Beginning in February 1924, Hitler was tried for
high treason before the special
People's Court in Munich. He used his trial as an opportunity to spread his message throughout Germany. At one point during the trial, Hitler discussed political leadership, during which he stated that leading people was not a matter of political science () but an innate ability, one of statecraft (). He further elaborated by claiming that out of 10,000 politicians, only one,
Otto von Bismarck, emerged, subtly implying that he too had been born with this gift. Continuing, he declared that it was not
Karl Marx who stirred the masses and ignited the
Russian Revolution, but
Vladimir Lenin, by making his appeal to the senses rather than the mind. Hitler's speeches during the trial made him famous, but they did not exonerate him. In April 1924, he was sentenced to five years' imprisonment in
Landsberg Prison, where he received preferential treatment from sympathetic guards and received substantial quantities of fan mail, including funds and other forms of assistance. During 1923 and 1924 at Landsberg, he dictated the first volume of (
My Struggle) to his deputy
Rudolf Hess. Originally entitled
Four and a Half Years of Struggle against Lies, Stupidity, and Cowardice, his publisher shortened the title to . The book, dedicated to the
Thule Society member
Dietrich Eckart, was an autobiography and exposition of his ideology. In , Hitler speaks at length about his youth, his early days in the Nazi Party and general ideas on politics, including the transformation of German society into one based on
race, with some passages implying
genocide. Published in two volumes in 1925 and 1926, it sold 228,000 copies between 1925 and 1932. In 1933, Hitler's first year in office, 1,000,000 copies were sold. The book acts as a reference, giving insight into the
world view from which Hitler never wavered throughout his life. In
Mein Kampf, Hitler states that he had little interest in politics as a child, aspiring instead to become a painter. Like other boys in his part of Austria, he was attracted to
pan-Germanism, but his intellectual pursuits were generally those of a
dilettante. Hitler portrays himself as a born leader interested in knightly adventures and exploration. By the time he was 11, Hitler was a
nationalist and interested in history. Hitler never finished his primary schooling, dropping out by the time he was 16. He devoted his attention instead to his artistic pursuits, which led him to move to Vienna in 1905. Hitler was later to proclaim that he learned some hard lessons in Vienna, namely that life was a critical struggle between the weak and the strong; in Hitler's worldview, morality did not matter, and everything simply boiled down to "victory and defeat". While Hitler was incarcerated at the Landsberg prison writing , he had routine visits from the respected First World War veteran, Major General Dr
Karl Haushofer, who was the chair of the military science and geography department at
LMU Munich. These meetings consisted of lectures and academic briefings on
geopolitics, most certainly covering the Nazi ideal of
Lebensraum and which likely influenced the views Hitler laid out in . Haushofer espoused the theory that Germany was defeated in World War I by lack of sufficient space and
autarchy. More importantly, Haushofer believed that nations which rested their power upon
command of the sea and maritime trade routes were doomed to fail, since any such control "would soon be broken", writing that human history stood "at the great turning-point in the favourable position of the island empires". Hitler believed that for Germany to expand its influence, it would have to rely on continental space and abundant arable soil, which could only be found eastward. Haushofer was a major influence on Hitler's conception of
Lebensraum. Influenced by Haushofer's theories, Hitler believed it was Germany's right to seize the cultivatable land in Russia, since the earth belonged to those people willing to till it "industriously". Describing the
Russians in the harshest of terms while intimating that the
German people were more deserving by virtue of their alleged superior intellect, Hitler stated: "It is criminal to ask an intelligent people to limit its children in order that a lazy and stupid people next door can literally abuse a gigantic surface of the earth". Presaging this Nazi goal, Hitler wrote in : "Without consideration of traditions and prejudices, Germany must find the courage to gather our people and their strength for an advance along the road that will lead this people from its present restricted living space to new land and soil, and hence also free it from the danger of vanishing from the earth or of serving others as a slave nation". In this sense,
social Darwinism and geography were merged in Hitler's mind. Many historians contend that Hitler's essential character and political philosophy can be discovered in . Historian James Joll once claimed that constituted "all of Hitler's beliefs, most of his programme and much of his character". According to historian
Andreas Hillgruber, evident within the text of is nothing less than the very crux of Hitler's program. One of Hitler's foremost goals was that Germany should become "a
World Power" on the geopolitical stage, or as he stated, "it will not continue to exist at all". Biographer Joachim Fest asserted that contained a "remarkably faithful portrait of its author". In , Hitler categorised human beings by their physical attributes, claiming German or
Nordic Aryans were at the top of the hierarchy, while assigning the bottom orders to Jews and
Romani. Hitler claimed that dominated people benefit by learning from superior Aryans and said the Jews were conspiring to keep this "
master race" from rightfully ruling the world by diluting its racial and cultural purity and exhorting Aryans to believe in equality rather than superiority and inferiority. Within , Hitler describes a struggle for world domination, an ongoing racial, cultural and political battle between Aryans and Jews, the necessary racial purification of the German people and the need for German imperial expansion and colonisation eastwards. According to Hitler and other
pan-German thinkers, Germany needed to obtain additional living space or
Lebensraum which would properly nurture the "historic destiny" of the German people. This was a key idea he made central in his foreign policy. Hitler wrote in of his hatred of what he believed were the world's twin evils, namely communism and Judaism. ==
Völkisch nationalism ==