Why did the Germans need to kill Jews? Why did Hitler hate Jews? German Jews were integrated into society

The cruel nationalism of the great Fuhrer is known all over the world, but few know why Hitler exterminated the Jews. This issue is best covered in his acclaimed book “My Struggle” (“Mein Kampf”). The work truthfully and logically reflects Adolf Hitler's dislike for the Jewish people. After all, who can tell you about your innermost thoughts and feelings better than yourself?

Excursion into history

Almost anywhere in the world, even teenagers who do not like history know about the existence of the Fuhrer. More than a dozen films have been made about this man, and many books have been written. People's attitudes towards Hitler are quite contradictory. Some admire his extraordinary skill as an orator, determination and intelligence. Others are outraged by the cruelty and arrogance.

Until a certain age, Adolf did not even think about the fact that Jews stood out separately from other nationalities. He first met a boy of Jewish nationality while receiving his education at school. Hitler was wary of him, as was everyone else, because he was suspiciously silent.

One day Adolf was walking along the central street of Vienna. His attention was attracted by the unusual cut of the “long-skirted caftan” and its owner, who wore black curls. The colorful personality left such a strong impression that Hitler decided to learn more about the Jews. As usual, he began by reading relevant literature.

The first printed publications that Adolf came across were anti-Semitic brochures. They expressed an extremely negative attitude towards Jews. Oddly enough, after studying them, the great dictator felt the injustice of the persecution of this people. After all, at that time Hitler distinguished Jews from other nationalities only by religion. And he did not entirely understand the hostility towards the Jews.

Gradually, the Fuhrer began to understand that Jews are a separate nation. He even began to distinguish them by their external characteristics: clothes, hairstyle and gait, not to mention their manner of speaking and behavior. As a result, the Fuhrer developed a special attitude towards the Jewish people. He began to openly hate him and persecute him in every possible way with the aim of destroying him.

Reasons for the extermination of the Jewish nation

Keeping the Nation Clean

The Fuhrer believed that the superior nation was the Aryans, of which he was a representative. Mixing of races, in his opinion, will lead to the destruction of the whole world. Aryans are distinguished by fair skin, blue eyes and have many achievements in all fields of activity. The main features of the nation: dedication and idealism.

German security

Jews successfully sought the entry of neutral states into the anti-German coalition. They took such actions both before and after the World War. The Fuhrer saw the goal of this as the destruction of the patriotic German intelligentsia in order to obtain a new workforce.

Hitler decided that Jews were the culprits of the syphilis that was rampant in Germany at that time. He confirms his opinion with their attitude towards arranged marriages. After all, there was no place for feelings in them and spouses had to satisfy their love instincts on the side. It also seemed to the Fuhrer that the Jews took special pleasure in seducing young Aryan girls, achieving the moral decay of the country.

World security

Hitler thought that after the enslavement of Germany, the Jews would gradually begin to conquer the whole world. And he could not allow this. After all, only the chosen Aryan people should be at the head of everything.

Marxism for Adolf was a purely Jewish teaching that denied personality as such. And the Fuhrer considered the spread of such ideas disastrous for the entire planet. That is why Hitler fought to destroy the destructive movement.

Personal animosity

This feeling was formed either on the basis of previous reasons, or in itself as a result of many years of observations of the children of Abraham. Among the negative traits of representatives of this people, the Fuhrer identified the following:

"Dirty" deeds.

Hitler became convinced, having studied the activities of Jews in various fields, that they were related to all “unclean” matters. Compares them to larvae, worms in an abscess. And he even equated cultural activity to a plague that penetrates everywhere, has no cure and spreads quickly.

Sharp mind.

The dictator admitted that he considered Jews to be very smart people. After all, they learned not from their own mistakes, but from the mistakes of others. This skill has been honed over thousands of years, and intellectual wealth has accumulated. Other people's wisdom aroused envy and indignation in Hitler. Because fruitful tactics were not used in Germany, so beloved by the Fuhrer. This is one of the reasons for some important errors.

