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GODS AND BEASTS -- THE NAZIS AND THE OCCULT

by Dusty Sklar
© 1977 by Dusty Sklar

For my mother and father and for Dave, Steve, Lisa, and Joe

Most important, the central doctrine of nazism, that the Jew was evil and had to be exterminated, had its origin in the Gnostic position that there were two worlds, one good and one evil, one dark and one light, one materialistic and one spiritual.... The mystical teachings of Guido von List, Lanz von Liebenfels, and Rudolf von Sebottendorff were modern restatements of Gnosticism.

When the apocalyptic promise of Christ's resurrection was broken, the Gnostics sought to return men to God by another route, more Oriental than Hellenist. They devised a dualistic cosmology to set against the teachings of the early Christian Church, which, they claimed, were only common deceptions, unsuited for the wise. The truth was esoteric. Only the properly initiated could appreciate it. It belonged to a secret tradition which had come down through certain mystery schools. The truth was, God could never become man. There were two separate realms -- one spiritual, the other material. The spiritual realm, created by God, was all good; the material realm, created by the demiurge, all evil. Man needed to be saved, not from Original Sin, but from enslavement to matter. For this, he had to learn the mystical arts. Thus Gnosticism became a source for the occult tradition.

A famous medieval Gnostic sect, the Cathars, came to identify the Old Testament god, Jehovah, with the demiurge, the creator of the material world and therefore the equivalent of Satan. Within Gnosticism, then, existed the idea that the Jewish god was really the devil, responsible for all the evil in the world. He was opposed to the New Testament God. The Cathars tried to eliminate the Old Testament from Church theology and condemned Judaism as a work of Satan's, whose aim was to tempt men away from the spirit. Jehovah, they said, was the god of an earth "waste and void," with darkness "upon the face of the deep." Was he not cruel and capricious? They quoted Scripture to prove it. The New Testament God, on the other hand, was light. He declared that "there is neither male nor female," for everyone was united in Christ. These two gods, obviously, had nothing in common.

The synagogue was regarded as profane by Christians. The Cathars -- themselves considered heretical by the Church -- castigated Catholics for refusing to purge themselves of Jewish sources; Church members often blamed the [Cathar] Christian heresy on Jewish mysticism, which was considered an inspiration for Gnostic sorcery.

But Gnostic cosmology, though officially branded "false," pervaded the thinking of the Church. The Jews were widely thought to be magicians. It was believed that they could cause rain, and when there was a drought, they were encouraged to do so. Despite the displeasure of the Roman Popes, Christians, when they were in straitened circumstances, practiced Jewish customs, even frequenting synagogues.

This sheds light on an otherwise incomprehensible recurring theme within Nazi literature, as, for example, "The Earth-Centered Jew Lacks a Soul," by one of the chief architects of Nazi dogma, Alfred Rosenberg, who held that whereas other people believe in a Hereafter and in immortality, the Jew affirms the world and will not allow it to perish. The Gnostic secret is that the spirit is trapped in matter, and to free it, the world must be rejected. Thus, in his total lack of world-denial, the Jew is snuffing out the inner light, and preventing the millennium:

Where the idea of the immortal dwells, the longing for the journey or the withdrawal from temporality must always emerge again; hence, a denial of the world will always reappear. And this is the meaning of the non-Jewish peoples: they are the custodians of world-negation, of the idea of the Hereafter, even if they maintain it in the poorest way. Hence, one or another of them can quietly go under, but what really matters lives on in their descendants. If, however, the Jewish people were to perish, no nation would be left which would hold world-affirmation in high esteem -- the end of all time would be here.

... the Jew, the only consistent and consequently the only viable yea-sayer to the world, must be found wherever other men bear in themselves ... a compulsion to overcome the world.... On the other hand, if the Jew were continually to stifle us, we would never be able to fulfill our mission, which is the salvation of the world, but would, to be frank, succumb to insanity, for pure world-affirmation, the unrestrained will for a vain existence, leads to no other goal. It would literally lead to a void, to the destruction not only of the illusory earthly world but also of the truly existent, the spiritual. Considered in himself the Jew represents nothing else but this blind will for destruction, the insanity of mankind. It is known that Jewish people are especially prone to mental disease. "Dominated by delusions," said Schopenhauer about the Jew.

... To strip the world of its soul, that and nothing else is what Judaism wants. This, however, would be tantamount to the world's destruction.

