TheGrayWolf wrote:You're referring to the table talks, well known fabricated quotes. As for some quotes i'm going to point out a few.
Here he even states he is still a Catholic.
I am now as before a Catholic and will always remain so.
– Adolf Hitler, 1941 letter to General Gerhard Engel
You just have no clue about the sources and quotes you cite.
This quote supposedly from a "letter to Gerhard Engel" in 1941, is in-fact a post-war "diary" entry dated August 6, 1938:
"Very long and strikingly calm conversation with Führer about churches and religion. Bormann had complained to the F. about church attendance as a duty in the Army and Navy. Apparently complaints by Party bosses on short-term service with r(eserve) units. F. had surprisingly declined to intervene. Spoke about his attitude towards the churches. Now as before he was a Catholic and would remain so. The [Catholic] Church was far too astute to excommunicate him. How he had learned a tremendous amount from the tactics, organisation and doctrinal method of the Cath[olic] Church. During the period of struggle he had seen the thing in a quite different light. His goal then had been to create a unified German Reich Church. The concordat was the most liberal advance he had achieved so far. This Church could be a fairly loose community of the two confessions in the form of a council. But he had to insist on its unconditional subordination to the state and National Socialist politics. He was very disappointed by the Reich bishop who so far had not even managed to unite the Protestants under one hat. France did it much better. There the Church was without political influence but on national holidays the tricolour decorated the altars and church towers, whereas in Germany he still had to remunerate his adversaries. Ritual, liturgy and other practices of the churches were neither here nor there as far as he was concerned. It was just that the churches had to be nationalistic as had always been the case in Poland. There the red and white flags and church banners had preceded their troops into battle. The time is still not ripe to get involved, but it will come. For the moment he had too many other problems and as leader of the people he did not underestimate the power of suggestion the churches wielded."
6.8.1938; Hildegard von Kotze (ed.), Heeresadjutant bei Hitler, 1938–1943: Aufzeichnungen des Majors Engel (Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1976), pp. 30-31.
Hitler is discussing the Church Question, one Engel has him discuss quite a few times, for example on March 14, 1938 in which Hitler says that the "Churches should only be allowed to become political if they were in the greater scheme of things the pawn of politics, that is of the political power." (p. 17) And on May 20, 1941 he emphasised the importance of the seperation of Church and State: "There was no way he [Hitler] would now allow bishops or other princes of the church to inveigle propaganda of its own kind under the cloak of brotherly love in order to revive its dwindling influence on the people. [...] the attitude of the church would have to undergo a basic change. [...] Napoleon had understood why it was necessary to separate church and state..." (p. 106). This shows how little Christian religiosity meant to him in terms of the state. Nationalsocialism wasn't Christian, and Christianity was given no special privileges let alone a place "at the top" of the Nationalsocialist state.
Anyway.
In the above quoted entry for August 6, it's clear Hitler isn't talking about being Catholic in the religious believer sense, but merely in the nominal obligatory official sense. Hence why he says that the Church cannot excommunicate him, because he is technically Catholic. This didn't make him spiritually Catholic.
What's funny too is that the way you quote it is as if Hitler said this in the first person, with the use of the word "I". I know you just saw this from somewhere and didn't know better, but it shows clearly that these Christians who're so desperate for evidence they have to resort to distorting what the sources actually said and the context in which they were said; turning a second hand diary entry into a verbatim quotation!
But if you want to quote Engel's diary, don't forget the entry I already quoted in this thread from January 20, 1940 in which Hitler is talking about the need to destroy the Church "root and branch":
"F. [Führer] spoke at length again about religious belief and his attitude to the churches. Undoubtedly under sniper fire from B(ormann) and H(immler) a less conciliatory attitude is developing. Whereas in the past he wanted to live and let live, he is now determined to fight the churches. F. literally: ‘The war, here as in many other areas, presents a favourable opportunity to dispose of it (the church question) root and branch.’ In days gone by, whole peoples had been liquidated. Tribes had settled nearby, the Soviet Union had recently provided plenty of examples how that could be done. One thing that the Germans had not been bettered in was their thoroughness and inclination to tradition, even to mysticism. If he continued to take no action against the rebellious clergy, then that was not least for the sake of the Wehrmacht. There the men ran to religious services in the field, and he preferred to have a soldier who was brave because he believed in God rather than a soldier who was cowardly because he did not. But here education in the SS, which was proving in wartime that a man schooled in the world view of affairs could also be brave without God, was showing the necessary way forward."
