As The History of Jihad From Muhammad to ISIS details, for years before the establishment of the State of Israel, the Mufti of Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, fought strenuously against Jewish settlement in the Holy Land, which had accelerated after Britain’s 1917 Balfour Declaration calling for the establishment of a Jewish homeland in the Middle East.
Beginning in 1919, al-Husseini began organizing jihad attacks against Jews, as well as riots in Jerusalem in 1920 during which six Jews were killed and two hundred injured. The following year, British high commissioner Herbert Samuel responded to al-Husseini’s instigation of jihad violence by appointing him mufti of Jerusalem, hoping that this gift would lead al-Husseini to be “devoted to tranquility.”
Instead, al-Husseini continued to incite violence, including riots in Petach Tikvah and Jaffa just weeks after he became mufti; forty-three Jews were killed. A British government report stated that “the Arab majority, who were generally the aggressors, inflicted most of the casualties.”
This continued to be true as Muslim Arabs attacked Jews over the next two decades, largely at al-Husseini’s instigation. Instead of confronting its mufti, in May 1939 the British government limited Jewish settlement in Palestine to seventy-five thousand over the next five years, thereby rewarding jihad violence by giving the mufti part of what he wanted (if it had been up to him, Jewish entry into the Holy Land would have been halted entirely, and the Jews there expelled) and condemning to death in the Holocaust untold numbers of Jews who might have escaped.
From 1941 to 1945, al-Husseini lived in Berlin, where he became close friends with Adolf Eichmann and Heinrich Himmler, and met with Adolf Hitler. Eichmann’s assistant, Dieter Wisliczeny, testified at the Nuremberg Trials that the mufti had been a central figure in the planning of the genocide of the Jews:
The Grand Mufti has repeatedly suggested to the Nazi authorities—including Hitler, von Ribbentrop and Himmler—the extermination of European Jewry. He considered this a comfortable solution to the Palestine problem….The Mufti was one of the initiators of the systematic extermination of European Jewry and had been a collaborator and adviser of Eichmann and Himmler in the execution of this plan. He was one of Eichmann’s best friends and had constantly incited him to accelerate the extermination measures. I heard him say, accompanied by Eichmann, he had visited incognito the gas chambers of Auschwitz.
Eichmann denied this, but in any case, there is no doubt of the fact that the mufti was openly calling for the mass murder of Jews. In a broadcast on July 7, 1942, the mufti exhorted Muslims in Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Palestine to kill Jews, basing his exhortation on a flagrant lie:
A large number of Jews residing in Egypt and a number of Poles, Greeks, Armenians and Free French, have been issued with revolvers and ammunition in order to help them against the Egyptians at the last moment, when Britain is forced to evacuate Egypt….
You must kill the Jews, before they open fire on you. Kill the Jews, who have appropriated your wealth and who are plotting against your security. Arabs of Syria, Iraq and Palestine, what are you waiting for? The Jews are planning to violate your women, to kill your children and to destroy you. According to the Muslim religion, the defense of your life is a duty which can only be fulfilled by annihilating the Jews. This is your best opportunity to get rid of this dirty race, which has usurped your rights and brought misfortune and destruction on your countries. Kill the Jews, burn their property, destroy their stores, annihilate these base supporters of British imperialism. Your sole hope of salvation lies in annihilating the Jews before they annihilate you.
Al-Husseini also actively intervened on numerous occasions to ensure that Jews were not deported from Europe—thereby ensuring that extermination was the only option left for the fanatical Nazi Jew-haters. As late as July 25, 1944, al-Husseini wrote to Joachim von Ribbentrop, the German minister for foreign affairs:
I have previously called the attention of your Excellency to the constant attempts of the Jews to emigrate from Europe in order to reach Palestine and asked your Excellency to undertake the necessary steps so as to prevent the Jews from emigrating. I had also sent you a letter, under date of June 5, 1944, in regard to the plan for an exchange of Egyptians living in Germany with Palestinian Germans, in which I asked you to exclude the Jews from this plan of exchange. I have, however, learned that the Jews did depart on July 2, 1944, and I am afraid that further groups of Jews will leave for Palestine from Germany and France to be exchanged for Palestinian Germans….It is for this reason that I ask your Excellency to do all that is necessary to prohibit the emigration of Jews to Palestine, and in this way your Excellency would give a new practical example of the policy of the naturally allied and friendly Germany towards the Arab Nation.
