Die Olympischen Spiele in Berlin


'I CALL ON THE YOUTH OF THE WORLD'

THE  XI  OLYMPIAD
Die Olympischen Spiele in Berlin

"German sport has only one task: to strengthen the character of the German people, imbuing it with the fighting spirit and steadfast camaraderie necessary in the struggle for its existence."

— Minister of Propaganda Dr. Joseph Goebbels
Führer und Reichskanzler Adolf Hitler Öffnet das XI Olympiade in Berlin
The 1936 Summer Olympics, officially known as the Games of the XI Olympiad, was an international multi-sport event that was held in 1936 in Berlin, Germany.



Berlin won the bid to host the Games over Barcelona, Spain, on 26 April 1931, at the 29th IOC Session in Barcelona (two years before the NSDAP came to power).


1936 Berlin Olympic Stadium
Berlin Olympic Games
1936 Poster
It marked the second and final time that the International Olympic Committee would gather to vote in a city which was bidding to host those Games.
The only other time this occurred was at the inaugural IOC Session in Paris, France, on 24 April 1894. Then, Athens and Paris were chosen to host the 1896 and 1900 Games, respectively.
To outdo the Los Angeles, USA games of 1932, the German authorities built a new 100,000-seat track and field stadium, six gymnasiums, and many other smaller arenas.



The Olympiastadion

Reichssportfeld

Hitler ordered the construction of a great sports complex in Grunewald named the "Reichssportfeld", with a totally new Olympiastadion.
Architect Werner March was in charge of the project, assisted by his brother Walter March.


Werner March
Werner March was born in Charlottenburg and died in Berlin.
For the 1936 Summer Olympics in Germany, March created his most famous work, Berlin's Olympic Stadium.
He was the son of Otto March, the architect of Berlin's first Olympic stadium.
This stadium was never used for its original purpose, though, because the 1916 Summer Olympics were cancelled due to World War I.
Together with his brother Walter he won a gold medal in art competition in 1936.

Construction took place from 1934 to 1936. When the Reichssportfeld was finished, it was 1.32 square kilometres (326 acres). It consisted of (east to west): the Olympiastadion, the Maifeld (Mayfield, capacity of 50,000) and the Waldbühne amphitheater (capacity of 25,000), in addition to various places, buildings and facilities for different sports (such as football/soccer, swimming, equestrian events, and field hockey) in the northern part.


 Reichssportfeld and Bell-Tower
The Olympiastadion was built in the southern part of the Reichssportfeld.
Werner March built the new Olympiastadion on the foundation of the original Deutsches Stadion, once again with the lower half of the structure buried 12 meters underground.
The capacity of the Olympiastadion reached 110,000 spectators.
It also possessed a special stand for Adolf Hitler and his political associates.
At its end, aligned with the symmetrically-designed layout of the buildings of the Olympischer Platz, and toward the Maifeld, was the Marathon Gate, with a big receptacle for the Olympic Flame.
To the east of the stadium, there were two field hockey stadia.

Olympia Glocke

 Reichssportfeld and Bell-Tower
Olympia Glocke
The Bell Tower crowned the western end of the Reichs Sportfield, planted amid the tiers of the Maifeld stands.
It was 77 metres (247 ft) high.
From its peak could be observed the whole city of Berlin.
During the games, it was used as observation post by administrators and police officials, doctors and the media.
In the tower was the Olympia Glocke - (Olympic Bell).

 Reichssportfeld and Bell-Tower
On its surface were the Olympic Rings with an eagle, the year 1936, the Brandenburg Gate, the date 1.-16. August and a motto between two swastikas: 'I call the youth of the world'.


The Dietrich-Eckart-Bühne

Dietrich-Eckart-Bühne
The Waldbühne was built in 1936 as part of the preparation for the Berlin Olympics.
The terraces were molded into the glacial river banks of the Berlin glacial valley.
It is a reproduction of the old Greek theater of Epidaurus (3rd century BC).
The theater was then named "Dietrich-Eckart-Bühne" in homage to Dietrich Eckart.
Seating for up to 25,000 spectators goes down to a depth of 30 metres (97 ft); in the middle section Adolf Hitler's box stood.
Adolf Wamper
The surroundings were decorated with statues by Adolf Wamper.
Adolf Wamper was born on June 23, 1901 in Würseln, near Aachen.
He died on May 22, 1977 in Essen.


