CBSE Class 9 Social Science important QuestionsHistory Chapter-3Nazism and Rise of Hitler 1 marks questions 3 marks questions 5 marks questions

CBSE Class 9 Social Science
Important Questions
History Chapter-3
Nazism and Rise of Hitler

1 marks questions

1. Name the most oppressed race in Germany.
Ans. Jews.
2. Name the party founded by Hitler.
Ans. Nazi Party.
3. Which was the purist race according to Hitler?
Ans. Aryan Race.
4. Name the first German Republic.
Ans. Weimer Republic.
5. Name the secret police of German.
Ans. Gestapo.
6. Name the Nazi youth group for children below 14 years of age.
Ans. Jungvolk.
7. What is the name for German Parliament?
Ans. Reichstag.
8. What was the name of treaty signed between Allies and Weimar Republic?
Ans. Versailles Treaty.
9. Where was an International Tribunal set up to try the war criminals?
Ans. Nuremberg.
10. Name the people’s car produced in Germany.
Ans. Volkswagen.
11. Name the place where people were isolated and detained without due process of
law.
Ans. Concentration Camps
12. Which was the highest post in the cabinet of Ministers in Germany?
Ans. Chancellor.
13. Name the scientist who discovered the theory of natural selection and evolution.
Ans. Charles Darwin.
14. Which Nazi youth organization consisted of all German of 14 to 18 years of age?
Ans. Hitler Youth.
15. What was Article 48 of Weimer Republic?
Ans. It gave the President the powers to impose emergency, suspended civil rights and rule
by decree.
16. Who wrote the book ‘Third Reich of Dreams’?
Ans. Charlotte Beradt.
17. Which was the most famous film in which orthodox Jews were stereotyped and
marked?
Ans. The Eternal Jews.
18. What was the immediate cause of world War II?
Ans. Germany invaded Poland in September 1940 was the immediate cause of World War II.
19. Who was Hitler’s propaganda Minister?
Ans. Goebbels.
20. What was Genocide war?
Ans. It was war which resulted in the mass murder of selected groups of innocent civilians of
Europe.

3 marks questions

1. State the verdict of Nuremberg Tribunal. Why did the Allies avoid harsh
punishments of Germany?

Ans. Nuremberg Tribunal sentenced only eleven leading Nazis to death.
Many others were imprisoned for life.
The Allies were not in favour of harsh punishment to Nazis as they felt that the rise of Nazi
Germany could be party traced back to the German experience at the end of the First World
War.


2. Describe the events that happened in 1945, when Germany surrendered to Allies.

Ans. In May 1945, Germany surrendered to the Allies.
Anticipating, Hitler his propaganda minister Goebbels and his entire family committed
suicide collectively in his Berlin bunker in April.
At the end of the war, an international Military tribunal at Nuremberg was set up to
prosecute Nazi war criminals for crimes against peace, for war crimes and crimes against
Humanity.


3. State the features of the Sparta cist League.

Ans. The birth of Weimer Republic coincided with the revolutionary uprising of the Sparta
cist League on the pattern of the Bolshevik revolution in Russia.
Soviets of workers and sailors were established in many cities. The political atmosphere in
Berlin was charged with demands of Soviet style of governance.
The anguished Sparta cists later founded the Communist Party of Germany.


4. Explain any three reasons why the Weimer republic was not received well by the people of Germany ?
people of Germany.

Ans. Many Germans held the new Weimer Republic responsible for defeat in the war and
disgrace at Versailles.
The peace of treaty was harsh and humiliating for the Germans.
The allied powers demilitarized Germany to weaken its power.


5. Highlight three main features of the political system setup after the defeat of
Imperial Germany in the First World War.

Ans. The defeat of Imperial Germany and the abdication of the emperor gave an opportunity
to parliamentary parties to recast Germany polity.
A National Assembly met at Weimer and established a democratic constitution with a federal
structure.
Deputies were now elected to the German Parliament or Reichstag, on the basis of equal and
universal votes cast by all adults including women.


6. Why did Germany suffer from hyper- inflation in 1923?

Ans. Germany fought the war largely on loans and had to pay war reparations in gold. This
heightened the economic crises of 1923.
The economic crises of 1923 created a situation when the prices of goods and services were
very high.
Germany retaliated with passive resistance and printed paper currency recklessly. With too
much printed money in circulation the value of the German Mark fell.
This crisis came to known as hyperinflation, a situation when prices rise phenomenally high.


