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Unholy Alliance: A History of the Nazi Involvement With the Occult
 
 
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Unholy Alliance: A History of the Nazi Involvement With the Occult (Paperback)

~ (Author), Norman Mailer (Foreword)
3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"A book of startling and sinister coincidences, of murder, magic, and mysterious questions there for us to pursue....highly readable." -- Norman Mailer

"A sophisticated and thrilling revelation of cults and their victims....I recommend a serious reading of Peter Levenda's Unholy Alliance." -- Bob Rudner, Chicago Greens/Green Party USA

"At once a terrific read, an underground classic, and a major work of investigative reporting....a profound and fascinating book." -- Jim Hougan, author of Spooks and Secret Agenda

"Breathtaking....Some of the voices heard here echo the voices Hitler pretended to hear and used for [his] apocalyptic purposes." -- Hans Janitschek, president of the United Nations Society of Writers and Artists


Product Description

FOREWORD BY NORMAN MAILER

Engagingly written, this is a comprehensive but popular history of the occult background and roots of the Nazi movement, showing how the ideas of a vast international network of late 19th- and early 20th century occult groups influenced Nazi ideology, from Madame Blavatsky and Aleister Crowley to the Thule Gesellschaft, the Order of the Golden Dawn, the Order of the Eastern Temple, and the pseudoscientific expeditions to Iceland and Tibet of the Ancestral Heritage Research and Teaching Society. Nazi appropriation of the occult was a strange mixture of astrology, freemasonry, racism rooted in occultism, and popular European folklore. It also traces the Nazi movements as they continued their activities after the war or "morphed" into neo-Nazi, skinhead, and satanic groups, such as the Christian Identity and White Aryan Resistance movements.


Product Details

  • Paperback: 423 pages
  • Publisher: Continuum; 2 edition (May 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0826414095
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826414090
  • Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (17 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #277,019 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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Peter Levenda
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Customer Reviews

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28 of 32 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A great read!, October 27, 2002
By A Customer
In this readable but thoroughly researched survey of the mythic/religio/occult ideologies that formed the basis of the Nazi movement, in UNHOLY ALLIANCE, the author has succeeded in making a dense, fact-laden topic spanning hundreds of years accessible to the non-specialist reader without sacrificing accuracy. This is probably the most thorough treatment of Nazi occult ideology in English, and where it surpasses similar works is that it continues documenting neo-Nazi survivals right up to the present. Anyone who doubts Levenda's thesis that the end of WWII only changed, rather than ended, the Nazi movement, need only check the unblushing anti-Semitism of some of the other reviews here.

Writers exploring the occult and its many flamboyant personalities frequently fall into either reflexive debunking or starstruck gullibility. While the author has done plenty of first-hand investigation, even getting into the Chilean Nazi enclave Colonia Dignidad during the Pinochet years, he succeeds in giving us a clear-eyed, even-handed view.

The Norman Mailer Foreword to this edition is an unexpected plus, a fine essay on metaphysics, occultism, and current events that gave this reader, who has always considered the enormous Mailer canon a mixed bag, a pleasant surprise: Mailer has a number of deeply insightful things to say about magic and the occult. Mailer says he's read UNHOLY ALLIANCE three times--once more than I have, though my first edition is a bit ragged from the many times I've also used it as a quick reference.

UNHOLY ALLIANCE belongs on the bookshelf of anyone with a serious interest in WWII, extremist religio-political ideologies of all descriptions, modern Roman Catholic history, or any branch of occultism. Thanks to excellent source notes and an index, it's a fine reference work that--a rare bonus in this field--is also a great read. The author's update to this new edition was obviously written post-September 11, and is a good, if somewhat sketchy, summary of developments since its original publication. One would wish Levenda could have had more space to explore the similarities between Nazi occultism and the current crop of terrorists in greater detail, but this is a very small quibble about an otherwise splendid work.

