The Nazi Connection to Islamic Terrorism: Adolf Hitler and Haj Amin Al-Husseini by Morse Chuck

The Nazi Connection to Islamic Terrorism: Adolf Hitler and Haj Amin Al-Husseini by Morse Chuck

Author:Morse, Chuck [Morse, Chuck]
Language: eng
Format: mobi, epub
Publisher: WND Books
Published: 2010-08-09T16:00:00+00:00


Amin al-Husseini inspects his Muslim-Nazi Hanzar troops—1943.

The Grand Mufti and the Holocaust

Amin al-Husseini was a significant and, indeed, key player in the Holocaust against the Jews. The fact that his role is virtually ignored by researchers and scholars of the Holocaust is curious indeed. A most notorious example of the level of involvement of al-Husseini in the Holocaust, one that is well documented with a letter in al-Husseini’s own handwriting, occurred in 1942, when Red Cross officials offered to mediate in an exchange with the Nazis of 4,000 orphaned Polish Jewish children who had been separated from their parents and 500 Jewish adults. The Jews were to be sent to Palestine in exchange for the return to Germany of pro-Nazi Templar Germans who had settled in Palestine around the turn of the century. Adolf Eichmann, who was in charge of such matters, was considering agreeing to the transfer until he read the letter from al-Husseini, dated May 13, 1942, and addressed to von Ribbentrop and forwarded to him, objecting to the transfer. In the letter, al-Husseini was reported to have said something to the effect that little Jews will grow up to be big Jews. The 4,000 Jewish children and 500 Jewish adults were instead sent to Auschwitz. The Jewish Agency for Palestine presented an authenticated copy of this letter to the British on February 26, 1946, in an unsuccessful attempt to see that al-Husseini was charged with war crimes.

On June 28, 1943, al-Husseini, acting in his capacity as the head of state of the Nazi-Muslim government-in-exile, wrote to the pro-Nazi foreign minister of Romania and was successful in his attempt to stop Romania from agreeing to allow 1,800 Jewish children and 200 Jewish adults to leave Romania and to emigrate to Palestine. On the same day, he also wrote to the pro-Nazi foreign minister of Hungary regarding the possible immigration of 900 Jewish children and 100 Jewish adults seeking passage to Palestine. In the letter to Hungary, al-Husseini suggested that the Hungarian government would be better served by sending their Jews where they would be “under active supervision, for example in Poland” (Appendix E).

These letters went a long way toward convincing these governments to send their Jewish children and adults to the Nazi concentration camps. By any estimation, these letters served to tip the balance in favor of the rounding up and concentrating of Jews into transit camps. Subsequently, the Jews of Romania and Hungary were put on boxcars and sent to the death camps. Al-Husseini sent these letters at a time when the Holocaust against the Jews was at its height of operation.

In the letter to the Hungarian foreign minister, published in the appendix of this book, al-Husseini pitches to him a dark conspiratorial view of a Jewish Palestine, one that was widely disseminated by the Nazis. The conspiracy theory proffered is of a secret cabal of powerful Jews conspiring to create a Jewish state in Palestine for the express purpose of establishing a centrally located foothold and a launching pad for world conquest.



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