Usury. Jews tended to occupy important and influential positions in Germany. This is due to their material well-being. Enrichment, according to the dictator, occurred through the ruin of honest Germans through the issuance of loans. After all, usury was invented by the Jews and made it possible to accumulate large sums of money in their hands. And, thereby, made it possible to govern the state.

It is this reason that is an assumption that still does not have one hundred percent evidence. The dictator himself did not say a word about this in his autobiographical books. But those who like to delve into other people's dirty laundry have several versions of why people burr and why Hitler had good reasons to take revenge.

  • Probable reasons for the dictator's vindictiveness:
  • Failure to pass art school exams due to a Jewish teacher.
  • Infection with syphilis from a Jewish girl.
  • The mother died at the hands of an inadequate doctor, in whose veins Jewish blood flowed.
  • The cruelty of the Fuhrer's Jewish father towards his mother.

The origin from the Jews, which had to be hidden, gave rise to hatred towards this people.

Adolf Hitler was firmly convinced that he was fighting against this people “in the spirit of the Almighty Creator.” The goal was achieved by all existing means. The talent of the speaker and perseverance influenced the population of Germany with amazing results. That's why the Germans exterminated the Jews.

This is interesting:

Hitler dreamed of becoming an artist, which he repeated more than once to his father, who imposed a career as an official. Why did he change his dream? He changed his dream. The meaning of life was to save Germany and the whole world from the threat posed by the Jews.

Hitler was voted Person of the Year by Time magazine in 1938. However, for the first time in the history of this nomination, the winner’s photograph was not placed on the cover of the publication.

They say that it was the dictator who initiated the creation of the prototype of the rubber woman. This was necessary to satisfy the male needs of soldiers without the participation of foreign women. And to combat the spread of syphilis.

According to various sources, from 17 to 50 attempts were made on the dictator. None of them were destined to achieve their goal. Some consider Hitler simply lucky, while others attribute to him the ability to foresee danger.

The Fuhrer had a favorite German shepherd, whose behavior often determined his mood and actions.

Adolf Hitler is behind the worst genocide in modern history. On his orders, millions of Jews were killed in gas chambers. Others died in concentration camps from hunger, hard work and disease.

This baffling chapter in German history left our reader Line Krüger wondering why Hitler hated the Jews so much.

Hitler created Nazism

According to historians, to find the origins of Hitler's hatred of Jews, one must understand his ideology. Adolf Hitler was a Nazi.

Context

Rising anti-Semitism in Europe

Israel Hayom 07/29/2015

Europe's Jews are in danger

Polosa 04/16/2015

Anti-Semitism: exacerbation of the disease

Israel Hayom 03/26/2015 “Nazism is built on the theory of racial hygiene. The fundamental principle is that races should not mix,” explains Rikke Peters, a researcher of right-wing radicalism at the Institute of Communication and History at Aarhus University.

Nazism is a National Socialist ideology developed and described by Adolf Hitler in the Mein Kampf manifesto, published in the mid-1920s.

In his manifesto, Hitler wrote:

— the world consists of people of different races who are constantly fighting with each other. It is the racial struggle that drives history;

- there are higher and lower races;

- the superior race will be in danger of extinction if mixed with the inferior ones.

The white race is supreme

“Hitler considered the white Aryan race to be the purest, strongest and most intellectual. He was sure that the Aryans were superior to everyone,” explains Rikke Peters. And he adds: “He hated not only Jews. This applied to both gypsies and blacks. But his hatred of Jews was especially strong because he saw them as the root of all evil. The Jews were the main enemies."

Historian Karl Christian Lammers, who studied the history of Nazism at the Saxo Institute at the University of Copenhagen, adds:

Hitler did not have mental illness

After World War II, many speculated that a man who, like Hitler, was responsible for a terrible genocide, must be mentally ill.

Rikke Peters argues that there is no evidence that Hitler was crazy or suffered from some kind of mental illness that made him hate Jews.

