Aliester Crowley, Hitler & the Nazi Party

     "Recently I was to discover some documents that show that Arnoldo
Krumm-Heller was eagerly interested to give his children an education
according Nazi-ideology.... So, Parsifal Krumm-Heller [son of Crowley's
first choice to run the Pasadena OTO lodge] (b. 1925) was sent in 1937 to
the famous Nazi elite school NAPOLA (which Hitler wrote about in Mein Kampf:
'A youth will rise in my order castles who will scare the whole world. I
want a violent, dictatorial, intrepid, cruel youth')...."
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http://www.cyberlink.ch/~koenig/consider.htm

From: The OTO Phenomenon Web Site

An OTO Anti-Semite Propagandist/Crowley and Hitler

From: Veritas Mystica Maxima
or Consider other O.T.O.groups non existent

by Peter-R. Koenig
excerpt from a biography on Theodor Reuss��������.

      "Of the six men and ten women in the Zurich lodge, besides those
mentioned above, there were also one Baron Herbert von Bomsdorff-Bergen, at
the time supposedly a producer at the Opera House, together with his wife;
Oskar Bienz (Laban's "dear friend and student"); Imre Schreiber; and W.
Rosenblum who acted as lodge treasurer. The meetings were hald at the home
of a certain Heinrich Friedl�nder, together with Brothers Reiser and
Turnibuca, and Sisters Beraly, Coleman, de Montcabrie, and Ruckeschell.
According Oskar R. Schlag (1907-1991), Bomsdorff-Bergen claimed that a scar
on his nose was the 'Mark of Baphomet'; [23] but after seceding from
'Libertas et Fraternitas' in 1922, Bomsdorff-Bergen turned to writing
pamphlets against Freemasonry in an anti-Semitic tone, under the pseudonym
of 'Christian Schweizerkreuz.' He still maintained contacts with the
Rosicrucians in Ticino from his estate in Morcote, which he had dubbed
'Klingsor's Magic Garden', and probably died in 1925. John Symonds gave
Bomsdorff a part in his novel "The Medusa's Head; or Conversations between
Aleister Crowley and Adolf Hitler" - he appears in a scene set at Weida in
Thuringia during 1925, where Crowley is chosen as 'World-Saviour' by
Heinrich Tr�nker and others.
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The Man Who Gave Hitler the Ideas.

Re: Hermann Joseph Metzger - OHO of the O.T.O.
and Patriarch of the Gnostic Catholic Church

     "H.J. Metzger published five newsletters as the 'Verlag
Psychosophisches Institut' ('Psychosophical Institute Press') on February
12th 1947, with "contributions from researchers in the occult and the exact
sciences." For instance, Peter Mano (Metzger himself) contributed a piece
entitled 'Occultism, Alchymy, Magic',  Felix Lazerus Pinkus one called 'Male
and Female', and Thomas Egloff [from Pinkus' Abramelin-circle] one called
'Ancient Fire'. In the early part of December 1950, Metzger also became
interested in Lanz Liebenfels (1874-1954), whom he described as 'the last
Grand Master of the Temple'; but a far better description of him was as 'the
man who gave Hitler the ideas. Liebenfels had founded something called the
'Ordinis Novi Templi' (ONT), and in his obituary - Liebenfels died on April
22nd 1954 - of June that year, Metzger spoke of his "unswerving faith and
exalted virtue [...] all who knew him confirm their high opinion of him." A
chapter from Liebenfels' violently anti-Semitic book "Theozoology" had
resemblances to Crowley's ideas. Rudolf J. Mund, one of Liebenfels'
adherents, visited Stein; (Mund himself had apparently been searched out by
Dietrich Heikaus, Grand Master of the Ordo Saturni). Metzger's house-mate
Anna Werder-Binder had only good things to say of him: "He proposed a Law of
Life [...] and FOR THE PRESERVATION OF THE RACE. He was writing as a
well-known race-hygienist in 1918."
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Crowley & Nazi Krumm-Heller

From: Baphomet and Rosycross, by Peter-R. Koenig
Crowley & Nazi Krumm-Heller
http://www.cyberlink.ch/~koenig/fra.htm

     "[Heinrich] Krumm-Heller spent the early 1930s in Spain, where he ran a
children's clinic and a pharmaceutical factory, as well as being an
organiser for the Red Cross; but when Franco came to power, he left the
country and went on a long tour that took in South America, Palestine,
Egypt, Turkey, and Rhodesia. Constant Chevillon told Hans R. Hilfiker a
rumour that although Krumm-Heller provided free consultations in his medical
practice, he made exorbitant charges later on for the medicines he
prescribed. A book-printer in Berlin printed his periodical 'Rosa-Cruz,'
which gave Krumm's address for correspondence as Texas. On the outbreak of
World War II, he had the misfortune to find himself by chance in Berlin, and
was compelled to spend the rest of the war in Nazi Germany. Crowley had high
hopes for Krumm-Heller and unsuccessfully suggested in 1936 that he should
'take over the work in California.' Crowley had been so disappointed by the
2nd Agape Lodge that he also suggested to McMurtry he should take it over,
10 years later. (McMurtry was just one among many and certainly NOT
Crowley's first choice.)
     "In 1936, the Nazi-pamphlet 'Der Judenkenner' appeared which caused the
neighbours of Krumm-Heller's family in Berlin to get upset.
     "Recently I was to discover some documents that show that Arnoldo
Krumm-Heller was eagerly interested to give his children an education
according Nazi-ideology. So, Parsifal Krumm-Heller (b. 1925) was sent in
1937 to the famous Nazi elite school NAPOLA (which Hitler wrote about in
Mein Kampf: "A youth will rise in my order castles who will scare the whole
world. I want a violent, dictatorial, intrepid, cruel youth").
     "Krumm-Heller participated in organizing the Red Cross in Spain but
left the country for South America after General Franco's ascent to power.
He continued to travel (Palestine, Egypt, Turkey and Rhodesia) but spent the
Second World War in Germany, where he happened to be at the outbreak of war.
And with the Mexican flag alongside the Hakenkreuz in front of his house,
they survived WWII seemingly safe.
     "In 1942 Krumm-Heller was staying at a sanatorium in Pyrmont, from
where he wrote to the 2nd Agap� Lodge in Calfornia, amongst other letters.
This lodge was whence the 'Church of Thelema' stemmed, which is still being
led by Helen P. Smith as a highly exclusive group. Krumm-Heller signed his
letters to Bolivia as "Huiracocha R+C+", and stamped them with a seal
bearing the title "Ecclesia Gnostica" (which was later also used by his son
Parsival)....
     "With permission from Theodor Reuss, Krumm-Heller founded Fraternitas
Rosicruciana Antiqua Centres in the various countries of our part of
America. After this he established his Summum Supremum Sanctuarium in
Berlin, from where he penned his letters to the South American brethren. Dr.
Krumm-Heller had received his previous initiations in 1909 in Argentina and
Chile, his Masters being Dr. Girgois and Dr. Arturo Clement (two Martinist
Masters)....
     During his lifetime the FRA grew even more strongly active. But the
outbreak of the Second World War put obstacles in the way of the
correspondence, so that his efforts often came to nothing; some of his South
American students described Krumm-Heller as a NAZI. During the War other
Rosicrucian organisations were able to maintain themselves better in South
America. The people from AMORC and Clymer's Rosicrucian Fellowship
'undermined' the FRA and opposed its tradition."
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