Dietrich-Eckart-Bühne
In 1935 he settled down in Berlin.
He took over with Prof. Baumgarten the project of construction of the Opera in Berlin-Charlottenburg.
The talented Wamper, influenced by his trips to Paris and meetings with the important artists of his time such as Bourdelle, attracted attention to himself.
Already a year later he creates a relief for the open-air podium of the Reichs-Sportfeld (The Reich Stadium) on the Olympic grounds in Berlin. Numerous official commission follow.
In 1940, Wamper's "Genius of Victory" is shown at the great art exhibition in Munich. 
During the Olympics, gymnastics competitions and a myriad of cultural programs were staged in the Dietrich-Eckart-Bühne.

Dietrich Eckart 
Dietrich Eckart (23 March 1868 – 26 December 1923) was a German journalist and politician and, with Adolf Hitler, was one of the early key members of the Nazi Party (NSDAP), and a participant in the 1923 November Putsch.
Eckart was described "a strange genius," - his racial views arose from a Gnostic, Manichean mysticism, and he spent hours with Hitler on the Obersalzburg discussing art, and the place of the Jews in world history.
Schutzstaffel Sig Runes
Along with Liebenfels, he has been called the 'spiritual father' of National Socialism.
As well as naming the Olympic Theater after Dietrich, Hitler also included the following dedication in 'Mein Kampf':

"Together with those, (party members who died in the November Putsch), and as one of the best of all, I should like to mention the name of a man who devoted his life to reawakening his and our people, through his writing and his ideas, and finally through positive action. - I mean Dietrich Eckart'.

The 5th Standarte (regiment) of the SS was also given the honour-title Dietrich Eckart.

Television

Television Camera
Berlin Olympic Games
Television Camera - 1936
Berlin Olympic Games
They also installed a closed-circuit television system and radio network that reached 41 countries, with many other forms of expensive high-tech electronic equipment.
Filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl, a favorite of Adolf Hitler, was commissioned by the German Olympic Committee to film the Games for $7 million.
Her film, titled Olympia, pioneered many of the techniques now common in the filming of sports.
Hitler saw the Games as an opportunity to promote his government and ideals of racial supremacy.
Total ticket revenues were 7.5 million Reichsmark, generating a profit of over one million marks. The official budget did not include outlays by the city of Berlin (which issued an itemized report detailing its costs of 16.5 million marks) or outlays of the German national government (which did not make its costs public, but is estimated to have spent US$30 million, chiefly in capital outlays).

Host City Selection

Olympic Flame in Berlin 1936
The bidding for these Olympic Games was the first to be contested by IOC members casting their votes for their favorite host city.
The vote occurred in 1931 during the Weimar Republic era, before Adolf Hitler rose to power in 1933. There were many other cities around the world that wanted to host this Summer Olympics, but they did not receive any IOC votes.
The other cities competing to hold the games were: Alexandria, Barcelona, Buenos Aires, Cologne, Dublin, Frankfurt, Helsinki, Lausanne, Nuremberg, Rio de Janeiro, and Rome.
Academics cannot agree whether the IOC during this period was a willing collaborator or an organization that favored the aesthetics of fascist governments.
Although the IOC was insulated from the reality of Nazism, elements of Hitler's regime were in parallel alignment with the sporting ideologies of the IOC.
The next scheduled games in 1940 were awarded to Tokyo even though Japan was becoming an aggressive militaristic, nationalist state.
Ironically in 1938 the Japanese rejected hosting the games because they saw the Olympics and its pacifist values as 'an effete form of European culture'.

The Olympic Village

Olympisches Dorf - Olympic Village
The Olympic village was located at Estal in Wustermark, (at 52°32′10.78″N 13°0′33.20″E), on the western edge of Berlin.
The site, which was 30 kilometres (19 mi) from the center of the city, consisted of one to two floor dormitories, dining areas, a swimming pool, and training facilities.
During the Second World War, it was used as a hospital for injured Wehrmacht soldiers. In 1945 it was taken over by the Soviet Union and became a torture and interrogation center for SMERSH.
Recent efforts have been made to restore parts of the former village, but to no avail. 

Influence of National Socialist Ideologies

Hans von Tschammer und Osten
Reichsbund für
Leibesübungen Gaufahne
Hans von Tschammer und Osten, as Reichssportführer, i.e. head of the Deutscher Reichsbund für Leibesübungen (DRL), the Reich Sports Office, played a major role in the structure and organization of the Olympics.

