Draft:Hennecke Kardel

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

German officer, non-fiction writer and merchant (1922-2007). Perhaps most famous and controversial among his writings was his book with the title "Adolf Hitler - Founder of Israel" published in 1973. A work built on some personal research, the works of several obscure authors from the Weimar era and a whole lot of unsubstantiated rumours. The main point of the book being that Hitler was in fact of partly jewish descent and worked with a international cabal of jewish zionists and gentile western politicians all connected via an occultist-freemasonic system of global shadow government. All this to produce the state of Israel as the zenith project of jewish nationalism. Hitler also according to Kardel was a sympathizer of marxist communism and had worked directly with jewish socialists in the short lived republic of Bavaria just after the end of WW1. Later procuring much of eastern Europe for the Soviet empire via his hazardous and failed military invasion of this region. This highly conspiratorial view of the background and career of Adolf Hitler and his inner circle of nazis is ignored by all academic historians. But is in principle shared by other writers of conspiracy-literature such as the canadian officer William Guy Carr in the book "Pawns in the game" (1956) and the english admiral Barry Edward Domvile in his memoir titled "From admiral to cabin boy" (1947). Although both Carr and Domvile differ somewhat from Kardel in analysis and outlook.