Goose-Step

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Wehrmacht troops Goose-Step through Warsaw
Wehrmacht troops Goose-Step through Warsaw

Der Stechschritt [1], commonly known in English speaking countries as "the Goose-Step", is a special form of the equal step, which is usually demonstrated in solemn military parades and passes in review of closed units. The marching troops swing their legs from a vertical leg to a nearly horizontally-extending one, bringing it down with a loud simultaneous stepping noise and continuing the cycle in unison. It emerged from Prussian drilling regulation during the early 19th Century.

Russian soldiers goose-stepping in Moscow
Russian soldiers goose-stepping in Moscow

This takes much practice and dexterity, and so the purpose of the goose-step is the demonstration of absolute mechanized discipline and superiority. Some, such as George Orwell, feel that the goose-step is also intended to look ridiculous, as Orwell said in his 1940 essay The Lion and the Unicorn:

[Goose-Stepping] is simply an affirmation of naked power; contained in it, quite consciously and intentionally, is the vision of a boot crashing down on a face. Its ugliness is part of its essence, for what it is saying is "Yes, I am ugly, and you daren't laugh at me", like the bully who makes faces at his victim… Beyond a certain point, military display is only possible in countries where the common people dare not laugh at the army.

Goose-stepping is commonly associated today with the German armed forces of the Reichswehr and of the Wehrmacht. However, other armies have historically practiced goose-stepping or similar variations, such as the Imperial Russian Army. Benito Mussolini introduced it in 1938 as Passo Romano ("Roman step") in the Italian army.

The use of the goose-step was severely curtailed in the Wehrmacht after the fall of France in 1940 and recruits in training were not taught it. Even earlier, it was reserved only for special parades, and required several days of practice to ensure troops were fit and able to perform without injuring themselves. Preparatory training would include soldiers marching in small groups with arms locked in order to maintain their balance and become used to the physical exertions required. Later in the war, manpower shortages, restrictions in training time, and a paucity of appropriate occasions made the goose-step disappear from sight as the army concentrated on combat training.

After the end of the Second World War a reduced form of the goose-step (boot point in knee height) was still used by the East German National People's Army under the name drilling step to avoid references to old Prussian or Wehrmacht military tradition.

In the Soviet Union and the later Russian Federation, various military units practice a form of goose-stepping, e.g. at the anniversary of the October Revolution. They follow the model of the Imperial Russian army, which practiced a version of goose-stepping.

Guards at the Mausoleum of José Marti, Santiago de Cuba
Guards at the Mausoleum of José Marti, Santiago de Cuba

In countries such as North Korea, China, Cuba or Vietnam, whose military forces are shaped by the Soviet model, it is still regularly demonstrated.

The Chilean military, which borrows much of its traditions from the Germans, still practices goose-steps on ceremonial occasions.

In Peru, it is customary to perform goose-steps on national holidays parades like the one on July 28th. There are competitions among secondary schools to this day.

The Iranian army's tradition of goose-stepping during military parades has continued despite the Iranian Revolution of 1979.

  • In all three versions of The Producers goose-stepping Nazi Stormtroopers are seen prominently throughout its main musical number Springtime for Hitler. In the lyrics we also hear "Goose-steps are new steps today!".
  • "The Goose-Step" is a political cartoon by E. H. Shepard, drawn in 1936 critical of the Nazis.
  • In an episode of the British sitcom Fawlty Towers titled "The Germans", John Cleese imitates Adolf Hitler by goose-stepping around the room.
  • The satirical band The Rutles have a song titled "Goose-Step Mama".
  • People in marching bands, when performing various kinds of step similar to the Goose-Step (for instance, the highstep) are warned to avoid "the Nazi," which has become band terminology for the Goose-Step.
  • In his comedy special Live on Broadway, Robin Williams goosesteps around the stage at one point, after mentioning reading a magazine article that claimed Hitler was a homosexual.
  • The song "Be Prepared" from the animated Disney movie The Lion King featured goose-stepping hyenas.
  • In Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, Henry Jones, played by Sean Connery, calls Colonel Vogel a "Goose-stepping moron."
  • Indie rock band the Shins released a 7" titled "When I Goose-Step" in 2000 comprised of an A side containing the title track and a B side containing the song "The Gloating Sun"
  • The distinctive rock crushing sound of hundreds of soldiers simultaneously goose-stepping on pavement has become a stock sound effect.
  • The comic strip Calvin and Hobbes makes a reference to goose-stepping at this link [1] <-link broken; original cartoon published on 9/6/1986. See The Complete Calvin and Hobbes.
  • In Roberto Benigni's "Life is Beautiful" Benigni (as the character Guido) mocks the German goose-step as he is marched off to his death by a Nazi soldier in order to retain the illusion of hope for his young son hiding nearby.

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