HY 4 Class Notes
Fatherland
“Oh holy heart of the peoples, O Fatherland!” You were created from the endless forests
and wide moors that the glaciers of the ice age left us. It was poor land only made fruitful
through sweat and toil, in joy and sorrow, in endless work. §One passed you on to the
next and laid down in your earth from which new life grew. In you rest the endless ranks
of past generations, the seed for new sowing in the wide land. The blood of the noble and
brave who defended you fell on you. You were fertilized by the best that you bore. §From
you, castles and cathedrals rose to the heavens, as if the earth itself wished to rise up to
the god it was seeking. From our earth, from the seed of our dead. §The land is broad.
Under the care of industrious hands it became a garden. They protected it lovingly, like
the mountains and valleys protect their villages. Proud cities by the rivers, displaying the
splendor of the old Reich. The market fountain has flowed for hundreds of years here.
The gates still stand through which once the Kaiser, the knights and the nobility passed.
§The silver stream of fate winds through. On the other bank is land that was lost. The
heart almost stops. How one wishes to stroke the distant forests as one would an old and
beloved face. But the heart beats once more on the plains and the coasts that German
colonists won. The castle of the knights stands in the east, an eternal testimony of
strength and virtue. There are the fields from which Frederick’s eagle rose toward the
sun, and there, far from the borders, is the wall of German dead, an eternal memorial of
the nation that withstood the world as long as it believed in itself. §Everything is founded
in and rests in you, Fatherland. Our strength and our greatness, but also our need and our
misery. You are the ground that bore us and will bear those distant generations that will
work and bleed for you. §No one can live without you, but each will gladly give his life
back to you who gave it to him.
Courage
Courage is the most beautiful and noble trait a man can have. He who has no courage is
not a man. §The “storming courage” of an attack is wonderful. The feeling of having
risked all in service of a high ideal frees one and lets him charge forward with joy.
Courage bears a man as if he had wings, and fills his heart. §The attack becomes the high
point of life. When everything depends on one card, when one can lose everything, when
one can win everything, life is at its best. He who has never charged and attacked, filled
with courage, has never fully lived. §Alongside “stormy courage” is the “indomitable
courage” of those facing hard fate. “Fate is great and powerful, but greater still is the
person who bears it unshaken.” §Life is often harder than death. A coward holds on to it.
No one faces a challenge greater than the strength he has been given to face it. Courage
overcomes all. When one has done all in his power, good luck comes to show him a new
way and help him along. But it is not really good luck. “Resist all powers, never give in,
be strong, calls the army of the gods.” §Courage is needed not only by the man, by the
soldier, a woman too needs courage. For the man battle, the attack is the greatest
challenge. For the woman it comes when she gives a new person life. Men who no longer
want to wage war cannot face the mothers who give new life at the risk of their own.
§Courage is the noblest trait of a man or woman. It determines the battle and gives
victory.
Hardness
Life demands hardness. One must strive with burning heart toward the ideal of hardness.
To be hard for the sake of life, to become a fighter, to win the victory. §Our environment
is a given. Burning heat in summer, biting cold in winter, long marches in the wet and
cold. Working long at the factory, or behind a machine gun. Bearing hunger and thirst,
sleeping on the bare earth, not surrendering in battle, never, never, no matter how
hopeless everything sees, hurling an empty pistol in the face of the enemy, reaching for
his neck without regard for oneself, even if it leads to death. To be a fighter, a fighter
with faith in his cause, even if everyone says it is a false cause. That brings victory, the
victory that belongs to him who is the harder. §You should never give up in battle or
work. Even if you fail a thousand times, you must make the thousand and first attempt. In
the end it will succeed and you will be the victor, even if almost bled dry, almost faint,
but filled with the triumphant knowledge of having overcome. You are victor in your
struggle and victor over yourself. §Each must prepare for his battle. Each must train as if
he will one day fight the decisive battle for Germany. Each must be able to march, suffer
hunger and thirst, sleep on bare ground, bear all privations, be a fighter, a soldier from the
moment he can understand what is at stake. §We need men hard and tough as steel,
harder than anything else in the world. Only they will master the great future of
Germany. Do you want to be one of them, or stand aside as a weakling? §Germany will
be the land of the brave and the strong. Either you belong to them, or you will no longer
be a German.