Al-Husseini was a committed collaborator with the Nazis, traveling from Berlin to Bosnia in 1943 to raise up a Muslim SS company, which was responsible for killing ninety percent of the Jews in Bosnia, as well as for the burning of numerous Serbian churches. He noted the convergence of the goals of Islamic jihad and those of the Nazis. “It is the duty of Muhammadans in general and Arabs in particular to…drive all Jews from Arab and Muhammadan countries…. Germany is also struggling against the common foe who oppressed Arabs and Muhammadans in their different countries. It has very clearly recognized the Jews for what they are and resolved to find a definitive solution [endgültige Lösung] for the Jewish danger that will eliminate the scourge that Jews represent in the world.”
In a 1944 broadcast, he made that “definitive solution” explicit: “Kill the Jews wherever you find them. This pleases God, history, and religion.” His call was an echo of the Qur’an’s call to “kill them wherever you find them” (2:191, 4:89) and to “kill the idolaters wherever you find them.” (9:5)
Al-Husseini was arrested by French troops in May 1945, but the French refused requests from the British to turn him over to their custody. The British may have wanted to put him on trial, as he was a British citizen (of their Palestinian mandate) and a collaborator with the Nazis. Instead, the French put him on a plane to Cairo, where he resumed his jihad against the Jews. The Muslim Brotherhood successfully prevailed upon the Egyptian government to grant him asylum. He died peacefully in 1974.
“Photographic Evidence Shows Palestinian Leader Amin al-Husseini at a Nazi Concentration Camp,” by Wolfgang G. Schwanitz, Tablet, April 7, 2021:
In 2017, Jerusalem’s Kedem auction house posted three of six previously unknown photos on the internet, in which the grand mufti of Jerusalem, Amin al-Husseini, inspects a Nazi concentration camp along with Nazi senior officials and government figures. According to the auctioneers, an expert was of the opinion that these inmates performed forced labor at the Trebbin camp near Berlin, which was, from 1942 to 1945, an SS artillery training place with a branch of the Sachsenhausen concentration camp in Oranienburg. Built after World War I as a Christian “City of Peace,” it was taken over by the SS in 1935. Among the prisoners were Jews from Hungary. Forced labor, terror and violence characterized their daily lives. Kedem hoped viewers would help identify men in the photos.
As it turns out, I can now shed light on five of the foreign guests in the pictures—global leaders whose presence reflects the transregional history between Europe, the Middle East, India, and America. The photographs also provide irrefutable proof that all of the men present had precise knowledge of the fate of Jews in Hitler’s Germany—and of the likely fate of Jews in their own home countries under Nazi rule. According to Kedem, the photos are stamped “Photo-Gerhards Trebbin.” This stamp indicates that they were probably photographed in Trebbin, 30 kilometers south of Berlin, “around 1943.” The six photos were auctioned for $12,300 to a private individual who, I would argue, should post the remaining three images on the internet as a humanitarian gesture to families of the prisoners.
Only three of the seven men pictured survived World War II and its immediate aftermath. The two German officials in uniform were both directly involved in the Holocaust. Before and after their trip to the camp, Adolf Hitler met separately with each of the foreign guests, who included the Palestinian leader al-Husseini, the former Iraqi Prime Minister Ali al-Kailani, the Croatian Ustasha ideologue Mile Budak, and the Indian Hindu leader Subhas Chandra Bose. So who were they?
Mile Budak was the ideologue of Croatia’s ethno-radical, anti-Semitic Ustasha party, which ran a Nazi satellite state formed in 1941. On the left is Dr. Fritz Grobba, a former envoy to Kabul, Baghdad, and Jidda. He was a Protestant and not a member of the Nazi Party. He had been in charge of the Middle East in the German Foreign Office since early 1942.
Grobba and the two Arab leaders pictured had supported the anti-British coup in Iraq, which was followed by the al-Farhud pogrom in mid-1941. In it, 179 Jews were killed and many stores looted. Masterminds like al-Kailani and al-Husseini wanted to signal, there in a 2,500-year-old community, how Arabia’s Jews should be treated.
In the second photo is the politician Arthur Seyss-Inquart, who presided over Hitler’s Anschluss of Austria in 1938 and two years later served as commissioner for the occupied Netherlands. In the process, he oversaw the deportation of 100,000 Jews to death camps and the enslavement of half a million Dutch people, half of whom were forced to go to Germany as slave laborers.
