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Hitler and Nazi Resurgence
Hitler used to have
1, 000 mails per month
Hindustan Times
Believe it or not, the amount of fan mails sent to Adolf Hitler rivalled
that of The Beatles.
This inference can be drawn from the contents of many of the upto 1,000
letters a month written to the Nazi ruler -- the mails have been
uneathered by German historian Henrik Eberle who published them in his
new book.
The book, titled Letters to Hitler -- People Writes to its Leader,
contains contents of the letters which included not only fawning pledges
of allegiance but bizarre requests from ordinary Germans for permission
to bake cakes named after the Nazi leader, The Independent reported on
Tuesday.
Although they were written only early in Hitler's career, shortly after
he was released from jail in 1923, they show that he was already being
deluged with fan mail.
The daily cited a telegram written by one Walter Zickler, dated June
1925. It pledges "unalterable allegiance and unshakeable faith in "Adolf
Hitler", on behalf of the "College of German Farmers".
"How does HE stand regarding the question of alcohol?" asks Alfred Barg,
in a letter written to Hitler in May 1925.
To Barg's letter, the dictator's deputy Hess replies nine days later,
"Herr Hitler does not drink any alcohol, except for a few drops on very
special occasions. He does not smoke at all."
Another letter written by a loyal National Socialist baker asks for
permission to bake a new variety of cake which would in future be
honoured with the name "Hitler Cake". Hess sniffily refuses because
Hitler's strategy is to strictly avoid "kitsch" publicity gimmicks.
The most obsequious mail came from Nazi Party members. One letter from a
Nazi official says, "We don't want anyone else in government, we want
only Adolf Hitler."
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