Robert Ley

Robert Ley was a Nazi that lead the German Labor Front from 1933 to 1945.

Quotes

 * “We believe on this earth in Adolf Hitler alone! We believe in National Socialism as the creed which is the sole source of grace! We believe that Almighty God has sent us Adolf Hitler so that he may rid Germany of the hypocrites and Pharisees.”, Robert Ley, July 23, 1936.


 * “We believe in Our Lord in heaven, who created us, who directs and protects us, and who has sent you to us, my Führer, so that you could liberate Germany. That is what we believe, my Führer!”, Robert Ley, 1936.


 * “... Christ, one of the great men of humanity, condemned Judah with the sharpest words. He cursed and damned their devilish goals. His whole life was an antisemitic struggle against Judah and its methods. The Jew Paul, born Saul, also called Schaul, transformed the honest, noble and elevated goals of the founder of the Christian religion into its very opposite, making them serve Jewish purposes. That may not dim the light of this great man of human history. ...”, Robert Ley, "Pesthauch der Welt", 1944.


 * “... The great German Martin Luther saw through the Jew, unfortunately too late, and called for burning his synagogues and Jewish schools and covering them with earth “so that no one will ever again be able to see so much as a stone or a cinder of what remains.” Speaking of what we formerly tolerated out of ignorance, Luther went on to say: “I did not know it myself, God forgive us, but now that we know, we may not protect these places any longer. In them, they defame Christ and us, insult us, curse us, spit on us, defile us. To ignore it would be to do these things to ourselves. We must also destroy their dwellings, since there they do the same things they do in their schools.” And Luther further wrote: “Some may think I say too much. I do not say too much, but rather too little, for I see what they write.” ...", Robert Ley, "Pesthauch der Welt”, 1944.


 * “... Christ led a bitter struggle against them [the Jews], ...”, Robert Ley, "Pesthauch der Welt", 1944.