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Golem - The plague of the Czechs - the destruction of Czech nationalism - an anti-Semitic essay in the midst of ...
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Golem - The plague of the Czechs - the destruction of Czech nationalism - an anti-Semitic essay in the midst of World War II. Prague, 1942
Golem... Geissel der Tschechen DIE ZERSETZUNG DES TSCHECHISCHEN NATIONALISMUS - Golem The plague of the Czechs - the destruction of Czech nationalism. By Nazi War Criminal WALTER JACOBI, ORBIS Publishing, Prague 1942. German.
An anti-Semitic essay accusing the Jews and the Freemasonry of subverting the Czech government under the pretext of achieving national independence. The author uses as an example the legend of the Golem from Prague, which was created by the Mahara'l in the 16th century in order to prevent bloodshed from the creator of the Christian communities in Europe against the Jews. And accuses the Jews of working by virtue of the Jewish "Golem", who is internally opposed to the nationality in which he lives, In this case, against the Czech people. According to him: "The old Jewish legend about the golem "the real Prague man" took on a new meaning in the twenty years of Czech sovereignty. The golem that enslaved the Czech people defeated them through spiritual confusion, and made them incapable of liberating themselves from the Jewish oppressor...". On the cover is a statue of the Mahara'l created by Ladislav Jan Šaloun in the Prague City Hall and placed there since 1917, Also, the book is accompanied by photographs of the Jewish cemetery in Prague, as well as various documents that "incriminate" the Jews. When the book was published all Czech newspapers controlled by the Nazis were obliged to publish a review of this book, and describing it in a positive light as a literary masterpiece.
The author, the Nazi criminal Walter Jacobi [1909-1947] German lawyer, SS officer and war criminal with the rank of SS-Obersturmbannführer (Lieutenant Colonel). During his studies at Martin Luther University in the early 1930s, he joined the ranks of the Nazi Party, and then served as a soldier in the Nazi SA unit. After Austria was annexed to the German Empire in 1938, he was assigned to the headquarters (Zentralabteilung II) in Berlin, where he was responsible for the Sudeten Germans. In the fall of 1939 he participated in the decision to execute in cold blood the university students and some officials. During the war he gave immediate orders for the execution of people who opposed the German regime. He also took part in the massacre of the village of Lidice near Kaldeno. After the war on May 3, 1947 he was executed in Prague for his crimes.
rare. In the world library catalog "world cat" only one copy appears in the library in Leipzig.
129 [3] p. 21 cm. Stains. Good condition.