- The Occult History of the Third Reich
"The Occult History of the Third Reich", starring
Patrick Allen and directed byDave Flitton is an English language 1991 four partHistory Channel documentary regarding the occult influences and history of theNazi Era, (pre, during and post) in Germany.Contents
The documentary was originally shown and released in four parts in 1991.
*Adolf Hitler
*The SS Blood and Soil
*The Enigma of the Swastika
*Himmler the MysticTelevision and DVD release
It was subsequently re-released on DVD in 1998 by Madacy [http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/6305247722] and again in 2004 in four parts by Pagasus [http://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B0002XOZLU]
ynopsis
The documentary contains mainly black and white as well as some color archival footage, with narration explaining the influences of alternative belief systems (occult, paganism, mysticism, etc) on the
Nazi ideology and Hitler's personal philosophy. It also documents the history and development of the ideas and symbols that would be used along with eugenicist racial politics to perpetrate the murder and oppression of millions during World War II.In the early 20th century, the young
Adolf Hitler was just one of many German-speaking people attracted by a new Germanic mythology that combined ancient legends and esoteric cosmologies with cutting-edge theories of genetic science. In the hands of the Nazis, the result was a new ideology that saw racial purity as the key to human destiny.This was a belief-system of arcane rituals and potent symbols, with the ancient swastika appropriated for the Nazi cause. By the time of the
Third Reich , Hitler and the Nazis had evolved an entirely new faith, complete with holy book, venerated relics and a priestly elite in the form of Himmler'sSS . It was a religion based on obedience, power, and the cult of the leader, with Hitler himself conceived in Messianic terms.Factual Inaccuracies
The figure of Fritzi Siegwein does not appear in any other documentation, written or filmed, regarding Nazi history.
ee also
*
Nazi mysticism
*Guido von List
*Karl Spiesberger
*Wilhelm Wulff The term "aryan" is attributed incorrectly to Madame Blavatsky, when it is actually the anglicized version of a word found in both Sanskrit ("Arya") and Avestan (see the wikipedia entry on "aryan" for this).
The other major mistake is that the Swastika comes from Tibet yet the symbol is part of ancient Vedic religion and later Hinduism in India. In other words, the section on the origins of the swastika is incorrect since it does not investigate the meaning of the term "aryan" or the history of the symbol of the swastika beyond what Blavatsky wrote.
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