Flight is a major symbol of the human spirit and freedom. Aviation is, naturally, identified with spiritual flight. The development of aviation is at the center of human interest and action. Therefore, it can serve as a touchstone for a series of phenomena and allow for a bold, short and accurate historical explanation.
The impact of transportation in general on human existence is enormous and the impact of aviation on modern history is accordingly. The airplane is a means of transportation that provide physical movement of people and goods from place to place, overcoming all physical obstacles. This means a complete change in the balance of power between the nations. Thus the twentieth century was characterized by the most difficult wars in human history.
There is a chronological connection between developments in the field of aviation and important historical events in the modern era: the French Revolution took place less then ten years after the invention of the hot air balloon. World War I broke out about ten years after the flight of the first airplane. World War II began at the ''golden age of aviation'' era, in a time when the airplane was established as the only safe air transport.
The airplane is the ideal means of transportation for an isolated country. Germany is a continental country isolated by natural obstacles. It has a small navy. As a result, its colonies were small.
The airplane was imported from the United States to Germany as a technological innovation a few years after its invention. Germany was then at the beginning of its rapid industrialization process and the airplane created a strong incentive for the adoption and development of new technologies.
Germany lost in World War I, but the Germans felt betrayed. The main reason for this was their feeling that in the prestigious air campaign they were close to winning. They had better airplanes and pilots. The famous Flying Circus Squadron, of which Hermann Goering was the last commander, was very successful and popular.
The Treaty of Versailles forbade the Germans to build needed airplanes and they felt deprived of the opportunity to defend themselves and develop the economy and society. Under the guise of civilian gliding clubs that were actually military pilot schools, the Germans continued to develop their Air Force.
Philosophical thinkers and politicians linked the material need to the spiritual need. They processed the movement toward the skies into a method of action. They provided the obedient and militaristic German people with the consciousness essential to the fulfillment of the upward command.
During the Nazi regime, the process of integrating aviation into the life of the country was complete. Aviation, instead of integrating organically, has become a leader in the economy and society. Between the years 1933-1939 the number of workers in this industry grew from three thousand to two million. At its peak, during World War II, the aviation industry was about forty percent of the national budget.
Four key figures in Nazi regime were fighter pilots and also dominant in the initiative and execution of the final solution: Hitler's two deputies, Hermann Goering and Rudolf Hess, who were his companions from the beginning, were professional pilots, whose skills in this field were the main lever for their personal advancement in the Nazi party. Goering and Hess were key activists in enacting and enforcing racial laws and in the chain of orders that led to the final solution. Another member of their squadron, Arthur Greiser, was one of the most prominent figures in the Nazi Party and the Third Reich Administration. As the Nazi mayor of Danzig he called for war on Poland. During the war he was governor of West Poland, making it a model for enforcing the final solution. Reinhard Heydrich was a fighter pilot, who combined a pilot career which he began at a relatively late age, with being Himmler's deputy. His most important role in the SS was being the commander of the Gestapo. He was the planner and direct commander of the Final Solution.
The scale of the aviation industry in Nazi Germany and the role of senior pilots in planning the final solution are enough to explain the rise and fall of the Third Reich and the Holocaust altogether. All the various explanations given so far for the extermination of the Jews in Europe ignore these facts.