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Following the rise of Adolf Hitler, who discovered the Society after he had been ordered to spy on them, Serbottendorff’s newspaper was bought out by Dietrich Eckart, a Bavarian Catholic who had helped form the German Worker’s Party - and thus the newspaper was now under German rule, for obvious reasons. It was Eckart who introduced Hitler to the more esoteric ways of the world, and it was Eckart who transcribed Mein Kampf. When they came to power, Hitler set up the SS, a secret Order of the Silver Star who went out initiating people into the esoteric mysteries. Close ties to Turkey were still in place, as the mass exterminations of both countries show. | Following the rise of Adolf Hitler, who discovered the Society after he had been ordered to spy on them, Serbottendorff’s newspaper was bought out by Dietrich Eckart, a Bavarian Catholic who had helped form the German Worker’s Party - and thus the newspaper was now under German rule, for obvious reasons. It was Eckart who introduced Hitler to the more esoteric ways of the world, and it was Eckart who transcribed Mein Kampf. When they came to power, Hitler set up the SS, a secret Order of the Silver Star who went out initiating people into the esoteric mysteries. Close ties to Turkey were still in place, as the mass exterminations of both countries show. | ||
Eckart himself was highly influenced by the Eastern mysticism and was a follower of [[Aleister Crowley]]’s movement. In fact, some researchers have even claimed that | Eckart himself was highly influenced by the Eastern mysticism and was a follower of [[Aleister Crowley]]’s movement. In fact, some researchers have even claimed that [[Aleister Crowley]] influenced the Nazi occult movement to such a degree that it may have been through him that the “secret brotherhood” were working and thereby influencing Hitler and his motley crew. | ||
The occult was rife within the Nazi Party as Himmler’s Death Head Units were to show with their [[SRA|ritualized murders]], harking back to Celtic head cults. Not to mention Himmler’s occult-inspired SS, who were headquartered at the castle of Wewelsburg in Westphalia, where there was a round table with 13 seats. In 1935, Himmler’s SS established the Ahnernerbe (Ancestral Heritage) to seek out occult secrets that would aid the Nazi Party to victory. They traveled across the world to Tibet, South America, Rennes le Chateau and other special places of occult interest. | The occult was rife within the Nazi Party as Himmler’s Death Head Units were to show with their [[SRA|ritualized murders]], harking back to Celtic head cults. Not to mention Himmler’s occult-inspired SS, who were headquartered at the castle of Wewelsburg in Westphalia, where there was a round table with 13 seats. In 1935, Himmler’s SS established the Ahnernerbe (Ancestral Heritage) to seek out occult secrets that would aid the Nazi Party to victory. They traveled across the world to Tibet, South America, Rennes le Chateau and other special places of occult interest. |