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Indiana Jones Isn’t Wrong—The Nazis’ Fascination With The Occult Was Very Real
The Federalist ^ | 07/14/2018 | Nathanael Blake

Posted on 07/14/2018 5:37:09 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

The Nazi fascination with fantastical science and the occult has long made for spectacular entertainment. From Indiana Jones trying to save the Holy Grail and the Ark of the Covenant from the Nazis, to comic-book super-soldier serums, to the reoccurring use of supernatural charlatanism to dupe the Germans in Hogan’s Heroes, pop culture has propagated the idea of the Nazis as obsessed with mysticism and mad science. And pop historians have eagerly provided background for these tales.

How much of it is true?

Quite a lot, it turns out. Recently released in paperback by Yale University Press, Eric Kurlander’s book Hitler’s Monsters: A Supernatural History of the Third Reich, provides a sober scholarly treatment of a subject that has frequently been sensationalized in pop history potboilers as well as pop culture. Dr. Kurlander, a history professor at Stetson University, has written a thorough overview of the intersections between Nazism and various mystical, occult, and pseudo-scientific theories. And there is a lot of material to work with, even if the less reliable claims are set aside.

The confusions of the Weimar Republic, following on Germany’s humiliating surrender in the First World War, accelerated a cultural drift away from empirical science and traditional religion. This space was filled by pseudo-science, mysticism, and religious experimentation.

Kurlander explains that “no mass political movement drew as consciously or consistently as the Nazis on what I call the ‘supernatural imaginary’ – occultism and ‘border science’, pagan, New Age and Eastern religions, folklore, mythology and many other supernatural doctrines.” This allowed them to attract those who sought “new forms of spirituality and novel explanations of the world that stood somewhere between scientific verifiability and the shopworn truths of traditional religion.”

Imagining Monsters

From astrology to racial mythology, the Nazi leadership was fascinated, in some cases enthralled, by a wide mix of pseudo-science and mysticism. And they put it into practice. “Nazi leaders sponsored everything from astrology, parapsychology and radiesthesia to biodynamic agriculture and World Ice Theory.”

The last of these was a particular favorite of both Adolf Hitler and Heinrich Himmler, who found its cosmology congenial to their mystical ideas about race. But their fascination with it may have contributed to the failure of Hitler’s invasion of Russia, as it discouraged proper German preparation for the bitter Russian winter.

Himmler and the SS were the locus of occultism and mysticism within the Nazi regime, but they were not alone. Kurlander relates that Hitler read and carefully annotated books on magic, and that he “hired Germany’s most famous dowser … to police the Reich Chancellery for harmful death rays.” Meanwhile, Rudolph Hess sponsored “astrology, anthroposophy, Buddhism, Hinduism, and Tibetan mysticism” and even consulted an astrologer before his flight to Scotland.

Many other Nazi leaders of varying importance dabbled in occultism and border science. Even the occasional Nazi suppressions of occultism were careful to distinguish between those they saw as commercial charlatans and those who practiced “scientific” versions of astrology or other occult or “border scientific” disciplines.

The academic style and the grim subject matter of this book do not lend themselves to humor. However, there are moments of levity, such as the description of the Nazi establishment of a “Pendulum Institute” to try to find enemy battleships by means of pendulum dowsing—which involved swinging pendulums over toy battleships placed on a large map of the Atlantic. The image of Nazis seriously trying to locate the British Navy by swinging weights over toy battleships is as amusing and outlandish as anything from Hogan’s Heroes.

However, Nazi mysticism was also part of the worst atrocities of the Third Reich. Nazi race theory was mystical and mythological. This often accorded practical flexibility—Nazi alliances with East Asians and Arabs, for instance, could be justified by claiming that these ethnicities, or at least their ruling classes, were descended from proto-Aryan stock. But Nazi racial mythology also fueled their genocidal policies.

Although many factors contributed to the Holocaust, the Nazis’ mystical conception of race was an indispensable motivation for their campaign of Jewish extermination. As Kurlander notes, absent “the supernatural figuring of the monstrous Jew, the highly technical process of genocide could never have been applied as widely or vociferously as it was.” In the Nazi spiritual imaginary, Jews were not just an inferior race, or a people with a degenerate culture; they were “vampiric, near omnipotent monsters whose sole purpose was to destroy Aryan civilization.”

