall of Julius Streicher was not merely the fall of a man, but a warning about the destructive power of words when they are used to feed hatred.
As a historian, I believe what made him truly frightening was not his power or position, but his ability to turn lies into belief and evil into something ordinary. A society does not fall into darkness overnight. It decays little by little when people stop questioning and allow men like Streicher to define right On the 7th of June, 1951, in the cold courtyard of Landsberg Prison, where the footsteps of top Nazi leaders had once echoed, a man walked slowly toward the gallows.
There was no shouting, no fear, only a cold gaze and hands slightly trembling with age. His name was Oswald Pohl, Os-volt Pohl, an administrative officer who did not directly wield a weapon, nor fight on the battlefield, yet held in his hands the entire system that executed death. From the amount of bread allocated to prisoners to the price assigned to their bodies after being worked to exhaustion.
He did not order anyone shot, yet he made millions disappear as if they were numbers in an accounting ledger. He was the administrative mind that turned all of Europe into an industrial killing machine, where humans were reduced to ID numbers, forced to labor until utterly depleted, exploited to their final breath. And when their bodies failed, they were disposed of like items of no remaining value.
If one killed with a gun, it was a clear crime, immediately visible to others. But killing with paperwork, with procedure, with production schedules, in cold, precise tables, that was totalitarianism at its most sophisticated. And Oswald Pohl, Os-volt Pohl, was the architect of that machine. The irony was that to many who believed in Nazi ideals, Pohl had never looked like a killer.
They called him an excellent manager, someone who optimized the system, and the one who brought order to chaos. The most terrifying brutality did not come from screaming fanatics, but from people who looked like office workers, sitting at desks, signing decisions that erased entire populations. What transforms a military accountant into the operator of the largest network of concentration camps in human history? Loyalty, ambition, trained indifference, or merely a perfect cog in a machine whose moral compass had been misprogrammed?
The salaried worker of the machine of human slaughter. Oswald Pohl, Os-volt Pohl, was not the type of character associated with the typical fascist image. He did not give speeches, did not raise his hand in salute, did not appear in propaganda photographs of adoration. He was quieter, more ordinary, and that was precisely what made him so terrifying.
He was born on the 30th of June, 1892, in a well-off family. His father was a blacksmith. His full name was Hermann Otto Emil Pohl, Hermann Otto Emil Pohl. And his mother was Auguste Pohl, née Seyfert, née Seyfert. Intelligent by nature, he attended a real gymnasium, studying classical Greek and Latin texts. A young man passionate about science, logic, and order.
That very belief in order would later turn him into the optimizer of a system that exterminated humanity. Yet the defeat of Germany in the First World War altered the trajectory of his life. He joined the Freikorps, semi-military right-wing units in Berlin, Upper Silesia, and the Ruhr.
There he believed that Germany had been betrayed by the Weimar government and by the Jews. From that point, obedience became an ideal, efficiency a goal, and decency was replaced by service to the Nazi regime. When Hitler came to power, Oswald Pohl, Os-volt Pohl, joined the SS, not out of fanaticism, but ambition and belief in the machinery.
Himmler saw in him something Hitler valued, a person of spreadsheets, someone who understood the worth of the system more than the worth of human life. Pohl was tasked with building the SS administrative machinery, where each column of numbers represented a human life, and financial optimization equaled optimization of death.
From 1939, Pohl directed the SS Main Economic and Administrative Office, WVHA, controlling finances, logistics, construction, and the entire concentration camp system. He turned the network of camps into a forced labor accounting system, payroll for prisoners, calorie limits to maintain minimal productivity, and procedures to exploit the human breath to generate output.
Under his command were more than 20 concentration camps and 165 forced labor camps, including Auschwitz, O W W, Wietz Wietz, Ravensbrück, R A H, Ven Bruck, Majdanek, M A I D A N E K, and Mauthausen, M O W T H A U S E N. At WVHA, humans were converted into production units. Death became depreciation. In reports, he even calculated the average value of a prisoner as 1,630 Reichsmark, and an effective working life as 9 months.