This remarkable statement, seemingly the rantings of a lunatic, expresses the Gnostic theme that the spirit of man, essentially divine, is imprisoned in an evil world. The way out of this world is through rejection of it. But the Jew alone stands in the way. Behind all the talk about "the earth-centered Jew" who "lacks a soul"; about the demonic Jew who will despoil the Aryan maiden; about the cabalistic work of the devil in Jewish finance; about the sinister revolutionary Jewish plot to take over the world and cause the decline of civilization, there is the shadow of ancient Gnosticism.

***

By the clever and continuous use of propaganda a people can even be made to mistake heaven for hell, and vice versa, the most miserable life for Paradise. (Adolph Hitler)

-- Gods & Beasts: The Nazis & the Occult, by Dusty Sklar

Pistis Sophia: A Gnostic Miscellany, translated by G.R.S. Mead
Be Here Now,  by Ram Dass
The Secret Doctrine -- The Synthesis of Science, Religion, and Philosophy, by Helena Petrovna Blavatsky
Isis Unveiled, by Helena P. Blavatsky
Nietzsche and Madame Blavatsky: Their Doctrines Stated and Compared, by Theosophical Quarterly Magazine 1909-1912
Hitler's Family: In the Shadow of the Dictator, directed by Oliver Halmburger, Thomas Staehler
Triumph of the Will, directed by Leni Riefenstahl
Mein Kampf, by Adolf Hitler
The Origin of the "Brownies," by Palmer Cox
Is Hitler a Rosicrucian? -- The Rosicrucian Forum 1939, by Rosicrucian Editors

The Mind and God of Adolf Hitler, by Rhawn Joseph, Ph.D.
Journey to the East, by Hermann Hesse
Marquis De Sade: His Life and Work, by Dr. Iwan Bloch
The Scented Garden of Abdullah the Satirist of Shiraz, by Ordo Templi Orientis
The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion, by Sergyei A. Nilus
The International Jew, by Henry Ford
Trust No Fox on His Green Heath and No Jew on His Oath, by Elwira Bauer
MoonChild, by Aleister Crowley
Thus Spake Zarathustra, by Friedrich Nietzsche
Paradise Lost, by John Milton
Asgard and the Gods -- The Tales and Traditions of Our Northern Ancestors Forming a Complete Manual of Norse Mythology, Adapted from the Work of Dr. W. Wagner by M. W. MacDowall and Edited by W. S. W. Anson
Obedience to Authority, by Stanley Milgram
Theozoology, or the Science of the Sodomite Apelings and the Divine Electron, by Dr. Jorg Lanz von Liebenfels
New Platonism and Alchemy, by Alexander Wilder
33rd Degree (1802) of the Southern Jurisdiction of the United States, Called Sovereign Grand Inspector General, or Supreme Council of the 33rd, by Anonymous
Journal Review of Religions, by Hazrat Inayat Khan
The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception, by Max Heindel
The Ibis, by Ovid, translated by A. S. Kline
Metamorphoses, by Ovid, translated by A. S. Kline
The Rosicrucian Emblems of Daniel Cramer
The Divine Pymander: The Hermetica of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus, translation by John Everard
Theologia Germanica, by Anonymous (Meister Eckhart)
Timaeus, by Plato, translated by Benjamin Jowett
Nationalism, by Rabindranath Tagore
Teutonic Knights, by Wikipedia
The Song Celestial: Bhagavad Gita, by Edwin Arnold
Kautilya's Arthashastra, by R. Shamasastry
The Rig Veda, translated by Ralph T. H. Griffith
The Pictorial Language of Hieronymus Bosch, by Clement A. Wertheim Aymes
The Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz, by Johann Valentin Andreae 
The Life of Paracelsus, by Franz Hartmann

The Life of Philippus Theophrastus Bombast of Hohenheim Known by the Name of Paracelsus and the Substance of his Teachings, by Franz Hartmann, M.D.
The Myth of the 20th Century, by Alfred Rosenberg
Theses on Communist Morality in the Sphere of Marital Relations, by Alexandra Kollontai, 1921
WOTAN, by Carl Gustav Jung
The Clash of Civilizations, by Samuel P. Huntington
Facts and Fascism, by George Seldes
Hitler's Secret Backers, by Sidney Warburg
Wall Street and the Rise of Hitler, by Antony C. Sutton
The Abandonment of the Jews -- America and the Holocaust, 1941-1945, by David S. Wyman
Wagner, Hitler and Anti-Semitism, by Ralph Glasgal
The Jew as Pathogen: Reflections on Marc Weiner's "Richard Wagner and the Anti-Semitic Imagination," by Ingrid H. Shafer
Kabbalah and Gnosticism, by G.W.F. Hegel
Nazi Culture: Intellectual, Cultural and Social Life in the Third Reich, by George L. Mosse
The Coming Race, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
A Strange Story, by Edward Bulwer Lytton
Zanoni: A Rosicrucian Tale, by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
Ars Vivendi (Art of Living), by Arthur Lovell
The Religion of the Aryo-Germanic Folk: Esoteric and Exoteric, by Guido von List

