Quote:
Originally Posted by Ebola
The anti-communistic movement played a huge part in the German recruitment of foreign volunteers too. Jews were never mentioned. Here are three examples of recruitment posters from Denmark:
"Crush bolshevism", "For Denmark against bolshevism" and "Danish deed on the eastern front"
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They used the same slogans and techniques for their recruitment for the Flemish SS
Sturmbrigade:

<- You can defend Belgium... By fighting on the eastern front!
I saw this in Sociology 101: during the 1930s, suicide rates for Western Europe were particularly high compared to other regions. When WW2 hit off, these rates dropped
dramatically, almost to zero. Apparently, having a common goal, a common enemy, a
Volksfeind, makes people forget their misery and take out their rage on that enemy. In Belgium, 10% of the population was either in nazi circles, or communist resistance movements.
So basically, war and death makes people feel complete.