George Zouvelos shared his post to the group: I am a descendant of a survivor of the Armenian Genocide! #MURDEROUS #DICTATOR ·
George Zouvelos added 6 new photos — with George Bail Boss Zouvelos.
#FATAL #ATTRACTION NO SURPRISE WHAT NEW BOOK REVEALS THAT THE 20TH-CENTURY #MURDEROUS #DICTATOR MOST IDOLIZED BY #HITLER was MURDEROUS #ISLAMIC...
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!["#FATAL #ATTRACTION
NO SURPRISE WHAT NEW BOOK REVEALS THAT THE 20TH-CENTURY #MURDEROUS #DICTATOR MOST IDOLIZED BY #HITLER was #KamalaMustafaAtatürk WHOSE IDEOLOGY AND COUNTRY #TURKEY CONTINUES TO PLAGUE THE ENTIRE WORLD TODAY #GeorgeZouvelos #Zouvelos #NeverForget1915 #ArmenianGenocide #GreekGenocide
"#AdolfHitler’s obsessions, for he was a man prone to unhealthy fixations, were dangerous for the world—whether with himself, with art school, with his dreams of grandeur, with Eva Braun, with his hatred of Jews—or, more obscurely, with Turkey.
To say that the roots of the #ThirdReich’s rise have been thoroughly examined would be an understatement. Yet one element of Hitler’s power grab has largely been neglected—the importance of Turkey and }Atatürk (or as Hitler called him, his “shining star”) on the #Führer’s thinking.
The two main #Nazi newspapers, the #Heimatland and #VölkischerBeobachter, were promoters of the “Turkish methods” as early as 1921.
The Nazis argued that brute force had been necessary for Turkey’s independence, and, insidiously, they highlighted Atatürk’s crackdown on ethnic minorities and all of those who dissented. One Nazi ideologue, #HansTrobst, wrote explicitly about Turkey’s “national purification” of “bloodsuckers” and “parasites” like #Armenians and #Greeks; Trobst was later invited to meet with Hitler after the leader read his writings on Turkey. Ihrig notes that Hitler’s secretary wrote to Trobst in Hitler’s name, declaring, “What you have witnessed in Turkey is what we will have to do in the future as well in order to liberate ourselves.”
A decade on, in 1933, Hitler would tell the Turkish daily Milliyet that Atatürk was, in his words, “the greatest man of the century,” and confess to the paper that in the “dark 1920s” “the successful struggle for liberation that [Atatürk] led in order to create Turkey had given him the confidence that the National Socialist movement would be successful as well.” Hitler called the Turkish movement his “shining star.” In 1938, on his birthday, Hitler would tell journalists and politicians that “Atatürk was the first to show that it is possible to mobilize and regenerate the resources that a country has lost. In this respect Atatürk was a teacher. #Mussolini was his first and I his second student.”
Today, Turkey in the German imagination has mostly to do with immigration, assimilation, and #EU membership. Ihrig has managed to show how the relationship between these two centers of civilization is far deeper, and far more fraught, than at first glance."
#WilliamOconnor #thedailybeast #ΓιωργοςΖουβελος"](https://scontent-lhr.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpa1/v/t1.0-9/p240x240/11041024_10206448963685501_7406660304078892657_n.jpg?oh=b54aa76b48b579d69f0271be2b51e27e&oe=558A495C)
!["#FATAL #ATTRACTION
NO SURPRISE WHAT NEW BOOK REVEALS THAT THE 20TH-CENTURY #MURDEROUS #DICTATOR MOST IDOLIZED BY #HITLER was #KamalaMustafaAtatürk WHOSE IDEOLOGY AND COUNTRY #TURKEY CONTINUES TO PLAGUE THE ENTIRE WORLD TODAY #GeorgeZouvelos #Zouvelos #NeverForget1915 #ArmenianGenocide #GreekGenocide
"#AdolfHitler’s obsessions, for he was a man prone to unhealthy fixations, were dangerous for the world—whether with himself, with art school, with his dreams of grandeur, with Eva Braun, with his hatred of Jews—or, more obscurely, with Turkey.
To say that the roots of the #ThirdReich’s rise have been thoroughly examined would be an understatement. Yet one element of Hitler’s power grab has largely been neglected—the importance of Turkey and }Atatürk (or as Hitler called him, his “shining star”) on the #Führer’s thinking.
The two main #Nazi newspapers, the #Heimatland and #VölkischerBeobachter, were promoters of the “Turkish methods” as early as 1921.
The Nazis argued that brute force had been necessary for Turkey’s independence, and, insidiously, they highlighted Atatürk’s crackdown on ethnic minorities and all of those who dissented. One Nazi ideologue, #HansTrobst, wrote explicitly about Turkey’s “national purification” of “bloodsuckers” and “parasites” like #Armenians and #Greeks; Trobst was later invited to meet with Hitler after the leader read his writings on Turkey. Ihrig notes that Hitler’s secretary wrote to Trobst in Hitler’s name, declaring, “What you have witnessed in Turkey is what we will have to do in the future as well in order to liberate ourselves.”