For the architects of the Holocaust, the essence of Jewishness (biological and spiritual) was enmity to the Aryan race. Thus, they came to believe that even destroying Jewish culture and making them subservient was not enough; only extermination would suffice as a solution to the “Jewish problem.” As Kurlander explains, “Auschwitz…was the border scientific byproduct of the Nazis’ faith-based vision of racial purification and Aryan utopia.” They committed genocide as a sort of spiritual warfare. By imagining monsters, the Nazis became monsters themselves.

Still Stranger Gods

It is tempting but dangerous to draw moral comparisons between contemporary circumstances and the Third Reich. Comparing current wrongs to the enormity of the Nazi regime tends to diminish the latter without effectively warning against the former. Thankfully, except for a few desultory comments at the end of the book, Kurlander does not attempt to draw parallels between Nazism and our own conflicts and crisis.

He recognizes that the particular horrors of National Socialism are unlikely to repeat themselves. Although loathsome and sometimes murderous, neo-Nazi cosplayers and alt-right creeps are losers who do not pose a real threat to our constitution and culture. Donald Trump is not an orange iteration of Hitler. The populist governments of Poland, Hungary, and other European nations (welcome, Italy) are not Nazis.

If there is a warning to us in this book, Kurlander suggests it is about the dangers of a culture and its “supernatural imaginary” becoming untethered from “traditional religion and modern science.” Despite the hopes of secular humanists, the space left when traditional religions decline tends to be filled not by rational scientific empiricism, but by still stranger gods.

As Father Brown, G.K. Chesterton’s detective priest, explains, Christian orthodoxy provides a hedge against superstition. In one story, Father Brown is chided for skepticism regarding some supernatural claims: “You have no business to be an unbeliever. You ought to stand for all the things these stupid people call superstitious … It’s your business to believe things.” He replies simply, “Well, I do believe in some things, of course … and therefore, of course, I don’t believe other things.”

An orthodox Christianity could not also believe in a Nazified “Aryan Christianity,” let alone the rest of the mystical mélange of the Nazi supernatural imaginary. Thus, Nazi leaders “rejected Christianity, at least in its traditional form,” although they felt they could not fully confront the German churches until after the war. Shamefully, many German Christians did not oppose the Nazis, but this should not obscure the Nazis’ fundamental antipathy toward Christianity and their embrace of a decidedly non-Christian supernaturalism.

Eric Voegelin, a political scientist who fled Nazi Germany, diagnosed Nazism, along with communism, as a political religion. Kulander’s valuable book provides extensive documentation to support this analysis. Losing faith in orthodoxy does not mean losing the impulses and needs that seek satisfaction in religion; it merely means they will be redirected. Traditional religion may be perilous, but spirituality without it may be even more so. Monsters rush in where angels no longer tread.

Nathanael Blake has a PhD in political theory. He lives in Missouri.


TOPICS: History; Military/Veterans; Society; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: faith; germany; hitler; indianajones; nazis; occult; vacuum
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To: Noamie

RE: So.... the author of this review is, himself, a true believing Liberal as clearly evidenced by this entirely bigoted and completely unnecessary foray into political slander for absolutely no reason.

Which particular person is the author slandering in the above paragraph? The closest I see are neo-nazis and alt-right creepers, but these people DO exist and he does not name names.


21 posted on 07/14/2018 7:13:48 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: odawg

Hillary Clinton actually did a psychological exercise where she “communed” with the spirit of Eleanor Roosevelt.

Snopes.com investigated it and deemed it to be mostly true.


22 posted on 07/14/2018 7:15:45 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

23 posted on 07/14/2018 7:23:04 PM PDT by Chode ( WeÂ’re America, Bitch!)
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To: SeekAndFind

Do you honestly feel that the paragraph added value or had any relevance to the review?


24 posted on 07/14/2018 7:28:20 PM PDT by Noamie
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To: Noamie

RE: Do you honestly feel that the paragraph added value or had any relevance to the review?

I think it is useful as a warning that such people however small, STILL DWELL AMONG US.


25 posted on 07/14/2018 7:30:47 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: Chode

Is Maria Orsic a real person? Or some character that someone came up with in his imagination?


26 posted on 07/14/2018 7:33:45 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

I disagree. I think it revealed the author’s bias and found it to be tasteless.

But, hey, two ppl disagreeing in an internet forum. Thats never happened before. Eh? Lol

Best to you, man.


27 posted on 07/14/2018 7:46:50 PM PDT by Noamie
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To: SeekAndFind

from everything i’ve read, real...


