Why Hitler Wished He Was Muslim
The Führer admired Atatürk’s subordination of religion to
the state—and his ruthless treatment of minorities. By DOMINIC GREEN Jan. 16,
2015 3:55 p.m. ET
‘It’s been our misfortune to have the wrong religion,”
Hitler complained to his pet architect Albert Speer. “Why did it have to be
Christianity, with its meekness and flabbiness?” Islam was a Männerreligion—a
“religion of men”—and hygienic too. The “soldiers of Islam” received a
warrior’s heaven, “a real earthly paradise” with “houris” and “wine flowing.”
This, Hitler argued, was much more suited to the “Germanic temperament” than
the “Jewish filth and priestly twaddle” of Christianity.
ATATÜRK IN THE NAZI IMAGINATION By Stefan Ihrig Harvard, 311
pages, $29.95
For decades, historians have seen Hitler’s Beer Hall Putsch
of 1923 as emulating Mussolini’s 1922 March on Rome. Not so, says Stefan Ihrig
in “Atatürk in the Nazi Imagination.” Hitler also had Turkey in mind—and not
just the 1908 march of the Young Turks on Constantinople, which brought down a
government. After 1917, the bankrupt, defeated and cosmopolitan Ottoman Empire
contracted into a vigorous “Turanic” nation-state. In the early 1920s, the new
Turkey was the first “revisionist” power to opt out of the postwar system,
retaking lost lands on the Syrian coast and control over the Strait of the
Dardanelles. Hitler, Mr. Ihrig writes, saw Turkey as the model of a “prosperous
and völkisch modern state.”
Through the 1920s and 1930s, Nazi publications lauded Turkey
as a friend and forerunner. In 1922, for example, the Völkischer Beobachter,
the Nazi Party’s weekly paper, praised Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, the “Father of
the Turks,” as a “real man,” embodying the “heroic spirit” and the
Führerprinzip, or führer principle, that demanded absolute obedience. Atatürk’s
subordination of Islam to the state anticipated Hitler’s strategy toward
Christianity. The Nazis presented Turkey as stronger for having massacred its Armenians
and expelling its Greeks. “Who,” Hitler asked in August 1939, “speaks today of
the extermination of the Armenians?”
ISLAM AND NAZI GERMANY’S WAR By David Motadel Harvard, 500
pages, $35
This was not Germany’s first case of Türkenfieber, or Turk fever.
Turkey had slid into World War I not by accident but because Germany had
greased the tracks: training officers, supplying weapons, and drawing the
country away from Britain and France. Hitler wanted to repeat the Kaiser’s
experiment in search of a better result. By 1936, Germany supplied half of
Turkey’s imports and bought half of Turkey’s exports, notably chromite, vital
for steel production. But Atatürk, Mr. Ihrig writes, hedged his bets and dodged
a “decisive friendship.” After Atatürk’s death in 1938, his successor, Ismet
Inönü, tacked between the powers. In 1939, Turkey signed a treaty of mutual
defense with Britain, but in 1941 Turkey agreed to a Treaty of Friendship with
Germany, securing Hitler’s southern flank before he invaded Russia. Inönü hinted
that Turkey would join the fight if Germany could conquer the Caucasus.
As David Motadel writes in “Islam and Nazi Germany’s War,”
Muslims fought on both sides in World War II. But only Nazis and Islamists had
a political-spiritual romance. Both groups hated Jews, Bolsheviks and liberal
democracy. Both sought what Michel Foucault, praising the Iranian Revolution in
1979, would later call the spiritual-political “transfiguration of the world”
by “combat.” The caliph, the Islamist Zaki Ali explained, was the “führer of
the believers.” “Made by Jews, led by Jews—therewith Bolshevism is the natural
enemy of Islam,” wrote Mahomed Sabry, a Berlin-based propagandist for the
Muslim Brotherhood in “Islam, Judaism, Bolshevism,” a book that the Reich’s
propaganda ministry recommended to journalists.
