Jan Udo Holey

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Jan Udo Holey (born March 22, 1967 in Dinkelsbühl ) is a German author . Under the pseudonym Jan van Helsing he became known in the genre of conspiracy fantasy as the author of historical revisionist and right-wing esoteric books. He came under public criticism because of anti-Semitic statements in the context of his conspiracy theory. Scientists and the German Office for the Protection of the Constitution described him as a right-wing extremist esoteric .

Life

origin

Holey was born the second of three children and grew up in a family in which esoteric ideas played a central role. His mother, Luise Holey, describes herself as a “seer”, his father, the former entrepreneur Johannes Holey , is a “traditional Gnostic ”.

In his youth, Holey was close to the punk scene. On the town hall square in Crailsheim he caused a stir when he burned a German flag there. After school, he completed an apprenticeship as an interior decorator. After spending several years in the punk scene, he came into contact with RAF sympathizers. He claims to have recognized that the “third generation of the RAF” was merely a “killer service” that “disposed of politicians” on behalf of the Bilderbergers . Holey describes himself as initiated into sex magic . He believes that he can collect and direct sexual energy, that orgasms from the age of 42 diminish the remaining vitality, and prefers to have sexual intercourse only with partners of the same mental maturity. As in his opinion every clairvoyant can confirm that homosexuality disfigures and disharmonises the aura, which is why it is not compatible with his sex-magical worldview. To underpin his type of sex education, he cites monks and priests in ancient Germania and the Celts .

Journalistic activities

At the age of 14, Holey Bram read Stoker's novel Dracula , which inspired him to use the pseudonym “van Helsing” for his publications. He argues that the Order of Illuminati , against which several of his books are directed, also consists of "bloodsuckers".

At the end of the 1980s, Holey wrote his first book, Secret Societies and Their Power in the 20th Century , which was published by Ewert in March 1994 and was mainly sold in esoteric bookstores. After just a few months, it became a bestseller. In 1995, secret societies were published 2 . The pseudonym was uncovered in July 1996 through critical reports in the magazine esotera and Der Spiegel . A display of up to 1,996 Jewish community of Mannheim for sedition occurred that stopped the store sales were probably sold more than 100,000 copies of the two books. The proceedings were discontinued "because of a lack of local jurisdiction" by the Mannheim district court. This was followed by a complaint in Switzerland, whereupon the two books were confiscated and indexed both in the Federal Republic of Germany and in Switzerland .

Holey was mentioned for the first time in reports on the protection of the constitution in the Baden-Württemberg report on the protection of the constitution in 1996 from the State Office for the Protection of the Constitution in Baden-Württemberg , where he was reported under the heading of right-wing extremist influence on the esoteric scene . This was followed by mentions in the Austrian constitution protection report in 2000 or by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution in 2004 and 2005, where Holey was referred to as a “right-wing extremist esoteric”. In the social sciences, too, Holey finds his way into being a “right-wing extremist esoteric”.

Since the late 1990s, he has been publishing his works in the Amadeus Verlag, which his mother founded in 1998. He has been the managing director there since December 31, 2009. The view to the right wrote that he and his publishing house are considered to be the “best-known representatives of brown esotericism”.

From 2007 to 2010 he ran the web TV channel Secret.tv, through which he disseminated his esoteric and conspiracy theory theses. A film made by Holey and Stefan Erdmann about the Cheops pyramid was distributed about it . "Film portal for brown esotericism " is what the Evangelical Central Office for Weltanschauung questions calls the Internet broadcaster. The “Handbook of Alternative Media” describes the station as “right-wing extremist Internet TV”.

In his books, Helsing ties in with the conspiracy theories of the authors Gary Allen and Des Griffin and their works The Insider (1970) and Who rules the world (1976). In particular, he relies on the American ufologist Milton William Cooper , whom he also knew personally and from whose work Behold a Pale Horse he quotes in detail. Holey claims a worldwide Illuminati conspiracy, which he includes Freemasons and Jews. He takes the view that Hitler was inspired by Bulwer-Lytton's book The Coming Race (1871) and Ossendowski's title Animals, Men and Gods , for which there is no evidence. However, Holey is making use of neo-Nazi clichés with these claims , since many passages by the authors Bulwer-Lytton and Ossendowski have contributed to the formation of neo-Nazi legends alongside theosophical sources.

