8.1.19

Natsi-Saksa #2 - Nomen est omen

"Tässä lepää 26. lokakuuta 1892 kuolleen Adolf Hittlerin maalliset jäännökset. Rukoile hänen puolesta."
Adolf Hittler (1832-1892, kaksi t-kirjainta) -nimisen henkilön hauta Bukarestin juutalaisella hautausmaalla. Haudan omistaja, itävallanjuutalainen rabbi Avraham Eliyohn oli Puolasta Unkariin muutettuaan vaihtanut nimensä Adolf Hittleriksi.
14. lokakuuta 1933 artikkeli ilmestyi lontoolaiseen Daily Mirror -lehteen, jonka mukana oli kuva Bukarestin juutalaisella hautausmaalla sijaitsevasta hautakivestä, jossa oli heprealainen kaiverrus ja nimi Adolf Hittler - oletetusti Führerin isoisä. Ennen juutalaisen hyväntekeväisyysjärjestön suorittamaa hautausta tämä Hitler oli kuitenkin vaihtanut nimensä Avraham Eliyohnista, eikä siten ollut paras todistusaineisto juutalaisesta Hitleristä. Kaikesta huolimatta oli tosiasia, että itä-Euroopassa oli sen nimisiä juutalaisia [...][1]                                                      —Eugene Davidson
"Hitler" ja "Hittler" ovat romanian- ja tšekinjuutalaisia sukunimiä.[2]


"Adolf Hittlerin hauta Bukarestissa".[3]


"Väittää todistavansa Hitlerin isoisän olleen juutalainen".[4]

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[1] Eugene Davidson, The Making of Adolf Hitler: The Birth and Rise of Nazism, University of Missouri Press, London, (1997), s. 6; Ksm. Wulf Schwarzwäller, The Unknown Hitler: His Private Life and Fortune, National Press Books, Bethesda, (1989), s. 10; David Lewis, The Secret Life of Adolf Hitler, Heinrich Hanau, London, (1977), s. 15; Brigitte Hamann, Hitler's Vienna: A Dictator's Apprenticeship, Oxford University Press, (1999), s. 46-47. This ["Hitler"] was totally unusual name among Upper Austrian peasants. It was no more familliar in Galicia where several Jewish families called Hitler were living. How did the honest Alois hit on this rather Jewish name? Hansjürgen Koehler, Inside the Gestapo: Hitler’s Shadow Over the World, Pallas, London, (1940), s. 147; Before Hitler became chancellor of Germany in 1933, there were twenty-two families named Hitler or Hittler listed in the New York telephone directories. By the end of the war there were none. Ironically, most of the former American Hitlers were Jewish. —Laura Lee, The Name's Familiar II, Pelican, Gretna, (2001), s. 177.

Gabe Friedman and Marissa Roer, When Hitler was a popular Jewish last name in New York, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, (May 10, 2017 11:50 AM); Ksm. Kiss the Mezzuzah–and Meet the Brownsville Hitlers, Jewish Telegraphic Agency, (June 4, 1933).
[2] David S. Zubatsky ja Irwin M. Berent, Sourcebook for Jewish Genealogies and Family HistoriesAvotaynu, Teaneck, (1996), "Hitler", s. 181; Ronald Hayman, Hitler and Geli, Bloomsbury, London, (1997), s. 7; Brigitte Hamann, Hitler's Vienna: A Dictator's Apprenticeship, Oxford University Press, (1999), s. 42; George Victor, Hitler: The Pathology of Evil, Brassey's, London, (1998), s. 35-36; Adolf's father, the Customs officer Alois Hitler, originated from the Austrian forests, close to the Czechoslovakian border, where even a fox and a hare live in peace together. [...] In 1936, in Switzerland, Hitler's biographer Konrad Heiden revealed about this Austrian part of the forest that one of Fuehrer's ancestors on his mother's side was Johann Salomon, and that it "has been proven that many Jewish Hitlers lived there," and that the "Rosalie Mueller, maiden name Huettler, is written on a tombstone in a Jewish cemetery in Polna." After annexation of Austria into Germany, one of the first moves Hitler made was to make all the villages and cemeteries with the names of his ancestors disappear, and in their place were established military training grounds. Hennecke Kardel, Adolf Hitler: Founder of Israel – Israel in War with Jews, Modjeskis’ Society Dedicated to Preservation of Cultures, San Diego, (1997), s. 5, 6.

