- REPORTING FROM BERLIN -- Germanys most infamous book wont be hitting newsstands this week after all. (Los Angeles Times)
- Otto Strasser, an early follower of Adolf Hitler who later broke with him and escaped from Germany, recalled a dinner with top Nazi officials at the 1927 Party Congress in Nuremberg. (Daily Beast)
- BERLIN — A state government in Germany is looking at legal measures to prevent a British publishers plans to reproduce excerpts from Adolf Hitlers infamous memoir Mein Kampf in Germany. (msnbc.com)
- The proposed publication of Hitlers Mein Kampf in Germany has sparked outrage and worries it would give voice to neo-Nazis. But The Local's Moises Mendoza argues it is time for the country to fight extremism by supporting free speech. (thelocal.de)
- Berlin — The city that was the center of Adolf Hitler's empire is littered with reminders of the Nazi past, from the bullet holes that pit the fronts of many buildings to the hulking Luftwaffe headquarters that now house the Finance Ministry. (Washington Post)
- BERLIN (Reuters) - Adolf Hitlers Mein Kampf, banned from German bookstores, will soon be available from newspaper kiosks after a British publisher said he would print excerpts from the text in Germany. (Reuters)
- German weekly Zeitungszeugen magazine will start publishing excerpts from Adolf Hitlers Mein Kampf next week, a move that has already caused criticism in Germany, French daily Le Figaro reported on Wednesday. (RIA Novosti)
- Graumann: I can truly do without the publication of this hate-filled book that is confused, saturated with anti-Semitism to the core. (Jerusalem Post)
- For all its notoriety as the most pernicious book of the 20th century, Adolf Hitlers Mein Kampf is a remarkably dull read. The prose is clotted and clichéd, and endlessly rambling. (Wall Street Journal)
Saturday, January 28, 2012
Mein kampf
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