“There is nothing to suggest that Hitler was mentally ill, although he is often portrayed as a madman in constant delirium. You could say he had a manic and paranoid-narcissistic personality type, but that doesn't mean he was crazy or mentally ill."

But although Adolf Hitler did not suffer from mental illness, there is no doubt that he was an aberration. A psychiatrist might diagnose him with a personality disorder.

“Hitler was evil. He was a master at manipulating people and also had poor social skills. But this does not make him mentally ill. In Hitler's life, everything that normally gives meaning and weight to existence was missing - love, friendship, study, marriage, family. He didn’t have an interesting personal life outside of political affairs.”

Antisemitism was rampant even before World War II

In other words, Hitler's personality can be described as deviant and dissocial, but this is not the only reason for the hatred of Jews that led to the genocide.

The German dictator was only part of a long-term general trend. At that time he was far from the only anti-Semite. When Hitler wrote his manifesto, hatred of Jews, or anti-Semitism, was already quite common.

In the 19th and 20th centuries, Jewish minorities in Russia and Europe were discriminated against and persecuted, says historian Claus Bundgård Christensen, a lecturer at Roskilde University.

“Hitler was part of the anti-Semitic culture in Germany and other European countries. Many believed that the Jews had a secret global network and were seeking to seize power over the world.”

Rikke Peters adds:

“It was not Hitler who invented anti-Semitism. Many historians note that his hatred of Jews resonated with the population because Jews were already persecuted in many countries.”

Nationalism led to anti-Semitism

The rise of anti-Semitism correlated with the spread of nationalism across Europe after the French Revolution of 1830.

Nationalism is a political ideology where a nation is perceived as a community of people with the same cultural and historical background.

“When nationalism began to spread in the 1830s, Jews were like a speck in the eye because they lived all over the world and did not belong to one nation. They spoke their own language and were different from the Christian majority in Europe,” explains Rikke Peters.

Conspiracy theories about a secret Jewish desire for world domination flourished among Christian nationalists in many European countries.

False protocols fueled speculation

The theory is based, among other things, on some ancient texts called “The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.”

These protocols were created at the end of the 19th century by the intelligence service of the Russian Tsar Nicholas II; in form they were similar to a real Jewish document.

According to these protocols, there really is a worldwide Jewish conspiracy to seize power. The Tsar of Russia used the Protocols of the Elders of Zion to justify his persecution of the Jews, and many years later, Adolf Hitler did the same.

“Hitler believed that the Jews actually had a global network where they sat and pulled the strings in an effort to gain world domination. He used false protocols as a means of legitimizing genocide,” says Klaus Bundgaard Christensen.

German Jews were integrated into society

However, Jews were part of German society when Hitler wrote his manifesto in the 1920s.

“German Jews were perfectly integrated into society and considered themselves Germans. They fought for Germany in the First World War, some were generals or held high public positions,” says Rikke Peters.

But Germany lost the war, and this defeat added fuel to the anti-Semitism of Adolf Hitler and his supporters.

“In World War I, Hitler was a soldier of the Bavarian regime. After the war, he blamed the defeat and subsequent unrest in Germany on the Jews. He said that the Jews had stabbed the German army in the back,” explains Karl-Christian Lammers.

The economic crisis benefited the Nazis

In the 1930s, Germany, like the whole world, plunged into the Great Depression. This economic crisis caused huge unemployment and social ills.

During this time of crisis, an anti-democratic Nazi party in Germany was formed - the National Socialist German Workers' Party, which was led by Adolf Hitler from 1921.

“Many Germans supported Nazism because they hoped the new political system would create better living conditions. At that time, Hitler's racial theory was presented only in Mein Kampf, and until 1933 party members knew little about racial hygiene. It was only after Hitler seized power in 1933 that anti-Semitism and racial theory began to play a prominent role in public life,” says Karl-Christian Lammers.

In the 1932 elections, the National Socialist Party and the German Communists together won a majority of the votes. Adolf Hitler demanded to be made chancellor and took this post.

