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History Nazi revison - Coggle Diagram
History Nazi revison
Workers
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By 1938, 10 million people (a third of the workforce) had enjoyed a state financed holiday.
Workers had lost the right to negotiate wages, to strike and to change jobs freely. The Councils of Trust did little to increase mutual trust in factories between employees and employers.
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Councils of Trust were set up in firms with 20 workers or more to discuss working conditions regulated in the “factory code of rules”
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Young People
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from the age of 10 boys and girls were encouraged to join the Nazis’ youth organisation, the Hitler Youth (the girls’ wing of which was called the League of German Maidens).
Membership from age 10 was made compulsory in 1936 and by 1939 90 per cent of German boys aged 14 and over were members.
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All teachers had to join the Nazi Teachers’ Association, which vetted them for political and racial suitability.
The curriculum was altered to reflect Nazi ideology and priorities
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Women
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Women were expected to emulate traditional German peasant fashions - plain peasant costumes, hair in plaits or buns and flat shoes. They were not expected to wear make-up or trousers, dye their hair or smoke in public. They were discouraged from staying slim, because it was thought that thin women had trouble giving birth.