A good starting point would be the 'Berlin Document Centre'
No. He was almost untouchable by members of the Nazi party because he was a member of the Nazi party and he was rich
Members of the Nazi Party were not targets.
Adolf Hitler was head of the Nazi Party. Members of the Nazi Party were Nazis. The Nazis also had a Hitler Youth division.
Kristallnacht
Hitler's political party was called the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiter Partei(National Socialist German Workers' Party). Members were known as Nazis.
The Nazis were the Germans who were members of the National Socialist German Workers' Party.
Kristallnacht
Ordinary Nazi Party members were told that the policies of Nazism were too complex for common party members to understand. This was one way, not all the ways, that party membership was kept under control and any individual ideas concerning political activity were held in check.
He didn't. Eventually most of Germany belonged the the Nazi Party.
The number of members in the Nazi (National Socialist German Workers) Party changed throughout the course of its existence. When the Nazi Party was still in its early years in 1925 the the approximate number of members was around 25,000, but swiftly grew to 180,000 members by the end of 1929. At the height of its membership, the Nazi party consisted of over 8.5 million Germans or roughly 12% of the total German population at the time.
By 1945 the Nazi Party had around 8 million members, two thirds male and one third female. On a total population of 70 million Germans in that year, this means that around 11.5% of all Germans were Nazi Party members.
They were people who sympathized with and worked with the Nazis without actually being members of the Party.