7. Who bailed Germany out from the situation of ‘hyper- inflation’ and how?

Ans. The Americans intervened and bailed Germany out of the crises.
America introduced the Dawes plan.
This plan reworked the terms of reparation to ease the financial burden on Germans.


8. First World War left deep imprint on European society and polity. Support thestatement with three examples.

Ans. Soldiers came to be placed above civilians.
Politicians and publicists laid great stress on the need for men to be aggressive, strong and
masculine.
Media glorified trench life.
Democracy was young idea which could not survive the instabilities of inter war Europe.


9. Explain any three reasons that led to the German invasion of Soviet Union.

Ans. Hitler wanted to achieve his long term aim of conquering Eastern Europe.
He wanted to ensure food supplies and living space for German.
So he attacked the Soviet Union in June 1941.


10. State the reasons responsible for USA to join the Second World War.

Ans. Japan was expanding its power in the east.
It had occupied French Indo-China was planning attacks on US naval bases in the Pacific.
When Japan extended its support to Hitler and bombed the US base ar Pearl harbour, the US
entered the Second World War.


11. Highlight any three important circumstances under which Hitler came to power.

Ans. The unjust peace treaty of Versailles with the Allied powers.
The peace treaty was very harsh and humiliating for the Germans.
German lost its all overseas colonies, a tenth of its population and 13% of its territories in
Europe.
It also lost a larger part of resources like iron ore and coal.


12. Describe the Battle of Stalingrad in Second World War?

Ans. Hitler attacked the Soviet Union in June 1941.
In His historic blunder Hitler exposed the German westerns front to British aerial bombing
and the eastern front the powerful soviet armies.
The Soviet red army inflicted a crushing and humiliating defeat on Germany at Stalingrad.After this the Soviet Red army hounded out the retreating German Soldiers until they
reached the heart of Berlin, establishing soviet hegemony over the entire eastern Europe for
half a century thereafter.


13. Highlight any three features of the new style of politics devised by Hitler.

Ans. Hitler devised a new style of politics. He understood the significance of rituals and
spectacles in mass mobilization.
Nazis held massive rallies and public meetings to demonstrate the support for Hitler and
instill a sense of unity among the people.
The red banners with the ‘Swatika’, the Nazi Salute, and the ritualized rounds of applause
after the speeches were all part of this spectacle of power.


14. Mention any two methods adopted for extermination of Jews.

Ans. Jews were killed in gas chambers.
Jews were made to live in ghettos where they were often prosecuted through periodic
organized violence.
Forced selling and confiscation of their properties.


15. Explain the idea of survival of Herbert.

Ans. Herbert’s idea of survival of the fittest formed the basis of Hitler’s idea of survival of the
best race.
According to Herbert’s idea only those species survived on the earth that could adapt
themselves to changing climatic conditions.
His ideas were used by Hitler to imperial rule over conquered people.


16. Describe the condition of Polish people under Nazism.

Ans. Occupied Poland was divided up. Much of North western Poland was annexed to
Germany.
Poles were forced to leave their homes and properties behind to be occupied by ethnic
Germans brought in from occupied Europe.Poles were then herded like cattle in the other part called the General Government, the
destination of all ‘undesirables’ of the empire.


17. Evaluate the role of women in the Nazi Society.

Ans. In the Nazi Germany, young people and children were told women were radically
different from men.
Girls were told to prove good mothers and bring up pure blooded Aryans, look after the
home and teach their children the Nazi values.
Those mothers who produced racially desirable children were awarded given favoured
treatment in hospitals, concessions in shops, theatres and even in railways.


18. What do you understand by the Second Front in the Second World War?

Ans. In 1942, in Europe, a battle had been fought between Germany and Russia on the
Eastern Front.
In 1944, British and American troops landed on the coast of Normandy in France and opened
another Front against Germany.
This front is known as the Second Frond. Now Germany has to fight on the many Fronts.


19. Write a short note on Tripartite Pact.

Ans. In September 1940, a Tripartite Pact was signed between Germany, Italy and Japan,
strengthening Hitler’s claim to international power.
Puppet regimes, supportive of Nazi Germany were installed in a large part of Europe.
By the end of 1940, Hitler was at the pinnacle of his power.