A decade on, in 1933, Hitler would tell the Turkish daily Milliyet that Atatürk was, in his words, “the greatest man of the century,” and confess to the paper that in the “dark 1920s” “the successful struggle for liberation that [Atatürk] led in order to create Turkey had given him the confidence that the National Socialist movement would be successful as well.” Hitler called the Turkish movement his “shining star.” In 1938, on his birthday, Hitler would tell journalists and politicians that “Atatürk was the first to show that it is possible to mobilize and regenerate the resources that a country has lost. In this respect Atatürk was a teacher. #Mussolini was his first and I his second student.”
Today, Turkey in the German imagination has mostly to do with immigration, assimilation, and #EU membership. Ihrig has managed to show how the relationship between these two centers of civilization is far deeper, and far more fraught, than at first glance."
#WilliamOconnor #thedailybeast #ΓιωργοςΖουβελος"](https://fbcdn-sphotos-d-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpt1/v/t1.0-9/p240x240/11061775_10206448964005509_4639023541237744562_n.jpg?oh=aa1936e8ab8b2b8afc44b7af191d7d4b&oe=55838233&__gda__=1434532817_ffb0f284c3a4d756a52f310d0a56234f)
!["#FATAL #ATTRACTION
NO SURPRISE WHAT NEW BOOK REVEALS THAT THE 20TH-CENTURY #MURDEROUS #DICTATOR MOST IDOLIZED BY #HITLER was #KamalaMustafaAtatürk WHOSE IDEOLOGY AND COUNTRY #TURKEY CONTINUES TO PLAGUE THE ENTIRE WORLD TODAY #GeorgeZouvelos #Zouvelos #NeverForget1915 #ArmenianGenocide #GreekGenocide
"#AdolfHitler’s obsessions, for he was a man prone to unhealthy fixations, were dangerous for the world—whether with himself, with art school, with his dreams of grandeur, with Eva Braun, with his hatred of Jews—or, more obscurely, with Turkey.
To say that the roots of the #ThirdReich’s rise have been thoroughly examined would be an understatement. Yet one element of Hitler’s power grab has largely been neglected—the importance of Turkey and }Atatürk (or as Hitler called him, his “shining star”) on the #Führer’s thinking.
The two main #Nazi newspapers, the #Heimatland and #VölkischerBeobachter, were promoters of the “Turkish methods” as early as 1921.
The Nazis argued that brute force had been necessary for Turkey’s independence, and, insidiously, they highlighted Atatürk’s crackdown on ethnic minorities and all of those who dissented. One Nazi ideologue, #HansTrobst, wrote explicitly about Turkey’s “national purification” of “bloodsuckers” and “parasites” like #Armenians and #Greeks; Trobst was later invited to meet with Hitler after the leader read his writings on Turkey. Ihrig notes that Hitler’s secretary wrote to Trobst in Hitler’s name, declaring, “What you have witnessed in Turkey is what we will have to do in the future as well in order to liberate ourselves.”
A decade on, in 1933, Hitler would tell the Turkish daily Milliyet that Atatürk was, in his words, “the greatest man of the century,” and confess to the paper that in the “dark 1920s” “the successful struggle for liberation that [Atatürk] led in order to create Turkey had given him the confidence that the National Socialist movement would be successful as well.” Hitler called the Turkish movement his “shining star.” In 1938, on his birthday, Hitler would tell journalists and politicians that “Atatürk was the first to show that it is possible to mobilize and regenerate the resources that a country has lost. In this respect Atatürk was a teacher. #Mussolini was his first and I his second student.”
Today, Turkey in the German imagination has mostly to do with immigration, assimilation, and #EU membership. Ihrig has managed to show how the relationship between these two centers of civilization is far deeper, and far more fraught, than at first glance."
#WilliamOconnor #thedailybeast #ΓιωργοςΖουβελος"](https://scontent-lhr.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/s261x260/11034310_10206448964245515_4739484593170641367_n.jpg?oh=9495dc7b478b8ad73a548a06874f7e0f&oe=5587B475)
!["#FATAL #ATTRACTION
NO SURPRISE WHAT NEW BOOK REVEALS THAT THE 20TH-CENTURY #MURDEROUS #DICTATOR MOST IDOLIZED BY #HITLER was #KamalaMustafaAtatürk WHOSE IDEOLOGY AND COUNTRY #TURKEY CONTINUES TO PLAGUE THE ENTIRE WORLD TODAY #GeorgeZouvelos #Zouvelos #NeverForget1915 #ArmenianGenocide #GreekGenocide
"#AdolfHitler’s obsessions, for he was a man prone to unhealthy fixations, were dangerous for the world—whether with himself, with art school, with his dreams of grandeur, with Eva Braun, with his hatred of Jews—or, more obscurely, with Turkey.
