Source: Hitler’s Beneficiaries: Plunder, Racial War, and the Nazi Welfare State (2007), p. 5
“I read the first edition of 'Mein Kampf' when it came out in 1923 and even then I knew Hitler meant what he said. I knew the history of anti-Semitism going back for centuries, and I knew all about pogroms in Russia and Eastern Europe. When I grew up and whent to school in Moscow, I experienced anti-Semitism and the restrictions on where Jews could live and work. Hitler systemized anti-Semitism. Pogroms are my business… Oh yes, I could be a professor of anti-Semitism.”
Testament to a Lost People
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Roman Vishniac 11
American photographer 1897–1990Related quotes
a few years later https://books.google.ca/books?id=3jjNW-_TnusC&pg=PA176
About
Massad, in "Semites and anti-Semites, that is the question," Al-Ahram, 2004
On Anti-Semitism
Ibid.
"The Ends of Zionism: Racism and the Palestinian Struggle"
http://www.peuplesmonde.com/article.php3?id_article=381 Interview with Norman Finkelstein]
Other sourced statements
Source: The Rainbow of Mathematics: A History of the Mathematical Sciences (2000), p. 127.
2 December 2015 https://www.jpost.com/Opinion/Candidly-Speaking-Temper-compassion-toward-Muslim-refugees-with-reality-436099
"Quotes of the Day", The Times, 18 February 2005, p. 2.
2000s, 2005
As quoted in Talks with Mussolini, Emil Ludwig, Boston, MA, Little, Brown and Company (1933) pp. 70-71. Mussolini’s interview was in 1932.
1930s