In October 2011, a long interview about his new book Hitler survived in Argentina was published on the Kopp-Online portal of the Kopp Verlag . On December 23, 2011, Holey's preface was published in its original length.

Legal disputes

In 1996, both books of secret societies were taken off the market after a seizure decision by the Mannheim District Court for sedition.

Due to a lack of local jurisdiction, the criminal proceedings for incitement to hatred against him were discontinued on February 11, 1998 , legal remedies were unsuccessful, and the Karlsruhe Higher Regional Court rejected the prosecutor's complaint .

In Switzerland, Holey's books were banned for violating the Anti- Racism Act of 1995.

As a result, the author endeavored to present the prohibition of his books as constitutionally questionable in the introduction and in the first part of his work. On page 14 of the first part he wrote his legal interpretation:

"[The book ...] is directed rather exclusively against the background powers, world conspirators, Freemasons , Rotarians , [...] but these groups are not part of the German population i. See § 130 StGB and thus not the subject of this provision [...] "

In 2001, the Mannheim Regional Court overturned the seizure order. The indexing in both countries has not been lifted.

Reception and evaluation of the publications

According to Hubert Michael Mader from the Austrian National Defense Academy, Holey succeeded with his bestsellers, probably the most important coup of right-wing extremism after 1945. He deals with various topics that have long been familiar in the esoteric scene and that are received unspectacularly. This, and this is the new thing, he intensifies with an unusually large number of right-wing extremist ideas and mixes them with interpretations based on his conspiracy theories, according to which the world, especially Germany, is threatened with annihilation by secret societies. Jews are at the forefront of this conspiracy. To this end, he essentially mixed the right-wing extremist writings of the Holocaust deniers and ufologists Miguel Serrano , Wilhelm Landig and the British anthroposophist Trevor Ravenscroft with some original sources. Holey advocates authoritarian conceptions of the state and society, glossing over National Socialism and denying Germany's war guilt. Holey insinuates from the outset that his critics are afraid of (mental) change. Although he asserts that he does not want to manipulate anyone, his publications repeatedly give the impression that he intends to mentally "reprogram" his readers.

Rüdiger Sünner counts Holey among the disciples of the » Black Sun «, who adapt Nazi myths of the superiority of former »Aryan« primitive cultures, such as Thule and Atlantis , and incorporate them into their fantastic treatises, in which the Third Reich is glorified or its crimes are denied . Serrano and Holey in particular contributed to the modernization of right-wing esotericism through the inclusion of UFO legends.

Historian Goodrick-Clarke notes that Holey's advocacy of humanity and the esoteric New Age ethos merely masked its anti-Semitic motives. In the handbook of anti-Semitism , Holey is assigned to the “so-called new-Germanic-pagan scene” because he would link modern-right mythology and esotericism. Stefan von Hoyningen-Huene counts him among the "esoteric conspiracy theorists".

Tobias Jaecker also assigns Holey to the esoteric spectrum in which belief in world conspiracies occupies a central position. Armin Pfahl-Traughber sees in Holey's works the connection between esoteric and right-wing extremist ideological set pieces. Wolfgang Wippermann sees Holey's assertions as examples of esoteric conspiracy ideologies, which, as can be seen from his writings, resembled the National Socialist "hairs". According to Ursula Caberta , he is the most famous German conspiracy theorist. His bestsellers have made esotericism the most important gateway for right-wing extremist ideologies in German-speaking countries.

The trend of the esoteric scene towards right-wing extremist standpoints became apparent shortly after Holey's books with the appearance of fifty to sixty esoteric right-wing extremist world conspiracy books. The chairman of the Armanen Order , which sees himself as the “Aryan elite” , Adolf Schleipfer , advertises and recommends Holey's 1st volume of secret societies as a basic work on the subject of logism entanglements, which replaces entire libraries. In its issue 51/1996, Der Spiegel wrote about the secret societies Volume 1 and 2: "Holey's conspiracy theories read like a mixture of Mein Kampf , wild science fiction and black magic." In May 1996 the news magazine Focus reported on the ban on his books in Switzerland.

