The Man Who Spread Hate in Nazi Germany: Julius Streicher
Nuremberg Trials: The Leaders of Nazi Germany [collection]
•
20m
From the 1920s to 1945, Julius Streicher used words as weapons.
Through his newspaper Der Stürmer, he flooded Germany with antisemitic propaganda, lies, and hatred.
He portrayed Jews as monsters, corruptors, and enemies of the nation — poisoning the minds of millions.
His newspaper was read in schools, displayed on public walls, and treated as truth by a generation.
Streicher’s words helped prepare the ground for persecution and genocide — long before the killing began.
When the war ended, the man who never fired a shot was judged for the deaths his words inspired.
Up Next in Nuremberg Trials: The Leaders of Nazi Germany [collection]
-
The Nazi General Who Helped Burn Euro...
General Alfred Jodl signed orders that fueled massacres from the Soviet Union to occupied Europe. He helped craft the Commissar and Commando Orders, condemning countless prisoners to death. Tried at Nuremberg for war crimes and crimes against humanity, Jodl was sentenced to death. Executed in 194...
-
Nazi Slave Labour Chief of Europe: Fr...
From 1942 to 1945, Fritz Sauckel built one of the largest systems of human exploitation in history.
As Hitler’s General Plenipotentiary for Labour Deployment, he orchestrated the deportation of more than 12 million men, women, and children from across occupied Europe — many torn from their homes ... -
From German Field Marshal to Nurember...
Wilhelm Keitel rose to the top of Hitler’s war machine as a loyal “yes-man,” signing criminal orders that fueled massacres and repression across Europe. From the invasion of Poland to Operation Barbarossa, his obedience enabled atrocities. At Nuremberg, he pled he was “just following orders,” but...