The article discusses the recent availability of the Nazi Party (NSDAP) membership records by the United States National Archives, which has sparked renewed interest among Germans in uncovering their family histories. These records reveal that many individuals previously regarded as heroes or martyrs had ties to the NSDAP, including some who were imprisoned by the Gestapo. The NSDAP grew rapidly during the early 1930s, reaching around 10 million members by 1945, meaning nearly one in five adults in Germany were part of the party at the time. After World War II, efforts were made to destroy these documents, but they were preserved and later transferred to U.S. archives. While German institutions face legal restrictions on making such data publicly accessible, many Germans have turned to American databases to search for their ancestors' involvement with the NSDAP.
Procjena pristranosti (Sredina): The article presents historical facts and quotes multiple sources without overt ideological framing. It focuses on the discovery of NSDAP records and their implications for personal and national history, avoiding explicit political commentary or biased language.
Zašto ove ocjene (Činjenice 75 · Objektivnost 65): The article provides historical context about Nazi Party membership in Germany, citing sources like the Federal Archives and the German Historical Museum. It accurately reports on the scale of party membership and the impact of World War II. However, it uses emotionally charged terms like 'martyrs'