Annabel Wahba, Eine deutsches Leben, Zeit Online, (5. Dezember 2013, 9:46 | Uhr Editiert am 5. Dezember 2013, 9:46).

Tanya Gold, The Sins of Their Fathers, The Guardian, (Wed 6 Aug 2008 00.01 BST).
"'My grandmother's name was Erna Patra Hitler,' says [Dr. Daniel] Brown. (After the War, she dropped the 't,' changing her name to 'Hiler.') 'Hans Hitler -- her second husband -- was the Fuhrer's nephew, but he didn't resemble him in any discernible way. He was soft and gentle. But what my step-grandfather lacked in vitriol was more than made up by the fierceness of my grandmother who was a sworn Nazi. She believed in the Nazi ideology before, during and even after the War. She was proud that her father-in-law was Hitler's brother, although he kept away from politics. Instead, he managed a cafe in Berlin, and because everyone knew that he was the Fuhrer's brother, all the Nazi elite patronized his establishment. This made his family and him -- including my grandparents -- local 'nobility.'" —Yitta Halberstam, Light in All the Dark Places, Aish, (Sep 2, 2006).
[3] "Mormântul lui Adolf Hittler din Bucuresti" or "The Grave of Adolf Hittler in Bucharest" (c. 1930) English translation: American Jews, commenting the attitude of the German dictator towards the Semitic race, have issued opinions that Hitler must be a Jew, because in the course of history the greatest oppressors of the Israelites have always been renegades. One of their most illustrious example is the great inquisitor Torrequemada who was a baptized Jew. The Americans have therefore appealed to the Jewish communities around the world to investigate whether there exist any Austrian [Jewish] family of the name Hitler which is related to the German Chancellor. An old Jew in Alexandria (Egypt) has recalled that some four or five decades earlier he had known a certain Hitler in Romania. He addressed to Dr. Niemerower, Rabbi of Bucharest who has in fact found a grave in the cemetery Philanthropy dated October 26, 1892 whose tombstone is reproduced in our illustration.* The grave was of the Austrian subject Adolf Hittler who had come from Poland to Romania and was employed as the porter of Hotel Boulevard. It is probable that there is no connection between the deceased Adolf Hittler and the German Chancellor. However, since it appears that Hitler can be also a Jewish name, it is not excluded that there is some Semitic blood in the veins of the German Chancellor. Nevertheless, this has absolutely no importance. *The tomb bears number 9 and is found in the 18th parcel. It lays on the place where the poor are buried.

[4] "Claims to Prove Grandfather of Hitler was Jew", The Chicago Daily Tribune, (Oct 1, 1933), s. 10.

DNA-tutkimus: Hitlerillä afrikkalaiset ja juutalaiset sukujuuret, MTV Uutiset, (JULKAISTU 23.08.2010 18:31, PÄIVITETTY 24.08.2010 23:13). 

Paula Tapiola, Dokumentti: Hitlerin vaimolla oli juutalaiset sukujuuret, Yle Uutiset, (5.4.2014, Päivitetty 5.4.2014 16:17).
Eturivissä tšekinjuutalainen Adolf Hitler, puolijuutalainen natsijohtaja Julius Streicher (äidin puolelta Weiss) ja täysjuutalainen natsipuolueen rahoittaja Ignaz Trebitsch-Lincoln (syntyjään Moses Pinkeles). 
Vuonna 1919 Adolf Hitler filmattiin marssimassa saksanjuutalaisen kommunistijohtajan Kurt Eisnerin hautajaissaattueessa kädessään musta surunauha ja punainen kommunistinauha.