Citat:
Ursprungligen postat av FritzDaCat
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Så, då vet vi. Källan är alltså inte någon överlevare, utan Himmlers älskarinna 1944.
Källan är ju Martin Bormann jr, den katolske prästjäveln, som fablar sina sinnessjuka påhitt i en "terapigrupp". Allt förmedlat av den judiska ärkelögnerskan Gitta Sereny. Hedwig Potthast, Himmlers sekreterare, var förmodligen död när Bormann jr yttrade detta år 1990. Potthasts dotter med Himmler, Gudrun, lever dock om jag inte missminner mig fortfarande och har "fel åsikter" (hon är tysk nationalist och vägrar ljuga om sina minnen av Himmler osv.)
A.S.Marquez har läst en annan bok där Bormann jr:s amsaga (förmodligen knyckt från någon morbid saga eller legenderna om markis de Sades Minski (kannibaljätten i
Juliette som bor i närheten av Vesuvius) omtalas:
http://forum.codoh.com/viewtopic.php?p=18460
Citat:
"---I recently read a 2005 Portuguese edition of a German book on what became of the children of III Reich leaders, where the following is described (my translation from Portuguese to English):
from the book wrote:
Heinrich Himmler's name and his home have a particularly atrocious meaning for Martin Bormann [the son, i.e. the one who became a priest]. Approximately one year before the War's end, during one of his visits, together with his mother and sister, to Himmler, his secretary and lover Hedwig Potthast suddenly told them she wished to show them something of great interest, a very special collection of her chief; they went to the loft and she opened a door; they saw tables and chairs made of human body parts. The seat was a carved pelvis; another one's legs were human legs complete with the feet. Immediately, miss Pothast showed them a copy of "Mein Kampf" bound in skin from a human back. Bormann remembers the woman explaining everything with forensic sobriety as if it had happenned only yesterday. He remembers how disturbed and petrified he and his sister were, and how his mother, equally disturbed, tried to console them, after they left, by telling them how Himmler had tried to present, as a gift to their father, Martin Bormann, a similar copy of "Mein Kampf" and how he had refused it in horror. For him, that was an exageration, his mother told them. We might as well add "even for him".
Original German edition: Norman and Stephan Lebert, "Denn Du Tragst Meinem Namen," Blessing Verlag, Munich 2000. Portuguese edition: "Também Usas o Meu Nome", Ambar, Lisbon 2005.
Talk of unhinged Nazis...
Even if one believes in furniture made of pelvises with actual feet etc., one cannot speculate enough on why would Bormann have refused the offer. Given the strained relationships between the top leaders of the III Reich, he might well have prefered to keep it, in order to be able to show it to Hitler himself. Can you imagine the scene? Bormann to Hitler:"Mein Fuehrer, here is a gift Himmler sent to me: your great bestseller bound in human skin..."
In spite of this sort of idiocy, the book has some interesting, little-known data of a more believable nature, namely concerning Gudrun Himmler.---"