The population was incited against the Jews

With the rise of the Nazi Party to power, Adolf Hitler and his associates began to spread anti-Semitic ideas among the population. There were campaigns that portrayed Jews as inferior and a threat to the Aryan race.

It was proclaimed that Germany is for the Germans, and the purity of the Aryan race must be preserved. Other races, especially Jews, must be separated from the Germans.

“Hitler managed to turn most of the German population against the Jews. But there were also people who protested his brutal attacks on the Jewish minority. For example, many believed that on Kristallnacht the Nazis went too far,” says Klaus Bundgaard Christensen.

Hatred of Jews remained unchanged

During the evening and night, many Jewish cemeteries, 7.5 thousand shops owned by Jews, and approximately 200 synagogues were destroyed.

Many Germans decided that the Nazi Party had overstepped its bounds, but Jew-hatred continued to spread. In subsequent years, Adolf Hitler and his supporters systematically sent millions of Jews to concentration camps and exterminated them.

“During the Second World War, the policy of the National Socialist Party changed in some areas, but hatred of Jews remained unchanged. The destruction of the Jews and the creation of a non-Jewish Europe was a measure of success for Hitler and other members of the party elite,” says Klaus Bundgaard Christensen. “Even at the end of the war, when it became obvious that resources had to be saved, the Nazis continued to spend money on concentration camps and sending Jews there.”

Let's look at why the genocide of the Jewish people occurred during World War II. This question has always aroused people's interest. For what reasons specifically the Jews, what could they do so terrible that they would be exterminated en masse? Many people still do not understand why the Jews were exterminated. After all, they are exactly the same people and have the right to life. In order to understand this issue, let's turn to history.

What is genocide

This concept is relatively new, but it has its place in human history. Genocide is a crime directed against people differing in nationality, religion or race. The word “genocide” was first used by the Polish lawyer Rafael Lemkin. He mentioned it in his writings, in which he described the massacres of Jews. After this, lawyers began to use this term at the trial in Nuremberg, where the issue of war criminals was resolved.

Holocaust in Germany

Before Adolf Hitler came to power in Germany, about half a million Jews lived on its territory. They, just like the Germans, had equal rights. Jews took an active part in the life of their country and did a lot for its prosperity. Why were the Jews destroyed if they had the same right to exist?

Everything changed dramatically with the arrival of Hitler. He had a plan related to the Jewish people, and gradually he began to implement it. The main goal of the plan was to separate the Jews from German society. Hitler wanted to blame the Jews for causing problems in the country, and to present these people in a less than favorable light. At first they tried to evict Jews from Germany and deprive them of citizenship. To achieve this, people were fired from their jobs and their property was taken away. But it didn’t come down to murder. Then there were periods of calm, and the Jews believed that everything they had experienced was in the past.

During the Olympic Games in Germany, all anti-Semitic signs disappeared. Hitler had to show the world that in his country everyone lived in peace and friendship and honored their leader. Everything returned to normal; after the end of the Olympics, Jews began to leave the country en masse. The whole world treated the tragedy of the Jews only with regret and did not try to extend a friendly helping hand. Everyone was confident that the Jews would cope with their problems on their own.

But Hitler decided that there were still many Jews left in the country, and this problem needed to be solved somehow. The policy towards them has changed dramatically. All Jews over 6 years of age were required to wear a distinctive badge in the form of a yellow star. They also had to hang a star at the entrance to their houses and apartments. Jews were prohibited from appearing in shopping centers and near administrative buildings. Their winter clothes were taken away and sent to the front. They were given only one hour a day to buy groceries. And later they were prohibited from buying milk, cheese and other necessary products. Everything was done to ensure that they had no chance of survival.

In September 1942, the eviction of Jews from the German capital began. Jews were sent to the East, where they were used as labor. Death camps began to be built in the country. And the purpose of their creation was the destruction of Jews and people of other nationalities. The Nazis took all measures to destroy the Jews forever and prevent the continuation of their family. They were brutally abused, after which they were killed and even their remains were burned. Only because Hitler imagined himself to be God, who has the right to decide the fate of people. He believed that such a nation had no right to exist and they must be destroyed.

