00010808.GIF
Hitler v. Hitler
Time "33, April l0,1939.p.20.
With some angry talk, Adolf Hitler last week launched a boat at
Wilhelnshaven.... On the previous day, another Hitler got off another
boat in Manhattan, and also delivered some angry talk-against his uncle
Adolf. William Patrik Hitler, 23, arriving in the U.S. for an anti-Hitler
lecture tour, explained that he hates his uncle because of 1) his policies,
2) his attitude toward his own family.
In 1909, Adolf Hitler's half-brother Alois went to Dublin, got a job as
a waiter, married an Irish girl named Bridget Elizabeth Dowling, had a son,
two years later deserted wife and child to go back to Germany. William grew
up to be a good-looking lad with a slight brogue and not much luck. His
worst luck, he said last week, was his name.
Because of his name, no one will give him a job in Britain. In
[year unreadable]. he went to berlin and applied for work there. Because
of his name, the application was forwarded to Uncle Adolf, who received
him coldly and told him that an adjutant would find him a job. The
adjutant found him a poor one, which he declined. During the 1934 blood
purge, he was arrested but soon released. This year he received hints that
he had better leave Germany. The Fuehrer, says William Hitler, is
singularly vulnerable on the question of his family relations.
Besides Half-Brother Alois, who now runs a prosperous Berlin Cafe (discreetly
under his first name), Adolf Hitler has a full sister and a half sister.
For a time his half-sister, Angela, served as his housekeeper at
Berchtesgaden. His father, also named Alois, was a source of great shame
to the Fuehrer: he had three wives... and died a drunkard. Furthermore,
Father Alois was the illegitimate son of an Austrian peasant girl, Maria
Schicklgruber and a miller named Johann Hiedler, who refused to recognise
the child. The boy, therefore grew up under his mother's name, and not
until he was 40 years old did he get permission from the authorities to
use his patronymic (which he trystated to Hitler). Had that permission
not been granted, Nazis would last week have raised their arms to the
speaker at Wilhelmshaven and cried not "Heil Hitler," but
"Heil Schicklgruber !"
Footnote...of whom the third was Adolf's mother ...
Hitler v. Hitler
Time 33, April 10, 1939 .p.20.
Home ·
Funding ·
Site Map ·
What's New? ·
Search
Nizkor
© The Nizkor Project, 1991-2009
This site is intended for educational purposes to teach about the Holocaust and to combat hatred.
Any
statements or excerpts found on this site are for educational purposes only.
As part of these educational purposes, Nizkor may include on this website materials, such as excerpts
from the writings of racists and antisemites. Far from approving these writings, Nizkor condemns them and provides
them so that its readers can learn the nature and extent of hate and antisemitic discourse. Nizkor urges the readers
of these pages to condemn racist and hate speech in all of its forms and manifestations.