- THE HONGKONG TELEGRAPH, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1980.
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The
A
The True Story of Hitler-
Man Who
The Man
DOLF HITLER, irra-
tional, contradic-
Thongkong Telegraph. tory, is an unpredictable
MONDAY, APRI, 6, 1936.
FRENCH POLITICS
character; therein lies this power.
includes
Has Done
or North Sen-is music. He is He is obsessed
deeply musical. by Wagner.
He takes no exercise, and his To millions of honest Ger- THE inside story of Hitler
extra- only many
important relaxation~- mans he is sublime-a figure ordinary and bizarre episodes, though recently he began to like France will shortly be in the throes of a General Election, the of adoration; he fills them His imagination is purely politi- battleship cruises in the Baltic result of which will have an im-with love, fear, and national- cal portant bearing on the Euro-ist ecstasy. pean situation. Politically. France has been somewhat un-
To many other Germans he is settled for a considerable time, meagre and ridiculous-a char- and it remains to be seen latan,
a lucky hysteric, and a whether the Sarraut Adminis-lying demagogue. tration will be able to secure What are the reasons for this the backing of the nution when
paradox? What are the sources voters go to the poll. Govern-of his extraordinary power? ments come and go in France with startling frequency. The
►
This Charlie Chaplin-mous tached man, given to insomnia and emotionalism, was born in Austria in 1889. He was not a "German, by birth.
present Administration has been NOTES OF THE DAY
widely referred to as the hundredth which France has
This was a highly important point inflaming his early Nation- alism. He developed, the im- placable patriotism of the fron- tiersman, the exile.
His schooling was very brief. He is not a person of genuine culture. He reads almost nothing.
The Treaty of Versailles was probably the most concrete single influence on his life; but
Hitler cares nothing for books, nothing
for clothes, nothing for friends, and nothing for food and drink. He neither smokes nor drinks, and he will not allow anyone to smoke near him.
He eats only vegetables-but they are prepared by an ex- quisitely competent chef.
He lives "simply,” but his flat in Munich is the last word in courtly sumptuousness!
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had since. the foundation of the WIDE OPEN SPACES Third- Republic, but a politicn!Immigration and land settlement writer has pointed out that the are two allied problems which have first six Ministries were virtual- frequently attracted much interest ly provisional, and it is only at ference of the League of Nations. it is doubtful if he ever read it at the International Labour Con-
THE man who is closest to Hitler is his chief body- 1875 that the counting should It has often been urged that the
The really begin. If the war years, Geneva, that admirable clearing tuals.
International Labour Offco at in full. He dislikes intellec- guard-Lieut. Bruckner.
only two men who can see him which were politically abnormal, house for industrial information of
at any time without previous are left out, it will be found that all descriptions, should carry out
He has never been outside in fifty-nine years the Republic appropriate investigations. In re- Germany since his youth in has had eighty-nine Govern-ponse to the demand for detailed Austria (if you except his war knowledge, informative articles on ments, giving an average life to "Openings for Settlers in Argen- experiences in Flanders and the
in the "International' Labour Re-
*
*
⭑
no
-By-
Author Of The Sensational Book "Inside
Europe"
each Government of about eight tinn" and "Jewish Colonisation In brief visit to Mussolini in Venice John Gunter months. Actually, however, the Falestine" have already appeared in 1934), and he speaks real average
life is ratherview!, which the LL.O. publishes foreign language except a few longer, as there are included in month by month. A most interest words of battered French. the total several Governments ing survey of "Land Settlement in Brazil appeared in a recent num- which were in a formal sense ber of this publication. On its To many who meet him, Hitler only new, but were really search for homes for the million
seems awkward and ill at almost, if not entirely, un-refugees who survived the Great
case. He has no poise. He changed in composition. On the War as helpless flotsam, borne
hither and thither on the turbulent finds it difficult to make quick other hand, if the averages are tide of post-War unrest in Europe, decisions; capacity for quick worked out for the years since the League of Nations has often decisions derives from inner the Armistice it will be found turned its eyes to the great open harmony, which he lacks. that there have been thirty: hard for a citizen of the Old World, spaces of Latin America. It is seven Ministries since Novem-with its ubiquitous evil of unem- ber, 1918, so that each of them ployment, to realise that there are has an average of only five actually countries where settlers aro months and ten days. The rela-still welcomed—that is, if they are tive stability of British Govern- not afraid of hard work. With the you were a public meeting, and ments is, of course, much higher, assistance of the Nansen Office, nothing can stop the gush of Since 1918, there have been only Russian refugee families have been words. cight, with an average life of transported overseas. They have
One after another he elimin- two years and two months each, been provided with land, farm Moreover, the record length of all the series of tulostated those who helped him to his
and necessaries life for any French Government under year-all at a cost of about £130 career. It is true that he has
been loyal to some colleagues those who never disagreed with him absolute him, who gave
(Continued on Page 4)
He is no "strong, silent man."
