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Why did Hitler Hate Jews? The answer to our query about Hitler's hate is typically fashioned around incomprehensible, even fantastically irrational singularities such as his failure to gain a seat in the Vienna Academy of Fine Art. Other, equally inane reasons are frequently offered to account for his hate. Such explanations skirt an all too apparent truth: a small minority of radical Marxist Jews of his era were prominent in numerous upheavals of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This book identifies both the players and the events that led to Hitler's loathing and it rejects the…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Why did Hitler Hate Jews? The answer to our query about Hitler's hate is typically fashioned around incomprehensible, even fantastically irrational singularities such as his failure to gain a seat in the Vienna Academy of Fine Art. Other, equally inane reasons are frequently offered to account for his hate. Such explanations skirt an all too apparent truth: a small minority of radical Marxist Jews of his era were prominent in numerous upheavals of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. This book identifies both the players and the events that led to Hitler's loathing and it rejects the simplistic and often highly fanciful claims of those who argue that the roots of his hate are attributable to a single event or experience, or are simply unfathomable. Hitler was a despicable man and fully deserves the odium he engendered. Still, he also had positive qualities that endeared him to his entourage and his people. In addition to explaining Hitler's hate, this book paints a somewhat different picture of Hitler: in particular, it highlights some of the positive qualities of the man, his entourage, and his people.
Autorenporträt
Mr. Granger served 21 years in the U.S. Army. During that service he spent over ten years assigned to locations in Germany. While there, he took to examining historical works related to Germany, Hitler, and his era. He was often miffed by narratives of the many historians who painted the German people in colors of lock-step obedience and irrational hatred-characteristics that were wholly at odds with what Mr. Granger observed and experienced in his dealings with the German populace. In the late 1990s Mr. Granger began researching in earnest the various historical accounts about Hitler and his people: this book is end result of that research. Mr. Granger is a graduate of the University of Tampa. He currently resides in Massachusetts.