Einar Aberg
Einar Gustav Vilhelm Åberg (20 April 1890 - 6 October 1970) was a Swedish Holohoax revisionist and international pamphleteer. In the 1950s the jews labeled him as "the world’s largest distributor of anti-Semitica."[1]
Life
Einar Åberg was born in Gothenburg, Sweden.[2] He began his authoring work in favour of the cause of human liberation in 1933 which included scores of mini-books and several full-length books distributed in a dozen languages. One of his first projects was the publication of his own translation of The Protocols of the Learned Elders of Zion (Israels Vises Hemliga Protokoll) into Swedish.[3]
In 1941 he founded Anti-jewish Action League of Sweden (Swedish: Sveriges Antijudiska Kampförbund), to oppose jewish supremacism. During this time in Stockholm he ran a bookstore. After the Second World War Åberg continued to distribute his political material in English to American, British, Canadian, and South African readers. The American jewish Committee and the World jewish Congress began an campaign of intimidation and blackmail and pressured the Swedish government to stop Aberg’s activities.[4]
Between 1941 and 1945, he was convicted nine times for his activities, such as for his bookstore having a sign stating that "jews and half-jews not allowed here". His activities were one cause for the 1948 Swedish hate speech law (sometimes called "Lex Åberg"). Åberg was the first to be convicted under this law and eventually was convicted six times, including to imprisonment.
In 1961, Åberg is said to have been at a meeting with Savitri Devi, when she visited Sweden. In 1964 at the age of 74 and in poor health he announced his retirement as a Swedish activist.
Pamphlets
- God's Chosen People (1948)
- The War Criminals (1950) 4 pages
- Why I am anti-jewish (1954) 4 pages
- Behind Communism Stands the jew
- The jews Are Also Human Beings Some People Say
- Kol Nidre--All Vows
- Please Let Me Go Around the World
See also
References
- ↑ Cross-Currents by Arnold Forster and Benjamin R. Epstein, page 214
- ↑ The Cross and the Flag, Volumes 20-21, 1962, page 8
- ↑ The Emergence of a Euro-American Radical Right, by Jeffrey Kaplan, page 112
- ↑ The Madhouse, By Daniel Hammarberg, page 360