Nazi-Church bell made controversy in Austria

This Church bell in Austria is embossed with a swastika and praises to Adolf Hitler.

Both Germany and Austria had plenty of Nazi-Churches, presenting a different gospel.
Both Germany and Austria had plenty of Nazi-Churches, presenting a different gospel.

Like many others in Austria’s countryside, a tower bell above the red-tiled rooftops of Wolfpassing village marks the passing of each hour with an unspectacular “bong.” But this bell is unique: It is embossed with a swastika and praise to Adolf Hitler.
And unlike more visible remnants of the Nazi era, the bell was apparently overlooked by official Austria up to now.

Local historian Johannes Kammerstaetter says most villagers would have known about it. But village mayor Josef Sonnleitner asserts even the villagers had no clue until the first media reports last month on the “Fuehrerglocke,” or “Fuehrer Bell”.

Propagating Nazi values or praising the era is illegal in Austria. Kammerstaetter, the historian, has formally asked state prosecutors to examine whether the government’s sale of the bell is a criminal offence. He says the change of ownership could constitute a case of “spreading National Socialist ideology” on the part of the government agency in charge of state-owned property

Raimund Fastenbauer, a senior official of Vienna’s Jewish community, invokes other concerns, noting that other Hitler-era relics like the dictator’s house of birth in the western town of Braunau have become a magnet for neo-Nazis.

“I think the best thing would be if the bell disappeared and was buried somewhere,” he says.
For its part, the government says that the sale was legal, along with the decision to keep the bell in the belfry as an integral component of the castle.

Economics Minister Reinhold Mitterlehner says the agency overseeing the sale was not aware of the inscription
Ernst Eichinger, a spokesman for the agency responsible for government real-estate, says that with a portfolio of more than 28,000 buildings — many of them huge — “we cannot search every centimeter” before a sale.

Concerns are heightened by the lack of clarity about what the new owner, Tobias Hufnagl, plans to do with the relict. Two web domains linked to him or his holding company, hufnagl.cc and thinvestments.com, did not open.

Sonnleitner, the Wolfpassing mayor, says has not been able to directly contact Hufnagl, despite weeks of trying.
In a terse email this week responding to numerous Associated Press queries seeking permission to film the bell and asking about its fate, Hufnagl said he had “no interest” in exchanges with the AP.

Source: AP

My comment:

There is an old saying. Once a dog, always a dog. Once a Nazi, always a Nazi.

During the Church reformation in Germany, idols in the form of wood was carried out of Reformed churches and bunt. All of it. No idols of saints and madonnas of the Roman Catholic religion, would again creep into the places of worship, and keep people in bondage to damnable idolatry.

Likewise: When Norway was liberate from Nazi-occupation in 1945, all symbols of the evil regime were removed and destroyed. Never again to appear on liberated Norwegian soil.

A small numbers of Nazi-artifacts were kept. Not to be honored and glorified, but to be exhibited inside museums.

If the Austrians would like to repent form their Nazi past, they need to keep Nazi-Church bells inside museums. And warn the young children never again to be deceived to follow the calling of such bells.

The Church in Europe has a horrible past of antisemitism and support of fascist ideology. Today, few Church goers seems to have understood anything.  The hate of Jews in Europe has shifted towards the Jews inside the state of Israel.

Written by Ivar

42 per cent in Austria see positive sides of Hitler

Poll finds that 54 per cent think neo-Nazi groups could be successful in Austrian elections if there wasn’t a law banning them.

If the Nazis were permitted to run for election in Austria, they would have won.
A Nazi party would have won an election in Austria today. This is Hitler being hailed in Vienna during Anschluss, March 12th 1938.

Forty two percent of Austrians think “not everything was bad under Hitler,” while 57 per cent think “there was nothing positive about the Hitler era,” according to a poll conducted by newspaper Der Standard that was published on Friday.

The poll was conducted among 502 eligible voters in Austria and published ahead of the 75th anniversary of the country’s annexation by Nazi Germany.

61 per cent thought the country adequately dealt with its Nazi past, while 39 per cent thought more should be done.