20. Highlight the issue on which differences was raised between Hitler and Schacht.

Ans. Schacht had advised Hitler against investing hugely in rearmament as the state still ran
on deficit financing.
Cautious people however had no place in Nazi Germany.
Schacht had to leave. Hitler chose war as the way out of the approaching economic crises.21. How was the Art of Propaganda used by Nazis to justify their acts?
Ans. Nazis used language and media were effectively.
They used special words for mass killings-Special treatment, final solution, Jew euthanasia,
selection and disinfection.
Media was used to win support for the regime and popularize its word view.
Propaganda films were made to defame the Jews, who were stereotyped and referred to as
vermin, rats and pests.



22. What were the ideas of Hitler on racial state?

Ans. He believed that there was no equality among people-on racial hierarchy.
The blond haired, blue eyed Aryan race was the most superior and the most inferior were
the Jews.
Hitler believed in lebensraum or living space.


23. What were the steps taken by Hitler to strengthen the Nazi youth and children?

Ans. Hitler believed that a strong Nazi society could be established only by teaching children
Nazi Ideology.
Children were controlled both inside and outside schools which were cleansed and German
children were segregated from Jews, gypsies and other children.
Good German children were brainwashed about Nazi ideas of race and ideology of
aggression and violence.
Youth organizations like Jungvolk and Hitler Youth were created to worship war, glorify
aggression and violence, and hate democracy and undesirable elements.



24. Highlight the Nazi cult of Motherland.

Ans. Women had to be good mothers and rear pure-blooded Aryans.
Women who bore racially desirable children were awarded and those who did not were
punished.
Women had to follow the Aryan code of Conduct.25. Write a short note on the foreign policy of Hitler.
Ans. Hitler pulled out of the League of Nations and reoccupied the Rhineland.
He integrated Austria and Germany in 1938 under the slogan one people one leader.
He occupied Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia.
In 1940 a Tripartite Pact was signed between Germany, Italy and Japan, strengthening
Hitler’s claim to international power.


26. Write a short note on the economic policy of Hitler.

Ans. Hitler assigned the responsibility of economic recovery to the economist Hjalmar
Schacht.
A program of state funded economic reconstruction was launched aiming at full production
and full employment.
This project produced the famous German superhighways and the people’s car, the
Volkswagen.
Hitler wanted to spend hugely in rearmaments.


27. What were the suggestions given by Gandhiji to Hitler?

Ans. Gandhiji wrote him that you are the person who can prevent a war which may reduce
humanity to the savage state.
Non violence is against the humanity.
Gandhi appealed him to stop the war.


28. What were the promises made by Hitler to the people of Germany?

Ans. He promised to build a string nation, undo the injustice of the Versailles Treaty and
restore the dignity f the German people.
He promised employment for those looking for work, and a secure future for the youth.
He promised to weed out all foreign influences and resist all foreign conspiracies against
Germany.


29. Explain the Nazi education policy.

Ans. Schools and education institutions were also used to spread the Nazi Ideology.
School textbooks were rewritten.
Racial science was introduced to justify the Nazi ideas of race.
Hitler believed that boxing could make children iron hearted, strong and masculine.



30. Explain any three reasons that led to the German invasion of Soviet Union.

Ans. Hitler wanted to achieve his long term aim of conquering Eastern Europe.
He wanted to ensure food supplies and living space for German.
So he attacked the Soviet Union in June 1941.

5 marks questions

1. Highlight the effects of the recession of 1930 on the US economy.

Ans. Wall Street Exchange crashed in 1929.
Fearing in a fall in prices, people made frantic efforts to sell their shares.
On single day, 24 October, 13 million shares were sold. This was the start of the great
depression.
Over the next three years, between 1929 and 1932, the national income of the USA fell by
half.
Factories shut down, exports fell, farmers were badly hit and speculators withdraw their
money from the market.
The effects of this recession in the US economy were felt worldwide.



2. Highlight the effects of the recession of 1930 on the German economy.

Ans. The German economy was the worst hit by the economic crises. By 1932, industrial
production was reduced to 40% of the 1929 level.
Workers lost their jobs or were paid reduced wages.
The number of unemployed touched an unprecedented 6 million.
On the streets of Germany we could see men with placards around their necks saying,
‘willing to do any work’.
The economic crises created deep anxieties and fear in People. The middle classes, especially
salaried employees and pensioners, saw their savings diminish when the currency lost its
value.
Small businessmen, the self employed and retailers suffered as their businesses got ruined.