Will
Will is the force inside you that commands. You may hesitate from weariness, anxiety,
weakness. Will lifts you over every barrier and orders you to do what your feelings and
understanding tell you to do. §A man without will is like a machine without power. It is
useless. But “where there is a will, there is a way,” and where a will orders, it is obeyed,
whether a person follows his own will or men follow the will of a leader. §Where there is
faith that comes from strength, it is will that gives it the push. §Exercise your will so that
it is as taut and ready as a drawn bowstring, ready to let loose in the moment it should,
neither a second too late nor a second too early. Exercise your will in little things until it
is strong enough to bring from you that which Germany expects
Self Control
One expects that a person who drives a car is in control, and that he causes no accidents.
One expects that a person who lives with other people will control himself, so that he
does not endanger himself or others. §The forces within us can raise or lower us. It
depends on the use we make of them, on whether we control them and therefore
ourselves. §Hunger and thirst exist to be satisfied. But woe to him who eats for the sake
of eating or drinks for the sake of drinking. He is lower than an animal that knows when
it has had enough. But he to whom understanding has been given does not know it. We
hate the gluttons and drunkards with bulging bodies and swollen eyes, people with no
character or self control. We eat and drink to live, but we never live in order to eat and
drink. §The body must be kept under iron discipline so that we are always in charge of it
and it is always dependable. We also may never allow the sexual drive to control us. For
adults it is not there to be satisfied, but rather a force that should be used to produce
future generations healthy in both body and soul. A young person is given strength not to
use in bed, but rather in the sun and the wind, on the sports field and countryside, until
we have a body in front of us full of strength and speed, a body in which courage and
faith are joined in a free soul, a body that is master of its passions, master of itself, the
German person of the future. Out of it will grow the strength of a renewed people, the
bearer of a future generation of nobility and freedom. §If you control yourself, you
control life. §If you control yourself, you must be able to bear pain without uttering a
sound. Men do not complain or cry, and boys who want to become men behave in the
same way. §You should not give in to every little problem. Be open, be determined,
never play the cripple, but control yourself. Be the master of your pain and problems.
Force yourself to be cheerfully faithful. Then you will find strength you did not know you
had. §You must practice self control. How often does duty call, but something distracts
you? Command yourself so that you can master yourself. §Do something every day that
you do not like to do, and avoid doing something every day that you would gladly have
done. §Do everything you are ordered to do immediately, without thinking about it. You
must in order to become a real man. §That is the secret of every great personality. It has
gained all the strength it directs outwardly from overcoming itself. §But you should not
be a meek person who gives up everything in order to live in a cave to receive a promised
blessing. God does not want that for a person. He should have pleasure in his work. He
should use it, but never misuse it, and should be the master of himself.
Discipline
Savages and half-savages have courage, but only advanced people have discipline.
Discipline is the ability to fall in line. Discipline is carrying out an order without knowing
the reason, without understanding. Discipline also means enduring injustice for the sake
of a good cause. §Discipline is iron virtue and silent obedience. §Discipline comes from
within yourself. You accept it because you follow a higher will. He who does not do this
will be forced by steely necessity, which alone can overcome the lack of will and
weakness of many, making of them useful members of the people and the state.
§Discipline is a spiritual attitude. Law and command work through it for the good of all.
Any weakening of discipline is the beginning of collapse. Each is called to ensure that he
himself and the man next to him behaves in a disciplined way.
Duty
Duty is a hard word as long as one has not done it. Duty is a pleasant word as soon as one
has done it. §Duty is the “you should” that you feel inside. Duty is that which family,
people and the state demand of you. Doing one’s duty does not mean being controlled by
the reins that rule a horse, but rather doing one’s duty means that one does it with joy, no
matter how hard. §The fatherland grew from the duty done by our fathers and forefathers.
From the duty we all do grows the present state and the future both of the individual and
the whole. §Duty can also mean sacrifice, the sacrifice of one’s own life. Your people can
demand of you what it has given you. But what does demand mean? The state, the
fatherland dwell in your own breast. You demand it of yourself, and the path of highest
duty is the way of greatest happiness, even if it leads to your death. § Justice comes from
fulfilled duty. There is no other justice in the National Socialist state, just as there is no
pay without labor. The greater the duty, the greater the justice. He who does the most for
Germany has the greatest right to guide Germany and determine its fate. He is the Führer
of the Reich, and others follow him according to the duty they have fulfilled. §A worker
on the street can stand higher in the ranks than a government minister if he has better
done his duty. §Fulfilling one’s duty to the utmost is required of each of us. Who will
wait until the demand comes, until it is req
Honor
You live by honor, not by bread. Slaves believe that they only need food and drink to
live. The free man knows that he needs honor first of all. §Your honor is your standing
with your comrades and fellow citizens. It is just as much your standing with yourself.
