------ Forwarded Message
> From: Robert Sterling <robal...@yahoo.com>
> Date: Sun, 11 Apr 2010 19:01:06 -0000
> To: <konform...@yahoogroups.com>
> Subject: Konformist: Hitler and the secret Satanic cult at the heart of Nazi
> Germany
> 
> Please send as far and wide as possible.
> 
> Thanks,
> Robert Sterling
> Editor, The Konformist
> http://www.konformist.com
> http://robalini.blogspot.com
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/konformist
> 
> http://www.newsmonster.co.uk/paranormal-unexplained/hitler-and-the-secret-sata
> nic-cult-at-the-heart-of-nazi-germany.html
> 
> Hitler and the secret Satanic cult at the heart of Nazi Germany
> Paranormal & Unexplained,
> Written by Danny Penman
> 
> At first glance, the large circular room in the basement of Wewelsburg Castle
> appears to be harmless enough. Smooth, finely cut stones pave the floor.
> Glistening rock walls arch majestically towards a high vaulted ceiling.
> 
> In the centre of the room lies a sunken circular altar with polished steps
> leading towards a burnt and cracked stone. From here you can see thirteen
> lanterns flickering on the curved walls. But it's only when you look directly
> upwards that the room's significance becomes shockingly clear. At the centre
> of the dome lies a giant swastika.
> 
> This room was the central temple of the Satanic cult that created and directed
> Germany's Nazi party. This so called Vril Society counted many of Hitler's
> henchmen as members, including Himmler, Bormann, and Hess. Central to the
> whole cult was Hitler, who they believed to be a psychic medium in contact
> with powerful forces that would create an all-conquering Aryan nation. Some
> saw him as the Dark Messiah.
> 
> Historians have tended to downplay the occult foundations of Nazism for fear
> of trivialising its heinous war crimes, but a recent documentary on the
> Discovery Channel laid bare the untold story of the secretive religion at the
> heart of fascist Germany. And bizarrely, it is thought to have been based on a
> 19th Century science fiction novel that predicted flying saucers, an alien
> race at the centre of the earth, and a mysterious force known as Vril.
> 
> "Occult myths played a central role in Nazism," says Professor Nicholas
> Goodrick-Clarke, head of the Centre for the Study of Esotericism at Exeter
> University. "When we look at these ideas today, we think of them as crazy, but
> they were central to the early Nazi Party and through them played a critical
> role in 20th century history."
> 
> "The Vril society was dedicated to evil," says historian Michael Fitzgerald.
> "Through their control of the Nazi party they committed the greatest acts of
> evil in the 20th Century.
> 
> "Vril occultists worked in complete secrecy doing anything that would promote
> Aryan power. This ranged from straightforward political assassinations,
> through to evoking the spirits of the dead, human sacrifice and summoning
> mysterious energies – or Vril - through sexual orgies."
> 
> To understand why the Nazi party was so obsessed with the occult and Satanism,
> you have to travel back to Victorian times. In the late 19th Century, Germany
> in common with Britain, was obsessed with the occult. It was a time when no
> self-respecting hostess would dream of holding a dinner party without a séance
> to round off the evening.
> 
> There was also huge interest in eastern mysticism and `prophets' of occult
> religions, such as Madame Blavatsky, were household names. Blavatsky believed
> that Europeans were descended from a race of angel-like creatures known as
> Aryans. They claimed that the Aryans had used mysterious psychic forces to
> build the pyramids, Atlantis and a network of cities beneath Antarctica.
> What's more, their descendants were to be found in the Himalayas and their
> sign was the swastika – the ancient Hindu good luck symbol.
> 
> These myths and more were crystallised in the science-fiction novel The Coming
> Race. In this, Edward Bulwer-Lytton told of a strange people called the
> Vril-Ya that lived at the centre of the Earth. They wielded fantastic power
> using a mysterious force known as Vril, which they also used to propel flying
> saucers. 
