Viking Germans, Polish and Polish and Russian jews, Mongolian, not the other Jews which they call themselves Zionists.
....Mongolian, my son had a Mongolian birth mark when he came here.
He is Asian.......
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There is something called White Russians and Black Russians:
The Jews killed were the Ashkenazi Jews, they were from Russia,not the other Jews, am I right ?
The real Germans were very successful people, and Russia would have non of that, and neither would the US. That is why US
took out most of the German population after WWII.
The truth is very hard to bear, those Jews killed were brought
by train from Russia, Poland, Lithuania, Ukraine, and Germany
to the camps.
The holocaust was about killing any Ashkenazi Jews, the real
Jews, the Polish Ash Jews, the German Ash Jews, the Russian
Ash Jews.
Ashkenazi Jews do not integrate this recombinant siRNA.
They get Bloom's Syndrome, Werner Syndrome and another
along with those.
Askenazi Jews: Who are they?
"Who is an Ashkenazi Jews?
Ashkenazi Jews, also known as Ashkenazic Jews or Ashkenazim (Hebrew: אַשְׁכֲּנָזִים, pronounced [ˌaʃkəˈnazim], sing. [ˌaʃkəˈnazi]; also יְהוּדֵי אַשְׁכֲּנָז, Yehudei Ashkenaz, "the Jews of Ashkenaz"), are the Jews descended from the medieval Jewish communities of the Rhineland. Ashkenaz is the medieval Hebrew name for the region which in modern times encompasses the country of Germany and German-speaking borderland areas. Ashkenaz is also a Japhetic patriarch in the Table of Nations (Genesis 10). Thus, Ashkenazim or Ashkenazi Jews are literally "German Jews." The word "Ashkenazi" is pronounced with a [z] sound, rather than with [ts] as in a few similar instances in the English language.
Many Ashkenazi Jews later migrated, largely eastward, forming communities in non German-speaking areas, including Hungary, Poland, Russia, Eastern Europe and elsewhere between the 10th and 19th centuries. With them, they took and diversified Yiddish, a Germanic Jewish language that had since medieval times been the lingua franca among Ashkenazi Jews. To a much lesser extent, the Judæo-French language Zarphatic and the Slavic-based Knaanic (Judæo-Czech) were also spoken. The Ashkenazi Jews developed a distinct culture and liturgy influenced, to varying degrees, by interaction with surrounding peoples, predominantly Germans, Poles, Czechs, Slovaks, Kashubians, Hungarians, Ukrainians, Lithuanians, Letts, Belarusians, and Russians.
Although in the 11th century they comprised only 3% of the world's Jewish population, Ashkenazi Jews accounted for (at their highest) 92% of the world's Jews in 1931 and today make up approximately 80% of Jews worldwide.[4] Most Jewish communities with extended histories in Europe are Ashkenazim, with the exception of those associated with the Mediterranean region. The majority of the Jews who migrated from Europe to other continents in the past two centuries are Ashekenazim, Eastern Ashkenazim in particular. This is especially true in the United States, where 6 out of the 7 million strong American Jewish population — the largest Jewish population in the world when consistent statistical parameters are employed[5] — is Ashkenazi, representing the world's single largest concentration of Ashkenazim............
...............
The exact definition of Jewishness is not universally agreed upon -- neither by religious scholars (especially across different denominations), nor in the context of politics (as applied to those who wish to make Aliyah), nor even in the conventional, everyday sense (where 'Jewishness' may be loosely understood by the casual observer as encompassing both religious and secular Jews, or religious Jews alone). This makes it especially difficult to define who is an Ashkenazi Jew, because Ashkenazi Jews have been defined by different people using religious, cultural, or ethnic perspectives. Since the overwhelming majority of Ashkenazi Jews no longer live in Eastern Europe, the isolation that once favored a distinct religious tradition and culture has vanished. Furthermore, the word Ashkenazi is being used in non-traditional ways, especially in Israel. By conservative and orthodox philosophies, a person can only be considered a jew if their mother was jewish, or they have undergone conversion. This means that a person can be Ashkenazi but not considered a jew by some of those within the jewish communities, making the term "Ashkenazi" more applicable as broad ethnicity which evolved from the practice of judaism in Europe."
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AshkenaziAnd yet do the Zionist Jews accept them? Hitler's was Jewish
according to this line, his grandfather was Jewish, ......
according to John Toland's book "Adolph Hitler"c. 1976 Ballantine Books , pages 2 and 3, under chapter title: "Deep are the Roots 1889-1907"and I quote:
"Hitler's father was born on June 7, 1837, in the village of Strones to a forty-two-year-old unmarried woman, Maria Anna Schicklgruber. Strones was too small to be a parish and so the baby was registered in Dollersheim as Aloys Schicklgruber, "Illegitimate."
The space for the father's name was blank, generating a mystery that remains unsolved: he probably was a man from the neighborhood. There is the slight possiblity that Hitler's grandfather was a wealthy Jew named Frankenberger or Frankenreither: that Maria Anna had been a domestic in this Jewish household at Craz and the young son had got her pregnant.
When Alois...was almost five, Johann Georg Hiedler, an itinerant millworker from nearby Spital, married Maria. But, her little son continuted to have a blighted family life, she died five years later and the stepfather apparently resumed his drifting. Alois consequently was brought up by Hiedler's brother Johann Nepomuk at house number 36 in Spital. This farmhouse and the one next door would play an imporant role in the life of young Adolph Hitler, for here, in this isolated village he spent half a dozen pleasant summer holidays".....
If Toland was correct, he won Pulitzer Prize for this book, then
Hitler name was changed, and I quote again from Toland, pg 2.:
"Hitler rarely talked about his family but to a few confidants he did confess an inability to get along with his father, a dictatorial man. While he revered his mother, a quiet, soft soul, it soon became evident that the former would be the dominating force in his life. Both parents came from the Waldviertel, a rural area of Austria, northwest of Vienna, not far from the present Czechoslovakian border and, according to one member of the family, there was Maravian blood in the line. Hitler was an unusual name for an Austrian and quite possibly it was derived from the Czech names "Hidlar" or Hidlarcek." Variants of these names had appeared in the Waldviertel since 1430 and changed from Hydler to Hytler to Hidler. In 1650 a direct ancestor of Adolf Hitler on his mother's side was called George Hiedler. His descendants occasionally spelled their name "Huttler" and "Hitler." In those days spelling was as unimportant and erratic as in Shakespearian England.
Adolf Hitler, by John Toland, Ballantine Books p.1976.
pages 2 and 3.
Proof that Hitler was Jewish, not German, at all.
But, he used the Germans as did the Russians.
Just some history so you know that there is a division
in the Jewish community, and that the Germans were not
the enemy.
This does tie into the archives in the "hidden warehouse"
in the US.
All about secrets.
Skytroll