Hitler’s Little Jig

Seventy-one years ago today, Adolf Hitler accepted the surrender of the French government at a ceremony in Compiegne, France. On June 21, 1940, Hitler melodramatically received France’s surrender in the same railroad car in which Germany had signed the 1918 armistice that had ended the First World War, thereby adding an additional flourish to century-long rivalry between France and Germany. (In 1918, the Armistice was singed in that railcar because it had once belong to Napoleon III, who lost the Franco-Prussian War).

It was an episode full of pointless symbolism. Hitler sat in the same chair in which Marshal Foch had sat when he faced the defeated Germans in 1918. After listening to the reading of the preamble, Hitler – in a calculated gesture of disdain to the French delegates – left the carriage, leaving the negotiations to General Wilhelm Keitel (who ironically would sign a surrender of Germany five years later).

After stepping outside, while talking to his generals and aides, Hitler stepped backwards; however, this is not what audiences in the Allied countries saw. John Grierson, director of the Canadian information and propaganda departments, noticed that Hitler raised his leg rather high up while stepping backwards. He looped this moment repeatedly to create the appearance that Hitler was childishly jumping with joy.

In those days of newsreels before films, the scene was played over and over again in movie theaters, and served the purpose of provoking popular disdain towards Hitler. 

The Armistice site was destroyed on Hitler’s orders three days later; the monuments, which included a German eagle impaled by a sword, and a large stone tablet which read “Here on the eleventh of November 1918 succumbed the criminal pride of the German Reich, vanquished by the free peoples which it tried to enslave”, were destroyed. A statue of Foch was left intact so that it would be honoring a wasteland. The Armistice carriage was taken to Berlin, but later destroyed in war. See here for Hitler’s reaction to the Armistice site.

 

9 thoughts on “Hitler’s Little Jig”

  1. it’s funny to watch the film today – it is an obvious fake. i guess 70 years ago people were not used to spotting photoshops.

    🙂

  2. Dear Comrades,

    I remember the piece well but we were callin it “The Jig Of Joy” back then. Pretty fancy stuff considerin that it was done by hand with no fancy computer help.

    I tried to find the original on YouTube but came up with about a thousand others that were much better (Considerin the aforementioned computer help).

    Here is a few done by some people who I think are pretty darn talented, though perhaps a bit misdirected…:

    Enjoy..and dont get mad you fellers…after all, its these kids that we fought the war for and we gotta teach them gentel like or theyl turn an go some other way worse than Hitler ever dreamed.

    Your Obt. Svt.
    Col Korn,
    Chief O’ Mayhem in the Great WW-2,
    Now, Chief O’ Security an Sanitation an the Complaint Dept.
    OXOjamm Studios.

  3. Outstanding post however , I was wanting to know if you could write a litte more on this subject? I’d be very thankful if you could elaborate a little bit more. Many thanks!

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