Fooled. From the diaries (1939-1945)
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Almost half of the October issue of IL is occupied by documentary material entitled “Fooled” - fragments from the diaries of 1939-1945, which were secretly kept by August Friedrich Kellner (1885-1970), who served as an inspector of justice in Mainz and Laubach under the Nazis. Perhaps a few quotes quoted almost at random will justify the timeliness and relevance of this warning publication: “The confusion in the minds is complemented by the emptiness in the souls. Looking at these people, you want to howl... The ball is ruled by rudeness, cruelty, thirst for power, and conceit.” “Now questions inevitably arise: have we become happier by occupying a number of countries? Did each individual German gain anything from these conquests?” “If, after the end of the war, the German people gather their courage and try to identify the darkest aspects of Hitler’s tyranny, then the press and its employees will be first on the list...” “The war has distorted the thinking of people. , and all their actions are subordinated to the tasks of war. The hangover will last longer than an inveterate pessimist can imagine.”
Data sheet
- Name of the Author
- Август Кельнер Фридрих
- Language
- Russian
- Translator
- Анатолий Сергеевич Егоршев