“Father Sky”. In 1935, students in schools were forbidden to say Christian prayers and later, lessons with any Christian content were completely discontinued.
Hitler once revealed his attitude toward Christianity when he bluntly stated that religion is an:
…organized lie [that] must be smashed. The State must remain the absolute master. When I was younger, I thought it was necessary to set about [destroying religion] …with dynamite. I’ve since realized there’s room for a little subtlety …. The final state must be … in St. Peter’s Chair, a senile officiant; facing him a few sinister old women… The young and healthy are on our side … Our peoples had previously succeeded in living all right without this religion. I have six divisions of SS men absolutely indifferent in matters of religion. It doesn’t prevent them from going to their death with serenity in their souls. [2]
As we can see, Hitler saw only one idea as having importance in the spiritual realm: the idea that would lead people to “go to their death with serenity in their souls”. He found it in abundance in such pagan concepts as “the German spirit” and “honor in battle”. He saw monotheistic religions as beliefs that must be “destroyed with dynamite” but, for political reasons, he acted more moderately.
The Nazi hatred for Jews was a part of this anti-Theistic ideology. Nazis who hated Christianity saw it as a “Jewish plot.” That Jesus Christ, a prophet of Israeli origin, should be loved and revered by Germans, who regarded themselves as the “master race”, was for them unthinkable. For the Nazis, it was not a prophet of Israeli origin that would be a guide for Germans, but the barbarous and cruel warriors of