> 
> The Coming Race and its attendant barmy mysticism would have sunk into
> obscurity if it hadn't been for the First World War. At the end of the war,
> Germany was plunged into violent anarchy and a host of extremist politicians
> and cult leaders stepped into the breach and battled for power. Chief of these
> was the occult Thule Society – and its inner sect, the Vril Society.
> 
> The Vril Society was noted for it's use of orgies to summon up occult energies
> – and to father a `master race' of children to repopulate a devastated
> Germany. It is said that women in such orgies would become possessed by
> spirits and begin speaking in tongues. And their prophesies were treated with
> deadly seriousness.
> 
> "But the darkest side of the Vril was their propensity for sacrificing young
> children," says Michael Fitzgerald, author of Stormtroopers of Satan. "They
> would stab them in the chest and cut their throats.
> 
> "At the height of their power in 1920s Munich, hundreds of children
> disappeared. Many are presumed to have been killed by the cult to summon up
> Vril energy. This may seem like an outlandish claim but when you consider what
> these people went on to do in the Third Reich, it seems almost tame."
> 
> Central to the Vril Society was the search for a German Messiah who would lead
> the Aryan's to world domination and exterminate all other races – especially
> the Jews. And his rise was predicted by a spirit calling itself the "Beast of
> the Book of Revelation."
> 
> In a séance attended by the cult followers Alfred Rosenberg and Dietrich
> Eckart, the Beast is said to have proclaimed that a man named "Hitler" would
> seize the "Spear of Destiny" and lead the Aryans to power.
> 
> And within a few weeks, a fiery young man of shabby appearance began attending
> Thule Society meetings. His name was Adolf Hitler.
> 
> The Society was quick to spot Hitler's potential and to exploit his
> astonishing personal magnetism. He could transform crowds into hysterical
> worshippers and mesmerise even the strongest of men. Power seemed to course
> through him, with waves of emotion whipping up those around him into a frenzy.
> At times, he seemed possessed.
> 
> Hitler was fascinated by the occult. He was a devotee of astrology,
> numerology, psychic mediumship, hypnosis and water divining. In short, the
> young Adolf would try anything that might foretell the future or give him
> control over others.
> 
> It was in the Thule Society that Hitler met those who would help him take over
> Germany and wage the Second World War. Rudolf Hess, Heinrich Himmler, Martin
> Bormann, Dietrich Eckart, Alfred Rosenberg, and Hermann Goering were all said
> to be members. It was these, along with Hitler, who used the Thule Society –
> and it's inner sect the Vril Society – to launch and promote the Nazi Party.
>  
> But even amongst this sinister group, there was an inner core who were even
> more evil, if that is conceivable.
> 
> "Bormann was an avowed Satanist, says Michael Fitzgerald. "Bormann, together
> with Rosenberg and Himmler, wanted to destroy Christianity and replace it with
> a truly occult religion of their own making. And along with the Thule Society,
> they created a political party that would try and do just that."
> 
> When Hitler led the Nazi party to power in 1933, members of the sect occupied
> all key positions. Hess became Deputy Fuhrer, Rosenberg became Minister of the
> Third Reich, Bormann was Chief of the Nazi Party Chancellery, Himmler was head
> of the SS and Gestapo, and Goering, Commander of the Luftwaffe. Only the
> deceased Dietrich Eckart, whom Hitler dedicated Mein Kampf to, failed to join
> them.
> 
> As soon as they gained power the Nazis began preparing for world domination.
> Their first act was to re-arm – a clear breach of the Treaty of Versailles,
> which formally ended the First World War. Whilst the protests from Britain and
> France were loud and shrill, Hitler guessed correctly that the Allies would
> shy away from war.
> 
> In 1938, Hitler annexed Austria. Again, he was appeased. And by the following
> year, most of Europe lay under his rule and Britain was in his sights.
> 
> Central to the Nazi ideology was the establishment of a thousand year Reich.
