reiver

Germany Invades Poland (World War II)

A segment from the 1942 U.S. government film “The World at War.”

(H/T Jeff Hoard)


    Wir stehen nicht allein: “We do not stand alone”. Nazi propaganda poster from 1936. The woman is holding a baby and the man is holding a shield inscribed with the title of Nazi Germany’s 1933 Law for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Offspring (their compulsory sterilization law). The couple is in front of a map of Germany, surrounded by the flags of nations which had enacted (to the left) or were considering (bottom and to the right) similar legislation.


    The countries which had enacted compulsory sterilization laws (and the date shown) were:

United States (date illegible; Indiana enacted first laws in 1907)
    Denmark (1929)
    Norway (1934)
    Sweden (1935)
    Finland (1935?)

    The countries where they were considering compulsory sterilization laws were:

Hungary
    United Kingdom
    Switzerland
    Poland
    Japan
    Latvia
    Lithuania

    Scan taken from Robert Proctor, Racial Hygiene: Medicine under the Nazis (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press), page 96. Originally from Neues Volk, March 1, 1936, p.37.

Wir stehen nicht allein: “We do not stand alone”. Nazi propaganda poster from 1936. The woman is holding a baby and the man is holding a shield inscribed with the title of Nazi Germany’s 1933 Law for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Offspring (their compulsory sterilization law). The couple is in front of a map of Germany, surrounded by the flags of nations which had enacted (to the left) or were considering (bottom and to the right) similar legislation.

The countries which had enacted compulsory sterilization laws (and the date shown) were:

  • United States (date illegible; Indiana enacted first laws in 1907)
  • Denmark (1929)
  • Norway (1934)
  • Sweden (1935)
  • Finland (1935?)

The countries where they were considering compulsory sterilization laws were:

  • Hungary
  • United Kingdom
  • Switzerland
  • Poland
  • Japan
  • Latvia
  • Lithuania

Scan taken from Robert Proctor, Racial Hygiene: Medicine under the Nazis (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press), page 96. Originally from Neues Volk, March 1, 1936, p.37.