To: jobim
The anti-Semitism in Germany predates its counterpart in Russia by quite a bit of time.
13 posted on
09/01/2014 12:56:20 PM PDT by
sakic
To: sakic
14 posted on
09/01/2014 1:02:04 PM PDT by
1rudeboy
To: sakic
Hitler’s anti-semitism was inspired by the Protocols of Zion, written by Russians.
To: sakic
From Disinformation by Ion Pacepe:
"The Protocols of the Elders of Zion", which claimed that the Jews were plotting to take over the world, was a Russian forgery, compiled by a disinformation expert, Petr Ivanovich Rachovsky, who worked for the Okhrana (Dept for Protecting the Public Security and Order) in the days of the tsar. Rachovsky was assigned to France at the time of the 1897 Zionist Congress, and he had been inspired by the enormous wave of anti-Semitism whipped up by the Dreyfus Affair. Rachovsky lifted most of his text directly from an obscure, 1864 French satire called "Dialogue aux Enfers entre Machiavel et Montesquieu" (Dialogue in Hell between Machiavelli and Montesqueu), written by Maurice Joly and accusing Emperor Napoleon III of plotting to seize all the powers of French society. The Okhrana officer essentially substituted the words "the world for France" and "the Jews for Napoleon III." During the Russian Revolution of 1905, the Okhrana republished its forgery in Paris under the name of a mystic Russian priest, Sergius Nilus, as part of an antirevolutionary propaganda campaign....In 1978, when I broke with communism, the Securitate was spreading the "protocalls" around the Middle East as well.
What I meant to say is that in modern times the anti-Zionist movement seems to have developed in Russia on which the nazis built their agenda. But historically, of course, anti-Semitism had been around since the Crucifixion.
16 posted on
09/01/2014 2:27:01 PM PDT by
jobim
(.)
To: sakic
You are historically ignorant.
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