For almost a century, historians have been haunted by the question of why Hitler did not like Jews. Moreover, the hatred was so strong that he even tried to wipe them off the face of the Earth, every last representative. Probably, the resentment must be very old and serious if a person devoted his whole life to such a task.

Hitler's childhood

First, let's deal with childhood of the future leader of Nazi Germany:

  • It was not so cloudless and prosperous.
  • No one had heard of any tolerance at that time.
  • Sometimes things were called by their proper names.
  • Sometimes they simply blamed all their problems on representatives of national minorities.
  • Human life was not valued that highly.
  • Basic human rights were declared much later.

In such conditions it is difficult to adopt something good. Our consciousness is structured in such a way that it receives the main information during childhood, and later uses this data as a basis for making further judgments.

So there is no doubt that The foundations of Hitler's hatred of the Jewish population began to form at a young age.

Persecution of Jews

Also played a role attitude towards Jews in society. The fact is that they represented not only a national, but also a religious minority:

  1. Forced to wander around the world, people did not have their own homeland.
  2. In the new lands, thanks to their intelligence and perseverance, Jews often occupied leading positions and lived quite prosperously.
  3. Certain areas were completely occupied by Jews; representatives of other nationalities survived from them one way or another.
  4. In a sense, the first migrants in history deprived the natives of their “living space.”
  5. This was especially noticeable during the crisis years, when inflation, unemployment and poverty occurred.
  6. But at the same time it was necessary to blame someone else for their troubles.
  7. The first ghettos for Jews appeared in Italy in the Middle Ages.

Hitler did not “fell from another planet”; while living in Germany, he witnessed some of its worst times. He had the opportunity to listen to speeches and speeches in which speakers blamed Jews, communists, British and many others for all the troubles.

However, it is difficult to say that dislike was present exclusively towards the Jewish population. The era was characterized by a number of revolutions and the creation of many new political movements. So everyone had reasons to hate everyone, there were enough differences in ideology. Already it was not necessary to be of a different nationality or faith.

Hitler's youth and adulthood

Even all this taken together cannot make a person fiercely hate all representatives of another nation. Many researchers claim that the roots of the problem lie in the very origin of Hitler. Like, his father himself was a Jew and there are already two options.

  1. Either Adolf was embarrassed by this fact and experienced complexes due to the persecution of the entire people.
  2. Or the father was a cruel tyrant who beat his mother, and maybe even the little Hitler himself.

But even that doesn't explain manic desires to destroy an entire nation.

Why did Hitler exterminate the Jews?

Entire extermination camps were created because:

  • Hitler hated Jews.
  • He created the whole concept of “higher” and “lower” races. From "Aryans" and "subhumans".
  • According to Adolf's theories, representatives of the “lower” were subject to complete extermination.
  • The German leader saw the Jews as a threat not only to Germany, but to the whole world.
  • In his opinion, this people was going to first enslave the Germans, and then take on all other nations, using Germany as a springboard for their actions.
  • According to Hitler, by exterminating the Jews, he was trying to save the world, create a fairer economic system, and prevent incest.
  • Considering the cunning and resourcefulness of the Jewish people, it was in total destruction that he saw the only path to a final solution to the Jewish question.
  • Most of all, this looks like the banal revenge of an offended person.
  • However, it is difficult to seriously analyze the motives of a person who is reasonably suspected of insanity.
  • An adequate person raised and “ignited” the masses with an idea, and then sent millions of Jews to the oven, and tens of millions of Germans to slaughter? Sounds a bit dubious.

If you have been even slightly interested in the biography of Hitler, you probably know that he never visited a concentration camp in his life. Why? No one can explain, but it’s a fertile topic for conspiracy theorists.