The higher the labor efficiency, the lower the subsistence cost, the greater the profit for the SS. Pohl once proudly stated that WVHA helped utilize human resources most effectively. And that efficiency was the purest form of crime in a modern system. No executioner needed, only formulas, ledgers, and a red stamp.
Oswald Pohl, Os-volt Pohl, had become the first spreadsheet killer of the 20th century. A cold ledger had turned Auschwitz into an industrial death line, where each stone, each ration, each body had a measurable economic value. When morality was replaced by efficiency, for Oswald Pohl, Oswald Pohl, efficiency was not only a working principle, but the sole measure of human value.
During his time running the SS Economic and Administrative Office, WVHA, he repeatedly emphasized the concept of Rationalisierung, fatum, Rationa- lisierung, rationalization. All activities, even genocide, must achieve maximum output at minimal cost. From 1942, Pohl oversaw the restructuring of the concentration camp system into a self-sustaining model.
Prisoners became production labor for the SS. Their deaths were not losses, but natural attrition, recorded in accounting books. An internal WVHA report from 1943 noted, “Mortality among laborers is an unavoidable consequence of war, not affecting production goals.” Oswald Pohl signed off on the DEST project, Deutsche Erd- und Steinwerke GmbH, fatum, Deutsch Erd- und Steinewerk, in Mauthausen, fatum, Mauthausen, Gross-Rosen, and Flossenbürg, Flossenbürg.
Prisoners were forced to carry stones over 40 kg 12 hours a day without rest, working until utterly exhausted. Historical reports indicated extremely high mortality rates in these quarries, run like death conveyor belts. During the same period, he expanded Ostindustrie GmbH, an SS company exploiting Jewish property in occupied Poland.
Those stripped of assets were classified as economically valueless, a cold bureaucratic term replacing the word human. Not brutality, but rationality was central to Pohl’s thinking. In a 1944 report, he stated that the camps were not only detaining the state’s enemies, but were models of cost-effective and efficient production.
That was the moment when morality completely vanished from the Third Reich’s administrative structure. No slogans of hatred, no propaganda were necessary. A simple economic formula made crime a procedure. Pohl saw no humans in the reports, only existing numbers. He even ordered a 10% reduction in prisoner rations to balance energy expenditure.
And therein lies the tragedy of industrialized cruelty. When an administration can turn efficiency into the highest value, all humanitarian principles become secondary costs. Oswald Pohl, Oswald Pohl, killed with reason devoid of soul, a rationality that made evil neat, tidy, and quantifiable. A soulless system where the mechanism kills instead of humans.
In 1942, as the war entered total mobilization, Pohl transformed the WVHA into the administrative brain of the entire concentration camp system. Under him were over 500 officers coordinating 20 functional departments and a network of more than 20 SS-controlled companies. From his Berlin office, Pohl could sign papers that would make tens of thousands of people vanish from the workforce.
In this structure, everything had an identification number. Prisoners were assigned codes. Corpses recorded as units no longer fit for labor. Hair and teeth cataloged as recycled materials. No one spoke of crime, only technical and managerial language remained. Here, evil became invisible, no longer an act, but the result of a perfectly designed chain of procedures.
Pohl called this philosophy Verwaltung ohne Gefühl, fatum, Verwaltung ohne Gefühl, administration without feeling. In internal records, he wrote that labor must be exploited to maximum efficiency, unaffected by emotion. That seemingly reasonable statement was the foundation of a mass killing mechanism.
When emotion is removed from management, people become replaceable resources. By mid-1943, Pohl expanded the SS production network, establishing more than 150 satellite subcamps around factories such as IG Farben, Krupp, and Siemens. Hundreds of thousands of prisoners worked 14 to 16 hours daily in near-starvation conditions.
They were not executed by bullets, but died gradually under the concept of productivity optimization, a notion born at the WVHA desk. Not Himmler, not Hitler, but Pohl’s production plans kept the camps running continuously like a soulless machine. Terrifyingly, in the eyes of the bureaucracy, everything was legal.