20.01.1940; Hildegard von Kotze (ed.), Heeresadjutant bei Hitler, 1938–1943: Aufzeichnungen des Majors Engel (Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1976), pp. 70-71.
However. one also need to remember that Engel's "diary" is in-fact not a diary at all, but a memoir written in the style of a diary based on rememberances and perhaps authentic diary entries which are now lost, making it impossible to tell what was written at the time, and what was written after the war.
But in any case, say what you want, but even Engel's diary doesn't support your claims about Hitler being Christian.
TheGrayWolf wrote:Your attempts of saying he lied to the German people is insulting to his image. You state that one must be in church to be a Christian, this is not true at all. One can be against denominations as it is organized religion but still believe in God.
It isn't my "attempts", it is my following the evidence.
I also don't think I ever said one needs to be "in the church" to be a Christian, but in any case it hardly matters since Hitler wasn't a Christian - at least not a believing one. He never formally left the Church, but he didn't believe in the religion, or the dogma. His attachment was merely nominal.
TheGrayWolf wrote:And no he never renounced his religion. We have his speeches, both in written form and with his own voice, yet you dismiss them for second hand sources who had a stake in selling the image of him being anti-Christian for the sake of their own agenda if and when he left office or died.
I do dismiss them, because they don't reveal his innermost thoughts. I think it's likely that Hitler was more likely to have had an attachment to the Church in the 1920s, but by the time he was in power - as Rosenberg's diary shows - he wasn't interested in Christianity at all, and didn't identify with the label. He didn't harp on Christianity, he didn't outlaw paganism, he didn't implement rigid religious standards but remained a largely neutral figure in the questions concerning religion.
Here are a few more diaries entires:
"With the Führer. He too admires the bravery of the Greeks in particular. Perhaps there is still something of the old Hellenism in them after all. The Serbs are fighting desperately. But once the first resistance is broken, then the great running will begin. More precise documents about the course of the operations are still missing. They have to develop first. The Piraeus has been mined. The Führer forbids a bombardment of Athens. That is right and noble of him. Rome and Athens are Mecca for him. He very much regrets having to fight the Greeks. If the English had not been entrenched there, he would never have rushed to the aid of the Italians. They would have had to do that themselves, because it is their business.
The Führer is a man completely oriented towards antiquity. He hates Christianity because it has crippled all noble humanity. According to Schopenhauer, Christianity and syphilis have made humanity unhappy and unfree. What a difference between a benevolent and wise smiling Zeus and a pain-distorted crucified Christ. Even the very conception of God is much nobler and more human among the ancient peoples than among Christianity. What a difference between a gloomy cathedral and a bright, free ancient temple. He describes life in ancient Rome: clarity, grandeur, monumentality. The greatest republic in history. We would probably not experience any disappointment, he says, if we were now suddenly transported to this ancient eternal city.
The Führer has no relationship at all to the Gothic. He hates the gloom and the blurred mysticism. He wants clarity, brightness, beauty. That is also the ideal of life in our time. In this respect, the Führer is a very modern man.
To him, the Augustan age is the culmination of history. And as for the slaves that Christianity supposedly freed. They were much more unfree and oppressed in the Middle Ages than in ancient Rome. What does slavery even mean? Is a modern-day industrial prolet perhaps freer than a slave before American "freedom" in the southern states. These are all prejudices."
8.4.1941; Elke Fröhlich (ed.), Die Tagebücher von Joseph Goebbels, Part 1, Vol. 9 (Munich: K.G. Saur Verlag, 1998), p. 234.
Later in the month:
"Long debates about the Vatican and Christianity. The Führer is the fiercest opponent of the whole spell, but he still forbids me to leave the church. For tactical reasons. And for such nonsense I have been paying my church taxes for over a decade now. That's what hurts me the most."
