Gustav Palm kept his secret for more than forty years. He’d been a young man when Hitler invaded his native Norway. After being forced to guard a Nazi prison camp, however, Gustav took his only option for escape: he volunteered for the Waffen-SS to fight at the front.
Agnes Erdös grew up in privilege and prosperity as a child in Hungary. She and her parents were practicing Roman Catholics, but they were ethnic Jews, and after the Nazis invaded her country, Agnes and her parents were sent to the death camp of Auschwitz-Birkenau. Miraculously, both Agnes and Gustav survived. And after the war, they found each other.
Told in their own words, Surviving Hitler is the story of two indomitable spirits who built on their life-altering experiences to overcome the past, help each other heal, and embrace a common faith in God that led them to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Deseret Book: Nazi Apologists?
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_beanboots
- _Emeritus
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- Joined: Fri Mar 15, 2013 7:32 pm
Deseret Book: Nazi Apologists?
Surviving Hitler - New from Deseret Book
I make an end of my writing upon these plates, which writing has been small; and to the reader I bid farewell, hoping that many of my brethren may read my words. Brethren, adieu.
“I believe if I had a house in hell and one in St. George I'd rent out the one in St. George and live in hell.”
-J. Golden Kimball
“I believe if I had a house in hell and one in St. George I'd rent out the one in St. George and live in hell.”
-J. Golden Kimball
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_ZelphtheGreat
- _Emeritus
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- Joined: Tue Dec 11, 2012 5:33 am
Re: Deseret Book: Nazi Apologists?
Wonder if there is a chapter with them celebrating Adolf and Eva being sealed in the Temple so they can be together forever as Mormons?
“If paying tithing means that you can’t pay for water or electricity, pay tithing. If paying tithing means that you can’t pay your rent, pay tithing. Even if paying tithing means that you don’t have enough money to feed your family, pay tithing." Ensign/2012/12
Re: Deseret Book: Nazi Apologists?
In the autumn of 1940, the German high commissioner in Norway was the Nazi Josef Terboven. In a speech to the Norwegian people, he promised full freedom and independence for the Norwegian people who rallied around the political party Nasjonal Samling, or National Socialist Party (NSP).
What was I to do? If we obeyed the demands of the high commissioner, then it seemed to me that we had not committed a treasonous act. Such thoughts tumbled around in my young mind. No one was willing or able to give me guidance. One year after Josef Terboven’s famous speech, I decided to join the National Socialist Party, and I became a member in January 1942. When my family and neighbors found out what I had done, it was a huge shock to them. Nevertheless, even then no one gave me any counsel on what I should or should not do.
When I came in contact with the National Socialist Party, I met people with independent ideas, enterprising and bold, and I shared many of those ideas. The people were ambitious and fully engaged, believing deeply in what they were being taught.
In defense of this young Mormon Nazi, our articles of faith say we need to be subject to a variety of rulers. Besides, prior to World War II, Apostle Clark was espousing some similar rhetoric and handing out copies of "Protocols of the Elders of Zion", (which by the way was not the Church handbook).
Cry Heaven and let loose the Penguins of Peace