Word: kampf
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
Could Britain take all that? By 1940 Adolf Hitler may no longer believe what he wrote in 1924. The London Daily Sketch recently attributed the following to Mein Kampf: "The British nation will ... be considered as the most valuable ally in the world as long as it can be counted on to show that brutality and tenacity in its Government, as well as in the spirit of the broad masses, which enables it to carry through to victory any struggle that it once enters on, no matter how long such a struggle may last, or how great the sacrifice that...
...German societies after the war. Today's problem is far larger. Beyond the need for immediate aid, U. S. churchmen face the prospect that an Axis victory would halt missionary work in colonies Germany may then dominate. Hitler believes in short shrift for missionaries. Said he in Mein Kampf: "Mission education in Africa is based on the absurd notion of making lawyers out of half apes...
Whose Iron? Adolf Hitler was putting the finishing touches to Mein Kampf in 1925 when the "Soldiers of Archangel Michael" (later the Iron Guard) was founded in Rumania. In recent years every effort by Carol to squelch the Guard - and over 2,000 youths of the Guard were executed last year by royal decree in a blood purge - has been quietly blocked by the Führer. Here was a ready-made fifth column and Hitler was not going to let it be wiped out. The Iron Guardists, nearly all fanatical Rumanian patriots of Sinn Fein recklessness, were...
...Shuster was head of his alma mater's English department for four years, from 1925 to 1939 was an editor of The Commonweal, Catholic magazine. He considers himself a liberal Catholic, has lectured and written extensively on Catholicism, English literature, modern German history, edited an edition of Mein Kampf...
...will deny that the present-day German Army is probably the best in the world. Give ear to what the man responsible for that Army says of voluntary enlistment. In Mein Kampf (p. 794, Reynal & Hitchcock, 1940 ed.) Hitler says: "... With the enormously increased demands of today that the war service makes upon the individual, a two years' service is perhaps barely sufficient in order to turn the untrained young man into a trained soldier. On the front we all had before our eyes the terrible consequences resulting for young soldiers who were not thoroughly educated in the craft...