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Hitler's book stirs anger in Azerbaijan Archived 26 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine, BBC News, 10 December 2004 "Mein Kampf:" – Adolf Hitler's book (Archived 19 August 2019 at the Wayback Machine), a Deutsche Welle television documentary covering the history of the book through contemporary media and interviews with experts and German ...
In Mein Kampf, Hitler envisioned a shared league with Italy and Great Britain capable of allowing Germany to supplant France as a great power. A Greater German Reich was to be created, far beyond the 1914 borders, to distribute the German population and secure the nation's long term geopolitical future.
Biographer Joachim Fest asserted that Mein Kampf contained a "remarkably faithful portrait of its author". [97] In Mein Kampf, Hitler categorized human beings by their physical attributes, claiming German or Nordic Aryans were at the top of the hierarchy, while assigning the bottom orders to Jews and Romani.
The first part of Hitler's book, Mein Kampf, is dedicated to Scheubner-Richter and the other fifteen men who died in the Putsch. The Aufbau Vereinigung declined rapidly after Scheubner-Richter's death, and its increasing integration with the NSDAP saw most of its Russian membership abandon the organization over the growing notions of anti ...
Dietrich Eckart visited Obersalzberg for the first time in May 1923. [2] The Hitler trial resulted in a minimum sentence of five years in Landsberg Prison, where he dictated the first volume of Mein Kampf to his later deputy Rudolf Hess [3] (according to Joachim Fest, the first volume was only dictated by Hitler in Obersalzberg after his imprisonment, like the second). [4]
At the peak of "Mein Kampf" sales, Hitler earned $1 million a year in royalties alone, equivalent to $12 million today. By 1939 , Hitler's work had been translated into 11 languages with 5,200,000 ...
Republican denies browsing Adolf Hitler’s book but doubles-down on hateful attack line
Russia was the example for fascism. [...] Whether party 'communists' like it or not, the fact remains that the state order and rule in Russia are indistinguishable from those in Italy and Germany. Essentially they are alike. One may speak of a red, black, or brown 'soviet state', as well as of red, black or brown fascism. [7] [8]