Secret Societies and Their Power in the 20th Century (two volumes)

In the secret societies , Holey combines science fiction, esotericism, Germanic mythology , Christian numerical mysticism and ufology and speaks of a “worldwide conspiracy of the 'Illuminati' - identified as of Jewish origin - to the detriment of the world and especially Germany”. In 1773, Mayer Amschel Rothschild and twelve other Jewish donors in Frankfurt's Judengasse are said to have come up with a plan to clear the way for their world government through a total of three world wars by the year 2000. In doing so, Holey refers explicitly to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion , an anti-Semitic and forgeries-based script published at the beginning of the 20th century, which is supposed to prove the Jewish world conspiracy . Through his dramatic representation, with which he suggests an alien struggle for the fate of our civilization, Holey was able to spread his, according to Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, Manichaean anti-Semitism in the New Age scene. To underscore the credibility of the protocols , Holey relied extensively on conspiracy theorist Milton William Cooper . Objecting that the logs were proven to be falsified, he commented:

“The question of authenticity is also incomprehensible to me. That would be equivalent to saying that the Ten Commandments are not real. It is completely irrelevant whether the Ten Commandments are from God, an extraterrestrial or from Mr. Miller. […] ´ The origin is completely irrelevant. It is the same with the 'protocols'. The things that are described therein are applied. "

In addition to the Protocols , Holey relies on numerous anti-Semitic and historical revisionist authors such as David Irving , David L. Hoggan , Germar Rudolf and other Holocaust deniers . Another spiritual relationship exists to the spiritual father of the far-right European Workers' Party (EAP), Lyndon LaRouche , with whom Holey shows solidarity. Holey considers LaRouche to be an adversary of the secret world conspirators, who fell victim to “a judicial scandal staged by the American establishment” and who was wrongly labeled a right-wing extremist by propaganda by the Anti-Defamation League .

Citing conspiracy theorist William Guy Carr , Holey claims, among other things, that the Protocols originated centuries ago and that they were a plan for world domination . According to Holey, what he calls a “Jewish banking system”, especially the Rothschild family , is working with the Illuminati as “true rulers” on a global conspiracy. These would have deliberately triggered the Second World War in order to make the United States dependent on high finance through its enormous costs . Your ultimate goal is a New World Order . Other classic anti-Semitic ideologems that he spreads are the ritual murder legend - allegedly the foundling Kaspar Hauser would have been murdered by Jews for religious reasons - the legend of the Jewish declaration of war on Germany in September 1939 , speculations about an alleged global power of the Jewish Lodge B. 'nai B'rith and the claim that Jews are really devil worshipers . He differentiates between Semitic Jews and Khazars and Ashkenazi Jews , whom he counts among his real enemies. He then printed a few pages of the malicious translation of the Talmud by Johannes Pohl , which had been published by the NSDAP in 1943 for anti-Semitic propaganda. Holey's claims that Helmut Kohl was Jewish and originally called Henoch Kohn and that HIV was artificially created on behalf of the allegedly Jewish Illuminati are original .

The secret world conspirator network of the 'Illuminati' includes various organizations and associations in Holey's ideology, including the UN . Intriguing secret pullers behind the UN have brought about all "wars of the last two centuries themselves." The UN troops are an "international police force" to target independent states such as Libya and Iran, which are slandered as aggressors by the ( synchronized ) international mass media to bring it under control. Holey draws a distorted revisionist view of history that ignores essential facts and agrees with former Nazi propaganda in many areas , for example on the question of alleged Jewish declarations of war on Germany, historically falsifying representations of Poland's role and the question of war guilt. To underpin his historical revisionist themes, he uses well-known neo-Nazi material such as the Morgenthau legend and claims that German and Japanese peace offers were systematically ignored because the Illuminati elite, under the guise of democracy and liberalism , wanted to level both countries to the ground to avoid the subsequent ones Maximize investment opportunities and facilitate integration into a planned global dictatorship.

