Jewish-Zionist Connection

(version 3)

"[Hitler was] one of the best friends the
Jews ever had in the Third Reich"
--David Irving, researcher on the Third Reich


Zionist re-education camps in Nazi-Germany, Aug. 1936

"In obedience to Himmler's directive I [Adolf Eichmann] now concentrated on negotiations with the Jewish political officials in Budapest [in Hungary]. One man stood out among them, Dr. Rudolf [Israel] Kastner [or 'Kasztner'], authorized representative of the Zionist movement. This Dr. Kastner was a young man about my age, an ice-cold lawyer and a fanatical Zionist. He agreed to help keep the Jews from resisting deportation [!] and even keep order in the collection camps if I would close my eyes and let a few hundred or a few thousand young Jews emigrate illegally to ['British'] Palestine. It was a good bargain. For keeping order in the camps, the price of 15,000 to 20,000 Jews - in the end there may have been more - was not too high for me. Except perhaps for the first few sessions, Kastner never came to me fearful of the Gestapo strong man. We negotiated entirely as equals. People forget that. We were political opponents trying to arrive at a settlement, and we trusted each other perfectly[!]. When he was with me, Kastner smoked cigarettes as though he were in a coffeehouse. While we talked he would smoke one aromatic cigarette after another, taking them from a silver case and lighting them with a little silver lighter. With his great polish and reserve he would have made an ideal Gestapo officer himself[!]. Dr. Kastner's main concern was to make it possible for a select group of Hungarian Jews to emigrate to Israel [Palestine]. But the Arrow Cross, the Hungarian fascist party, had grown strong and stubborn. Its inspectors permitted no exceptions to the mass deportations. So the Jewish officials [thereafter] turned to the German occupation authorities. They realized that we were specialists who had learned about Jewish affairs through years of practice. As a matter of fact, there was a very strong similarity between our attitudes in the SS and the viewpoint of these immensely idealistic Zionist leaders who were fighting what might be their last battle. As I told Kastner: 'We, too, are idealists and we, too, had to sacrifice our own blood before we came to power.' I believe that Kastner would have sacrificed a thousand or a hundred thousand of his blood to achieve his political goal. He was not interested in old Jews or those who had become assimilated into Hungarian society. But he was incredibly persistent in trying to save biologically valuable Jewish blood[!], that is, human material that was capable of reproduction and hard work. 'You can have the others,' he would say, 'but let me have this group here.' And because Kastner rendered us a great service by helping keep the deportation camps peaceful, I would let his groups escape. After all, I was not concerned with small groups of a thousand or so Jews."
--Adolf Eichmann; "Eichmann Confessions," in Life, Vol. 49, No. 23, December 5, 1960, p. 146

Hitler issued a directive of July 1937 permitted selected non-Aryans to remain in the Nazi party (NSDAP).


Alois Hitler (Schicklgruber[-Hiedler?];
1837-1903) and Klara Pölzl (b. 1861)


Alois Hitler Sr. and son Adolf

"In addition to the official nominee on the Nazi Party family tree for Hitler, Johann Georg Hiedler . . . there are 'a Graz Jew by the name of [1] Frankenberger, a scion of the seigneurial house of [2] Ottenstein, and even a Baron [3] Rothschild of Vienna [a story spread by the Austrian secret police].' . . . [Werner Maser, German biographer of Hitler] has concocted an elaborate theory . . . to bolster the candidacy of his man, Johann Nepomuk Hiedler."
--Ron Rosenbaum; "Explaining Hitler," 1998, ch. 1

"The rumored paternity correspondence that would document the story of a liaison between Maria and a wealthy Jew [Frankenberger] she served, the 'Jew from Graz' cited by Hitler's personal attorney Hans Frank [!] in his Nuremberg memoir, has never surfaced."
--Ron Rosenbaum; "Explaining Hitler," 1998, ch. 1

"Hitler's father was the illegitimate son of a woman with the last name Schicklgruber from Leonding near Linz, who worked as a cook in a Graz household . . . This cook called Schicklgruber, Adolf Hitler's grandmother, was employed in a Jewish household by the name of Frankenberger when she gave birth to her child. And this Frankenberger paid child support to Fraulein Schicklgruber on behalf of his approximately nineteen-year-old son [Frankenberger Jr.] for the period from the child's birth until his fourteenth year of age. There also was correspondence for years between these Frankenbergers and Hitler's grandmother, the overall tenor of which . . . was that Fraulein Schicklgruber's illegitimate child had been conceived under circumstances that made the Frankenbergers responsible to pay child support . . . Accordingly, Hitler himself was one-fourth Jewish."
--Hans Frank, while imprisoned in Hamburg; "In View of the Gallows"