Hans von Tschammer und Osten (25 October 1887 in Dresden, Kingdom of Saxony - 25 March 1943) was a German sport official, SA leader and a member of the Reichstag. He was married to Sophie Margarethe von Carlowitz.
The Summer Olympics in Berlin were held during von Tschammer's tenure as Reichssportführer. He played a major role in the structure and organization of the Olympic Games together with Carl Diem, who was the former secretary of the Deutscher Reichsausschuss für Leibesübungen (DRA). Von Tschammer trusted the organization of the Fourth Winter Olympics in Garmisch-Partenkirchen to Karl Ritter von Halt, whom he named President of the Committee for the organization of the games.

He promoted the idea that the use of sports would harden the German spirit and instill unity among German youth. At the same time he also believed that sports was a 'way to weed out the weak.'


Carl Diem
Von Tschammer trusted the details of the organisation of the games to Theodor Lewald and Carl Diem, the former president and secretary of the Deutscher Reichsausschuss für Leibesübungen, the forerunner of the Reich Sports Office.

Carl Diem (1882-1962) — a highly respected sports official before, during, and after the Nazi Government — “he was an avid athlete as a young man. Denigrating the value of his country’s powerful but archaic Turner Sport Movement, an institution entrenched in the Fatherland for over a century, Diem became a dedicated enthusiast and advocator of a German sporting movement parallel to those developing rapidly in fin du siecle Anglo-Saxon nations. Diem followed a career path in teaching and sport administration, rising rapidly to head what became known as the German National Sports University, founded in Berlin in 1920.”



'Fest der Völker'  - Leni Riefenstahl
He had a long association with Germany’s Olympic movement. He was the 30-year-old captain of the German team at the 1912 Stockholm Olympics, and, like Theodor Lewald, appointed to the 1916 organizing committee. Diem, “though generally staying in the background, did more than anyone else in the Reich during the first half of the twentieth century to advance German sports and German Olympic ambitions.”
In 1936, he became the General-Secretary of the Berlin Organisationskomittee. His “inspired contributions” to the Berlin Games included the Iron Bell with the words, 'Ich rufe die Jugend der Welt' (I call on the youth of the world); Olympische Jugend (Olympic Youth), a five-act pageant of dances at the opening ceremonies; and, the torch lighting in Olympia and relay to Berlin. Diem described the Berlin Games as an event for Germany to lead "a victory charge for a better Europe."


THE OLYMPIC TORCH RELAY

The media in the United Kingdom was saturated before the London Games began with reports and images of the 'Olympic Torch'.

Strangely, no mention was made of the origins of the Olympic Torch Relay - although there has been a suggestion that it has 'deep' and 'mystic' origins in 'democratic' ancient Greece.

Olympic Torch Relay 1936
Olympic Flame - Berlin 1936

In fact the first Olympic Torch Relay was instituted by Hans von Tschammer und Osten, as Reichssportführer, i.e. head of the Deutscher Reichsbund für Leibesübungen (DRL), the Reich Sports Office,

The Olympic Flame was used for the third time at these Games, but this marked the first time it was kindled in Olympia, Greece, and then brought to the Olympic Stadium by a torch relay.

Sun Swastika
Olympic Torch 1936
The National Socialists created a 'quasi-religious' ceremony at Olympia, which involved a torch being kindled by the rays of the sun at the hands of 'so-called' priestesses of Apollo (why not Zeus as he was the patron god of Olympia).


For the National Socialists the sun, which was represented by the swastika was, the source of creativity and life, and flames kindled by the sun's rays were equally symbolic of the creativity and life of the Aryan race - the ancient Greeks, of course, being considered Aryans par-exellence.

Olympic Torch 1936
This also explains why the National Socialists were so enamoured with torchlight processions, and flaming cauldrons.

For the Games of the XI Olympiad a beautiful torch was designed, bearing the olympic rings and a map of the torch relay etched onto the handle.
In the Olympic stadium in Berlin a huge bronze 'cauldron' was created.
This cauldrom was lit at the comencement of the Games, and was ceremoniously extinguished on the last night of the Games, and this custom has been continued ever since.
So, the modern 'Olympics' is centred round a Völkisch ceremony of Aryan Sun worship - with no connection to the ancient Greeks.

History

Olympic Torch
1936 
Olympic Games Television Programme
The games were the first to have live television coverage.
The German Post Office, using equipment from Telefunken, broadcast over 70 hours of coverage to special viewing rooms throughout Berlin and Potsdam and a few private TV sets, transmitting from the Paul Nipkow TV Station.
The Olympic Flame was used for the third time at these games, but this marked the first time it was brought to the Olympic Village by a torch relay, with the starting point in Olympia, Greece (see above)
The Republic of China's Three Principles of the People was chosen as the best national anthem of the games.
The official book of the 1936 Olympics is present in many libraries containing the signatures of all gold medalists.