Nazi Germany annexed Austria in 1938, and a debate still smoulders on whether Austrians were Hitler’s first victims or willing accomplices. Austria’s Jewish population was nearly wiped out in the ensuing Holocaust.

Source: The Jerusalem Post

Anschluss: Hitler was greeted as an Holy Roman emperor in Austria on 12 March 1938.
Hitler was greeted as an Holy Roman emperor in Vienna on 12 March 1938.

My comment:

Once a Nazi, always a Nazi.

With 42 per cent of today’s Austrians favorable to the Nazis, we are back in the days from 1933 to 1936.

Adolf Hitler got 36 per cent of the votes in 1932.

He might have done much better, if he had run for elections in Vienna today.

As late as in 1960, 89 per cent of the people of Austria were Roman Catholics.

Before the Austrians welcomed to be included in the Third Reich, the Austrians were a part of the Holy Roman Empire of Germany, the second Roman empire.

The inspiration of building a Roman Empire, is also behind the European Union (EU). The Austrians will hail the political leader, who will soon align and unite all the empires. Just like the dream of their Roman Catholic brother, Adolf Hitler.

Written by Ivar

Austria battling views from Nazi past after Gaza flotilla

Vienna city council resolution against Israel was “unbalanced”.

Austria’s chancellor Werner Fayman tries to give a balanced comment on anti-Jewish agitation in Vienna..

This is a statement by Austria’s chancellor Werner Fayman. As the head of the Social Democratic Party (SPO), He has declared as “unbalanced” a recent Vienna city council resolution which condemns Israel’s attack of the Gaza aid flotilla late last month.

Most of Vienna’s city council democratic party members formed a coalition in May with the extremist right-wing Austrian Freedom Party, which is linked to neo-Nazis, and the alliance voted to condemn Israel’s response to the Mavi Marmara mission.

Ariel Muzicant tells about an explosion of fresh Jew-hate in Austria.

“There will be a debate within the SPO; people seem to realize they have been misled and misused,” said Ariel Muzicant, head of Austria’s Jewish community.

“It was not just a humanitarian flotilla. Islamists were on board and decided to commit criminal acts against Israel. [This was] not shown in the first days.”

In related news, a local German politician from the Free Democratic Party (FDP) in Stade, Germany sued three Left Party members last week over their support for the Gaza flotilla and resigned from his post as chairman. “As liberals, we want to send a clear message against this nasty anti-Semitism in the Left Party, nor are we blind in the right eye,”

Thomas Schalski-Seehann told the Hamburger Abendblatt. He is the first politician to charge the Leftist members with “incitement to hatred” and the “support of a terrorist organization.”

Two Left Party members and a former Left Party MP and foreign policy spokesman were on the Turkish flagship which was intercepted by Israel off Gaza.

Source: Jerusalem Post

Breaking News:

Viennese Jews facing harassment

Vienna: June 17, 2010

Jews in Vienna reportedly have been facing almost daily harassment since Israel’s deadly interception of a Gaza-bound flotilla.

Ariel Muzicant, president of the Viennese Jewish community, told ORF, the Austrian national public broadcaster, that members of the Jewish community have been subjected to verbal abuse and spitting. He said the violence has been directed at people who are identifiable by their clothes as being Jews and that there was no physical violence, according to DPA, citing the ORF report.

Muzicant, who heads the Vienna Israelite Community, or IKG, the body that represents Vienna’s Jewish community, also said his organization filed lawsuits against the organizers of recent anti-Israel demonstrations since anti-Semitic slogans and images were used, according to DPA. The protesters reportedly were mostly of Turkish or Arab origin.

Source: JTA

My comment:

According to Ariel Muzicant, banners equating the Nazi swastika and the Star of David were present at the rallies in Vienna last week. A sign stating “Hitler wake up” was displayed at an anti-Israeli demonstration organized by left-wing group the Anti-Imperialist Committee and Austrian Muslims.

Adolf Hitler recieves a hero's welcome when he "attacked" Austria in 1938,

Adolf Hitler was born in Austria. Jew hate flourished in the old Empire of Austria Hungary, that was demolished in 1918, since Vienna had been on the loosing team in World War I.