29.4.1941; Elke Fröhlich (ed.), Die Tagebücher von Joseph Goebbels, Part 1, Vol. 9 (Munich: K.G. Saur Verlag, 1998), pp. 279-280.
Here's a long one, from December 1941:
The leader speaks with the highest praise of Japanese religiosity, which is synonymous with genuine Japanese-ness. It is a pity that we do not have something similar. Our Christianity will always be against a strong national conception, according to its whole structure. It is, after all, Jewish in its very essence. A religion based on the principle that one should love one's enemies, that one must not kill and that one must turn the left cheek when one has received a blow on the right is not suitable as a manly doctrine of defence of the fatherland. Christianity is indeed a doctrine of decay. For a modern man it deserves only spiritual contempt. Today, in its denominational form, it operates as treason, at least at home. A typical example of this is Bishop Galen of Münster. The Führer is determined to make tabula rasa with him and some other agitators in the foreseeable future. He watches the development for a while, but when the barrel is full to overflowing, then suddenly the lightning bolt of wrath will descend on these treacherous princes of the church.
The Protestant Church, too, is now trying to do the same as the Catholic Church. Bishop Wurm from Württemberg has the ambition to become a second Galen. It will probably be much easier for us to deal with the Protestants than with the Catholics, because they are stupid and know nothing about tactics. It's different with the Catholics.
I am also absolutely opposed to forcing these rebellious church leaders into a monastery, for example. Then the problem will smoulder on and on. If one takes action against it, then radically and in such a way that the problem is solved all at once, even if by force.
The Führer deplores the fact that there are still a number of generals, especially in the army, who do not believe they can condemn the actions of Bishop Galen. How a modern thinking person can recognise in Christianity any teaching at all for the present time is beyond me. Even our party minister Kerrl is in this line, who, through his preoccupation with the church question, probably because of his half-education, takes a completely confused and half-baked standpoint. In view of our modern science, to be a Christian is only to possess a lack of intelligence. What can Christianity give to a man of today? Above all, one must be surprised that the extraordinarily pale ideas of the hereafter of Christianity can still move intelligent people. The ideal of the hereafter painted by Christianity has no inner substance. Mohammedanism is at least better founded. It promises the earthly citizen for his good Mohammedan way of life at least an afterlife that corresponds to his ideas of happiness in this world. But to imagine or wish for a heaven in which eternal bliss consists in singing hallelujahs is downright absurd for a 20th century man. It is clear that this whole doctrine will have to be replaced somehow in the course of the decades. But we don't need to force the issue, it will come about of its own accord in the light of modern knowledge. In any case, our present task is to eliminate the political influence of the churches. What they want or strive for religiously can be indifferent to us in view of our great earthly tasks; but as soon as they interfere in earthly problems, they must be sharply rejected.
[...]
The Führer vigorously resists the idea that religious functions should be attributed to him in the future. He does not want to become a saint, but sees his task exclusively in solving political problems. But it will probably be unavoidable in later decades or centuries that the people will make of him what they already see in him today. If such a development occurs naturally, one should not object to it. It was different with Christianity, which was only imposed on Germanic people by force.
[...]
I am extremely pleased that the Führer is taking a very consistent stand on this important problem and is not allowing himself to be influenced in any way by popular mass ideas.
14.12.1941; Elke Fröhlich (ed.), Die Tagebücher von Joseph Goebbels, Part 2, Vol. 2 (Munich: K.G. Saur Verlag, 1996), pp. 506-507, 508. 509.