Hitler never answers ques- tions. He talks to you as if
the Republic, which was hold before the war by Waldeck- Rosseau, and has only been! equalled since by reckoning M. their political machine neces- Poincare's two consecutive Gov-sarily tends to instability, and is, obedience. ernments between 1926 and 1929 of course, true. By reason of
*
**
appointment are Ribbentrop, his adviser in foreign affairs, and Schacht, the Economics Dicta-
tor.
Neither Goering nor Goeb- bels may see Hitler without previous appointment.
Hitler tends to keep all sub- ordinates at a distance. They worship him; but they do not know him well.
They may see him every day, year in, year out: but they would never dare to be familiar. as one, only amounts to three their different systems, it is not HITLER, at 46, is not in first-
Hitler is totally uninterested years, a record which has been satisfactory to compare the
in women from any personal easily beaten by Mr. Baldwin British and French figures for
rate physical condition. He. and Mr. MacDonald since the longevity of Governments. None has gained about 12lb., and point of view. He thinks of them as house-wives and war, to my nothing of Mr. Lloyd the less, the frequent changes in shows it.
or potential mothers, mothers, George's six-year Cabinet in the France do affect the question of war and after, and several long-continuity of policy, especially in
The sloppiness with which he
He is not a woman-hater, but. lived Governments of carlier the realm of foreign affairs. salutes is notorious. The fore-
ha javoids) and evades women. The argument that the For this reason, a system which arm barely moves
above the French are politically unstable provides greater stability would elbow. He had lung trouble as Many women are attracted to in their political opinions is appear to be infinitely prefer- a boy and was blinded by poison him sexually, but they have had countered by the contention that] able.
to give up the chase..
date.
gas in the war.
It
HITLER has no use for money
personally, and, therefore, very little interest in it, except for political purposes. He has virtually no financial sophistica- tion; his lack of knowledge of even the practical details of finance, as of economica, is pro- found.
He takes no salary from the State. Rather he donates it to
a
fund which supports work- men who have suffered from la- bour accidents; but his private fortune could be considerable if he chose to save.
He was born and brought up a Roman Catholic, but he lost faith early and he attends no religious services of any kind.
On being formed, his Govern- ment almost immediately began a fierce religious war against. Catholics, Protestants and Jews alike.
The basis of much of Hitler- ism was Hitler's incredibly dras- tic desire to purge Germany of non-German elements-to create a hundred per cent. Germany for one hundred per cent. Ger- mans only.
*
domate, Nazi-ism, in fact, CARRIED to its logical ex-
and nationalist religion.
Hitler's attempt to unify re- ligion in Germany may lead to one danger. He himself may become a god. And divinity en- tails dimculties. Gods have to perform miracles.
Bre
Extreme precautions naturally taken to guard Hitler against assassination. His body- guard are supposed to be bound by a suicide pact. If, despite
vigilance, their
something should happen to the Fuehrer, they will kill themselves.
IF
1
મ
*
Hitler should die to-morrow his most likely successor is disliked and feared by would
be Goering bitterly as many members of the party.
he
Rumours to the effect that Goering is now actively intrigu- ing against Hitler are probably nonsense. There are many vir- tues that Goering lacks, but loyalty is not among them.
Besides, Hitler could elimin- ato Goering to-day almost as easily as he eliminated Rochm.
rivals do not exist. Goering, Hitler is all-powerful. Real Goebbels, and all the rest of them are no more than moons to Hitler's sun,`
They shine but only when the sun shines on them.
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