Not-So-Fun-Fact! As late as the 1950s, a near-majority of Germans still believed that Hitler should have been regarded as a good leader, had he not lost WW2.
It wasn’t until the mid-late 1960s, when the next generation, learning about Germany’s recent past, looked at their parents and asked in horror, “How could you have supported such atrocities?!” that Germany’s modern cultural sense of anti-Nazism was planted.
Not-So-Fun-Fact! As late as the 1950s, a near-majority of Germans still believed that Hitler should have been regarded as a good leader, had he not lost WW2.
It wasn’t until the mid-late 1960s, when the next generation, learning about Germany’s recent past, looked at their parents and asked in horror, “How could you have supported such atrocities?!” that Germany’s modern cultural sense of anti-Nazism was planted.
Sadly anti-nazism slowly fade and afd on rise.
It’s a lesson that has to be relearned by each generation, unfortunately. Would that it could be one-and-done.
The division of Germany at the time that generational trauma was being worked out doesn’t help.
When were the school reforms introduced?