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48 of 59 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Anti-Semites Attack!, August 14, 2002
By A Customer
Reading the last few reviews of Unholy Alliance, I am struck by the fact that both reviewers are unapologetic anti-Semites. I guess everyone's entitled to their opinion, but they have misrepresented some of the facts. I only find a single reference to Tom Metzger in the book, and the author nowhere states that Metzger was a "rune master", whatever that is, only that his newsletter used to be a forum for pagan and Odinist views. I think that's correct. As for Hitler not being an occultist, the author states very clearly that Hitler was not a member of any occult group, but that he was fascinated by Lanz von Liebenfels, something that is well-documented, and was a protege of Dietrich Eckart. In fact, the entire book is well-documented with sources (from the Captured German Documents Section at the National Archives, among other places) that you won't find other places, and the author even gives microfilm roll numbers so anyone -- even an anti-Semite! -- can go to the Archives and look up the relevant documents themselves with ease. While one of the reviewers is an admirer of Goodrick-Clarke (who also writes about the occult background of the Third Reich), he does not like Unholy Alliance. I think the problem is that Unholy Alliance also focuses on modern survivals of Nazism in North and South America and takes a good hard look at groups like Metzger's, something that Goodrick-Clarke does not do (even though his books are excellent). Unholy Alliance puts it all in one place; and the author risked his life investigating Colonia Dignidad in Chile, a place where others were not so lucky to escape (an American math professor was taken to the Colony a few years AFTER the author, and tortured and killed as reported in the NY Times), and was personally acquainted with James Madole and Roy Frankhouser, all notorious racists and neo-Nazis. To attack the book because of a single reference on a single page to Metzger seems strange. And although the reviewer claims to have been a friend of Metzger since 1978, it is obvious that the author of Unholy Alliance has also been in the field at least that long (his trip to Chile was in 1979 for instance).

So, I think the book is worth a look by Nazis and anti-Nazis alike. Both will discover a wealth of information about the SS Ahnenerbe and its bizarre Tibet Expedition, about Otto Rahn and the search for the Grail, and about a host of other things that few other books have bothered to document as thoroughly.

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65 of 83 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Interesting Examination of Nazi Occultism., January 8, 2003
Peter Levenda's _Unholy Alliance_ is at once a tale of adventure and intrigue and a useful source of information on the occult origins of Nazism. Much has been made of these occult beginnings and developments which led to the creation of Hitler's Third Reich and which have continued after its downfall in various forms of NeoNazism. In this book, Peter Levenda examines these occult aspects of Nazism from its early development in the Thule Society and among individuals such as Guido von List, Lanz von Liebenfels, and Rudolf von Sebottendorf to Nazi psychics up until the present day in which Satanism and other such dark forces have combined with Nazi occultism. Levenda rightly contends that Hitler himself was not overly influenced by occult ideas (contrary to the thesis put forth in _The Spear of Destiny_) despite his youthful readings of von Liebenfel's notorious magazine, "Ostara". However, according to Levenda the magical and occult aspects of Nazism cannot be denied. Levenda considers Nazism to be a sort of cult with an all powerful leader ("Der Fuehrer"). Much of the material in this book as far as the early roots of Nazism is available from other sources especially _The Occult Roots of Nazism_ by Nicholas Goodrick-Clark. However, Levenda provides new material in his examination of Nazi psychics, including Hanussen, his thorough discussion of the Ahnenerbe Society, his explanation of the Tibet expedition which has not previously been covered by other authors in this field, and his discussions of the notorious madman Aleister Crowley. In fact, a great deal of this book focuses on the shenanigans of Aleister Crowley but also discusses the roots of many German secret societies in the Theosophical Society of the medium Madame H. P. Blavatsky. The most interesting discussion in this book however is that of the survival of the Nazi cult in various manifestations particularly in South America. The far reaches of the tentacles of the Nazi octopus can be seen in the trail of Rudolf Hess, where he claims that he was being mind-controlled by various psychiatrists working for the Allied Powers. This is one among hundreds of bizarre instances involving the captured Nazi elite. The escaped Nazis may have traveled to South America via various underground channels. Individuals such as Klaus Barbie and Martin Bormann as well as the infamous physician, Dr. Josef Mengele, may have traveled to South America and survived in hiding under different aliases and involving themselves with various occult movements and lodges. The nation of Chile appears to be particularly likely to be infested with NeoNazis according to Levenda. Among others the occult writer and Chilean diplomat Miguel Serrano has written praising Hitler. Levenda himself investigated the secret Nazi center, the infamous "Colonia Dignidad", in Chile. This mysterious colony is run by the self-described "Baptist" zealot, Dr. Ernst Schafer, with unproven ties to Nazism. While in Chile, Levenda encountered this mysterious Nazi colony and barely managed to escape alive (luckily a report involving the statute of limitations on Nazi war crimes was being reviewed that day which may have allowed his escape). Rumors of mysterious deaths, torture, sexual abuse of children, and the practice of the black arts combining traditional Voodoo ritual with Nazi occultism have spread about the infamous "Colonia Dignidad". Whatever exactly this colony consists of, it is certainly not a wholesome affair. In the last full chapter in this book, Levenda turns his attention to NeoNazism. In particular, he examines the question of Nazi Satanism (taking a look at such organizations as the former National Renaissance Party) as well as the phenomenon of Nazi Skinheads. Nazi Satanists appear to base their rites off of those performed by the ultimate black magician and Reichsfuehrer of the SS, Heinrich Himmler, which he performed in his mysterious castle, Wewelsburg. Levenda makes some decent comparisons and analysis of Nazism and the Satanic abduction scare (in which he compares such mass murderers as Charles Manson with Nazi occultism and Satanic practices). Ultimately, upon finishing this book, it is clear to the reader that the Nazis were indeed based on an occult system of practice. While I dislike the idea that this was some form of neopaganism, it is more likely a restoration of the Gnostic heresy and a revolt against the Catholic Church, Christianity, and the Semitic religions. Levenda is unfortunately too harsh on the Catholic Church in this respect giving into many modernist and liberal biases. It is a fact that the Church tried to protect many individuals from the evils of Nazism and its death camps, despite whatever else certain of its members may have done. Also, the case against Pope Pius XII's involvement with Nazism is certainly far from being resolved in my mind at least. I believe Nazism constitutes a form of modern day Satanism and its ties to black magic and evil forms of occultism and degeneracy are all too apparent.

