Léon
Degrelle:
The First World War has long been overshadowed by the even more
destructive conflict that followed within twenty years of its end, yet the
"Great War" of 1914-1918 cost more than eight million dead and more than
twenty million wounded. It shattered empires, spawned blood-drenched
revolutions, and set the Third World ablaze with anti-colonial fervor. In
a few short years the cataclysm that was the First World War laid low the
crowned heads of half of Europe. And from the bloody trenches and
bomb-cratered no-man's-lands of its most furious battles would spring
forth a lonely and unsung German infantryman, Adolf Hitler, to put his
stamp on the twentieth century as has no man before or since.
Author Léon Degrelle, a highly decorated combat veteran and a former
confidante of the German Fuehrer at the height of his power, has exploited
long-neglected documents in this comprehensive history of the war that
ignited what he calls "The Hitler Century", the modern Iron Age of total
war and fragile peace. His findings smash once and for all the myth of
German war guilt. Degrelle argues with passion and eloquence that the
corrupt leaders of France's Third Republic, the power-hungry intriguers of
Pan-Slavism, the buccaneers of British imperialism, and the shadowy
eminences of international finance and world Zionism unleashed and
prolonged the carnage. He also exposes the sordid postwar maneuvers of the
West's intellectually and morally bankrupt leaders, as they carved up a
prostrate central Europe wracked by the alien contagion of Bolshevism.
Readers will learn the sinister secret of Sarajevo and the real
culprits who sent the Lusitania to its doom; they'll penetrate the
gloom that shrouds the real origins of today's Mideast conflict;
they'll discover the hidden forces that brought Communism to Russia.
They'll slog with British Tommies, French Poilus and German Landsers
through the muck of Passchendaele and Verdun; ride with Lawrence through
Arabia's sun-dazzled sands; plot with Lenin and a handful of conspirators
in Zurich and St. Petersburg; battle Bolsheviks in furious street fights
in Munich and Berlin. And those who read this book will grasp the key to
the secret origins of Adolf Hitler: that the Third Reich's leader was
born, not in Austria in 1889, but in 1919, at Versailles.
(535 pages, 16 x 23.5 cm, hardcover with dust jacket, 16 glossy pages
of illustrations, index insert.)
The First World War has long been overshadowed by the even more
destructive conflict that followed within twenty years of its end,
yet the "Great War" of 1914-1918 cost more than eight million dead
and more than twenty million wounded. It shattered empires, spawned
blood-drenched revolutions, and set the Third World ablaze with
anti-colonial fervor. In a few short years the cataclysm that was
the First World War laid low the crowned heads of half of Europe.
Léon Degrelle:
The First World War has long been overshadowed by the even more
destructive conflict that followed within twenty years of its end,
yet the "Great War" of 1914-1918 cost more than eight million dead
and more than twenty million wounded. It shattered empires, spawned
blood-drenched revolutions, and set the Third World ablaze with
anti-colonial fervor. In a few short years the cataclysm that was
the First World War laid low the crowned heads of half of Europe.
And from the bloody trenches and bomb-cratered no-man's-lands of its
most furious battles would spring forth a lonely and unsung German
infantryman, Adolf Hitler, to put his stamp on the twentieth century
as has no man before or since.
Author Léon Degrelle, a highly decorated combat veteran and a
former confidante of the German Fuehrer at the height of his power,
has exploited long-neglected documents in this comprehensive history
of the war that ignited what he calls "The Hitler Century", the
modern Iron Age of total war and fragile peace. His findings smash
once and for all the myth of German war guilt. Degrelle argues with
passion and eloquence that the corrupt leaders of France's Third
Republic, the power-hungry intriguers of Pan-Slavism, the buccaneers
of British imperialism, and the shadowy eminences of international
finance and world Zionism unleashed and prolonged the carnage. He
also exposes the sordid postwar maneuvers of the West's
intellectually and morally bankrupt leaders, as they carved up a
prostrate central Europe wracked by the alien contagion of
Bolshevism.