His conspiracy theories looked like a mixture of Mein Kampf , wild science fiction and black magic. He describes a black magic operating Tibetan order that was significantly involved in the creation and formation of the Third Reich. There is an underground organization called “ Black Sun ”, which, according to neo-fascists, operates underground bases and colonies all over the world that are inhabited by millions of Reich Germans. One of these bases would be at an altitude of over 5000 meters in the Himalayas. China therefore invaded Tibet, tortured and killed Tibetan monks on behalf of Masonic Illuminati in order to locate and liquidate the Reich Germans and thereby thwart the emergence of a new German kingdom of light . The Chinese project had failed, however, because the Imperial German colonies were located in hidden valleys and were under the protection of the highest Tibetan lodge, the " Gelugpa " or "Yellow Caps", which also included the "Ariannis" (descendants of extraterrestrials and today's inhabitants subterranean realms).

In a skilful montage of facts, non-verifiable testimony, partial truths and absurd interpretations, Holey claims that Adolf Hitler tried by means of two SS expeditions to find the entrances to the subterranean realm of Agartha in the Himalayas, inhabited by Aryans , in order to make contact with the descendants of the Aryan godmen to step into their capital Shamballa. King Shamballah's name is Rigden Iyepo , the king of the world who is represented above ground by the Dalai Lama . Other colonies of the last battalion built by Hitler are in Neuschwabenland (Antarctica), the Andes, Greenland, the Canary Islands, African mountain ranges, Iraq, Japan and inland. Holey writes of unsuccessful attempts by the Allies to attack the German colony in Antarctica. Even the detonation of two atom bombs over Neuschwabenland in 1958 could not defeat the German colony. From this he concludes that the German Reich continued to exist and never surrendered, only the German armed forces represented by Dönitz . Holey had learned from a courier from the "Black Sun" that in 1994 there was a standing army of 6 million soldiers worldwide, consisting of smuggled Aldebarans , Ariannis and Reich Germans. This army has 22,000 Reichsflugplatten . That is why the US and Russia launched the SDI program . The middle section of the first volume contains blurred photos of flying disks with swastika and SS symbols. Holey claims these are authentic. He got it personally from the British secret service, which found it in 1945 in hidden SS archives. Esoteric subdivisions of the Thule Society and the SS (with the name "Black Sun") had UFOs with anti-gravity motors with which they flew to the Aldebaran star system as early as the 1940s. Hitler approved the design and construction of these UFO miracle weapons , in which Karl Haushofer , Rudolf von Sebottendorf and Viktor Schauberger were involved. Holey refers explicitly to Rudolf von Sebottendorf and his Thule mythology when he claims the existence of a "higher race" from which the Germanic peoples would have emerged.

Keep your hands of this book!

Following the seizure of his two conspiracy books due to anti-Semitic sedition by the Mannheim District Court, Holey stylized himself in his 2004 work Hands off this book! himself as a victim of a conspiracy and marketed his alleged martyrdom in the advertising text accordingly as “the last secrets of our 'enlightened' world”. According to Amazon, 165,000 copies were sold in Germany in 2010 of this, the most successful of his books to date, which also presents various cross-scientific topics . Holey claims that the core of the book is about finding one's personality. According to Ulrike Heß-Meining, in this book he again shows his right-wing extremist anti-Semitic views, albeit in a rather subtle form.

more books

Holey's third book, World War III , was published in 1996 and contains prophecies of various fortune tellers. In the book Company Aldebaran. Contacts with people from another solar system. (1997) Holey deals with Aryan- looking aliens who are said to have come to earth with UFOs in order to carry out genetic manipulations on humanity. In 1998, The Inner World: The Secret of the Black Sun was published . The book is about an alleged invention of the National Socialists, the Reichsflugplatten , which are now stationed in the hollow interior of the earth . In 1999, Holey reported in The Jan van Helsing file about the criminal case against him and presented himself and his ideas as victims of conspiracies. In 2000, in The Children of the New Millennium , he tells about children with media talent who have contact with the dead and who could read auras . This appeared in 2005 Who's afraid of the black man? deals with near-death experiences , the author also claims to have conducted media interviews with death. Together with Stefan Erdmann, Holey published The Millennium Lie in 2008 : On the trail of the pyramid puzzle ; the book claims that the pyramids were hydroelectric plants. Previously, Holey had processed the same thesis in his DVD film: “The Cheops Lie”. Holey in April 2009 published the one-million-euro-book , which at bestsellers such as The Secret - The Secret of Rhonda Byrne inspired and represents wealth as a result of the attitude. In 2010 there was Secret Societies 3 - Freemason War , an alleged interview with a "high degree Freemason" who confirmed Holey's own claims.