After the Nuremberg trials in 1946, Seyss-Inquart ended up on the gallows for his crimes against humanity. Budak shared this fate a year earlier in Zagreb, where he was hanged as a war criminal for his policy of sending Jews, Serbs, Sinti, and Roma to death camps.
On the other hand, both Arab leaders continued their anti-Jewish and Islamist policies unimpeded after the end of the war: al-Kailani until 1965 and al-Husseini until 1974. Outside of Israel, Nazism had hardly been delegitimized in the Middle East, and its adherents often came to power after the war ended. The Iraqi al-Kailani staged a coup in Baghdad but failed. He was sentenced to death, then exiled to Beirut.
Al-Husseini also found himself in Beirut, where he was active in the World Islamic Congress, which he founded in Jerusalem in 1931 (he opened a Berlin branch a year later). With robust backing, he rose to become the first “Global Grand Mufti.” A mufti is a religious and legal authority who hands down rulings on everyday issues to believers in his jurisdiction. His late half-brother Kamil was the previous grand mufti of Jerusalem. Al-Husseini received the title in 1921, and in order to preserve and expand his transregional “Mideast-Europe” legacy after 1945, he chose as his representatives Said Ramadan for Europe, in Switzerland, and Yasser Arafat in the Middle East. The Mufti advised Arafat in 1968 to take over the Palestine Liberation Organization (which he headed until 2004) and “to liberate Palestine,” operating out of Gaza with Fatah troops.
Unmentioned, but visible in photo 1—though the angle and quality mar it—is almost certainly Indian nationalist Subhas Chandra Bose. Also called Netaji, Hindi for “The Respected Leader,” he probably died in a mid-1945 plane crash near Taiwan. Controversy over his role diminished in 1997 when he was given his place in the Indian pantheon of liberation leaders. However, questions linger about his close Nazi contacts and meetings in 1942 in Berlin with Hitler and SS chief Heinrich Himmler. Since the first photo shows flowering plants, it probably dates from the second half of 1942, when Bose was still in Berlin—making the identification all the more likely….
Born in 1886, Fritz Grobba survived WWII and 10 subsequent years in the Soviet gulag. After his release in 1955, he advised Bonn on Middle East policy as a retiree until 1973. Another German diplomat who appears in the pictures but is not mentioned in the Kedem catalog is Martin Luther, who served as undersecretary of state in the Foreign Office. He conspired against his boss, Joachim von Ribbentrop, and as a result was sent to the Sachsenhausen concentration camp in early 1943. He died shortly after the end of the war.
During WWI, Luther served with an army railroad regiment up to the Balkans, where he heard about the Armenian genocide. Two decades later, as head of the German Department of the Foreign Office, he was one of 15 Nazis at the Wannsee Conference who coordinated the “logistics of mass murder.” About 100 “Asia fighters” who served alongside Germany’s Ottoman allies during WWI rose to Nazi leadership after 1933, many of whom served the West German government in Bonn after 1950.
The auction text mentions al-Husseini, the other key figure in this group. Some see al-Husseini’s Nazi contacts as reflecting a pragmatic interest in obtaining a strong foreign ally for Arab national goals. Others link the mufti’s enthusiasm for Nazi plans for the Final Solution to his additional desire to bring genocide to Palestine and the Middle East. The new pictures are important evidence in this debate.
What is certain is that al-Husseini rose to become the primary non-European aide and activist for Hitler’s Middle East. Interrogated by the Soviets in 1946, Grobba confirmed Hitler’s and von Ribbentrop’s plans for genocide in the Middle East. Some say the mufti embodied the Palestinian national consensus, a claim that rests on the supposition that a Palestinian “nation” existed prior to WWII. Surely, not all Palestinian Arabs should be associated with al-Husseini, whatever his titles and ambitions; some of them worked against the Axis powers.
As officers, Grobba and al-Husseini were brothers-in-arms in 1915, including in areas where Armenians were deported. Both men spoke Turkish. They met during the 1930s in Iraq, where the German envoy Grobba dealt with Iraqi state representatives and grew to dislike al-Husseini. In his eyes, a cleric without a state styling himself the “grand mufti” should not act as a politician. Their mutual dislike increased after the failed Baghdad coup against the British in mid-1941.
A British adviser in Iraq, Archibald McDougall defended Grobba in The Times, saying he was not a “Nazi Lawrence of Arabia” stirring up Muslims but rather a hard-nosed career diplomat. Berlin then grew suspicious of Grobba. Rumors circulated that he had invited Jews to his receptions, that he was a Freemason, and that he preferred al-Kailani to the mufti. His career faltered, as he was caught between the two Arabs frequently arguing over “who would be the real leader.”