Germany Awakes: Growth, Battle and Victory of the NSDAP (Deutschland Erwacht: Werden, Kampf und Sieg der NSDAP)
Mesmerism: The Discovery of Animal Magnetism, by Franz Anton Mesmer, translated by Joseph Bouleur
The Foundations of the Nineteenth Century, by Houston Stewart Chamberlain
The Rosicrucians: Their Rites and Mysteries, by Hargrave Jennings
The Real History of the Rosicrucians, by Arthur Edward Waite
The Divine Comedy of Dante Alighieri, translated by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
De Monarchia of Dante Alighieri, edited with translation and notes by Aurelia Henry
The Convivio, by Dante Alighieri
The Pythagorean Sourcebook and Library, Translated by Kenneth Sylvan Guthrie
Pythagoras, by Carl Huffman, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy
The Revolt of the Demons, by Lewis Mumford
A Sephardic Woman's Point of View:  The Grandees, by Paula O. de Benardete
Vishvakarman, by Wikipedia
Summa Contra Gentiles, by Saint Thomas Aquinas
The Confessions of St. Augustine, by St. Augustine of Hippo, translated and edited by Albert C. Outler, Ph.D., D.D.
St. Augustin's City of God, edited by Philip Schaff, D.D., LL.D
The Practice of the Ancient Turkish Freemasons: The Key to the Understanding of Alchemy, by Baron Rudolf von Sebottendorf
Nature, by Ralph Waldo Emerson
The Conduct of Life, by Ralph Waldo Emerson
Letters and Social Aims, by Ralph Waldo Emerson
Character, by Ralph Waldo Emerson
Napoleon; or, the Man of the World from Representative Men, by Ralph Waldo Emerson
Essays and English Traits, by Ralph Waldo Emerson
Solilpsism Syndrome, by Wikipedia

The Proverbs of Solomon, by Solomon, Son of David, King of Israel
Heaven and its Wonders and Hell -- From Things Heard and Seen, by Emanuel Swedenborg, translated by John Ager
Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship, by Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
The Tree of Life and The Hebrew Alphabet, by Dirk Gillabel
Unholy Alliance: A History of Nazi Involvement with the Occult, by Peter Levenda
The Horror at Red Hook, by H.P. Lovecraft
The Hound, by H.P. Lovecraft
Gertrude Stein, by Wikipedia
The CCF and the God of Thunder Cult, by Stanley Ezrol & Jeffrey Steinberg
The Fire Regained, by Sidney M. Hirsch
Esotericism in Germany and Austria, by Wikipedia
Rune-Magic, by Siegfried Adolf Kummer
The Story of the Volsungs, by Anonymous, translated by William Morris and Eirikr Magnusson
Through the Looking Glass, by Lewis Carroll
The Iliad of Homer, translated by Samuel Butler
The Odyssey, by Homer, translated by Samuel Butler
The Ancient and Primitive Rite  of Memphis and Misraim, Excerpts from "A New Encyclopaedia of Freemasonry," by Arthur Edward Waite
Anthroposophy and Ecofascism, by Peter Staudenmaier
The Occult Significance of Blood, by Rudolf Steiner
Dietrich Eckart, by William Gillespie
Bolshevism From Moses to Lenin: "A Dialogue Between Adolf Hitler and Me," by Dietrich Eckart

Table of Contents:

Opening Pages

  1. Hidden Roots

  2. Giants in the Earth

  3. Gods and Beasts

  4. The Thule Society

  5. Riffraff into Supermen

  6. The Savage Messiah

  7. Tibetan Wisdom Meets German Folly

  8. Atlantis, the Home of the Master Race

  9. The Obedient Man

  10. The Black Knights

  11. The Children's Crusade

  12. Prophets of the Third Reich

  13. Jung and the Aryan Unconscious

  14. Jehovah as Satan

  15. Making an Obedient Mass

  16. The Dangers of Occult Thinking

Sources Quoted
Selected Bibliography
Index