Readers will learn the sinister secret of Sarajevo and the real
culprits who sent the Lusitania to its doom; they'll
penetrate the gloom that shrouds the real origins of today's
Mideast conflict; they'll discover the hidden forces that brought
Communism to Russia. They'll slog with British Tommies, French
Poilus and German Landsers through the muck of Passchendaele and
Verdun; ride with Lawrence through Arabia's sun-dazzled sands; plot
with Lenin and a handful of conspirators in Zurich and St.
Petersburg; battle Bolsheviks in furious street fights in Munich and
Berlin. And those who read this book will grasp the key to the
secret origins of Adolf Hitler: that the Third Reich's leader was
born, not in Austria in 1889, but in 1919, at Versailles.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
(Leon Degrelle)
Published by the "Institute for Historical Review",
this hardcover is highly recommended. The content and flavor of this
book can best be illustrated by quoting the text on the dust cover:
The First World War has long been overshadowed by the even more
destructive conflict that followed within twenty years of its end,
yet the "Great War of 1914-1918" cost more than eight million dead
and more than twenty million wounded. It shattered empires, spawned
blood-drenched revolutions, and set the Third World ablaze with
anti-colonial fervor. In a few short years the cataclysm that was
the First World War laid low the crowned heads of half of Europe.
And from the bloody trenches and bomb-cratered no-man's-lands of its
most furious battles would spring forth a lonely and unsung German
infantryman, Adolf Hitler, to put his stamp on the Twentieth Century
as has no man before or since.
Arthur Leon Degrelle, a highly decorated combat veteran and a former
confidante of the German F¸hrer at the height of his power, has
exploited long-neglected documents in this comprehensive history of
the war that ignited what he calls "The Hitler Century," the modern
iron age of total war and fragile peace. His findings smash once and
for all the myth of German war guilt. Degrelle argues with passion
and eloquence that the corrupt leaders of France's Third Republic,
the power-hungry intrigues of Pan-Slavism, the buccaneers of British
imperialism, and the shadowy eminences of international finance and
world Zionism unleashed and prolonged the carnage. He also exposes
the sordid post-war maneuvers of the West's intellectually and
morally bankrupt leaders, as they carved up a prostrate central
Europe wracked by the alien contagion of Bolshevism.
Readers will learn the sinister secret of Sarajevo and the real
culprits who sent the Lusitania to its doom; they'll penetrate the
gloom that shrouds the real origins of today's Mideast conflict;
they'll discover the hidden forces that brought Communism to Russia.
They'll slog with British Tommies, French Poilus and German Landsers
through the muck of Paschendaele and Verdun, ride with Lawrence
through Arabia's sun-dazzled sands; plot with Lenin and a handful of
conspirators in Zurich and St. Petersburg; battle Bolsheviks in
furious street fights in Munich and Berlin. And those who read this
book will grasp the key to the secret origins of Adolf Hitler; that
the Third Reich's leader was born, not in Austria in 1889, but in
1919, at Versailles.
About the Author:
Leon Degrelle was born in 1906 in Bouillon, a small town in the
Belgian Ardennes, to a family of French origin. He studied at the
University of Louvain where he acquired a doctorate in law. He was
also interested in other academic disciplines such as political
science, art, archeology and Thomistic philosophy. As a student his
natural gift of leadership became apparent.
By the time he reached twenty years of age he had already published
five books and was operating his own newspaper. Out of his deep
Christian conviction he joined Belgium's Catholic Action Movement
and soon became one of its leaders. By the time he was 25 he had
addressed more than 2, 000 meetings. His passion was people. He
wanted to win the crowds, particularly the Marxist ones. He wanted
them to share his ideals of social and spiritual renewal; to lift
people up; to forge with them a stable, efficient and responsible
State backed by the good sense of people and for their sole benefit.
