Hitler and the Occult
Journalist Ken Anderson analyzes claims made by historian Trevor Ravenscroft and others that the Holy Lance, which is said to
have pierced the side of Jesus Christ, took center stage in Hitler's life and was the focal point of Hitler's ambitions to conquer the world. In addition to pointing out the flaws in this theory,
Anderson questions the veracity of the biblical story of the lance.
Was there some meaning behind the flight of Hitler deputy Rudolf Hoss to Britain, Hitler's supposed extrasensory perception, his choice of the swastika as the Nazi symbol, the "superman" who
haunted the Fuhrer, the use of Nostradamus in propaganda, the way Americans were taken in by the astrological propaganda war, and strange similarities between Hitler and Charlie Chaplin? Anderson
offers rational explanations for these alleged strange events and powers, demonstrating that they cannot be attributed to Hitler.
"Some of the most persistent myths about Hitler connect him with mysticism, occultism, and the supernatural. Anderson provides much-needed debunking of these legends, tracing most of the
longest-lived to their sources and refuting them." -Booklist
"Takes a critical look at the evidence that Hitler may have been involved in the occult, and, disappointingly,
finds that Winston Churchill had more ties to the occult through the Freemasons than did Hitler." ---Reference & Research Book News
"Anderson skilfully disentabgles Allied propaganda from historical fact . . ." -Christian Parapsychologist
"It definitely is worth reading. In fact, [Anderson] helps greatly to dispell a lot of the false ideas of the importance of the occult in the Nazi regime." -The American Rationalist. "Because it
is the first to deal with the occult as an aspect of Holocaust revisionism, [this book] belongs in the responsible Holocaust library." -Association of Jewish Libraries Newsletter .
Author : Ken Anderson
ISBN-13 : 9780879759735
Publisher : Prometheus Books
Publication date : 28/04/1995
Editorial Reviews
In this touching, if modest, memoir, Fuykschot recalls the daily problems her family endured during the WWII German occupation of Holland, which stretched from her 11th to her 15th year. She
conveys the effect on the populace when Queen Wilhelmina fled to London-"We had lost our Queen, we were no longer a nation, we were nobodies..."-and the more devastating impact on the Fuykschot
family when her father, an insurance inspector, was held in a hostage camp. After his release, the family suffered the increasing privation that was common across Holland: the absence of running
water and electricity and the relentlessly diminishing food supply. During the grim winter of 1944-1945, children were sent into the countryside to beg for food at farmhouses. Fuykschot provides
a dramatic account of the liberation of Utrecht by Canadian troops, who made such a favorable impression in ensuing weeks that scores of Dutch citizens ultimately moved to Canada ("Moving to
Canada seemed to many like going to live with your big brother), including the author herself. Photos.
Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
In this touching, if modest, memoir, Fuykschot recalls the daily problems her family endured during the WWII German occupation of Holland, which stretched from her 11th to her 15th year. She
conveys the effect on the populace when Queen Wilhelmina fled to London-``We had lost our Queen, we were no longer a nation, we were nobodies...''-and the more devastating impact on the Fuykschot
family when her father, an insurance inspector, was held in a hostage camp. After his release, the family suffered the increasing privation that was common across Holland: the absence of running
water and electricity and the relentlessly diminishing food supply. During the grim winter of 1944-1945, children were sent into the countryside to beg for food at farmhouses. Fuykschot provides
a dramatic account of the liberation of Utrecht by Canadian troops, who made such a favorable impression in ensuing weeks that scores of Dutch citizens ultimately moved to Canada (``Moving to
Canada seemed to many like going to live with your big brother), including the author herself. Photos. (Apr.)