Reasons for hating Jews

From Hitler's point of view, his dislike of Jews explained:

  1. The love of this people for acquisitiveness. Adolf believed that in any situation the Jew sought benefit for himself, not paying attention to the boundaries of morality.
  2. Their high position in society. Persistence and mentality allowed representatives of this people to achieve good results in all matters related to finance.
  3. Higher standard of living for Jews compared to Germans. In times of crisis, the average Semitic lived better than the native German.
  4. The embitterment of Adolf himself towards the whole world, due to the collapse of all plans and the horrors seen in the war.
  5. The desire to see oneself in the role of “savior of the world” who will eliminate the global threat.

But there may be a reason V something else:

  • Origin of Hitler.
  • His childhood years.
  • Resentment and conflicts with representatives of Jewry.
  • Failures on the personal front.

Still not precisely defined time period, in which Adolf became so angry with all the children of Israel. Historians suggest that this happened in the first years after demobilization from the army.

More than 70 years have passed since the death of the Fuhrer and it is no longer so important why Hitler did not like Jews. More importantly, his personal grudges ultimately resulted in tens of millions of deaths. And mostly they were not Jews at all.

Video about Hitler's hatred of Jews

In this video, the rector of St. Petersburg State Agrarian University, historian Viktor Efremov will tell you why Hitler began to dislike Jews, where, in his opinion, this hatred comes from:

The best way to understand why Hitler did not like Jews is to read his book “Mein Kampf” (“My Struggle”). Yes, Adolf was a controversial person. On the one hand, he had a sharp mind, hard work, and oratory worthy of respect. On the other hand, during his short life he killed a huge number of people, of whom the lion's share were Jews.

Hitler's biography has been examined from various angles in many books. Should you trust them? The surest way to understand the train of thought of a convinced fascist is to study his creation - the manuscript “My Struggle”.

Theories of the origin of hatred

Some believe that discussing the deeds of Adolf Hitler is as powerful as discussing the life of the humble Jesus Christ. You can argue with this, but is it worth it? It is much more useful to consider the origins of his hostility towards Jews. “Mein Kampf” mentions the first encounter with the concept of “Jew” during the formation of the Fuhrer’s social democratic views. It was then that his thorough study of this nationality began.

Hitler's first acquaintance with a Jewish boy occurred at school. Adolf treated him with caution due to the latter's taciturnity. The living example before my eyes gave enough reason for thought...

In his youth, the Fuhrer distinguished Jews from other nationalities only by religion. Once, walking along the central street of Vienna, Adolf noticed “a figure in a long-skirted caftan with black curls.” The image was so colorful that the young man decided to study this people through a careful analysis of the information in books. Numerous anti-Semitic pamphlets helped create a feeling that the Jewish nation was unfairly placing itself above the rest. When he realized that these people belonged to a separate nation, he wanted to isolate himself from them completely.

Why Adolf Hitler looked at Jews with hatred:

Uncleanliness and untidiness. According to the Fuhrer's personal observations, Jews do not like to wash. They do this very rarely, so they are easily distinguished from other people by their unpleasant odor. If we take into account the constant untidiness in clothing, then the biased attitude towards them on the part of neat people becomes understandable.

From early childhood, Adolf was taught to take personal hygiene responsibly. For him, all those who ignored cleanliness and neatness became factors of irritation.

Moral dirt. Hitler devoted a lot of time to studying the activities of Jews in various spheres of life. The conclusion was clear: all these people are involved in one or another “unclean” affairs. In his book, the Fuhrer compares unpleasant nationality to worms or nasty maggots in an abscess.

The activity was culturally equivalent to the plague. The worst thing is that their worldview spread with enormous speed and was not treated with anything, penetrating into every corner of consciousness. The constant thirst for profit was mixed with the absence of moral restrictions on the way to achieving the desired result.

Split personality. The strangest thing is that on one issue Jews could express completely opposite thoughts. The answer depended on the circumstances and the surrounding environment. Such two-facedness could cause extremely negative emotions. Even in historical terms, many negative aspects arose.