In a few short years he had won over a large part of the Belgian
population, and on the 24th of May 1936 his Rexist party won a
smashing electoral victory against the established parties: 34 house
and senate seats. Mussolini invited him to Rome, Churchill saw him
in London and Hitler received him in Berlin.
After joining the pan-European crusade against Soviet Communism,
Leon Degrelle escaped unconditional surrender by flying some 1,500
miles across Europe to Spain, crash-landing on the beach of San
Sebastian, critically wounded. But against all odds he survived,
building a new life in exile for himself and his family.
This book is a valuable addition to a Revisionist collection,
private or public. It may be purchased for $14.95 plus $4.95 for
postage and handling. Please add California tax where applicable.
Write to:
Institute For Historical Review
Post Office Box 2739
Newport Beach, California 92659
USA
Léon Degrelle:
Hitler,geboren
in Versailles
Der Versailler Vertrag wurde 1919 ohne Mitwirkung der Deutschen
als der Hauptbetroffenen verfaßt, ihnen gegen ihren Protest und
ultimativ mit Androhung der Verlängerung der Hungerblockade wie des
alliierten Einmarsches aufgezwungen. Die darin vorgenommenen, vom
Haß diktierten Gebietsabtretungen, Staatsneugründungen und Bildungen
von ethnischen Minderheiten in fremdvölkischen Staaten belasteten
Europa in der Folgezeit sehr, führten zu Adolf Hitler und
verursachten den Zweiten Weltkrieg. Erst in unseren Tagen zerbrechen
mit Jugoslawien und der Tschechoslowakei die letzten künstlichen
Gebilde der Pariser Vorortverträge und machen endlich natürlicheren
Ordnungen Platz.
Das Zustandekommen und die Hintergründe dieser unser ganzes
Jahrhundert schicksalshaft bestimmenden Beschlüsse der Alliierten
werden von Léon Degrelle meisterhaft geschildert. Er hat sein Leben
lang gegen Marxismus und Bolschewismus gekämpft, in der katholischen
Rex-Bewegung der 30er Jahre in Belgien, als Divisionskommandeur des
Zweiten Weltkriegs im Osten, danach als historischer Schriftsteller.
In diesem Werk hat der mit dem Eichenlaub ausgezeichnete
höchstdekorierte ausländische Offizier der deutschen Wehrmacht vor
allem französische Quellen der damaligen Zeit ausgewertet und daraus
viele bezeichnende Einzelheiten zusammengetragen.
Hier liegt auch der Schlüssel zur Politik bis in unsere Tage. Wer
die Geschichte des 20. Jahrhunderts und die Ursachen des 2.
Weltkrieges begreifen will, findet hier erschöpfende Antwort in
mitreißendem Stil.
Über den Autor:
Léon Degrelle, geboren am 15. Juni 1906 in Bouillon/Luxemburg,
Studium der Rechte. 1930 gründete er im wallonischen Belgien die
katholische Rex-Bewegung, die sich für einen autoritären Ständestaat
aus "natürlichen Gemeinschaften" (Familie, Berufsstand, Volk) und
gegen die Parteien einsetzte und 1936 im Parlament 26 Sitze errang.
Im Mai 1940 wurde er in Belgien verhaftet und nach Frankreich
verschleppt, wo er von den Deutschen befreit wurde. Er trat als
Freiwilliger der Waffen-SS bei, kämpfte im Osten (Rußlandfeldzug),
war zuletzt Divisionskommandeur. 1944 mit dem Eichenlaub zum
Ritterkreuz ausgezeichnet, war er der höchstdekorierte ausländische
Offizier der deutschen Wehrmacht. Bei Kriegsende flog er von Oslo
nach Nordspanien, wurde beim Flugzeugabsturz schwer verletzt und
lebte nachdem in Spanien. Am 14. 12. 1945 wurde er in Belgien zum
Tode verurteilt, das vergeblich von Spanien die Auslieferung
verlangte.
[Degrelle starb 1994 in Malaga.]
|