By late 1941, Germany controlled large Muslim populations in
southeastern Europe and North Africa. Nazi policy extended the grand schemes of
imperial Germany toward madly modern ends. To aid the “liberation struggle of
Islam,” the propaganda ministry told journalists to praise “the Islamic world
as a cultural factor,” avoid criticism of Islam, and substitute “anti-Jewish”
for “anti-Semitic.” In April 1942, Hitler became the first European leader to
declare that Islam was “incapable of terrorism.” As usual, it is hard to tell
if the Führer set the tone or merely amplified his people’s obsessions.
Like Atatürk, Hitler saw the Turkish renaissance as racial,
not religious. Germans of Turkish and Iranian descent were exempt from the
Nuremberg Laws, but the racial status of German Arabs remained creatively
indefinite, even after September 1943, when Muslims became eligible for
membership in the Nazi Party. As the war went on, Balkan Muslims were added to
the “racially valuable peoples of Europe.” The Palestinian Arab leader Haj Amin
al-Husseini, Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, recruited thousands of these
“Musligermanics” as the first non-Germanic volunteers for the SS. Soviet
prisoners of Turkic origin volunteered too. In November 1944, Himmler and the
Mufti created an SS-run school for military imams at Dresden.
Haj Amin al-Husseini, the founder of Palestinian
nationalism, is notorious for his efforts to persuade the Nazis to extend their
genocide of the Jews to the Palestine Mandate. The Mufti met Hitler and Himmler
in Berlin in 1941 and asked the Nazis to guarantee that when the Wehrmacht
drove the British from Palestine, Germany would establish an Arab regime and
assist in the “removal” of its Jews. Hitler replied that the Reich would not
intervene in the Mufti’s kingdom, other than to pursue their shared goal: “the
annihilation of Jewry living in Arab space.” The Mufti settled in Berlin,
befriended Adolf Eichmann, and lobbied the governments of Romania, Hungary and
Bulgaria to cancel a plan to transfer Jews to Palestine. Subsequently, some
400,000 Jews from these countries were sent to death camps.
Mr. Motadel describes the Mufti’s Nazi dealings vividly, but
he also excels in unearthing other odious and fascinating characters. Among
them: Zeki Kiram, the Ottoman officer turned disciple of Rashid Rida, founder
of the Muslim Brotherhood; and Johann von Leers, a Nazi professor who converted
to Islam and became Omar Amin, an anti-Semitic publicist for Nasser’s Egypt.
Some of the Muslim Nazis ended badly. Others stayed at their
desks, then consulted for Saudi Arabia in retirement. The major Muslim
collaborators escaped. Fearing Muslim uprisings, the Allies did not try the
Mufti as a war criminal; he died in Beirut in 1974, politically eclipsed by his
young cousin, Mohammed Abdul Raouf al-Qudwa al-Husseini, better known as Yasser
Arafat. Meanwhile, at Munich, the surviving SS volunteers, joined by refugees
from the Soviet Union, formed postwar Germany’s first Islamic community, its
leaders an ex-Wehrmacht imam and the erstwhile chief imam of the Eastern Muslim
SS Division. In the 1950s, some of Munich’s Muslim ex-Nazis worked for the
intelligence services of the U.S., tightening the “green belt against
Communism.”
A revolutionary idea must be seeded before, in Heidegger’s
words, “suddenly the unbound powers of being come forth and are accomplished as
history.” Seven decades passed between Europe’s revolutionary spring of 1848
and the Russian Revolution of 1917. The effects of Germany’s ideological
seeding of Muslim societies in the 1930s and ’40s are only now becoming
apparent.
Impeccably researched and clearly written, Messrs. Motadel
and Ihrig’s books will transform our understanding of the Nazi policies that
were, Mr. Motadel writes, some “of the most vigorous attempts to politicize and
instrumentalize Islam in modern history.”
—Mr.
Green is the author of “The Double Life of Dr. Lopez” and “Three Empires on the
Nile.”
Source:
WSJ
1 comment:
Interesting history. I knew he was infatuated with Wagner and German mythology, but had forgotten if I'd ever read anything about a link between Nazi and Islamic fascism... beyond both being totalitarian of course.
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