Hitler’s choice was clear: al-Husseini. He saw in the mufti a principal actor in the Middle East, and a “realist.” Benito Mussolini followed Hitler’s lead and recognized the mufti as the most competent spokesman for the Arabs who could help the Fascist-Nazi alliance in reshaping North Africa.
It was against this political backdrop that SS chief Heinrich Himmler invited select Nazis and their guests to visit his concentration camp system. At the end of June, Grobba noted, the two Arabs each instructed two of their aides to join an SS training course that included a visit to a concentration camp. Al-Kailani wanted to go along to see if this system could be a model for Iraq, where there was a large Jewish community. Grobba agreed: The assistants were going anyway, so there was nothing wrong with it. Still, the SS asked the German Foreign Office to sign on….
Fred Alan Medforth says
The involvement of Muslims in the Nazis’ extermination programme using the example of Professor Jussuf Murad Bey Ibrahim
he Kinderfachabteilung in Stadtroda was established in October 1942 at the latest (as the only such ward in what today is the state of Thuringia) and continued to operate until the end of World War II. The clinic’s medical director was Dr. Gerhard Kloos, and the physician responsible for the “special children’s ward” was Dr. Margarete Hielscher. Dr. Kloos continued his medical career after the war in West Germany until his retirement in 1968. He died in 1968. Even though the Stasi discovered her involvement in the killing as perpetrator, Dr. Hielscher received political protection in the East German Republic, where she served as director of the pediatric section of neuro-psychiatry at Stadtroda until her retirement in 1965. She died in 1985.
It has been estimated that 133 children died in the special children’s ward in Stadtroda. However, even before the establishment of the ward, at least 70 children died either because life-saving treatment was withheld or were killed through medication.
These figures established in the research of S. Zimmermann and R. Renner have been indirectly called into question by the physicians J. Kasper and M. Lembke, who in the context of a book commissioned by the state medical association, whose apparent purpose is to exculpate the physician Jussuf Ibrahim in regard to his involvement in Euthanasia, interpret medical evidence in a way that arrives at very conservative figures.
The Kinderfachabteilung was housed in the historic Martinshaus, which has been torn down since.
In the post-WW II period, the author on occasion of the 100th anniversary of the institution in 1948 merely notes a “high mortality” for the war years but makes no mention of the role of Stadtroda in “euthanasia” crimes (Buchda 1948: 49). When in the 1960s the clinic director informed the Ministerium für Staatssicherheit (Stasi) that medical records point to “euthanasia” crimes at the site during the Nazi years, and further investigations by the Stasi substantiated these charges, the records were sealed in an archive and no persecution took place.
In 1985 K. Masuhr and G. Aly published a detailed expose on the crimes of Dr. Kloos in Stadtroda; it also included details on the involvement on Dr. Hielscher as well as the University Children’s clinic’s role in sending children to Stadtroda. State authorities in East Germany began anew to look into the matter but still did not pursue a persecution (see Aly 2000); however, in 1986, the then-director of the pediatric section of neuro-psychiatry at the facility, S. Köhler, in a public lecture on occasion of the 100-year anniversary of the existence of this section not only described the “children’s euthanasia” action at Stadtroda but also mentioned Dr. Hielscher’s murderous involvement and post-war career at the facility (as one of her predecessors) – an unusual acknowledgement in East Germany at the time. S. Zimmermann and G. Wieland presented a further short overview on medical crimes against children in 1989. Subsequent interrogations have shed more light on the subject matter, including the role of the once-esteemed pediatrician Dr. Jussuf Ibrahim (here) and the cover-up by the Stasi (Wanitschke 2005).
Read more:
https://medforthblog.wordpress.com/2020/12/06/the-involvement-of-muslims-in-the-nazis-extermination-programme-using-the-example-of-professor-jussuf-murad-bey-ibrahim/
Michael A. says
as pointless as point out the “jewish descent that were ignored” in the SS and Wehrmacht
https://www.google.com/books/edition/Lives_of_Hitler_s_Jewish_Soldiers/OSEMEAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=jews+waffen+ss&printsec=frontcover
gravenimage says
There were some Jews in the German military who tried to survive the war. Not sure what other point you are trying to make.
mortimer says
Reply to Fred Alan Medforth: What does that have to do with Mufti Al-Husseini?