To say that the roots of the #ThirdReich’s rise have been thoroughly examined would be an understatement. Yet one element of Hitler’s power grab has largely been neglected—the importance of Turkey and }Atatürk (or as Hitler called him, his “shining star”) on the #Führer’s thinking.
The two main #Nazi newspapers, the #Heimatland and #VölkischerBeobachter, were promoters of the “Turkish methods” as early as 1921.
The Nazis argued that brute force had been necessary for Turkey’s independence, and, insidiously, they highlighted Atatürk’s crackdown on ethnic minorities and all of those who dissented. One Nazi ideologue, #HansTrobst, wrote explicitly about Turkey’s “national purification” of “bloodsuckers” and “parasites” like #Armenians and #Greeks; Trobst was later invited to meet with Hitler after the leader read his writings on Turkey. Ihrig notes that Hitler’s secretary wrote to Trobst in Hitler’s name, declaring, “What you have witnessed in Turkey is what we will have to do in the future as well in order to liberate ourselves.”
A decade on, in 1933, Hitler would tell the Turkish daily Milliyet that Atatürk was, in his words, “the greatest man of the century,” and confess to the paper that in the “dark 1920s” “the successful struggle for liberation that [Atatürk] led in order to create Turkey had given him the confidence that the National Socialist movement would be successful as well.” Hitler called the Turkish movement his “shining star.” In 1938, on his birthday, Hitler would tell journalists and politicians that “Atatürk was the first to show that it is possible to mobilize and regenerate the resources that a country has lost. In this respect Atatürk was a teacher. #Mussolini was his first and I his second student.”
Today, Turkey in the German imagination has mostly to do with immigration, assimilation, and #EU membership. Ihrig has managed to show how the relationship between these two centers of civilization is far deeper, and far more fraught, than at first glance."
#WilliamOconnor #thedailybeast #ΓιωργοςΖουβελος"](https://scontent-lhr.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-xap1/v/t1.0-9/p160x160/1908451_10206448964685526_2331152276998847576_n.jpg?oh=05ed8597139ecda5533df1b21f839a97&oe=557A0CA5)
!["#FATAL #ATTRACTION
NO SURPRISE WHAT NEW BOOK REVEALS THAT THE 20TH-CENTURY #MURDEROUS #DICTATOR MOST IDOLIZED BY #HITLER was #KamalaMustafaAtatürk WHOSE IDEOLOGY AND COUNTRY #TURKEY CONTINUES TO PLAGUE THE ENTIRE WORLD TODAY #GeorgeZouvelos #Zouvelos #NeverForget1915 #ArmenianGenocide #GreekGenocide
"#AdolfHitler’s obsessions, for he was a man prone to unhealthy fixations, were dangerous for the world—whether with himself, with art school, with his dreams of grandeur, with Eva Braun, with his hatred of Jews—or, more obscurely, with Turkey.
To say that the roots of the #ThirdReich’s rise have been thoroughly examined would be an understatement. Yet one element of Hitler’s power grab has largely been neglected—the importance of Turkey and }Atatürk (or as Hitler called him, his “shining star”) on the #Führer’s thinking.
The two main #Nazi newspapers, the #Heimatland and #VölkischerBeobachter, were promoters of the “Turkish methods” as early as 1921.
The Nazis argued that brute force had been necessary for Turkey’s independence, and, insidiously, they highlighted Atatürk’s crackdown on ethnic minorities and all of those who dissented. One Nazi ideologue, #HansTrobst, wrote explicitly about Turkey’s “national purification” of “bloodsuckers” and “parasites” like #Armenians and #Greeks; Trobst was later invited to meet with Hitler after the leader read his writings on Turkey. Ihrig notes that Hitler’s secretary wrote to Trobst in Hitler’s name, declaring, “What you have witnessed in Turkey is what we will have to do in the future as well in order to liberate ourselves.”
A decade on, in 1933, Hitler would tell the Turkish daily Milliyet that Atatürk was, in his words, “the greatest man of the century,” and confess to the paper that in the “dark 1920s” “the successful struggle for liberation that [Atatürk] led in order to create Turkey had given him the confidence that the National Socialist movement would be successful as well.” Hitler called the Turkish movement his “shining star.” In 1938, on his birthday, Hitler would tell journalists and politicians that “Atatürk was the first to show that it is possible to mobilize and regenerate the resources that a country has lost. In this respect Atatürk was a teacher. #Mussolini was his first and I his second student.”
Today, Turkey in the German imagination has mostly to do with immigration, assimilation, and #EU membership. Ihrig has managed to show how the relationship between these two centers of civilization is far deeper, and far more fraught, than at first glance."
#WilliamOconnor #thedailybeast #ΓιωργοςΖουβελος"](https://fbcdn-sphotos-b-a.akamaihd.net/hphotos-ak-xpf1/v/t1.0-9/p235x165/11041801_10206448965005534_4231927000750474472_n.jpg?oh=dee1d7b643c2c32dbbf4f1c60a2e1db4&oe=55775F0F&__gda__=1433529881_223cc0fa1ddac06a19a8758b2191fda8)
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