Reports were made, budgets approved, numbers tallied, as if it were a normal production line. Pohl did not incite murder. He ensured that system efficiency was always at its peak. Yet that professional coldness made the crime comprehensive, leaving no gaps. Oswald Pohl, Oswald Pohl, exemplified the corruption of administrative intellect, a learned managerial individual using knowledge to serve an inhuman system.
The WVHA needed no fanatics, only rule-followers. That is what made it more dangerous than anything else, because when humans no longer feel responsible, the system kills in their place. When crime is legitimized by stamps and signatures, no screams, no smell of crematorium smoke, only top-secret stamped documents, detailed plans bearing the signature of Oswald Pohl.
They were not execution orders, but production contracts, financial proposals, logistical directives. Yet each sheet indirectly sent tens of thousands of people to their deaths. Moreover, in the year 1942, the events were nearly forgotten after the restructuring of the WVHA into the SS war economy apparatus. Under his authority, a series of state-controlled companies were established.
DEST, DAW, Ostindustrie GmbH, Ostindustrie, specializing in stone quarrying, brick production, weapons, and military uniforms. The primary labor force consisted of concentration camp prisoners, identified by numbers, easily replaceable when they died. A prisoner transferred from Buchenwald, Buchenwald, to Mauthausen, Mauthausen, would be accompanied by a personnel allocation slip, a transport invoice, and a biological status report.
From an administrative perspective, the system was perfectly chilling. Pohl called it Rationalisierung, Rationa- lisierung, rationalization of production. In a report to Himmler, Himmler, he wrote, “Prisoners are no longer a burden on the state, but a resource to be exploited to the fullest.
” The wording sounded like a corporate meeting, but behind it lay the deaths of millions. What distinguished Pohl from Hitler or Himmler was not ideology, but his belief that procedures could make crime appear legal. In May 1944, when 437,000 Hungarian Jews were sent to Auschwitz-Birkenau, Auschwitz- Birkenau, the WVHA under Pohl approved all transport costs, food for the prisoners, and even the budget for four new crematoria to handle increased capacity.
In just 8 weeks, more than 320,000 people were killed. And in Pohl’s administrative system, all were recorded as target figures achieved. His orders also called for the confiscation of prisoners’ property. They confiscated everything from clothes, watches, to gold teeth, all for the purpose of being placed in the SS warehouse in Berlin.
Not blood, but a stream of books and reports that turned crime into formal accounting. As the Third Reich expanded its power and built a war apparatus, there were those who did not carry guns directly, but contributed profoundly to the brutal mechanism through documents, seals, and spreadsheets.
Among them, Oswald Pohl, the senior SS financial officer, embodied most clearly the type of crime disguised under the veil of efficient administration. The final trial, when the price of efficiency is judged. After the collapse of Nazi Germany in May 1945, Oswald Pohl fled to northern Germany with false papers. 3 weeks later, he was arrested by British forces near Bremen, not with weapons in hand, but a suitcase full of SS financial reports.
The very papers that had helped him run one of the largest forced labor systems in the world. In April 1947, in Nuremberg, Nuremberg, the Pohl trial, one of 12 subsequent Nuremberg trials. Oswald Pohl sat in courtroom number two, no longer in uniform, and with no power in his hands. In front of him were more than 7,000 pages of evidence, seals, reports, and signatures, all belonging to Oswald Pohl himself.
Here, when questioned about his role, Pohl said, “I only signed administrative documents. I did not kill anyone directly.” But the prosecutor dismissed this and presented hundreds of documents bearing his signature, from expanding the crematoria at Auschwitz, transferring gold and human teeth to Berlin, to rationing plans to optimize productivity.
Each red stamp represented a death sentence carried out without trial. The court made it clear that no one could legalize crime under administrative pretext. At the trial, the prosecutor read the payrolls and reports submitted by the WVHA to Himmler. In the fourth quarter of 1943, labor losses due to death were 29%. Output still met targets.
Not a single line mentioned human beings, only numbers. And when morality was replaced by data, the system entirely supplanted the soul of those who operated it. The prosecutor described this as crime not born of hatred, but of efficiency. Pohl merely nodded. He still defended himself, believing he was merely performing official duties.