Wellington says
Cut to the quick. What is your damn point as Michael A. and moritmer have already in their own way inquired?
Prolixity, you know, on its own doesn’t aid truth and other good things. Indeed, it invariably detracts from such noble pursuits and is a “cousin” ordinarily of standard obfuscation or, put in a more colloquial way, of being guilty of “mudding the waters.”
Your turn if you care. Give it a shot. I would had I posted something as you did, though thankfully I did not. Hope you’re not a “one-hit wonder,” which is one of sundry ways that defenders of erroneous thinking and downright evil so often operate.
Oh yeah, your turn again big time—if you really are on the level.
gravenimage says
Actually, I think that Fred’s pointing out Muslim involvement in the concentration camps is salient here.
St. Croix says
It’s not a topic that is often covered, and it’s good it’s being brought out. There may have been many more Muslim operatives in the camps that we just don’t know about. I’m sure the general person knows nothing of any of it. Those who know about the mufti and Hitler are not surprised, and won’t be, if there is still evidence to be revealed. The real anger of the modern “palestinians” is towards Jewish existence, not just that there is a Jewish State, though that is the crowning insult. The rage of Palestinian Muslims against Jews is not BECAUSE there is a Jewish State, however! Which is the go-to, knee-jerk assumption of most Leftists and modern woke people.
Every bit of evidence which points this out, such as collaboration between Muslims and Nazis in the historic genocide of Jews, should be examined, investigated and follow-up. I would not be surprised if there weren’t more evidence out there, buried and dusty.
Frankfrankly says
Long suspected and now confirmed. Appointing a poacher as gamekeeper often works, but fanatical anti-semites are immune to wanting tranquility. The policy of using ‘peaceful’ Islamists to counter violent ones in modern times has produced disastrous results. Some people (unfortunately with power) never learn. A similar error is made with the Marxist BLM.
Renee B. says
Dont you find it a bit rich you bring up the Mufti and thereby Muslims, but not Hindus because of Subhas Chandra Bose visiting this same camp and his Indian Legion? (Which unlike Arabs got their own Waffen Unit not just Army?)
gravenimage says
Yes, there were Muslim Waffen Units.
Here they are at Muslim prayer:
https://rarehistoricalphotos.com/muslim-waffen-ss-13th-division-1943/
Unlike Muslims, Hindus are not taught to murder Jews, nor did most Hindus follow Bose–most in fact *opposed* Hitler.
James Lincoln says
gravenimage,
Much thanks for the link.
Wikipedia, surprisingly, has an excellent article regarding the muslim Waffen Units.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/13th_Waffen_Mountain_Division_of_the_SS_Handschar_(1st_Croatian)
gravenimage says
True, James.
mortimer says
British high commissioner Herbert Samuel was dead wrong to promote a terrorist. Al-Husseini lived and died a bigoted and unrepentant terrorist. The high commissioner should have incarcerated, tried and hanged Al-Husseini rather than rewarding his criminality.
By paying the Pallies to SLAY JEWS, the Blundering Biden administration is blundering the same way that Herbert Samuel did!
Lucas says
Interestingly the Soviets had their own “Red Mufti” Aberham Rasulev who called for a Jihad against Germany.
gravenimage says
I can’t find anything about Rasulev. Do you have links?
mortimer says
The photos should be given by the buyer to the Holocaust Museum.
Michael A. says
Was my earlier comment removed or just still being moderated? I did not use profanity or hateful speech, just disagreed with the premise and explained why.
Michael A. says
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Christians_(movement)
gravenimage says
Do you have any problem with violent Jihad? It appears not.
Michael A. says
What does me being censored have to do with violent Jihad?
gravenimage says
Every new poster’s comments initially go to moderation here–this is automatic, and is done by many web sites.
Whether Michael A. has a problem with violent Jihad is indeed a salient question here–this is Jihad Watch.
From his sneering reply it seems unlikely that he does. So mass slaughter of Infidels–Jews included–is perfectly Halal.
Jamie says
Wonder who is shown in the two missing pictures? Somehow doubt we will ever know.
somehistory says
the same scummy dross are in one of the others as are shown in this photo. They are lined up, but one can clearly see the mozlum murderer.
tgusa says
Germany keeps going back to the islamist well. In WWI Germany was a member of the central powers which included the Ottoman turks. Some things just don’t change. It is as if they just cant help themselves.
