The mention and focus of some paragraphs are ‘neopagans’. A term that didn’t really apply until the 60’s, and then it was a broad concept rather than an actual organized movement.
I’ve never considered Nazi’s as Christian, nor even ‘right wing’ as the article mentions. I’ve never come across anything popular and credible that claims the Nazi’s where Christian.
The Nazi party for the most part transitioned from Ariosophy and Aryanism into a working political belief with roots as far back as the late Roman empire — obviously pagans, but organized militarily to lay the smack on Rome and further glorify their Aryan purity.
The bottom line was the germanic people considered themselves purebreds while viewing the outsiders as over breed rats that then focused on the Jews internally.
Occult for the Nazi’s? Yes. Paganism? Not really by design, just by circumstance. More socialist and racist fascists. Much like our modern day Liberal.
Neopaganism, or at least "new paganism" is a term used to describe the Nazis in the 1930s by Churchill and Christian clergy. I wouldn't be surprised if the terms can be found in 1920s era English language publications.
Ive never considered Nazis as Christian, nor even right wing as the article mentions. Ive never come across anything popular and credible that claims the Nazis where Christian.
The Left has tried hard, especially amongst the more secular Jews to equate Nazis with Evangelical Christians.