But the Austrian wanted a re-match, and longed to be a part of a “great” Third Reich. As the only European nation, Austria welcomed the German “invaders” on 12 of March 1938. 14th of March Adolf Hitler was received as a hero in the Austrian capital.

There were 185.000 Jews in Vienna in 1938. After the war, only 25.000 remained.

Neo-Nazism is on the rise in Austria. There is again a longing for a strong Fuhrer, that can make the Austrians feel great. The common enemy that can create a united front in Austria, is the Jews. There are still 7.500 Jews living in Austria, the large majority in Vienna. I guess God of the Bible will send some hunters there also, to get His chosen people home where they belong.

Austrian neo-Nazis support the Ayatollah´s nuclear bomb

The right wingers in Austria has issued death threats to leaders of organizations that tries to stop the Ayatollah getting a nuclear bomb.

There seems to be no major differense. Their common enemy is the Jews.


This is confirmed by Austia-born Simone Dinah Hartmann, who is leading the «Stop Bomben» campaign. This organisaion has offices in five European contries, and have been able to get corporations to cancel trade agreements with Mahmoud Ahmadinejads Iran.

The web site «Alpen-donau.info» is not related to the Austrian «Freedom party». But Heartman warns that the neo-Nazis in Austria is working hard to infiltrate the right wing political entry.

The neo-Nazis in Austria defend a nuclar Iran from their common hate towards the Jewish people.

Austria seems to seek even closer ties with the mullahs. Instead of isolating the Islamic Republic, Vienna just welcomed Manouchehr Mottaki, Iran’s foreign minister, who in 2006 gave the opening speech at Tehran’s Holocaust denial conference.

While most European countries have reduced their business ties with the mullahs, Austrian exports to Iran, including sophisticated machinery and electronic goods, rose by almost 6 per cent in 2009, reaching approximately €350 million.

That figure is even more astounding given that during last year’s world financial crisis, Austrian exports to the rest of the world fell 20 per cent. Several Austrian companies are suspected of working with front companies affiliated with the Iranian Revolutionary Guard. Citing information provided by the companies’ own Web sites, Emanuele Ottolenghi writes in his recent book «Under a Mushroom Cloud: Europe, Iran and the Bomb» that Tech Hydropower, a company owned by the Austrian Andritz group, is involved in the construction of an Iranian dam on behalf of Sepazad Engineering, the Guard’s engineering branch.

As «Azadi» the call for freedom, was heard throughout the streets of Tehran this summer, the Austrian Chambers of Commerce organized an Iran seminar to intensify business ties with the mullah dictatorship. During the visit of a high-ranking Iranian business delegation to Austria in March of last year, the president of the Chambers of Commerce, Christoph Leitl, who like Foreign Minister Spindelegger is a member of the conservative party, clearly stated his vision for future trade between the two countries.

Kurt Waldheim was a Nazi officer during World War II

The Mottaki visit on 25th of April was no aberration. Vienna has a long tradition of appeasing the Islamic Republic. In 1984, Austrian Social-Democrat Erwin Lanc was the first Western foreign minister to visit Iran after the Islamic Revolution. Kurt Waldheim, the Austrian president whose term in office was darkened by revelations about his Nazi past, became the first Western head of state to pay the regime in Tehran a courtesy visit in 1991. Waldheim even placed a wreath at Ayatollah Khomeini’s sarcophagus. His trip to Tehran paved the way for further visits by high-ranking politicians from other Western European countries—especially from Germany.

Source: Danish Christian Daily «Kristelig Dagblad».

My comment:

That the former UN Secretary General Kurt Waldheim was a Nazi officer during World war II, seems to have been forgotten. The neo-Nazis has one thing in common with the old. They hate the Jewish people.

If you want to harm the Jewish people, you will work hard to get rid of the state of Israel. All kinds of United Nation related organizations seems to have this common goal. Its understandable that a man like Kurt Waltheim chose to work with the Islamic Word in the UN. He was the head of «the perfect tool» to complete what Hitler did not manage.

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