On 12-04-2002 03:58 PM, Nova Land writes:
Open Letter to Jedi on Hitler's religious beliefs
Dear Jedi,
Hi! I hope you had a good Thanksgiving! Mine was pretty exhausting, but on the good side I got to spend some time relaxing at a university library.
As I'd hoped, I was able to locate the book containing the passages you had quoted concerning Hitler's religious beliefs. It's interesting reading.
The book is Hitler's Table Talk, also published as Hitler's Secret Conversations. It was originally published in 1953, and has been reprinted in several editions since then. It consists of transcriptions of private discourses Hitler made between 1941 and 1944, and his religious beliefs come up in a number of these. The passages you quoted come from conversation # 4 (night of 11th-12th July 1941):
quote:
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"The heaviest blow that ever struck humanity was the coming of Christianity ... The deliberate lie in the matter of religion was introduced into the world by Christianity."
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and conversation # 287 (11th August 1942, evening):
quote:
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"I'll make these damned parsons feel the power of the state in a way they would have never believed possible. For the moment, I am just keeping my eye upon them: if I ever have the slightest suspicion that they are getting dangerous, I will shoot the lot of them. This filthy reptile raises its head whenever there is a sign of weakness in the State, and therefore it must be stamped on. We have no sort of use for a fairy story invented by the Jews."
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Do you have access to an edition of this book? I went through the book, noted which conversations had material relating to Hitler's religious beliefs, and copied those pages, so I can quote the relevant passages for you, but it will make things easier (and save me a lot of typing) if you have a copy you can refer to yourself. The relevant conversations are: 3, 4, 5, 27, 33, 43, 47, 48, 49, 51, 52, 75, 76, 100, 105, 143, 148, 152, 153, 160, 163, 184, 187, 190, 233, 236, 248, 275, 287, 304, 308, 326, and 328. (The page numbering is different for Table Talks and Secret Conversations, but the content of these conversations appears the same, apart from a slight difference in numbering toward the end regarding # 326 in Table Talks, which is # 327 in Secret Conversations. If you have a copy of Table Talks handy I'll be glad to cite the page numbers; otherwise I'll just refer to these by conversation numbers.)
You indicated a reluctance to identify the source where you found these passages, and that's fine. Your source would only be relevant if they had read the primary source material or had other special knowledge on the subject (in which case their views might deserve some extra consideration as we weigh the material and evaluate its significance). Since your source mixes portions from 2 separate passages, and uses the same portions (with the same omissions) that Bullock apparently used, your source looks to be simply someone who is quoting from Bullock (or quoting from someone else who is quoting from Bullock) rather than anyone with any special knowledge or expertise. So I'm happy to ignore them and get on to looking at the actual source material if that's agreeable with you.
Obviously, there is a danger in relying too heavily on only one source. Table Talks is interesting, and appears to give some of Hitler's inner thoughts that he did not care to share in his more public utterances, but these were not recorded on tape so we are dependent on the notes (and memory, and judgment, and interpretation) of the person doing the transcribing. I saw and skimmed through some other books which also purported to reveal Hitler's private thoughts, some of which looked interesting. But Table Talks is the source that has the passages you cited as the basis for your belief that Hitler was an atheist, so it seemed worthwhile to focus on what this book actually does say before getting distracted onto what other sources have to offer.
In a nutshell: This book supports your belief that Hitler was not a Christian (at least not as most people understand Christianity today). It does not support your belief that Hitler was an atheist. Repeatedly Hitler attacks atheism in these conversations, and expresses belief in God. We can get into that in more detail when you're ready.
I don't think anyone besides you and me is still interested in this topic (and I'm not sure you're still interested) so we should have this thread largely to ourselves. (Anyone else who's interested is welcome to lurk or to take part, too. My one request is that people not come in simply to toss insults.)
Where would you like to start? If you have access to the book, we can pick specific conversations and look at them. Or we can start from the beginning and take the relevant conversations in order. Or I can pick a few passages and type excerpts out for you, and we can proceed from there. Let me know your preferences.
good wishes /