- Natalie de Bogory
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The Protocols First publication of The Protocols
Programma zavoevaniya mira evreyamiWriters, editors, and publishers associated with The Protocols
Carl Ackerman · Boris Brasol
G. Butmi · Natalie de Bogory
Denis Fahey · Henry Ford · L. Fry
Howell Gwynne · Harris Houghton
Pavel Krushevan · Victor Marsden
Sergei Nilus · George Shanks
Fyodor Vinberg · Clyde J. WrightDebunkers of The Protocols
Vladimir Burtsev · Herman Bernstein Norman Cohn · John S. Curtiss
Philip Graves · Michael Hagemeister
Pierre-André Taguieff · Lucien WolfCommentaries on The Protocols
The International Jew
The Cause of World Unrest
The Jewish Bolshevism
Mein KampfMain article: Protocols of the Elders of ZionNatalie de Bogory, (also deBogory), is primarily known for her notorious work in translating from the Russian language into the English language, and subsequently distributing and participating in having published the first or second American edition in the United States of the infamous Plagiarism known as the Protocols of the Elders of Zion. There were two different editions printed in the United States in 1920. The earlier, entitled The Protocols and World Revolution, associated with Boris Brasol and published by Small, Maynard and Company. The later, entitled Praemonitus Praemunitus associated with Harris A. Houghton and published by The Beckwith Company.
Contents
Biography
She was the granddaughter of a general in the service of the tsar of Russia. Her parents had been imprisoned under the tsarist government for revolutionary involvements. Her father Vladimir escaped from Siberia and later married her mother Julie Gortinsky in Switzerland. Gortinsky was from a noble family and educated at the Smolny Institute in St. Petersburg. Natalie was born in Geneva. She married Albert Sonnichsen, a writer,[1] had one child Eric in 1909, and was divorced from in 1919. Eventually she moved to Paris, after losing custody of her son in a very public legal fight, and she worked as Sol Hurok's publicity person in Europe and eventually a writer for the International Herald Tribune. She died in 1936 in Paris.
She worked as the assistant of the physician and military intelligence officer in the service of the U.S. War Department, Harris Ayers Houghton, who paid for her services out of his own private funds. Houghton engaged her as his personal and investigative assistant, for nine months, and subsequently claimed that no public funds were used for her services. She had obtained a Russian version of the Protocols of Zion from the notorious White Russian and extremely antisemitic, tsarist officer Boris Brasol, and thereafter she requested, under her own initiative and received authorization to translate it into the English language. She did not work alone, however, but with close consultation with Brasol, and another former tsarist officer, General G. J. Sosnowsky.
References
- Norman Cohn - Warrant for Genocide - (London: Serif, 1996) ISBN 1 897959 25 7
- Cesare G. De Michelis - The Non-exitent Manuscript - (Lincoln and London :The University of Nebraska Press, 2004) ISBN 0-8032-1727-7 (cloth)
- Robert Singerman - "The American Career of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion" - American Jewish History, Vol. 71 (1981) pp. 48-78
See also
- Boris Brasol
- Harris A. Houghton
- Protocols of Zion
- Serge Nilus
References
- ^ Who's Who; 1919
Categories:- American translators
- American people of World War I
- Protocols of the Elders of Zion
- 1936 deaths
- Jewish biography stubs
- Jewish history stubs
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