Movie

Holey's broadcaster Secret TV produced the film The Cheops Lie . In addition, Secret TV sponsored the cartoon Fabian, the goldsmith , produced in 2008 , who advocates a similar conspiracy theory as Holey in secret societies : "Fabian, the goldsmith" founded the secret society of the "enlightened" and has been guiding world affairs ever since. The film was made with the support of Kopp Verlag . Other claims from Holey's work, such as the planned tattooing of a barcode on people by the “enlightened”, can also be found in the film.

List of works

Books

Under his own name

  • The inner world. The secret of the black sun. Novel. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 1998, ISBN 3-9805733-1-1 .
  • The Jan van Helsing file. A documentary about the ban on two books in the "freest land of German history". Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 1999, ISBN 3-9805733-9-7 .
  • The children of the new millennium. Media children change the world . Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2001, ISBN 3-9807106-4-5 .

Under the pseudonym "Jan van Helsing"

  • Secret Societies and Their Power in the 20th Century . ISBN 3-89478-069-X ( indexed and confiscated in Germany 1996 , repeal of the confiscation order 2001).
  • Secret Societies 2 (the interview) . ISBN 3-89478-492-X (indexed and confiscated in Germany 1996, repeal of the confiscation order 2001).
  • Book 3 - The Third World War . Ewert, Lathen (Ems) 1996, ISBN 3-89478-573-X .
  • Aldebaran company. Contacts with people from another solar system. The sensational experiences of the Feistle family. Ewert, Lathen (Ems) 1997 (copyright year), ISBN 3-89478-220-X .
  • Keep your hands of this book! Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2004, ISBN 3-9807106-8-8 .
  • Who is afraid of the black man…? Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2005, ISBN 3-9807106-5-3 .
  • National Security - The Conspiracy. Top secret projects in technology and space travel Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2005, ISBN 3-938656-25-5 .
  • The millennium lie. On the trail of the pyramid puzzle. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2008, ISBN 3-938656-30-1 (with Stefan Erdmann ).
  • The 1 million euro book Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2009, ISBN 3-938656-99-9 (with Dr. Dinero).
  • Secret Societies 3 - Masonic War. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2010, ISBN 978-3-938656-80-8 .
  • Hitler survived in Argentina. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2011, ISBN 978-3-938656-20-4 (with Abel Basti).
  • politically incorrect: inconvenient facts and dangerous truths that can no longer be spoken! Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2012, ISBN 978-3-938656-60-0 (with Michael Morris, Andreas Popp, Johann Georg Schnitzer , Michael Vogt , Stefan Erdmann, Ben Morgenstern, Johannes Holey, Rudolf Passian )

Audio books

  • Stefan Erdmann: Interview with Jan van Helsing . Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2006, ISBN 3-938656-01-8 .