Rosenberg writes on the same date in his diary:
"The conversations yesterday and today at the Führer [headquarters] revolved principally around the problem of Christianity. The actions of the bishop of Münster were mentioned first. For quite some time now the English have been using his speeches to provide the bulk of their propaganda; they drop leaflets by the hundreds of thousands and read aloud in their radio broadcasts the verbal assaults made by Graf von Galen. The Führer declared that the gentlemen want to be “martyrs,” in the expectation of an honorable captivity. But the bishop of Münster will one day face a firing squad. Apart from that, in the völkisch struggle no help can be provided over the long term by a moral doctrine that preaches love of one’s enemy, turning the left cheek if someone slaps you on the right one, etc. That people devour their God, even fight a 30-year war over the form in which this meal must be eaten, can make one downright despair of all of mankind. A few generals and even a minister and Party member assert, he said, that only as a Christian can one be brave at all, as if the Germanic tribes, Romans, or Greeks had been cowardly. Even the Bolsheviks know how to die; often, when faced with captivity, they preferred to shoot themselves in the head. He has visited his SS divisions, and there is no Christian deception there, they are calm and know what they must do. We will never fathom the meaning of life and the world, all our microscopes will not yield the solution, merely expand our insights by a minuscule amount. But if there is a God, it is our duty to develop the abilities we have been given. We can err along the way but not feign and lie. This Christian hypocrisy is now nearing its end, he said, and in a process of casting off everything that is putrid, a return to health will begin. If the churches are such supporters of preserving the lives of imbeciles [Idiotenerhaltung], he is willing to leave all the feebleminded to them, as priests and disciples. If we were to get rid of Christianity], other peoples may feel free to keep the Christian religion.
I interjected that anyway, Lagarde stated previously that reading the Old Testament made him seasick. The Apostle Paul deliberately visited the seaports (Corinth, Thessaloniki) to prepare for his insurrection among these people. It has always been incomprehensible to me, I said, that H[ouston] St[ewart] Chamberlain put so much effort into defending Paul. Führer: Yes, that was Chamberlains mistake.
The Führer showed great sympathy for the worldview of the Japanese: it is a heroic stance, one of self-sacrifice for the people. I mentioned that I had just received an interesting letter from a Japanese scholar about our worldview and that of the Japanese.
Today we learned that Kerri had died, that is, the very minister and Party member whom the Führer characterized so sarcastically yesterday. The Führer said that Kerri’s motives surely were nothing but noble, but the endeavor to unite National Socialism and Christianity was simply a hopeless one. I: People have tried to salvage the “pure teaching” so many times already, but all these experiments have now failed. The Führer: This restoration of early Christianity would indeed be the worst thing, despite all their moral failings, Julius II and others, who acted as patrons of great artists, are still less dangerous than early Christianity. Jokingly; Don’t you want to take on Kerri’s office? Aghast, I waved my hand in disapproval, and he said: Indeed, you certainly do have another office. But I don’t want to hand over the church affairs to the Ministry of the Interior.
After my presentation we returned to the topic of Christianity. After the war, the Führer said, I also want to tackle this problem decisively. Elimination of their education of minors. Only adults should be permitted to commit to a church, and someone should be allowed to decide on a career in the priesthood only after serving in the Wehrmacht. Finally: Christianity was introduced long ago by human instruments of power, and he will likewise not shy away from using instruments of power, if necessary.
I recommended that the Führer read Burckhardts Age of Constantine the Great, where the Christianization inaugurated by Constantine is really depicted very well, by the standards of the insights of the time. I view the task of my future institute for Indo-Germanic intellectual history in Munich in part as introducing in place of the decaying biblical tradition a better and even older one: the ethics of the ancient Iranians and the wisdom of the ancient Hindus are finer than the New Testament. We said our good-byes very cordially. I see how these ideological questions stir the Führer, in the midst of military concerns. When I gave him the Japanese letter, he began reading it with interest. Then he was immediately gripped by it and kept it for a thorough reading (it has 13 pages)
14.12.1941; Frank Bajohr & Jürgen Matthäus (eds.), Alfred Rosenberg: Die Tagebücher von 1934 bis 1944 (Frankfurt/Main: S. Fischer Verlag, 2015), pp. 414-417. cf. English ed. The Political Diary of Alfred Rosenberg and the Onset of the Holocaust (Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield, 2015), pp. 268-270.
The relevant quote from Rosenberg's memoirs:
"In private conversations, Hitler was quite hostile to the Christian concept of God, although I heard him speak about it only two or three times in the many years of his life. Once he said to me: "Just look at the head of Zeus. What nobility and sublimity speaks from these witnesses!" about the Lord's Supper: "It is a state of primitive religion that one bites one's God with one's teeth." Against the Gothic he claimed that in it everything dark and clouding the spirit was embodied. Only the spatial effect of the Strasbourg Cathedral he later accepted.
