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Christendom NS booklets

Booklets, 3

As I’ve already said, I originally didn’t want to post my private comments on some booklets published under the auspices of the Third Reich because I didn’t want to openly criticise National Socialism: I kept those criticisms to myself. Now that I better understand the dark times, and considering that my duty is to yearn for a dawn in the Aryan collective unconscious, I believe I must exhume my notes written on the blank pages of these booklets.

On July 19, 2021, for example, in the booklet shown in the image, I wrote:

I barely see the first paragraph and a problem arises.

Since I am a priest of the Fourteen Words and not a Nazi, the likely fact that this booklet won’t be anti-Christian (cf. also my fundamental difference with white nationalists) suddenly occurred to me.

The booklet is composed of ten articles by various authors. Then I read the following sentences from the first article, written by Erich Maschke. It doesn’t matter that the rest of the articles by the other nine authors didn’t contain passages I consider offensive. What I want to point out are the contradictions of National Socialism between those who represented its exoteric face and the more esoteric enlightenment on Christianity held by Hitler and his inner circle.

Erich Maschke wrote:

…the heathen Prussians. By force of arms must the Brothers subdue or drive out the heathen tribes… War against the heathen was the highest duty, the greatest sacrifice which a man could offer. [page 5]

…this forcible Christianizing of the Baltic countries of Prussia, Latvia and Estonia… The Prussian tribes were fought until they were subdued and accepted the Christian faith. [pages 6-7]

Maschke wrote these things apparently approving of the forced conversion of these Germanic pagans. On the blank page at the end of the booklet I wrote:

It’s worse than what I wrote inside the cover!

I was so surprised that it motivates me to start a new series for WDH, which we could begin with “Why Nazism Failed, Part 1.” And I would continue if I find this type of message in the other thirteen booklets I bought and will read (except for Sieg der Waffen which doesn’t have any bad messages).

I never expected this. It’s becoming increasingly clear that the priest is not a Nazi, although he still considers Hitler the man whose birth should replace that of the mythical Jew whom the fools of American racialism still worship.

Sometime later, I wrote on the back cover in black ink: “What I wrote in this booklet with blue ink [quoted above] is devastating. I’ll see now if I’ll report this to WDH…”

But I didn’t do it in 2021.

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