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| AMIN AL HUSSEINI AND ADOLPH HITLER |
It’s no coincidence that just a few months after
Nazi Germany surrendered, on November 2, 1945, the anniversary of the Balfour
Declaration, many synagogues were burned down in Egypt and dozens of Jews were
killed on the streets of Cairo.
On November 5, 1941, the grand mufti of
Jerusalem, Haj Amin al-Husseini, arrived in Berlin. He was fleeing Iraq
following the failure of the coup he was involved in there, and three weeks
later he met with Adolf Hitler. The meeting took place despite Nazi Germany’s
entanglement in Operation Barbarossa and the war against Russia.
The Nazis appointed the mufti “Das Arabische Buro Der Grossmufti” of Berlin and gave him a monthly allowance of tens of thousands of dollars a month. He was instructed to hire dozens of assistants, each of whom also received a salary directly from the Third Reich. Among the individuals with whom he worked closely during his time in Berlin was Hassan Salameh – the father of the Palestinian terrorist Ali Salameh (aka “the Red Prince”), one of the perpetrators of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre of Israeli athletes.
The Nazis appointed the mufti “Das Arabische Buro Der Grossmufti” of Berlin and gave him a monthly allowance of tens of thousands of dollars a month. He was instructed to hire dozens of assistants, each of whom also received a salary directly from the Third Reich. Among the individuals with whom he worked closely during his time in Berlin was Hassan Salameh – the father of the Palestinian terrorist Ali Salameh (aka “the Red Prince”), one of the perpetrators of the 1972 Munich Olympics massacre of Israeli athletes.

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