But for the first time, the world refused to accept that excuse. In the sixth count indictment, the court charged him with organizing and running the concentration camp system, forced labor, confiscation of prisoner property, and contributing to systematic genocide. On the 3rd of November, 1947, Oswald Pohl was sentenced to death by hanging.
He appealed, claiming he had not killed anyone, only performed administrative work. The appellate court rejected this, affirming that administrative responsibility cannot be separated from systematic crime. For the first time in history, efficiency was condemned as a form of organized indifference. The sentence was carried out on the 8th of June, 1951, at Landsberg Landsberg prison, a place that had executed many other war criminals.
The man who had turned humans into numbers ended his life with a file just three lines long about loyalty and duty. “I have served more than 30 years as a soldier. I’ve always followed orders and kept my oath of loyalty. I was ready.” His death did not close the crimes, but closed an era that believed systems could replace morality.
Since then, in all post-war political and administrative doctrines, the name Oswald Pohl has become a symbol of inhumanity when efficiency surpasses his conscience. This was not only a sentence for Oswald Pohl, but a warning to an entire civilization that efficiency could replace morality. For when a hand does not hold a gun, but signs plans that make others pull the trigger, it is no longer obedience, but systematic complicity.
The paradoxical legacy, a verdict for all ages. Pohl was not a fanatic like Himmler or Heydrich, nor like the executioners on the battlefield. On the contrary, he was a model bureaucrat, punctual, precise, efficient. In his world, morality became a cost and performance the measure of human value. The most frightening aspect of the 20th century, fatam 20th century, was not the guns, but the abstraction of crime when humans could take millions of lives without ever seeing them.
And that was also Pohl’s tragedy. A man who believed that following procedures was enough to be considered innocent. More than seven decades later, the world has entered the era of data, artificial intelligence, and automation creeping into every corner of life and story. Humanity once again faces the question once posed to Pohl.
When every decision is systematized, are we recreating a soulless machine? Were Pohl living in the 21st century, fatam 21st century, he might say, “I only operate the algorithm. I do not make decisions.” But history has taught that any system, however intelligent, can become cruel if the humans within it stop questioning.
From concentration camps to data pipelines, the line between efficiency and indifference has never been thinner. Oswald Pohl died for war crimes, but his legacy, a model of inhuman governance, still exists in modern society. His death did not close history, but opened a warning. When humans let processes replace ethics and let performance overshadow compassion, crime returns in more sophisticated forms.
And perhaps the final question for us is not, “Did Oswald Pohl deserve to die?” But rather, “Today, in the systems we still call normal, how many Oswald Pohls quietly exist?” If you believe history is not only to be remembered, but to understand the present, subscribe to the channel now. Each video here not only recounts the past, but helps us see its shadow in today’s world.
In the winter of 1942, black smoke from the cities of Eastern Germany kept rising without end. Trains followed one after another leaving the stations, filled with numbered people whose gaunt faces pressed against the cold metal bars. Along the tracks, guards stood motionless in the freezing air, with only the sound of iron wheels grinding on the rails and the long whistle tearing through the night.
Amid that scene, one name was mentioned at rallies, in newspapers, and across public squares. Julius Streicher, founder of the newspaper Der Stürmer, the man who devoted his entire life to spreading hatred and redefining the idea of the enemy of Germany. He never fired a single shot, but his words sent millions away in silence.
As the war spread across Europe, Streicher believed that his pen had created a pure Germany. Yet in that very moment, he was writing the sentence of his own condemnation, one that history would never erase. Origins and early career. Julius Streicher was born on the 12th of February, 1885, in the village of Fleinhausen in the Swabian region of Southern Germany.
He was the ninth child in a large family. His father was a strict and conservative elementary school teacher. From an early age, Streicher was deeply influenced by that rigid environment, which later shaped his hot-tempered, domineering personality and his constant desire to make others obey him.
In 1904, after completing teacher training, Streicher began working as a school teacher like his father. He quickly became known among local educators, not for his teaching ability, but for his violent temper and authoritarian behavior. Students feared him, while colleagues described him as a man who could not control his emotions.