Michael A. says
It’s mostly a myth
https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.reddit.com/r/AskHistorians/comments/7ckfe5/how_were_muslims_treated_in_nazi_germany_what_was/
gravenimage says
Is this photograph a “myth”? Is the Mufti of Jerusalem’s genocidal hatred of Jews a myth?
Is Hitler’s admiration of Islam a myth?
St. Croix says
What is Michael A. on about??? What’s *his* point? Since he ragged on Fred Medforth about being off point…
gravenimage says
Photographic evidence shows Jerusalem Mufti Haj Amin al-Husseini at Nazi concentration camp
……………….
I had never seen this appalling photograph before, but it does *not* surprise.
Aussie Infidel says
In a broadcast on July 7, 1942, the mufti (Al-Husseini) exhorted Muslims in Egypt, Syria, Iraq, and Palestine to kill Jews: “Annihilate the Jews before they annihilate you”.
The activities of this erstwhile mufti was my introduction at the young age of seven to the dangers of Islam, back in the dark days of WW II. One afternoon in 1944 when I came home from school, my grandmother was listening to the BBC News on short-wave radio; and she said that the Mufti of Jerusalem had allied with Hitler, and his Mohammedans (as Muslims were often called back then) had killed some Jews in Jericho. I was quite scared because Jericho was also a small town in central western Queensland near where we lived at the time, and I thought they would be coming for us next. But Gran calmed me down and explained that the town in question was in the Middle East. Some time later Gran found out that one of her cousins was killed in that attack.
Al-Husseini’s murderous legacy was perpetuated by his nephew – one
Mohammed Yasser Abdel Rahman Abdel Raouf Arafat al-Qudwa al-Husseini, better known as Yasser Arafat, the leader of the PLO.
Dawne says
Very interesting.
Wellington says
Thanks for that narration, Aussie Infidel.
somehistory says
Thank you for the history…personal and otherwise. History is being lost in this time, so it’s good for those who lived it, to speak it as much as possible.
St. Croix says
Thank you for sharing your unique link to this topic. How many today will even believe this collaboration? Will they claim it’s all *myth* or look into it, if they do hear about it? Yet, on radio broadcast it was revealed to all, the Mufti collaborating with Hitler. Anyone who has read the Qu’ran will know why. But sadly, many do not have any idea what the Qu’ran actually says, and it is becoming a crime to point it out. If you do point it out, you are a hater.
Which seems like they have it pretty sewn up.
Also fascinating that the apple didn’t fall far from the tree in the greasy Arafat.
gravenimage says
Thanks for that account, Aussie Infidel.
Dawne says
“Al-Husseini was arrested by French troops in May 1945, but the French refused requests from the British to turn him over to their custody. The British may have wanted to put him on trial, as he was a British citizen (of their Palestinian mandate) and a collaborator with the Nazis. Instead, the French put him on a plane to Cairo, where he resumed his jihad against the Jews.”
I know that the post WW2 period was littered with appalling examples of mass murderers allowed to get away and live in tranquility, but it is interesting that the French actually REFUSED requests for extradition of Al-Husseini in 1945 and got him out safely to Egypt. This isn’t a “bungling official” allowing a nazi/ nazi sympathiser mass murderer to go free, but a deliberate act to knowingly allow this man to evade justice. Why?
gravenimage says
Good question. It may have had to do with their not wanting to rile up their own colonial Muslim population. No excuse, though.
ROBERT CARRILLO says
My Dad fought these animals in WWII, in N. Africa and in Europe..
Nothing has changed..
James Reid says
Apart from this open collaboration with the Germans 1939-45, he helped to form Muslim Divisions for the Waffen SS in the Balkans.They fought Tito’s Partisans in Yugoslavia, then, as the Germans retreated, all the way back to Berlin. Some fought in Italy & France. They are simply Desert Nazis.
somehistory says
i received an email with one of the photographs a few days ago, with the story of the auction.
I was not a bit surprised. Having read many times about the mozlums and hitler being bed-fellows, and the admiration current day mozlums have for hitler.
Hatred brings the haters together. And together, they conducted evil things against the innocent ones they hated. and, the hatred continues, along with the evil conducted against the innocent.
gravenimage says
+1
somehistory says
The mozlum murderer is smiling large for the camera. He and the others really believed it was their time to rule the entire world, and he was enjoying seeing where his **enemies** were being tortured and murdered…not for any crimes…just because he hated them and loved satan, his demon father.