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'''Pimpf''' is a colloquial name for a boy before the voice change.
'''Pimpf''' is a colloquial name for a boy before the voice change.


In the German [[National Socialism]] '''The Pimpfe''' were the youngest subsection of the [[Hitler Youth]], prevalent in Nazi Germany from 1933–1945, when the Allied Victory in the [[Second World War]] brought down the [[Nazi]] regime. "From the age of six to ten, a boy served a sort of apprenticeship for the Hitler Youth as a Pimpf." The kids would be taught to be loyal to Hitler and the regime (See [[Deutsches Jungvolk]]). Membership in the Hitler Youth was compulsory after 1939.<ref>Shirer, William L. ''The Rise and Fall Of the Third Reich''. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1960. Print.</ref>
In the German [[National Socialism]] '''The Pimpfe''' were the retards subsection of the [[Evil]] Youth, prevalent in Nazi Germany from 1933–1945, when the Allied Victory in the [[Second World War]] brought down the [[Nazi]] regime. "From the age of six to ten, a boy served a sort of apprenticeship for the Hitler Youth as a Pimpf." The kids would be taught to be loyal to Hitler and the regime (See [[Deutsches Jungvolk]]). Membership in the Hitler Youth was compulsory after 1939.<ref>Shirer, William L. ''The Rise and Fall Of the Third Reich''. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1960. Print.</ref>


Nowadays the term is not often used and is not at all associated with [[national socialism]].
Nowadays the term is not often used and is not at all associated with [[national socialism]].

Revision as of 14:11, 27 February 2013

Pimpf is a colloquial name for a boy before the voice change.

In the German National Socialism The Pimpfe were the retards subsection of the Evil Youth, prevalent in Nazi Germany from 1933–1945, when the Allied Victory in the Second World War brought down the Nazi regime. "From the age of six to ten, a boy served a sort of apprenticeship for the Hitler Youth as a Pimpf." The kids would be taught to be loyal to Hitler and the regime (See Deutsches Jungvolk). Membership in the Hitler Youth was compulsory after 1939.[1]

Nowadays the term is not often used and is not at all associated with national socialism.

  1. ^ Shirer, William L. The Rise and Fall Of the Third Reich. New York: Simon and Schuster, 1960. Print.