Movies

  • The Cheops lie
  • Fabian, the goldsmith , 2008

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. a b c d e Arnon Hampe, Holey , In: Werner Bergmann, Brigitte Mihok, Wolfgang Benz (eds.), Handbook of Antisemitism: Anti-Semitism in Past and Present , Volume 2 People , Walter de Gruyter 2009, p. 375 f.
  2. a b Oliver Schröm: Brown esotericism on the advance: Many books from the New Age scene paint a racist worldview. In: Zeit Online . May 28, 1998, p. 1 , accessed August 28, 2017 .
  3. ^ A b Friedrich Paul Heller , Anton Maegerle : The language of hatred: right-wing extremism and völkisch esotericism: Jan van Helsing and Horst Mahler . Butterfly publishing house, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-89657-091-9 , p. 126.
  4. ^ Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and reports. Political esotericism - a right-wing extremist challenge. Vienna: National Defense Academy 1999. pp. 85f and 104f.
  5. a b Birk Meinhardt: Aryans in the microwave war. In: Süddeutsche.de . from 15./16. March 2008.
  6. Chantal Magnin and Marianne Rychner: Structural similarities between two interpretations of the world: esotericism and anti-Semitic conspiracy theory . In: Tangram. Bulletin of the Federal Commission against Racism , No. 6 (1999), p. 43.
  7. Dracula's UFO . In: Der Spiegel . No. 51 , 1996, p. 73 ( online - December 16, 1996 ).
  8. Conspiracy theorists with links to the right corner? , Article from April 7, 2009 by Matthias Holzapfel on Merkur.de
  9. ^ Arnon Hampe: Holey, Jan Udo. In: Wolfgang Benz (Hrsg.): Handbuch des Antisemitismus . Vol. 2: People . De Gruyter Saur, Berlin 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-44159-2 , p. 375 (accessed via De Gruyter Online).
  10. ^ Constitutional Protection Report 2000 Austria, 2001, p. 23
  11. Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution: Report on the Protection of the Constitution 2004 ( Memento of September 29, 2007 in the Internet Archive ) (PDF; 3.5 MB); P. 106; Constitutional Protection Report 2005, p. 118
  12. ^ Thomas Fliege, Kurt Möller, right-wing extremism in Baden-Württemberg , Belchen-Verlag 2001, p. 99; Ines Aftenberger, The New Right and Neorassism , Grazer Universitätsverlag 2007, p. 64; Johann Dolanski, The universe as it really is: Dolan theory: presented according to the latest technical-scientific research , Turia & Kant Verlag 2008, p. 125
  13. Looking to the right: Ama Deus Verlag: “Bloodlines of the Illuminati” , review, accessed May 21, 2014.
  14. Bernd Merling: secret.tv. ( Memento of the original from July 12, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was automatically inserted and not yet checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. In: Antifaschismus2.de . January 3, 2010, accessed January 26, 2014. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / antifaschismus2.de
  15. Bernd Hüttner, Handbook Alternative Media 2011/2012: Print Media, Free Radios, Archives & Publishers in the FRG, Austria and Switzerland , AG SPAK Books 2011, p. 65.
  16. EZW, Brave New Conspiracy World: Secret TV - a new film portal for brown esotericism , accessed on March 20, 2016
  17. ^ G. Hooffacker / P. Lokk : Right-wing extremist Internet TV. In: Bernd Hüttner (ed.), Handbook Alternative Media 2011/2012. Print media, free radios, archives & publishers in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, AG Spak: Wasserburg 2011, p. 65.
  18. ^ Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke : Black Sun. Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity . NYU Press, New York 2002, p. 297.
  19. a b Tobias Jaecker, Anti-Semitic Conspiracy Theories after September 11th: New Variants of an Old Interpretation Pattern , LIT-Verlag 2005, p. 56.
  20. Martin Brauen : Traumwelt Tibet: Western illusions. Publishing house Paul Haupt Berne, Bern; Stuttgart; Vienna 2000, ISBN 3-258-05639-0 . P. 73.
  21. a b Anna Hunger: Well networked - The Kopp publishing house and the dazzling right-wing publicist scene . In: Stephan Braun , Alexander Geisler, Martin Gerster (eds.): Strategies of the extreme right: Backgrounds - Analyzes - Answers . 2nd updated and expanded edition, Springer Fachmedien, Wiesbaden 2015, ISBN 978-3-658-01983-9 , p. 430.
  22. a b Stefan Meining : Right esotericism in Germany. Constructs of ideas, interfaces and potential dangers, in: Political extremism as a threat to freedom (59 pages, pdf; 2.2 MB), Thuringian State Office for the Protection of the Constitution , Erfurt 2003, pages 45–84.
  23. a b Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: In the shadow of the black sun. Marix Verlag Wiesbaden 2002, ISBN 978-3-86539-185-8 , p. 563.
  24. Wolfgang Bittner: Satan's Conspiratorial Brothers - Attacks and Antitheses against German Freemasonry 1970-2000. 453 pp., Bodem Verlag, ISBN 3-934215-01-7 . Page 132-133.
  25. theopenunderground: Constitutional Protection Report 2004 (PDF; 2.8 MB); P. 108.
