Everything about Reichstag Fire Decree totally explained
The Reichstag Fire Decree
(German: Reichstagsbrandverordnung) is the common name of the Order of the Reich President for the Protection of People and State' issued by German president
Paul von Hindenburg in direct response to the
Reichstag fire of
February 27,
1933. The decree nullified many of the key
civil liberties of German citizens. With
Nazis in powerful positions of the German government, the decree was used as the legal basis of imprisonment of anyone considered to be opponents of the Nazis, and was used to suppress publications not considered "friendly" to the Nazi cause. The decree is considered by historians to be one of the key steps in the establishment of a
one-party Nazi state in Germany.
Background
Adolf Hitler had been named
chancellor of Germany and invited by President von Hindenburg to lead a coalition government only four weeks previously, on
January 30,
1933. Hitler's government urged von Hindenburg to dissolve the
Reichstag and to call elections for
March 5.
On the evening of
February 27,
1933 — six days before the parliamentary election —
fire broke out in the Reichstag chambers. While the exact circumstances of the fire remain unclear to this day, what is clear is that Hitler and his supporters quickly capitalized on the fire as a means by which to speed their consolidation of power. Seizing on the burning of the
Reichstag building as the opening salvo in a communist uprising, the Nazis were able to throw millions of Germans into a convulsion of fear at the threat of Communist terror. The official account stated:
The burning of the Reichstag was intended to be the signal for a bloody uprising and civil war. Large-scale pillaging in Berlin was planned.... It has been determined that ... throughout Germany acts of terrorism were to begin against prominent individuals, against private property, against the lives and safety of the peaceful population, and general civil war was to be unleashed....
The decree was improvised on the day after the fire (
February 28) after discussions in the
Prussian Ministry of the Interior, which was led by
Hermann Göring, and was then brought before the Reich cabinet. In the ensuing discussions, Hitler stated that the fire made it now a matter of "ruthless confrontation of the
KPD" and shortly thereafter, President von Hindenburg, 84 years old and lapsing in and out of
senility, signed the decree into law.
The decree, officially the
Verordnung des Reichspräsidenten zum Schutz von Volk und Staat (
Order of the Reich President for the Protection of People and State), invoked the authority of
Article 48 of the
Weimar Constitution which allowed the
Reichspräsident to take any appropriate measure to remedy dangers to
public safety.
The decree consisted of six articles. Article 1 suspended most of the civil liberties set forth in the Weimar Constitution —
freedom of the person,
freedom of expression,
freedom of the press, the
right of free association and
public assembly, the
secrecy of the post and telephone, not to mention the protection of property and the home. Articles 2 and 3 allowed the Reich government to assume powers normally reserved to the
federal states. Articles 4 and 5 established
draconian penalties for certain offenses, including the
death penalty for
arson to public buildings. Article 6 simply stated that the decree took effect on the day of its proclamation.
Text of the decree
The preamble and Article 1 of the Reichstag Fire Decree show the methods by which the civil rights protections of the Weimar Republic's democratic constitution were abolished in a legal manner by the Nazis:
| Ordnung des Reichspräsidenten zum Schutz von Volk und Staat |
Order of the Reich President for the Protection of People and State |
Auf Grund des Artikels 48 Abs. 2 der Reichsverfassung wird zur Abwehr kommunistischer staatsgefährdender Gewaltakte folgendes verordnet:
|
On the basis of Article 48 paragraph 2 of the Constitution of the German Reich, the following is ordered in defense against Communist state-endangering acts of violence:
|
| § 1. |
Die Artikel 114, 115, 117, 118, 123, 124 und 153 der Verfassung des Deutschen Reichs werden bis auf weiteres außer Kraft gesetzt. Es sind daher Beschränkungen der persönlichen Freiheit, des Rechts der freien Meinungsäußerung, einschließlich der Pressefreiheit, des Vereins- und Versammlungsrechts, Eingriffe in das Brief-, Post-, Telegraphen- und Fernsprechgeheimnis, Anordnungen von Haussuchungen und von Beschlagnahmen sowie Beschränkungen des Eigentums auch außerhalb der sonst hierfür bestimmten gesetzlichen Grenzen zulässig. |
§ 1. |
Articles 114, 115, 117, 118, 123, 124 and 153 of the Constitution of the German Reich are suspended until further notice. It is therefore permissible to restrict the rights of personal freedom [habeas corpus], freedom of opinion, including the freedom of the press, the freedom to organize and assemble, the privacy of postal, telegraphic and telephonic communications, and warrants for house searches, orders for confiscations as well as restrictions on property, are also permissible beyond the legal limits otherwise prescribed. |
Effects
The decree wasn't accompanied by any written guidelines from the Reich government; this omission gave wide latitude in interpreting the decree to Nazis like Göring, who as
Prussian interior minister was in authority over the police forces in Germany's largest province. The
Länder not yet in the Nazis' grasp largely restricted themselves to banning the Communist press, Communist meetings and demonstrations, and detaining leading KPD officials. In Prussia, however, summary arrests of KPD leaders were common, thousands were imprisoned in the days following the fire, and the total number of arrests in Prussia on the basis of the Reichstag Fire Decree in the two weeks following
February 28 is believed to be in the vicinity of 10,000.
Among the German communists arrested on the basis of the Reichstag Fire Decree was KPD chairman
Ernst Thälmann; while KPD founding members
Wilhelm Pieck and
Walter Ulbricht — later to be leaders in postwar
East Germany — were among those who escaped arrest and lived in exile.
Göring issued a directive to the Prussian police authorities on
March 3, stating that in addition to the constitutional rights stripped by the decree, "all other restraints on police action imposed by Reich and Land law" were abolished "so far as this is necessary ... to achieve the purpose of the decree." Göring went on to say that
In keeping with the purpose and aim of the decree the additional measures ... will be directed against the Communists in the first instance, but then also against those who co-operate with the Communists and who support or encourage their criminal aims.... I'd point out that any necessary measures against members or establishments of other than Communist, anarchist or Social Democratic parties can only be justified by the decree ... if they serve to help the defense against such Communist activities in the widest sense.
Just over three weeks after the passage of the Reichstag Fire Decree, Hitler's National Socialists further tightened their grasp on Germany by the passage of the
Enabling Act. This act gave Hitler's cabinet the legal power to decree laws without being passed by the Reichstag.
The Reichstag Fire Decree was thus one of the key steps which the Hitler government took to formally establish one-party dictatorship in Germany.
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