Dr. Hans Frank

"[There are] investigations decisively contradicted the allegation that Hitler's grandfather was Jewish. Since Alois Schicklgruber was born on June 7, 1837, a Jew named Frankenberger would have to have been employed in Graz that same year. Both preconditions, however, are untrue. Neither in the registry books of the Jewish synagogue nor in the birth records of other religious communities of Graz is a Frankenberger to be found. An Alois Schicklgruber appears for the first time in 1900; but since he was much younger than Alois Schicklgruber, he naturally is out of the question as Alois' father. The case is similar with Maria Anna Schicklgruber who is recorded neither in the Graz domestic register nor in the municipal register; for the time in question, which was impossible anyway, since she was living in Walfviertel in Lower Austria as a subject of the Counts of Ottenstein"
(Nizkor Project: Center Against Holocaust Revisionism)

"The third possibility is that Adolf Hitler's grandfather was Jewish. Rumours to that effect circulated in Munich cafés in the early 1920s, and were fostered by sensationalist journalism of the foreign press during the 1930s. It was suggested that the name 'Hüttler' was Jewish, 'revealed' that he could be traced to a Jewish family called Hitler in Bucharest, and even claimed that his father had been sired by Baron Rothschild, in whose house in Vienna his grandmother had allegedly spent some time as a servant. But the most serious speculation about Hitler's supposed Jewish background has occurred since the Second World War, and is directly traceable to the memoirs of the leading Nazi lawyer and Governor General of Poland, Hans Frank, dictated in his Nuremberg cell while awaiting the hangman.
Frank claimed that he had been called in by Hitler towards the end of 1930 [i.e. about 1938-9] and shown a letter from his nephew William Patrick Hitler (the son of his half-brother Alois [see picture below], who had been briefly married to an Irish woman) threatening, in connection with the press stories circulating about Hitler's background, to expose the fact that Hitler had Jewish blood flowing in his veins. Allegedly commissioned by Hitler to look into his family history, Frank reportedly discovered that Maria Anna Schicklgruber had given birth to her child while serving as a cook in the home of a Jewish family called Frankenberger in Graz. Not only that: Frankenberger senior had reputedly paid regular instalments to support the child on behalf of his son, around nineteen years old at the birth, until the child's fourteenth birthday. Letters were allegedly exchanged for years between Maria Anna Schicklgruber and the Frankenbergers. According to Frank, Hitler declared that he knew, from what his father and grandmother had said, that his grandfather was not the Jew from Graz, but because his grandmother and her subsequent husband were so poor they had conned the Jew into believing he was the father and into paying for the boy's support. . . . A family named Frankenreiter did live there [in Graz], but was not Jewish. There is no evidence that Maria Anna was ever in Graz, let alone was employed by the butcher Leopold Frankenreiter. . . . Equally lacking in credibility is Frank's comment that Hitler had learnt from his grandmother that there was no truth in the Graz story: his grandmother had been dead for over forty years at the time of Hitler's birth. And whether in fact Hitler received a blackmail letter from his nephew [William Patrick] in 1930 is also doubtful. . . . [William Patrick's] 'revelations', when they came in a Paris journal in August 1939, contained nothing about the Graz story."
(Ian Kershaw, "Hitler 1889-1936: Hubris")


William Patrick, a fervent anti-Nazi who
left Germany for good in December 1938,
started campaigns against his own uncle,
Adolf Hitler, with his mother, Brigid, in 1941

(WWW: Sunday Times: The Last of the Hitlers)

"In 1933 the London Daily Mirror published a picture of a gravestone in a Jewish cemetery in Bucharest inscribed with some Hebrew characters and the name Adolf Hitler. . . . After the war Hitler's former lawyer, Hans Frank, claimed that Adolf told him in 1930 [?] that one of his relatives was trying to blackmail him by threatening to reveal his alleged Jewish ancestry. Hitler asked Frank to find out the facts. Frank says he determined that at the time Maria Schicklgruber gave birth to Alois, she was working as a household cook in the town of Graz. Her employers were a Jewish family named Frankenberger, who had a 19-year-old son. The son, according to Frank, was Alois's father and Hitler's grandfather . . . Maria Schicklgruber never lived in Graz. Frank's source for the Frankenberger yarn was a distant relation of Hitler's, who supposedly had letters exchanged by the Frankenbergers and Maria Schicklgruber."
(WWW: The Straight Dope: Was Hitler part Jewish?)

"A subsequent analysis of Frank's statement by Simon Wiesenthal disclosed that there was no evidence of any Jewish family named Frankenberger ever living in Graz. What is more, Jews had been driven out of Graz in the 15th century and had not been allowed to return until 1856, nearly twenty years after Hitler's grandfather had been born."
(WWW: Holocaust History: Hitler Jewish?)

