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Hermann Ahlwardt

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Name
  
Hermann Ahlwardt


Role
  
Journalist

Hermann Ahlwardt Interview with Hermann Ahlwardt the German apostle of anti

Died
  
April 16, 1914, Leipzig, Germany

Hermann Ahlwardt (21 December 1846 – 16 April 1914) was a writer, a member of the Reichstag (German parliament) and a vehement antisemite.

Contents

Life

After stealing money collected for the children's Christmas party in 1889, Ahlwardt was fired from his job as a primary school principal. He blamed his financial difficulties on Jewish money-lenders and wrote a book claiming the German government was in the pay of the Jewish banker, Gerson von Bleichröder. He was jailed for four months when it came to light that the documents he used to support the claim had been written by Ahlwardt himself.

In 1892, Ahlwardt accused arms manufacturer Ludwig Loewe & Co. of being in a Jewish-French conspiracy to sell defective rifles to the German army in order to weaken the country militarily and was sentenced to five months' imprisonment for this unfounded defamation but was not jailed because by this time he had been elected to the Reichstag. He had run in a by-election for a very rural Brandenberg district seat. World agriculture prices were depressed at the time and he had told this farming community that their troubles were due to the Jews.

In the Reichstag he described Jews as "predators" and "cholera bacilli" that should be exterminated. The popularity of Ahlwardt and another antisemite Reichstag deputy, Otto Böckel, in conservative rural electorates prompted the German Conservative Party to add an antisemitic plank to their 1892 Tivoli Congress platform.

Ahlwardt's violent rhetoric alienated even other antisemitic politicians. In 1895 he was expelled from the German Social Reform Party and, with Otto Böckel, founded the Antisemitic People's Party (Antisemitische Volkspartei). He lost his seat in the 1903 Reichstag election and withdrew from politics. He visited the United States and on returning to Germany began campaigning against Freemasonry. He was imprisoned again in 1909, this time for blackmail, and in 1914 Ahlwardt died in a traffic accident in Leipzig at the age of 67.

Selected works

  • The desperate struggle of the Aryan peoples with Judaism, 3 vols., 1890
  • Part 2: The oath of a Jew
  • Part 3: Jewish tactics, at the same time answer to Mr. Ludwig Jacobowski
  • The processes Manché and Bleichröder, 1892
  • The Jews and the Germans. A supplement to the Jews, 1892
  • The Great Prophet. A reminder and parting word to my anti-Semitic friends, 1892
  • The Jewish question. Lecture, 1892
  • Ottering, 1892
  • My arrest, 1892
  • As the Jew does, Lecture, 1892
  • The Treaty of Germany, 1913
  • Truths about a German mine in Bohemia. Rudolfstädter Erzbergbau-Gewerkschaft in České Budějovice. A reality novel of a modern kind with the usual accompaniments of suicide, madness and despair, 1913
  • More light! The assassination of Friedrich Schiller, Lessing and Mozart before the Forum of Modern Literary and World History, 1914
  • More light! The Order of Jesus in His True Form and in His Relations with Freemasonry and Judaism, 1919
  • References

    Hermann Ahlwardt Wikipedia