When I said during one of these conversations that churches should not be destroyed, that they could only be gradually filled with new people, he said: "That is very wise of you to think like that.
In principle and inner attitude Hitler had thus clearly distanced himself from churches and Christianity, but paid full justice to his first appearance, conceded to everyone the right of personal conviction, protected the Wehrmacht in all its desires of confessional care."
Alfred Rosenberg, Letzte Aufzeichnungen: Ideale und Idole der Nationalsozialistischen Revolution (Göttingen: Plesse Verlag, 1955), p. 235. cf. Heinrich Härtle (ed.), Großdeutschland: Traum und Tragödie. Rosenbergs Kritik am Hitlerismus (Munich: Selbstverlag, 1969), p. 204.
This is probably in reference to comments Hitler made on October 12, 1940, or thereabouts, as noted in Rosenberg's diary (which was not kept daily):
"So now this burning question has been addressed. The German people, after coming home from the war, would also not understand returning to the old big-city holes while the imposing new [cities of] Berlin, Munich, Nuremberg, Hamburg are being created. The German worker is entitled to have the nucleus of his life receive consideration, too, in addition to having the state represented through grand architecture. It is with him, after all, that the victory has been fought for and won.—Another time, when we were talking about Strassburg and I was making a case for the cathedral as a national shrine, the Führer said with tears in his eyes: It should also be a monument in memory of the unknown soldier. What does the simple man have? What can he know of the magnitude of history? He has his body, and that he puts to use. What would all our plans be without this soldier! They would all be merely words on paper.
So I hope that first the monument to these German soldiers is erected in the Strassburg Cathedral. What I expressed as a wish in the Myth that the war memorial would replace the Marian columns must be initiated from the top, through example. Strassburg would be the finest example
The Führer is not fond of the Gothic style. The eroded statues in Reims were a disappointment to him. It was in Strassburg, he said, that a Gothic cathedral for the first time had evoked a strong sense of space.—That is true. The massive columns here do not block the view of the entire space. Besides, I have my reservations here, for the Gothic style was not only the Catholic zenith; it was also crucial, yet refined Germanicness [Germanentum], Here, the closeness to nature breaks through all the expressions of Catholicism: the pattern of tendrils in Marburg, the vibrant gobelins, etc. That one can no longer build in the Gothic style today, incidentally, is something I explained in the Myth (this passage was written in 1917-1918)."
12.10.1941; Frank Bajohr & Jürgen Matthäus (eds.), Alfred Rosenberg: Die Tagebücher von 1934 bis 1944 (Frankfurt/Main: S. Fischer Verlag, 2015), p. 353. cf. English ed. The Political Diary of Alfred Rosenberg and the Onset of the Holocaust (Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield, 2015), p. 219.
Other excerpt.
"Only one point of view could correspond to the National Socialist attitude: everyone may seek religious reinforcement and consolation where he wishes, but no one may be forced to seek such from the existing denominations. The advocacy of religious convictions is a matter for each individual; political or even police power may be used neither for nor against such a conviction. Adolf Hitler always held this view..."
Alfred Rosenberg, Letzte Aufzeichnungen: Ideale und Idole der Nationalsozialistischen Revolution (Göttingen: Plesse Verlag, 1955), p. 232.
So, clearly, your claim that Hitler "renounced his religion" is complete rubbish. But this was known already.
Nobody, except Bormann, had an agenda. Not least one which can be proven. Goebbels and Rosenberg both wrote private diaries, in the latter case he only wrote sporadically and not on every topic. Hardly an effort befitting an alleged propagandist with an "agenda".
fireofice wrote:And no, you don't just have to rely on Table Talks to come to the conclusion that Hitler was anti-Christian. I don't think Table Talks is as bad a source as you think, but even if we threw out the Table Talks, Hitler was still clearly anti-Christian.
This guy has been going on and on about the Table Talks since the beginning, even though I haven't been using them, but whenver I have (in some cases) it has been qualified and supported by the use of other material. Though I have mainly utilized diaries. He is belligerent and clearly hasn't read - of if he has, understood - anything I've been writing.
I'm expecting to obtain the diary of Walther Hewel very soon; he was a diplomat and very good friends with Hitler. So we shall see what - if anything - his diary uncovers.