Bund Deutscher Mädel, BDM in German), was the women's wing of the Hitler Youth (HJ) or the Hitler Youth, the youth movement of the National Socialist German Workers Party (NSDAP). Date Nazi ideology focused on racial superiority and anti-Semitism, the BDM was reserved exclusively Aryan girls from 10 to 18 years, suffering from hereditary diseases. The smaller (10 to 14 years) were grouped into a sub-league call Jungmädelbund (JM) or the League of young girls. [1] In the beginning the league had few members (in 1931 it counted 1700); but when the Nazis came to power and, apart from the Catholic youth associations who for several years was poorly tolerated, forbade any other youth associations (1933), the BDM became the largest women's association in the world with a total number of members who reached 4.5 million in 1944. Since 1936, enrollment became mandatory. In 1938 was created in the sub-section BDM Faith and Faith and Beauty Schönheit or [2], association optional for young women aged 18 to 21 who had to act as a temporal connection with the Nationalsozialistische Frauenschaft or National Socialist Women's League, women's wing Nazi party to which you are enrolled in 21 years. [3] The process of Gleichschaltung or Forced alignment started in 1933 so he could take advantage of powerful and monopolistic propaganda and organizational tools for the total submission ideological Nazism also the younger generation of women.