Notable Achievements

Germany had a prosperous year in the equestrian events, winning individual and team gold in all three disciplines, as well as individual silver in dressage.
In the cycling match sprint finals, the German Toni Merkens fouled Arie van Vliet of the Netherlands. Instead of being disqualified, he was fined 100 marks and kept his gold. German gymnasts Konrad Frey and Alfred Schwarzmann both won three gold medals.
Jesse Owens won four gold medals in the sprint and long jump events.
His German competitor Luz Long offered Owens advice after he almost failed to qualify in the long jump and was posthumously awarded the Pierre de Coubertin medal for sportsmanship. Mack Robinson, brother to Jackie Robinson won the 200 meter sprint silver medal behind Owens by .04 seconds.
Although he did not medal, future American war hero Louis Zamperini, lagging behind in the 5,000 meter final, made up ground by clocking a 56-second final lap.
This effort caught the attention of Adolf Hitler who personally commended Zamperini on his speed. In one of the most dramatic 800 meter races in history, American John Woodruff won gold after slowing to jogging speed in the middle of the final in order to free himself from being boxed in.
Glenn Edgar Morris, a farm boy from Colorado, won Gold in the Decathlon. Rower Jack Beresford won his fifth Olympic medal in the sport, and his third gold medal.
The U.S. eight-man rowing team from the University of Washington won the gold medal, coming from behind to defeat the Germans and Italians with Adolf Hitler in attendance.
In the marathon two Korean athletes won medals – Sohn Kee-chung (gold) and Nam Sung-yong (bronze) – running for Japan and under Japanese names; Japan had annexed Korea in 1910. British India won the gold medal in the field hockey event once again (they won the gold in all Olympics from 1928 to 1956), defeating Germany 8–1 in the final, however, Indians were considered Indo-Aryans by the Germans and there was no controversy regarding their victory. Rie Mastenbroek of the Netherlands won three gold medals and a silver in swimming.
Estonia's Kristjan Palusalu won two gold medals in Men's Wrestling, marking the last time Estonia competed as an independent nation in the Olympics until 1992.
After winning the middleweight class, the Egyptian weightlifter Khadr El Touni continued to compete for another 45 minutes, finally exceeding the total of the German silver medalist by 35 kg.
The 20-year-old El Touni lifted a total of 387.5 kg crushing two German world champions, El Touni broke the then Olympic and world records, while the German lifted 352.5 kg.
Furthermore, El Touni had lifted 15 kg more than the heavyweight gold medalist, a feat only El Touni has accomplished.
El Touni's new world records stood for 13 years.
Fascinated by El Touni's performance, Adolf Hitler rushed down to greet this human miracle. Prior to the competition, Hitler was said to have been sure that Rudolf Ismayr and Adolf Wagner would embarrass all other opponents.
Hitler was so impressed by El Touni's domination in the middleweight class that he ordered a street named after him in Berlin olympic village.
The Egyptian held the No. 1 position on the IWF list of history's 50 greatest weightlifters for 60 years, until the 1996 Games in Atlanta where Turkey's Naim Süleymanoğlu surpassed him to top the list.
Italy's football team continued their dominance under legendary head coach Vittorio Pozzo, winning the gold medal in these Olympics between their two consecutive World Cup victories (1934 and 1938).
Much like the successes of German athletes, this triumph was claimed by supporters of Benito Mussolini's regime as a vindication of the superiority of the fascist system.
Austria won the silver; a controversial win after Hitler called for a rematch of the quarterfinals match to discount Peru's 4–2 win over Austria.
The Peruvian national Olympic team refused to play the match again and withdrew from the games. In the quarter-finals of the football tournament, Peru beat Austria 4–2 in extra-time. Peru rallied from a two-goal deficit in the final 15 minutes of normal time.
During extra-time, Peruvian fans allegedly ran onto the field and attacked an Austrian player. In the chaos, Peru scored twice and won, 4–2.
However, Austria protested and the International Olympic Committee ordered a replay without any spectators.
The Peruvian government refused and their entire Olympic squad left in protest as did Colombia.

Leni Riefenstahl - Olympia 36

Leni Riefenstahl
Javelin Thrower
'Fest der Völker'
In 1936, Hitler invited Riefenstahl to film the Olympic Games in Berlin, a film which Riefenstahl claimed had been commissioned by the International Olympic Committee.
She also went to Greece to take footage of the games' original site at Olympia, where she was aided by Greek photographer Nelly, along with route of the inaugural torch relay.
This material became Olympia, a successful film which has since been widely noted for its technical and aesthetic achievements.
She was one of the first filmmakers to use tracking shots in a documentary, placing a camera on rails to follow the athletes' movement, and she is noted for the slow motion shots included in the film.