Nevertheless, Streicher was recognized for his gift of speech, a talent he would later use to manipulate the masses. In 1909, Streicher moved to Nuremberg, the city that would be forever tied to his life. Four years later, in 1913, he married Kunigunde Roth, a woman from the same Bavarian region. The marriage was peaceful in its early years, and they had two sons, but the relationship gradually grew distant as Streicher became involved in extremist political activities after the war.
When World War I broke out in 1914, Streicher volunteered for the German army. On the Western Front, he served in the infantry and took part in several battles in France and Belgium. Despite reports of poor discipline, Streicher rose to the rank of lieutenant and received both the first class and second class Iron Cross awards for bravery.
However, those small victories could not erase the trauma he felt when Germany surrendered in 1918. Like many other veterans, Streicher carried a sense of humiliation and resentment. The defeat was not only the collapse of an empire, but also the shattering of his inner beliefs. It was the psychological turning point that pushed him toward extremism.
After being discharged, he returned to Nuremberg amid a chaotic Germany. The economy had collapsed, inflation was soaring, and returning soldiers could no longer find their place in society. Many believed the nation had been stabbed in the back, a widespread conspiracy theory at the time that blamed Jews and communists for Germany’s downfall.
Streicher was among those who embraced that idea. In 1919, he joined the Schutz und Trutzbund, a right-wing paramilitary organization that opposed the newly formed socialist government of the Bavarian Republic. During rallies, Streicher displayed an exceptional talent for oratory. His voice was hoarse, but powerful, and his fiery dramatic speeches stirred intense emotions among the crowd.
This was the first time he openly and aggressively expressed anti-Semitic views. That same year, Streicher helped establish the Nuremberg branch of the German Socialist Party, DSP, an ultra-nationalist, far-right organization that opposed communism and Catholicism. The party competed with Hitler’s emerging Nazi Party for the support of veterans and the discontented lower middle class.
Though small in size, the DSP was an important environment where Streicher honed his propaganda skills and expanded his political influence. From a provincial school teacher, he quickly became one of the leading figures of the radical nationalist movement in Bavaria. In 1921, Streicher was elected leader of the DSP’s Nuremberg branch and frequently organized public rallies attended by hundreds of people.
His speeches revolved around a single message. “The Jews are the cause of all suffering.” This was the formative period of Julius Streicher’s worldview, a mixture of personal bitterness, political frustration, and hatred fueled by Germany’s post-war collapse. His speeches began attracting attention from members of the Nazi Party, particularly a rising figure in Munich, Adolf Hitler.
From that encounter, Streicher’s fate was sealed. He would no longer be a school teacher or a local agitator, but would become one of the most notorious propagandists of the future Reich. From here, the story of the number one hate-monger of Nazi Germany officially began. Joining the Nazi Party. After several years of activity in the German Socialist Party, Julius Streicher became increasingly radical.
His rhetoric against the Jews grew so intense that even his allies within the same political camp began to worry. The leader of the German Working Community, an organization in which Streicher once participated, publicly criticized him for an obsessive hatred of Jews and foreign races. But instead of stopping, Streicher took it as a sign that he was on the right path.
In 1922, when Adolf Hitler began expanding the National Socialist German Workers’ Party, NSDAP, Streicher realized this was a movement perfectly aligned with his own ideology. He met Hitler at a political meeting in Munich. The admiration that the crowd showed for Hitler convinced Streicher that he had found the savior of Germany.
Only a few weeks later, Streicher decided to dissolve his own organization and persuaded all his supporters to merge into the Nazi Party. Upon officially joining the NSDAP, Streicher became one of its earliest members, belonging to the group known as Alt Kämpfer, or the old fighters. Hitler highly valued his fanaticism and soon assigned Streicher to organize rallies in Nuremberg, which would later become the spiritual capital of the Nazi Party.
In April 1923, Streicher launched his own newspaper, Der Stürmer, The Attacker. It marked a turning point in his life. From the very first issue, the paper made its purpose clear: to spread hatred and instill fear of Jews in the minds of Germans. Each edition was filled with baseless accusations, fabricated stories, and offensive illustrations.
