Nazi social policy aimed to create a controlled, racially “pure” society loyal to Hitler. Women were encouraged into traditional roles, young people were indoctrinated through schools and youth groups, and churches were controlled or weakened.
At the same time, Nazi racial ideology led to increasing persecution of Jews and other minority groups. This began with discrimination and exclusion in the 1930s and escalated into the Holocaust and the Final Solution during the Second World War.
Overall, Nazi social policy combined control, propaganda, and violence to reshape German society—and ultimately resulted in mass persecution and genocide.