28 posted on 07/14/2018 7:51:29 PM PDT by Chode ( WeÂ’re America, Bitch!)
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To: Noamie

RE: I think it revealed the author’s bias and found it to be tasteless.

Bias against WHO in particular?


29 posted on 07/14/2018 7:52:22 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

The Big Bang Theory - Amy ruins the Indiana Jones franchise
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kWE6M-rhh2U


30 posted on 07/14/2018 8:50:33 PM PDT by minnesota_bound
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To: SeekAndFind

Just like Hillary and the spirit cooking, seances, etc.


31 posted on 07/14/2018 9:25:33 PM PDT by DesertRhino (Dog is man's best friend, and moslems hate dogs. Add that up. ....)
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To: SeekAndFind
I have a copy of The Ultra Spy: An Autobiography, by F.W. Winterbotham. He was a British spy in Nazi Germany before the war; a military attaché pretending to sympathize. He was shown many things before being told by a friend while back in England "Don't come back to Germany."

This on page 157 is rather chilling:

The following day was MidSummer's Day and Rosenberg proudly announced that he would take us to see the new Nazi version of the Festival of the Solstice in Lübeck's ancient fortress. There, on the circular roof of the ancient keep, stook a circle of identical Hitler Youths, shoulder to shoulder, all of them exactly the same height and shape, fair hair, blue eyes, dressed in their pale khaki shirts and shorts, 'totally Aryan'.

The battlements now echoed, with centuries-old pagan litanies chanted by the circle of Aryan boys. At midday there was a shadowless silence as the sun hung for a moment directly overhead, and then a paean of praise rang out for the Aryan sun-god. The whole performance had been in deadly earnest.

32 posted on 07/14/2018 9:59:53 PM PDT by \/\/ayne (I regret that I have but one subscription cancellation notice to give to my local newspaper.)
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To: SubMareener

Plesae define that.


33 posted on 07/15/2018 12:08:55 AM PDT by Architect of Avalon
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To: Architect of Avalon

Q has told anyone who has read his posts that the scope and scale of the corruption is so great that it has to be revealed slowly. Would believe that the elites hunt naked kids in the Black Forest, kill them and eat them, without a lot of preliminary revelations?


34 posted on 07/15/2018 12:22:20 AM PDT by SubMareener (Save us from Quarterly Freepathons! Become a MONTHLY DONOR)
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To: SeekAndFind

Strange how a man who ordered the murder of 20,000,000 is such an object of interest, while a man who ordered the murder of 69,000,000 is barely mentioned, and the a man who ordered the murder of 76,000,000 never even talked about - beyond a passing reference to his existence ...


35 posted on 07/15/2018 1:36:21 AM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now it is your turn ...)
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To: SeekAndFind

One need look no further than the swastika for evidence of the Nazi’s fascination with occult mysticism.


36 posted on 07/15/2018 1:43:35 AM PDT by sasportas
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To: SeekAndFind

Most “bad guys” think of themselves as misunderstood good guys. Not the Nazis. The NAZIs knew they were evil.


37 posted on 07/15/2018 6:37:36 AM PDT by StolarStorm
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To: Noamie

If you understand human nature and have even a passing knowledge of end times prophecies, and The Bible in general, then you will know that what the Nazis did can and will happen again. The heart of man is inherently evil, and will embrace all manner of evil. People who attain positions of power are especially prone to fall into this trap. Satan has never stopped working to undermine Christianity, and recent revelations about paganism in high places only scratches the surface concerning how successful he has been.


38 posted on 07/15/2018 8:18:15 AM PDT by yawningotter
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To: yarddog
tried to contact their Son who was killed in WWI

Not defending Doyle's belief in the mystics and charlatans at all, but this scenario was common after WWI. Lots of families enlisted seers and psychics to get them in contact with their lost family members. WWI was a horror scarcely imaginable to modern man.

39 posted on 07/15/2018 9:12:58 AM PDT by Hardastarboard (Three most annoying words on the internet - "Watch the Video")
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To: SkyDancer

37 years ago , most folks understood
the premise of the Jones Film , had some
glimmer of truth, and that was what made the movie a hit.
The only people now days who may be a bit surprised by this
information about Hitler, are the brainwashed youth
who have been trained in public schools.


40 posted on 07/15/2018 6:12:25 PM PDT by huckleberry55
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