Die Götter des Stadions

Riefenstahl's work on Olympia has been cited as a major influence in modern sports photography.
Riefenstahl filmed competitors of all races, including African-American Jesse Owens in what would later become famous footage.

Olympia was very successful in Germany after it premiered for Hitler's 49th birthday in 1938, and its international debut led Riefenstahl to embark on an American publicity tour in an attempt to secure commercial release.
The film was released in two parts: 'Olympia 1. Teil — Fest der Völker' (Festival of Nations) and 'Olympia 2. Teil — Fest der Schönheit' (Festival of Beauty).
In 1937, Riefenstahl told a reporter for the Detroit News:
"To me, Hitler is the greatest man who ever lived. He truly is without fault, so simple and at the same time possessed of masculine strength".


Swimmer - 'Fest der Völker'
Die Götter des Stadions
She arrived in New York City in November 1938, five days before Kristallnacht, or 'night of broken glass'; when news of the event reached America, Riefenstahl maintained that Hitler was innocent.
On 18 November, she was received by Henry Ford in Detroit and Olympia was shown at "The Chicago Engineers Club" two days later.
Avery Brundage stated that it was "The greatest Olympic film ever made" and Riefenstahl left for Hollywood, where she was received by the German Consul Georg Gyssling, on 24 November. She negotiated with Louis B. Mayer and on 8 December, Walt Disney brought her on a three-hour tour showing her the on-going production of Fantasia.
After the Goebbels Diaries surfaced, researchers learned that Riefenstahl had been friendly with Joseph Goebbels and his wife, Magda, attending the opera with them and coming to the Goebbels' parties, however, Riefenstahl maintained that Goebbels was upset that she had rejected his advances and was jealous of her influence on Hitler, seeing her as an internal threat; therefore, his diaries could not be trusted.
By later accounts, Goebbels thought highly of Riefenstahl's filmmaking but was angered with what he saw as her overspending on the Nazi-provided filmmaking budgets.


Leni Riefenstahl
 'Das Blaue Licht'  (1932)
LENI RIEFENSTAHL was born in Berlin in 1902.
She studied painting and started her artistic career as a dancer.
She became already so famous after her first dance hat Max Reinhardt engaged her for the 'Deutsches Theater'.
An injury of the knee put an end to her sensational career. 
After that, she became famous as an actress, a film director, a film producer and a film reporter.
She also became world-renowned as an actress in the films 'Der heilige Berg' (The Holy Mountain) (1926), 'Der große Sprung' (The Great Leap) (1927), 'Die weiße Hölle vom Piz Palü' (The White Hell of Piz Palü) (1929), 'Stürme über dem Mont Blanc' (Storms Over Mont Blanc) (1930), 'Der weiße Rausch' (The White Noise) (1931), 'Das Blaue Licht' (The Blue Light) (1932) and 'SOS Eisberg' (1933).


Leni Riefenstahl
'Der heilige Berg'
1926 
Her greatest success she made with the documentary film 'Triumph des Willens' (The Triumph of the Will) named after the Reich Party Congress 1934 in Nuremberg which got the highest awards: The gold medal in Venice in 1935 and the gold medal at the World Exhibition in Paris in 1937, however, at the end of the war this film destroyed Leni Riefenstahl's career, for now it had no longer been recognized as a piece of art but been condemned as a National Socialist propaganda film.
Her world-famous film about the Olympic games was equally well received.
That film included two parts, part I 'Fest der Völker' (Festival of the Nations) and part 2 'Fest der Schönheit' , (Festival of Beauty) and did also get the highest awards: the gold medal in Paris in 1937, the first price in Venice as the world's best film in 1938, the Olympic Award by the IOC in 1939, and in 1956 it had been classified as one of the world's best ten films.




OLYMPIA GLOCKE
(The Olympic Bell)



Many of the traditions of the modern 'Olympic' Games originated with the 1936 Berlin Olympics - which is probably not surprising as the Nazis were masters of propaganda and spectacle.
The Logo of the Berlin Olympics was the 'Olympia Glocke' - the Olympic Bell - to be tolled at the opening and closing of the Games.
Interestingly, one of the 'secrets' of the London 2012 Games, revealed at the opening ceremony, was a huge bell (see right), tolled as the games were opened.
The Original 'Olympia Glocke' survived the 1939-1945 war, and still exists, and can be seen outside the Berlin 'Olympic Stadium'.




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