Der Stürmer was unlike ordinary political propaganda publications. It was designed to provoke the darkest instincts of human nature. Thanks to its crude language and sensational style, Der Stürmer quickly drew attention. Streicher printed thousands of copies per issue and distributed them for free in taverns, train stations, or pasted them publicly on bulletin boards across the city.
The paper became a perfect tool for him to spread prejudice and hatred, something Hitler considered essential to uniting the psychology of the German nation. In November 1923, Streicher joined Hitler in the Beer Hall Putsch in Munich. After the Nazi Party was banned, Streicher founded a substitute organization called the German Frontline Fighters Union, maintaining a network of Hitler supporters in Franconia.
He continued publishing Der Stürmer secretly, cleverly changing the publisher’s name to avoid prosecution. Each article carried a more extreme tone than before, filled with claims that Jews were poisoning German society from within. When Hitler was released from prison after eight months and reestablished the Nazi Party in 1925, Streicher immediately returned.
To recognize his loyalty and dedication during the most difficult period, Hitler appointed him Gauleiter of Middle Franconia, a position equivalent to a regional administrative leader of the party. With his new authority, Streicher controlled all of Nuremberg and its surrounding areas. He reorganized the local party structure, oversaw propaganda and demonstrations, and personally directed large-scale rallies.
Under his command, Der Stürmer was no longer just a local paper, but a political weapon. Each article was used to justify discrimination and the exclusion of Jews from the German national community. In Hitler’s eyes, Streicher was a man who fought with words, someone willing to use any means to that made Streicher trusted by Hitler, for the Führer valued absolute loyalty above political competence.
By combining the pen, the stage of propaganda, and the fury of the masses, Julius Streicher secured his place in the Nazi power structure. He was not a thinker, nor a statesman, but a man who knew how to say what the crowd wanted to hear, even when those words were the most toxic lies. From 1925 onward, Julius Streicher’s name became inseparable from Nuremberg, which he turned into the heart of extremist propaganda.
And within less than a decade, the words he spread in small printed sheets had become the foundation of a massive propaganda machine, one that would destroy every trace of humanity. The boycott of 1933. On the 30th of January 1933, Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany by President Paul von Hindenburg.
Within weeks, the entire power structure of the nation was reshaped. Opposition parties were dissolved, the free press was brought under control, and a new regime based on propaganda, violence, and fear officially came into being. Amid the euphoria of Nazi supporters, Julius Streicher believed that his time had come.
Immediately after the Nazi Party took power, Streicher was appointed chairman of the Central Committee for the reaction to the so-called Jewish crimes and economic boycott, a special body established to organize the nationwide campaign against the Jews. Under the pretext of responding to slander from the foreign press, Streicher turned this campaign into the regime’s first public assault on the Jewish community.
On the 1st of April 1933, the boycott order was issued. Thousands of members of the SA, the paramilitary force loyal to Hitler, were mobilized. In Berlin, Munich, Frankfurt, and Nuremberg, they stood guard in front of stores, offices, pharmacies, and clinics owned by Jews. The black and yellow star of David symbol was painted on shop windows.
The slogans, “Do not buy from Jews” and “The Jew is our misfortune”, were plastered everywhere. In Nuremberg, Streicher personally directed the campaign. He stood on the balcony of the town hall delivering a speech to the crowd shouting, “Germans, protect the honor of your nation.
Teach the enemy that they no longer have the right to live in this country.” Cheers erupted throughout the square, hundreds of shops closed their doors, and many citizens, fearful, stayed off the streets. A few isolated violent incidents occurred, but the police did not intervene. In reality, the law enforcement apparatus was already completely under Nazi control.
The campaign lasted only one day. Economically, it achieved little, as many Germans quietly continued to shop at their familiar Jewish-owned stores. But psychologically, it marked a turning point. For the first time, discrimination and hatred were legalized and organized as state policy. The silence of society became complicity.
A week after the boycott, the government enacted the Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service, which stipulated that only those of Aryan descent were allowed to work in state institutions. Thousands of Jewish teachers, doctors, civil servants, and lawyers were dismissed.