3. Highlight the important features of the education imparted in Nazi Schools.
Ans. Good German children were subjected to a process of Nazi schooling, a prolonged
period of ideological training.
School textbooks were rewritten. Racial science was introduced to justify Nazi ideas of race.
Stereotypes about Jews were popularized even through mathematics classes. Children were
taught to be loyal and submissive, hate Jews and worship Hitler.
Even the function of sports was to nurture a spirit of violence and aggression among
children.
Hitler believed that boxing could make children iron hearted strong and masculine.



4. Highlight the different provisions which were made by Nazis for German Youth to
enter the Nazi organizations.

Ans. Youth organizations were made responsible for educating German youth in the spirit of
National Socialism.
Ten year olds had to enter Jungvolk. At 14 all boys had to join the Nazi youth organization-
Hitler Youth-where they learnt to worship war, glorify aggression and violence, condemn
democracy, and hate Jews, communists, Gypsies and all those categorized as undesirable.
After a period of rigorous ideology and physical training they joined the labour Service,
usually at the age of 18.
Then they had to serve in the armed forces and enter one of the Nazi organizations.



5. Briefly describe the role of the International Military Tribunal set up after the
Second World War?

Ans. In May 1945, Germany surrendered to the Allies.
Anticipating what was coming, Hitler, his propaganda minister Goebbels and his entire
family committed suicide collectively in his Berlin bunker in April.
At the end of the war, an International Military Tribunal at Nuremberg was set up to
prosecute Nazi war criminals for crimes against peace, for War Crimes and Crimes against
Humanity.
Germany’s conduct during the war, especially those actions which came to called Crimes
against Humanity, raised serious moral and ethical questions and invited Worldwide
Condemnation.
The Nuremberg Tribunal sentenced only eleven leading Nazis to death. Many imprisoned for life.6. Explain any five features of Hitler’s foreign policy.
Ans. In foreign policy also Hitler acquired quick success.
He pulled out of the League of Nations in 1933, reoccupied the Rhineland in 1936, and
integrates Austria and Germany in 1938 under the slogan, one people, one empire, and one
leader.
He then went on to wrest German-speaking Sudetenland from Czechoslovakia, and gobbled
up the entire country.
In all of this he had the unspoken support of England, which had considered the Versailles
verdict too harsh.
These quick successes at home and abroad seemed to reverse the destiny of the country.



7. Explain the contribution of Schacht in economic recovery of Germany.

Ans. Hitler assigned the responsibility of economic recovery to the economist Hjalmar
Schacht.
He aimed at full production and full employment through a state funded work-creation
program.
This project produced the famous German superhighways and the people’s car, the
Volkswagen.
Schacht had advised Hitler against investing hugely in rearmament as the state still ran on
deficit financing.
Cautious people however had no place in Nazi Germany. Schacht had to leave.



8. How was the Great Economic Depression of 1929-1932 destroyed German economy?

Ans. The German economy was the worst hit by the economic crises. By 1932, industrial
production was reduced to 40 percent of the 1929 level.
Workers lost their jobs or were paid reduced wages.
The number of unemployed touched an unprecedented 6 million.
On the streets of Germany you could see men with placards around their neck saying,
“willing to work”. Unemployment youths play cards and simply sat at street corners, ordestroyed queued up at the local employment exchange.
The middle classes, especially salaried employees and pensioners, saw their savings diminish
when the currency lost its value.



9. What were the main problems faced by Weimer Republic in Germany?

Ans. Germany lost its overseas colonies, a tenth of it population, 13 percent of it colonies, 75
percent of its iron and 26 percent of its coal to France, Poland, Denmark and Lithuania.
Weimer Republic was being made to pay for the sins of the old empire.
The republic carried the burden of war guilt and national humiliation and was financially
crippled by being forced to pay compensations.
Those who supported the Weimer Republic, mainly Socialists, Catholics and Democrats,
became easy targets of attack in the conservative nationalist circles.
The birth of Weimer Republic coincided with the revolutionary uprising of SpartacistLeague
on the pattern of the Bolsheviks.



10. “Politically, the Weimer Republic was fragile”. Explain.

Ans. Politically, too the Weimer republic was Fragile. The Weimer Constitution had some
inherent defects, which made it unstable and vulnerable to dictatorship.
One was proportional representation. This made achieving a majority by any one party a
near impossible task, leading to a rule by coalition.
Another defect was Article 48, which gave the President the powers to impose emergency,
suspend civil rights and rule by decree.
Within its short life the Weimar Republic saw twenty different cabinets lasting on an average
239 days, and a liberal use Article 48.
Yet the crises could not manage. People lost confidence in the democratic parliamentary
system, which seemed to offer no solutions.

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