Page 135 - The Track Of The Jew Through The Ages - Alfred Rosenberg
P. 135
Alfred Rosenberg
under his chairmanship, he had shown that for him indeed every
means was good. "Young Italy" arose through him. "But it was not
sufficient for the great master", says D'Arlincourt, "to revolutionise
a country, it was necessary to disturb everybody. Young Germany
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was founded, Young Poland, Young Switzerland, Young Europe".
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Weishaupt, the much extolled idealist, wrote to a high-
ranking brother of the order: "In order to remain masters of our
debates we should speak sometimes in one way at other times in
another. Let us always say that the end will show what is to be taken
as truth; one speaks sometimes in this way, at other times in another
in order not to be found out, in order to make our actual thought
impenetrable for the uninitiated. I want to make spies of the adepts,
for themselves, for others, for all".
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A high-ranking brother wrote to another (Nubius):
"Everything subjects itself to the level to which we wish to lower
mankind. We hope to undermine in order to rule . But I fear that
. .
we have gone too far; when I observe the personalities of our agents,
I begin to fear not being able to control the storm that has been
conjured up ... We have robbed the people of religious and
monarchical belief, their honesty and family, and now, when we
hear a thunder from afar, we tremble since the monster may devour
us. We have stripped the people, bit by bit, of every honest feeling;
it will be merciless . . The world has been led to a dependence on
.
democracy and for some time democracy has meant to me always
demagogy". 253
250
L'ltalie rouge, Paris, 1815, pp.5-6. [See note below.][ Young Europe was a
society formed in 1 834 in Berne by Mazzini along with refugees from Italy, Poland
and Germany.]
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[Charles Victor-Prevot, Viscount d'Arlincourt (1788-1 856) was a novelist and
playwright who wrote a history ofthe Ital ian revolutions from 1 846 to 1 850 entitled
L'ltalie rouge, on Histoire des revolutions de Rome, Naples, Palerme ... (1850).]
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[This letter was apparently written by a member of the Italian Carbonari, w ho
were similar to the Freemasons, on April 3, 1 844. It outlined a plan of subversion
of the Catholic Church (see E. Barbier, Les infiltrations magoniques dans I'Eglise,
Paris/Brussels: Desclee de Brouwer, 1901, p.5).]
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Cretineau-Joly, L'Eglise romaine en face de la revolution francaise [2 vols.,
1859)]. [Jacques Cretineau-Joly (1803-1875) was a French historian who first
published the letter mentioned above in his work on the Roman Church and the
French Revolution.]
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