Universities quickly removed Jewish professors from their faculties as well. Streicher regarded the boycott campaign as the first step in the rebirth of the German nation. In later issues of Der Stürmer, he wrote that the Jews will destroy themselves through their own greed and deceit, while calling for similar measures to be expanded nationwide.
He saw this as a personal triumph, proof that propaganda could transform words into collective action. For the Jews of Germany, the 1st of April 1933 marked the beginning of a dark decade. For Streicher, it was the moment he believed himself to have become a vanguard soldier in the struggle for a pure Germany. But for history, it was the day German morality began its descent, when a campaign lasting only 24 hours opened the door to the atrocities that would follow.
The machine of hateful propaganda. After 1933, when the Nazi regime took full control of the media system, Julius Streicher’s Der Stürmer was regarded as an independent, yet powerful propaganda tool. Although it was not part of the Ministry of Propaganda directed by Joseph Goebbels, this newspaper held a special place in Hitler’s heart.
The Führer repeatedly declared that Der Stürmer was the only paper brave enough to tell the truth about Germany’s enemies. With such praise, Streicher was able to continue operating without censorship, even when other party agencies considered him vulgar and disgraceful. Glass display cases known as Stürmerkasten were erected across Germany, in schools, squares, tram stations, and railway depots, allowing citizens to read the paper for free.
This method of propaganda was simple, but effective. It turned lies into habits, repeated so often that people eventually believed them. In Streicher’s view, the press was not merely a tool to deliver information, but a weapon of the mind. Der Stürmer did not discuss politics or strategy. It focused on emotional agitation, fear, hatred, and contempt.
The newspaper was filled with articles mocking and accusing Jews of causing every social problem, from unemployment and economic crisis to crime. Each issue was accompanied by crude caricatures portraying Jews as deceitful, dangerous, and inhuman. At its peak in 1935, Der Stürmer reached a circulation of over 600,000 copies per issue, an enormous figure for that time.
While other newspapers followed Goebbels’ formal propaganda guidelines, Streicher took a different route. He targeted human instincts. He understood that fear and hatred spread faster than any argument. One distinctive feature of Der Stürmer was its blend of anti-Semitic content and suggestive elements.
He believed that fear of moral corruption would stir the masses more effectively. The paper often published articles accusing Jews of defiling German women and poisoning the Aryan race, accompanied by offensive illustrations. Streicher called it political erotica, something he claimed was necessary to awaken the public.
Streicher’s extremism went far beyond ordinary propaganda. In hundreds of his writings, he tried to prove that Jews were not truly human, but a biological threat to Germany. These baseless arguments played a crucial role in dehumanizing the Jewish population, making violence against them appear acceptable to the public.
Not content with influencing adults, Streicher also sought to corrupt the minds of children. He published three propaganda books for young readers, most notably Der Giftpilz, The Poisonous Mushroom, in 1938, and Trust No Fox on His Green Heath and No Jew on His Oath in 1936. These publications depicted Jews as demonic figures, while portraying Aryans as the embodiment of virtue and strength.
With bright and appealing illustrations, Streicher’s books were placed in school libraries, where German children read them weekly. More than 70,000 copies were printed and distributed, becoming a direct propaganda weapon for the youth. Through Der Stürmer, Streicher turned journalism into an instrument of dehumanization. He issued no orders, wielded no weapon, yet his pen made millions believe that eradicating an entire people was an act of righteousness.
In Germany at that time, hatred was no longer a private emotion. It had been legitimized as a national ideology. To Hitler, Streicher under the pretext of confiscating Jewish property, Streicher seized countless houses, shops, and valuable assets for himself. Reports sent to Berlin indicated that most of the property confiscated in the Middle Franconia region ended up in his hands or those of his close associates.
In August 1938, Streicher ordered the demolition of the Nuremberg Grand Synagogue, an ancient religious and cultural landmark of the city. He declared that the temple spoiled the landscape of a pure German city. This act caused outrage even within Nazi ranks. Göring and Himmler both objected, arguing that such behavior was too blatant and counterproductive for international propaganda.
However, it could