> This was to be done by perverting history and creating a new religion based on
> Aryan mythology – the same mythology propagated by the Victorian occult
> `prophets' and the science fiction novel The Coming Race.
> 
> To do this, Himmler set up an occult research bureau under the wings of the
> SS, known as the Ahnenerbe. This was instructed to prove German racial
> superiority by linking them to the mythical race of ancient Aryans. It also
> hoped to uncover lost magical artefacts such as the Holy Grail and the Spear
> of Destiny. This, you will recall, was the spear used to kill Jesus as he hung
> on the cross.
> 
> "It's also possible they were looking for the Ark of the Covenant in
> Ethiopia," says Michael Fitzgerald. "They were obviously hoping to use its
> reputed magical powers for their own ends."
> 
> The Ahnenerbe mounted a series of huge expeditions to search for ancient Aryan
> cities in the Himalayas, the Middle East and Bolivia. The organisation looted
> artefacts from ancient sites around the world. It's no surprise then, that the
> Ahnenerbe was the inspiration for the Nazi archaeologists in Raiders of the
> Lost Ark.
> 
> The Ahnenerbe devoted considerable efforts to exploring paranormal phenomena,
> such as ESP, psychokinesis, water divining, astrology and black magic. In
> fact, the organisation spent around £10 billion in today's money on research.
> That's about the same as the Allies spent on the atomic bomb programme.
> 
> Very little of the Ahnenerbe's work was of practical wartime use, although the
> German Navy is said to have used diviners to seek out Allied warships and
> convoys in the North Atlantic.
> 
> "They were initially quite successful," says Michael Fitzgerald. "But they
> became so overworked, especially towards the end of the war, that they began
> to fail."
> 
> Forecasting the future was a central preoccupation of the Nazis. The Ahnenerbe
> employed astrologers, rune diviners and a host of psychics to try and fathom
> the future. One astrologer, Karl Krafft, quickly rose to prominence after
> correctly predicting the 1939 Munich assassination attempt against Hitler.
> 
> Hitler believed that the astrological forecast and his survival was proof that
> the occult Gods supported his "Final Solution". It left him in a state of
> mystical exaltation.
> 
> Eyes blazing with excitement he shouted: "Now I am content! It is Providence's
> intention to allow me to reach my goal."
> 
> Through the Ahnenerbe the Nazi's began to creating an occult civilisation to
> supplant our Christian one.
> 
> "They began by indoctrinating the Hitler Youth with Satanic ideologies," says
> Michael Fitzgerald. "Children and the future leaders of the SS were taught
> that compassion was weakness. They were encouraged to celebrate pagan
> festivals and to carry out occult ceremonies.
> 
> "Himmler named himself the Black Jesuit – and he meant it. He laid plans to
> establish pagan temples across Germany after the war. These would replace
> churches. And on every altar there would be a copy of Hitler's Mein Kampf."
> 
> A new religious city centred around Wewelsburg Castle was planned. It was to
> be an occult Vatican dedicated to all things evil. Colleges would educate
> Germany's future leaders in the occult, such as psychic mediumship, hypnosis
> and divination. Museums and galleries would house such artefacts as the Holy
> Grail, the Spear of Destiny and the Ark of the Covenant. And there would be
> research labs dedicated to finding new energies – such as Vril – to power
> spaceships to the stars.
> 
> To the modern eye, the Nazi preoccupation with the occult seems completely
> deranged. Were they simply insane or was something more sinister at work? It
> is tempting to write them off as insane, but some believe Hitler was truly
> possessed by evil forces.
> 
> Hermann Rauschning, a friend of Hitler and compiler of his speeches, said:
> "One cannot help thinking of Hitler as of a medium, the medium is possessed.
> Without any doubt, Hitler was possessed of forces which were beyond him and of
> which the individual called Hitler was only the temporary instrument."
>  
> 
> 
> 
> 
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