Also recommended: _The Morning of the Magicians_ by Pauwels and Bergier and _The Occult Roots of Nazism_ by Nicholas Goodrick-Clark.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

2.0 out of 5 stars Worthwhile Reading for Psychologists Researching Occultophilia
A self-indulgent and often rambling antirational pseudo-expose. Mr Levenda is certainly an interesting subject in himself obsessed with the topic of contemporary evil, but who... Read more
Published 1 month ago by Steven P. Bohlin

5.0 out of 5 stars Very good read, unusual information!
I picked up this book after first hearing about the Nazi occult practices in a Germanic Mythology lecture in college, and wow, was there a lot of information that the mainstream... Read more
Published 16 months ago by Richard K.

1.0 out of 5 stars Reader beware
I was about to purchase this book because of the interesting subject matter. When noticing the foreword by Mr Norman Mailer and then remembering his political positions I felt the... Read more
Published 16 months ago by lenny12458

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent research!
Although I could go on and on, like the other reviewers, I'll try to keep this short. Peter Levenda did extensive research for this book, and its obvious looking at the... Read more
Published on July 6, 2007 by TheReviewer

1.0 out of 5 stars Horrible research and poorly formulated arguments
As other reviewer have mentioned, Levenda contradicts his own conclusions and arguments in this book; arguments formed by poor research and untrustworthy sources... Read more
Published on April 28, 2007 by Lothar Tuppan

2.0 out of 5 stars You have to be VERY gullible to take this book seriously!
Unholy Alliance has to be the stupidest book written about so called "Nazi occultism" since Spear of Destiny by Trevor Ravenscroft. Read more
Published on January 25, 2007 by Cwn_Annwn

4.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating, but I'm not sure I believe him.
The bulk of this book is an absorbing study of Nazi occultism. Levenda contends that this was not an eccentricity dabbled in by a few of the high command but was in fact central... Read more
Published on August 30, 2006 by Fed Up With Amazon

5.0 out of 5 stars Worthwhile read
I picked this book up at a local academic library several years ago and read it in it's entirety.

Since it has been a while, I cannot remember everything about what... Read more
Published on August 21, 2006 by Raymond Jensen

3.0 out of 5 stars One Side of Darkness
Peter Levenda's book on the history of Nazi Involvement with the occult is interesting and informative, but sadly lacking in balance. Read more
Published on July 5, 2006 by Michael Tozer

1.0 out of 5 stars Ohhgawd avoid this crapola like poison
Ohhgawd avoid this crapola like poison. This is neither a scholastically researched, nor an academically-sound nor a first-person-adventure account of this important topic. Read more
Published on December 31, 2005 by OoOoOoO

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