1. Enthusiasm
Source 14.35- The children enjoyed the military life in camps without the danger, and they liked that it all came before traditional school and the parental home
Conformity for Career Reasons
Source 14.35- Children believed that they could find jobs through the persecution of Jews and Marxists.
Source 14.37- Those job openings that the children had expected were being filled by other people only because they were a few years older, and the children were being disappointed and not getting what they had hoped for
Conformity Through Fear
Source 14.36- Many students say that their parents support the Nazis, even when the opposite is true, out of fear that the Nazis will take their parents away.
Source 14.38- The sketch shows a child being taken at gunpoint by some soldiers. This, coming from a youth magazine, would strike fear into the children and make them afraid to oppose the Nazis in any way.
Conformity Through Apathy/Natural Obedience
Source 14.34- The children were brought up to naturally obey and support the Nazis, even though they didn't even know much about their political platform. The "fatherland" was used often to make the children feel they needed to support the Nazis in order to support their homeland.
Nonconformity/Disillusion
Source 14.36- Plenty of children still opposed Hitler and the Nazis, but didn't do so publicly out of fear. They grew tired with the activities of the Hitler Youth, and many stopped attending its events and paying its dues. Many youth violated the Nazi policies and in the working class youth there was a lot of criticism towards the Nazis.
Criticism/Opposition
Source 14.36- The working class youth often criticized the Nazis, and eagerly violated its rules. Many stopped attending Hitler Youth events and stopped paying its dues, as well.
Source 14.37- Children, who are losing their job opportunities to older people, are growing tired of the Nazis' broken promises, lack of freedom, and mindless drilling.
Source 14.39- There were many groups of children from ages 12 to 17 that had a hostile attitude towards the Nazis and the Hitler Youth. They stayed out late at night, and it was suspected that they were responsible for the anti-Nazi graffiti saying things like "Down with Hitler," "Down with Nazi brutality," etc.
2. The sources suggest that the reaction of the young people was, for the most part, positive at first. Many children enthusiastically got involved in the Hitler Youth for the enjoyment of the militaristic living and the potential for future job opportunities. However, as those jobs were denied them and given to older people, and as the Hitler Youth activities and military experience grew old, more and more young people lost support for the Nazi regime and began to turn their backs on it. Some children actively opposed the Nazis and spoke out against them through vandalism such as graffiti.
3. Since most of the sources come from either the German opposition or the police, the origins come from two opposite extremes, but not from a neutral point of view. The material would, of course, have an agenda either strongly supporting or strongly opposing the Nazi regime. Depending on the position of the source's origin, the positives or the negatives about the reaction of the German youth could be exaggerated. Those opposing the Nazis would stretch the truth to make the Nazis look worse, and those supporting them would do the same, but to make them look better. If there were more sources from neutral points of view that had no strong opinion in favor of either side, then those sources would be more reliable in understanding how the German youth reacted to the Nazi youth policy.
4. The Nazi youth policy was rather successful in gaining support from the German youth. It successfully brainwashed many children into supporting the Nazis and sharing its ideals, and it appealed to them through the promise of job opportunites and the excitement of a military life without the danger and without the emphasis on school. Although there was much opposition, it was mostly kept quiet out of fear, and whether or not the youth supported the Nazis, they were afraid to actively oppose them, and therefore the Nazis were successful in preventing the German youth from rising against them.