


Montegriffo wrote:
https://translate.google.com/translate? ... edit-text=A Jewish resident of the Jerusalem area (55) was interrogated Thursday on charges he posted on Facebook, expressing "sympathy, sympathy and sympathy for the actions of the Nazis"
A 55-year-old Mizrachi man expressed his support for the extermination of Ashkenazi Jews on facebook: "He imagines that I have the power of Hitler, sitting on a chair with a bottle of wine and putting them one by one in a furnace of a thousand degrees, how much I hate them"
W. Shirer, The Rise & Fall of the Third Reich 21-24 (Fawcett Crest 1960)Adolf Hitler was the third son of the third marriage of a minor Austrian customs official who had been born an illegitimate child and who for the first thirty·nine years of his life bore his mother's name, Schicklgruber. The name Hitler appears in the maternal as well as the paternal line. Both Hitler's grandmother on his mother's side and his grandfather on his father's side were named Hitler, or rather variants of it, for the family name was variously written as Hiedler, Huetler Huettler and Hitler. Adolf's mother was his father's second cousin . . . .
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On the mother's side there was a certain stability. . .. The story of Hitler's paternal ancestors is quite different. The spelling of the family name changes; the place of residence also. There is a spirit of restlessness among the Hitlers, an urge to move from one village to the next, from one job to another, to avoid firm human ties and to follow a certain bohemian life in relations with women.
There are many weird twists of fate in the strange life of Adolf Hitier, but none more odd than this one which took place thirteen years before his birth. Had the eighty-four-year-old wandering miller not made his unexpected reappearance to recognize the paternity of his thirty-nine-year-old son nearly thirty years after the death of the mother, Adolf Hitler would have been born Adolf Schicklgruber. There may not be much or anything in a name, but . .. Germans speculate whether Hitler could have master of Germany had he been known to the world as Schicklgruber. It has a slightly comic sound as it rolls off the tongue of a South German. Can one imagine the frenzied German masses acclaiming a Schicklgruber with their thunderous "Heils"? "Heil Schicklgruber!"?