Graz
15th c.
    |
    |   1837 Alois Sr.
   V
1856

There is of course some reason to believe that the "westernized" Sephardic Jews might still have lived in Graz even after the 15th century - as Jews for long lived in Spain as crypto-Jews.

Although, as in the case of Jesus, there is a Jewish interest in making their opponents members of their own "tribe(s)", one might make up ones own mind when presented with the "evidence".


Louis Rothschild (b. 1882) & Alois Hitler, Jr.
(b. 1882); same grandfather?

One may look non-Jewish, but that is a Jew suppose to look like then?


"Nordic" Jews; note that these people are full-Jews; followers of Judaism or atheists

About Hitler being one quarter "Jew" I personally don't know - and don't even know if it really makes a difference. Hans Frank below might more likely be "Jewish", as well as "Mediterranean".

The son of Hans Frank has also been interviewed in German news media. Sometimes on behalf on Jewry without mentioning his connection to his famous father!

***


Hans Frank and Heinrich Himmler; Frank became
the governor of "Jewish" Poland in 1939

"The Jewish question can only be
solved by establishing a Jewish state."
--Dr. Hans Frank, 1933

"About the Jews I won't speak, they are not enough interesting anymore. If they get to Madagascar or somewhere else don't interest us. We [?] find it clear that this mix of Asiatic breed [incl. Khazars] should go back to Asia where they came from[!]."
--Hans Frank, talking about the "Askenazim"; Jan. 22, 1941

According to the Jewish historian Hannah Arendt in her 1963 book "Eichmann in Jerusalem" Hans Frank was one of many (about 40) full-Jews in the "service of Nazism". It is interesting to note that Frank was the one who put fourth the claim that Hitler was "one-fourth Jewish" (Frank). He is the only source there is to that claim. Hans Frank was hanged at Nuremberg.


Hannah Arendt

Frank was not himself a "mix of Asiatic breed", but a Mediterranean (Sephardic) Jew.

"Once, when passing through the inner City, I suddenly encountered a phenomenon in a long caftan and wearing black side-locks. My first thought was: Is this a Jew? They certainly did not have this appearance in Linz. I watched the man stealthily and cautiously; but the longer I gazed at the strange countenance and examined it feature by feature, the more the question shaped itself in my brain: Is this a German?"
--Adolf Hitler; "My Struggle," Vol 1, ch. II, 1925


Hans Frank and Himmler; Frank became
"Gauleiter," governor of Poland
after the Nazi occupation 1939


"The Chosen People";
cover of Der Stürmer, 1936


"Mit dem Stürmer gegen Juda"
(With the Storm man against Judah)

***


Reinhard Heydrich & (father?)
Heydrich Bruno (Süss)

  "The Zionists adhere to a strict racial position and by emigrating to Palestine they are helping to build their own Jewish state. Our good wishes together with our official good will go with them."
--Reinhard Heydrich, 1935


Dr. Robert Ley (Levy), Minister of Labor


Adolf Eichmann; he worked with Zionist leaders

"[H]ad I been a Jew, I would have been a fanatical Zionist.
I could not imagine being anything else. In fact, I would have
been the most ardent Zionist imaginable."
--Karl Adolf Eichmann, in Argentina


Trial of Eichmann in Israel 1960


Adolf Hitler and the Spanish (half?) Jew Francisco Franco, 1940

Nazi promotion of Jewish culture

  "Hitler was right in one thing. He calls the Jewish people a race and we are a race."
--Stephen Samuel Wise, President of the American Jewish Congress, June 1938;
Roosevelt wanted Wise as US ambassador to Hitler

"1. Jews are forbidden to hoist the Reich and
national flag and to present the colors of the Reich.
2. On the other hand they are permitted to present the Jewish
colors
. The exercise of this authority is protected by the State."
(Nuremburg Laws, Section 4, September 15, 1935)

   
Which one do you recognize?; the
"Israeli one" was used in Poland,
the largest Jewish region (Jews
were also deported there)
 
 
Zionist Haganah ship with
the future Israeli flag (1947)

Anti-boycott, lasted only
one day; April 1, 1933

"In 1897, the first Zionist Congress was held at Basle. The Stadt Casino concert hall was decorated with a flag, the blue stripes outside white, and a Star of David hung over the hall: the symbols which would one day fly over the State of Israel. Some enthusiast claimed that the flag was the banner of the ancient Hebrews; it had in fact been devised by David Wolffsohn [1856­1914], one of Herzl's associates"
--Geoffrey Wheatcroft; "The Controversy of Zion," 1996


Molotov (Russian Socialist) and Hitler (German Socialist)
Nov. 1940; they decided to split Poland in half and the Jews
with it; Molotov had a Jewish wife

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