"Aryan" does not mean "white"
Aryan comes from Indian Buddhism. The Danish religious scholar Dr. Lindtner reported about it in an interview. http://vho.org/VffG/2000/1/FreeHistorians100-103.html
"What is the meaning of the term "Aryan" that you find in Buddhism?
This is very easy to explain. The expression only exists in Danish as a loan word. The term comes from Indian and means, for example, in Sanskrit ãrya ; in other Indian languages it is written ariya . I am repeating the word as it is written.
Some say that this word must be correctly translated as "noble" or "elegant" and that the translation you have chosen "Aryan" betrays your personal interpretation.
Yes, that is exactly the objection. However, it is raised only by a narrow circle, for if one investigates how the Indians and English translated the word, one sees that they render "Aryan" with "Aryan". It is unfortunate that this evokes false associations in certain people with certain prerequisites. That's why I explained in a note that after careful consideration - I used to translate the word as "noble" myself - I decided to stick to what's there. It's simply a translation and not a translation an interpretation Some like the word, some don't."
"White people" are nonsense too. There are no such things - except as an illness. Fair-skinned would be better linguistically. At that time, the Germans did not describe themselves as the "white race", only as members of the Nordic race, to which other European peoples were also counted. The Chinese weren't yellow either, although they used to be called "Yellow" or "yellow danger". "Redskins" (Indians) are said not to have been really red either. The "blacks" aren't directly black either, at most dark brown. These False theories of race or descent are also part of the war of lies, psychological warfare, which has lasted for at least 150 years.
That Hitler didn't like the "black" Americans at the Olympic Games is also one of the lies about that time.