§To be honorable is to be courageous. To be honorable is to be selfless and loyal. To be
honorable is to be in control of oneself. He who does great things for his fatherland is
honorable. §Honor comes not from money and possessions. But he who creates new
values or gives other work through his spirit or the work of his hands can thereby win
honor. §It is also honorable to be the son of someone noble, someone who has done much
for his people and his state. But the son is unworthy of his honor if he does not win it
anew. §Inherited honor does not last forever, but always demands work and struggle.
Honor is like a crown. He who ceases to live and act like a king loses it — and has lost it,
even if he still wears it on his head. §Not everyone can take honor from another. The
insult of a boy cannot harm one’s honor. But he who accepts an insult in a cowardly way
loses honor before others. §We do not reply to an insult ourselves at first. That is why
superior leaders and judges are there. But if someone hits you, hit back, and if someone
strikes your face, strike him back. For we National Socialists in Germany today, there is
only one honor, one concept of honor. There is no particular concept of honor for
particular classes any longer. National Socialism has given us all a new common sense of
honor. We know it. He who does not have it is not free, but a slave. The least important
worker today can be free and honorable, the prosperous businessman a slave and a serf.
§That is the new law, which gives honor only to the brave, the selfless, the loyal, the self
controlled, those who do everything for Germany that they can. §The way to honor is
open for every German.
Loyalty
Loyalty is a holy word. Speak it rarely. It must be as taken-for-granted as the air we
breathe. §What exists exists because of loyalty. If that which exists ceases to be loyal, it
returns to nothingness. That tears the bonds that hold everything together. It shatters
camaraderie; it shatters leadership; it shatters honor; it shatters confidence in the law; it
shatters the army; it shatters the state; it shatters everything that exists. §Germany
collapsed in 1918 because disloyalty replaced loyalty. An “excess of loyalty” raised it
again from the abyss. Now it stands on the foundation of loyalty, which must be stronger
than the destructive forces of the world. §What is loyalty, comrade? §Your loyalty is that
you never, never turn from the ideals to which you have sworn allegiance. National
Socialism has raised them high, so that they live in you and will go into the grave with
you. That is your first and deepest loyalty. §And you are true to your fatherland, called
Germany. As its earth brought forth your blood, you belong to it forever. §The third
claim on your loyalty is to follow the Führer both in the brightest and the darkest days. It
is better for you to follow him ever into darkness and misery than that your loyalty
weakens even once. §Fourth, you owe loyalty to your comrade. You will always help him
in need and danger. He should always know that he can come to you, that he can rely on
you entirely, as if you were his physical brother. §Sigfried and Hagen were loyal.
Siegfried, the bright hero, fought battles for his king. His life was joy and jubilation and
victory. Love and loyalty accompanied him, as if bearing him on their hands. §Hagen
slew Siegfried not as a cowardly murderer, but rather because Siegfried invited guilt upon
himself. The honor of the king was at stake. Siegried had to die. But Hagen took the guilt
upon himself. His loyalty to his king was more to him than his own outward honor. He
took the curse of a murderer on himself and was greater than all and he was loyal [This
story is part of the Niebelung saga]. §The German warrior loyally followed his nobleman and did not return home without him. The knights loyally followed their lords
and emperors. Prussia’s greatest sons were served their king loyally, even when they
were better than he. They served not his person, but the crown that he bore. The millions
who died in the World War loyally followed their leaders. In loyalty, they lie with them
as a ring of dead around Germany. In loyalty, we all follow the Führer and his flag. The
hand of each will hold the flag until death, the flag that leads Germany to new life. §We
show loyalty in daily life as well. Once again, a man’s word is dependable. Promises
must be kept and will be kept. We do not need a handshake and an oath. Each can depend
on our word, because we again have become loyal. §Germany is the land of loyalty. It
dwells in its vast forests. It dwells in its knights and soldiers. It dwells again in us.
Loyalty is our honor. Who wants to be dishonorable amidst the brave and the heroes?