  26. ^ A b c d Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and reports. Political esotericism - a right-wing extremist challenge. National Defense Academy, Vienna 1999. pp. 38–39 and p. 47.
  27. ^ Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and reports. Political esotericism - a right-wing extremist challenge. Vienna: National Defense Academy 1999. p. 107f and p. 131.
  28. Rüdiger Sünner: Black Sun. Unleashing and abuse of the myths in National Socialism and right esotericism . Second edition, Verlag Herder, Freiburg im Breisgau 1999. p. 230.
  29. Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: In the Shadow of the Black Sun. Marix Verlag Wiesbaden 2002, ISBN 978-3-86539-185-8 , pp. 555-556.
  30. Stefan von Hoyningen-Huene, Religiosity among right-wing extremist youth , LIT-Verlag 2003, p. 60.
  31. Armin Pfahl-Traughber, Freemasons and Jews, capitalists and communists as enemy images of right-wing extremist conspiracy ideologies from the German Empire to the present , In: Uwe Backes, right-wing extremist ideologies in history and present , Böhlau Verlag 2003, p. 225.
  32. Wolfgang Wippermann: Agents of Evil. Conspiracy theories from Luther to the present day . be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, p. 146.
  33. Ursula Caberta: Black Book Esoteric . Gütersloher Verlagshaus, 2nd edition 2011, p. 104.
  34. Eduard Gugenberger, Franko Petri and Roman Schweidlenka: World conspiracy theories . The new danger from the right . Deuticke, Wien 1998, p. 198 and p. 274.
  35. Eduard Gugenberger, Franko Petri and Roman Schweidlenka: World conspiracy theories . The new danger from the right . Deuticke, Vienna 1998, p. 199.
  36. Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution: Patterns of argumentation in right-wing extremist anti-Semitism ( Memento of the original from November 22, 2009 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.verfassungsschutz.de archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. (PDF; 1.4 MB) . November 2005, p. 10f.
  37. Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: In the Shadow of the Black Sun. Aryan Cults, Esoteric National Socialism and the Politics of Demarcation. Marix Verlag, Wiesbaden 2009, p. 556.
  38. ^ Anton Maegerle : From Obersalzberg to NSU. The extreme right and the political culture of the Federal Republic 1988–2013. Edition Critic, Berlin 2013, p. 117.
  39. Wolfgang Wippermann: Agents of Evil. Conspiracy theories from Luther to the present day . be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, p. 148.
  40. ^ Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and reports. Political esotericism - a right-wing extremist challenge. Vienna: National Defense Academy 1999. pp. 40–41.
  41. infoSekta: Van Helsing: Ideological core unchanged .
  42. ^ A b Wolfgang Wippermann: Agents of Evil. Conspiracy theories from Luther to the present day . be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, p. 148 f.
  43. Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: In the Shadow of the Black Sun. Aryan Cults, Esoteric National Socialism and the Politics of Demarcation. Marix Verlag, Wiesbaden 2009, p. 559.
  44. ^ Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and reports. Political esotericism - a right-wing extremist challenge. Vienna: National Defense Academy 1999. pp. 60–68.
  45. Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: In the Shadow of the Black Sun. Marix Verlag Wiesbaden 2002, ISBN 978-3-86539-185-8 , p. 558.
  46. Martin Brauen : Traumwelt Tibet: Western illusions. Publishing house Paul Haupt Berne, Bern; Stuttgart; Vienna 2000, ISBN 3-258-05639-0 . P. 66.
  47. ^ A b Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and Reports. Political esotericism - a right-wing extremist challenge. Vienna: National Defense Academy 1999. pp. 70–71.
  48. Martin Brauen: Traumwelt Tibet: Western illusions. Publishing house Paul Haupt Berne, Bern; Stuttgart; Vienna 2000, ISBN 3-258-05639-0 . Pp. 69-72.
  49. ^ Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and reports. Political esotericism - a right-wing extremist challenge. Vienna: National Defense Academy 1999. p. 69.
  50. Rüdiger Sünner: Black Sun. Unleashing and abuse of the myths in National Socialism and right esotericism . Second edition, Verlag Herder, Freiburg im Breisgau 1999. pp. 220–221.
  51. Wolfgang Benz : The Protocols of the Elders of Zion - The legend of the Jewish world conspiracy . CH Beck, Munich 2007, p. 94.
  52. a b Ulrike Heß-Meining, Right-Wing Esotericism in Europe , In: Uwe Backes, Patrick Moreau (eds.), The Extreme Right in Europe , Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2011, pp. 394–396.
  53. Wolfgang Wippermann : Agents of Evil. Conspiracy theories from Luther to the present day . be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, pp. 147–148 and p. 190.
  54. see information portal against right-wing extremism .