For example, the leaders of Social Democracy belonging to a given nationality showed hatred towards their own nationality. Such behavior dishonors the history of the country and its great leaders. For Hitler, such a situation was absolutely unacceptable. Leaders reflect their people, so the chosen path of development casts a dark shadow on all representatives of this nationality.

Fight against Germany. It was the Jews who ensured that neutral states became participants in the anti-German coalition. It was created even before the World War. It is difficult to say whether people hated by the Fuhrer really had a hand in these events. What purpose could they pursue in this way?

The destruction of the German patriotic intelligentsia would lead to the complete subjugation of Germany, after which the whole world would open up. At least that's what Adolf thought. That's why he decided to get involved in politics. This was the only way to save the country from the interference of the cunning people.

Resourceful and rich mind. Hitler quite rightly considered the objects of his hatred to be very smart people. Their intellectual properties have been developed over thousands of years. Honing the skills of politics and trade was absorbed literally with mother's milk. It is not for nothing that among Jews the family is transmitted through the female line.

They say that a smart person learns not from his own mistakes, but from others. Most often, Jews did this, carefully observing what was happening around them. The resourcefulness of this nationality aroused a mixture of admiration and hatred in the Fuhrer. How could they act so low with their global capabilities?

Spread of syphilis in the country. The Jews, who penetrated into the area of ​​even sexual life, promoted commercial marriages without feelings. Accordingly, they allowed the satisfaction of love instincts elsewhere. This approach to intimate relationships led to the rapid spread of venereal disease.

Where there is room for dirt, the future of the country cannot be built. Sick people can infect completely healthy neighbors! Therefore, it is easier to “remove” the possible source of problems at the root.

Usury. It was the Jews who invented the concept of credit. Many nationalities were united by the habit of helping each other in times of trouble. After the penetration of the very idea of ​​​​the need to profit from the grief of another person, a split arose in the awareness of the laws of the previously familiar society.

With the help of usury, honest people were lured into the credit cabala and were soon forced to go bankrupt. For Jews, this was an excellent opportunity to significantly enrich themselves at the expense of the naivety or misfortune of others.

Marxism. Hitler was deeply convinced that the Jewish interpretation of the teachings of Marxism (denial of the value of the individual in man), if theoretically disseminated throughout the world, would lead to the unequivocal death of the entire planet. Homo Sapiens is therefore considered the highest level of development of nature because it knows how to develop each individual individually, with an eye on the benefit of others.

A global view of what is happening

The main reason for the Fuhrer’s struggle with the Jewish nation was still to protect the Aryans from the harmful influence of the Jews. Well, more global goals should include the defense of the entire world from political conquest by a hated nation. If we must put up a defense, then it would be better to do it in the form of an attack...

Adolf was confident that in the fight against this people he was acting “in the spirit of the Almighty Creator.” I walked towards my goal confidently, honing my knowledge and skills along the way every free minute. Thanks to his excellent oratorical talent, the Fuhrer easily preached racism. In conditions of a serious crisis, bright slogans raised wings of hope for a better life in the souls of listeners. That is why the Germans exterminated the Jews with due tenacity.

Alternative versions of Hitler's hostility towards the Jewish people:

Adolf once contracted syphilis from a Jewish girl. This so stunned the clean young man that he forever felt disgusted with all representatives of this nationality.

Jewish blood flowed in the veins of the Fuhrer's father. Because of the humiliating attitude towards his wife (Adolf's mother), the son began to hate his father and, accordingly, all Jews in general. There is also another interpretation of family relationships. It focuses on Alois Hitler's cruel treatment of his son. They say that there was too much dirt and hypocrisy in the principles of my father’s upbringing.

The need to hide one's origins deepened the feeling of hatred. If everyone around you is so concerned about the purity of their own family, then it is better to remove witnesses of the uncleanliness of one of your comrades away. So genocide against Jews is an attempt to negate any hint of a connection with this nationality.

The Fuhrer's mother died at the hands of an unqualified doctor of Jewish origin. Then the son vowed revenge.

Related publications