Above: Top members of the NSDAP, including Joseph Goebbels and Adolf Hitler, enjoy an eintopf meal durring the Winterhilfswerk drive.
Above: An off-duty soldier donates to the Winterhilfswerk.
The Hitlerjugend and Bund Deutscher Madel were the most active in collecting for the WHW drives, and members from both organizations would regularly go from door to door asking for donations. In keeping with the socialist concepts of community over the individual, the total donations each individual was able to raise were not reported. Only the total raised by the relevant organization of that region. Donators were given cards to place on their window in order to not be bothered by the next group of collectors. Wearing the current pin of the week would keep collectors away as well. Failing to donate on the other hand, might get your name posted in the local paper as "someone who forgot"!
Above: Two women offer donations to an SS officer on a snowy day.
The highlight of the drive would occur on National Solidarity Day (December 3rd)
when high ranking party officials would take to the streets and ask for donations themselves. Famous figures including Hermann Goering and especially Joseph Goebbels, were noted for taking part in this annual event. Another popular aspect of Winterhilfswerk was the eintopf (a special kind of cheap stew). A family would eat an eintopf meal for dinner one night per month during the drive, and donate the money they saved doing so to the WHW.
Above: Volunteers sort donations to the WHW. Most of those in the photograph appear to be canned and dry goods.
The Winterhilfswerk drive was not only useful for bringing aid to Germans in need, but also for continuing to unify the nation and people. The concepts promoted by the WHW drive helped develop trust between people and state, and provided an easily identifiable example of Volksgemeinshaft to the German people, and the rest of the world.
Nicer gifts included lapel pins also..........!! it's such a very nice things...!!
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