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Background: The annual Nuremberg party rallies are well known. However, subordinate units of the Nazi Party held their own mini-versions of the national rally, at which top Nazi leaders often spoke. This material is taken from a 78-page booklet on the 1936 rally for Gau Südhannover-Braunschweig. Most of the material consists of photographs. I here translate the account of the rally, and include the cover and three of the photographs. The source: Niedersachsen marschieren: Gautag Hildesheim 1936 (Hanover: Gauleitung der NSDAP, 1936).
Lower Saxony MarchesThe Gau Rally in Hildesheim: 1936Gau Rally in Hildesheim: 1936
We wander through the narrow streets past the wonderful churches and their towering steeples. Everywhere today new flags fly, green garlands hang from the old bay windows around the ancient oaken doors. The city is decorated for a great event: The Fourth Gau rally of the NSDAP Gau Südhannover-Braunschweig, the Gau for Lower Saxony, is being held within its walls from 12-14 June 1936. Germany’s past, Germany’s present, and Germany’s future join together. People of our day pass through the ancient streets over which the Führer’s banners fly, all feeling themselves part of a tribe of people, as children of their Lower Saxon landscape within a finally united German fatherland. Can there be greater harmony between the old and new eras, between the flowering of a past German culture and the longing of our day for reviving a clear German character, for the strengthening of our ethnic ideals in pure and full landscape, than here? The feeling was so strong, so deep, so powerful in these days that each felt it in his heart. Friday Evening, 12 JuneThe huge factory hall of the Senking plant is filled with a vast crowd of people. Packed together between the machines that today are at rest, they are in the midst of a place of hard work for one’s daily bread. The German worker has come here, who made his path himself, and now listens attentively to the words of Dr. Ley, words about labor as a gift of God, of the joy that is the right of the free and healthy German worker. Saturday Morning, 13 JuneFor the leaders of all formations and affiliates of the Gau,
the high point of the Gau rally is the leadership congress in
the
In the afternoon, all offices and affiliates meet in special meetings. There was also an endless variety of various events. In the evening, the dead of the Gau were honored at the Berghölzchen. S.A. Gruppenführer Kasche spoke. After that, 287 local groups received their standards, presented by Assistant Gauleiter Schmalz. Then there was a torchlight parade. From the ancient streets of the city, a broad avenue leads
to the wide and open Berghölzchen Hill. A forest surrounds the green
meadow, making it a gathering place of unique beauty: there is the unity
of the space, the broad avenue that leads from the narrow city to the
free and open heights, the broad vista that one enjoys. The setting is
marvelous, emphasized by the flags of the movement and the flags of the
Gau capital with their bright colors, which fly from high flagpoles.
It seems as if the whole city, as if a whole people, is striving upwards
toward the silver eagle, high above the forest, a holy symbol. It grows
dark. As the first pale stars appear on this warm summer night, flames
spring up from pylons bearing the names of the dead of the Gau.
Thousands of torches are lit, and a huge fiery stream seems to flow down
from the hill into the city, whose splendid churches brightly illuminate
the dark night. Sunday, 14 JuneThe Gau’s youth met at 7 a.m. for a morning ceremony at the Johanniswiese. They hear the words of the Führer:
At 10 a.m., there is a roll call for all formations on the Berghölzchen. A vast throng gathers in brown, gray and black columns, between which shine the while of the BDM and the blue of the Naval-HJ. Honor guards from the Wehrmacht stand at the foot of the hill. Dr. Goebbels speaks:
Afterward, the formations march past in a never-ending stream, accompanied by band music. In the afternoon, there is riding and tournaments. At the same time, a large historical parade marches through the city. It shows historical events, proverbs, and customs of Lower Saxony. It is a splendid and colorful event! Conclusion of the Gau RallyShortly before midnight, the Hitler Youth band performs at the Market Square. German youth play “Taps.” Comrades hold the torches. The old buildings, the old fountains, and our fresh, tanned youth play in the torchlight. One will never forget the scene as the midnight hour tolls! The Gau rally is over. What we experienced stays in our hearts. This was no parade of party formations, but rather this Gau rally in Hildesheim was an affirmation of the entire population of Lower Saxony to the movement, and to their landscape, to a strong, united Lower Saxony. Through its long years of battle, through the historical growing together of its counties, Gau Südhannover-Braunschweig has become a strong unit, a whole from which nothing can be taken without destroying it. Only Lower Saxon unity, anchored in its land, can give the strength to master the political, cultural, and economic tasks we face, and to develop all that is noble and beautiful.
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