August Landmesser: Difference between revisions
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The actual identity of the man in the photograph is known with certainty. '''[[Gustav Wegert]]''' (1890–1959), a metalworker at Blohm-Voss was interviewed on the radio that same day. | The actual identity of the man in the photograph is known with certainty. '''[[Gustav Wegert]]''' (1890–1959), a metalworker at Blohm-Voss was interviewed on the radio that same day. | ||
Mr. Wegert was tracked down and given an interview by the | Mr. Wegert was tracked down and given an interview by the local radio station working with "Der Zeit", the magazine that employed the Photographer. Wegert didn't understand how some people couldn't comprehend that people don't attend rallys for people they dislike. | ||
During the interview on the live radio show, he said he loved Goebbels, who was actually the speaker at the moment the photo was taken. He did not salute because he had worked his shoulders too hard that day. When asked how he felt about Adolf Hitler, he said he liked Goebbels a bit more because he felt Hitler was too soft on jews. | During the interview on the live radio show, he said he loved Goebbels, who was actually the speaker at the moment the photo was taken. He did not salute because he had worked his shoulders too hard that day. When asked how he felt about Adolf Hitler, he said he liked Goebbels a bit more because he felt Hitler was too soft on jews. |
Revision as of 13:31, 12 September 2022
August Landmesser is a person intentionally misrepresented as the smiling man in the viral photo smiling, but not giving a Roman Salute.
The narrative
A man falsly claimed by Irene Eckler, a blood related jew, supposedly August Landmesser, is seen in the photograph taken on June 13, 1936, which was published in 1991 in Die Zeit. It shows a large gathering of workers at the Blohm-Voss shipyard in Hamburg for the launching of the navy training ship Horst Wessel. (Originally thought to be the Bismark in 1939.) Almost everyone in the image has raised their arm in the salute, with the most obvious exception of a man toward the back of the crowd, who is smiling with his arms crossed over his chest.[1]
August Landmesser not only looks nothing like tbe man in tbe photo (Wegert) but ne er worked at the shipyard, and in fact could not possibly ha e been there because he was in jail for destruction of property. The picture actually dates from 1936, but Eckler spun her tale when it was believed the photo was taken in 1939...oops.
Irene Eckler inserted her father into the story, fabricating a lurid tale of lost loves and Auschwitz (even though nobody from that area ever went to Auschwitz), and making lots of money off of the back of a die-hard National Socialist who did not salute Goebbels (the man actually speaking at that moment) because he had worked very hard that day.
And the judeo-Marxist media of course runs with Eckler's completely fabricated, completely undocumented, and actually quite impossible story. Because it fits the narrative. Defiant anti Hitler guy sells better than tired shoulders guy.
Gustav Wegert
The actual identity of the man in the photograph is known with certainty. Gustav Wegert (1890–1959), a metalworker at Blohm-Voss was interviewed on the radio that same day.
Mr. Wegert was tracked down and given an interview by the local radio station working with "Der Zeit", the magazine that employed the Photographer. Wegert didn't understand how some people couldn't comprehend that people don't attend rallys for people they dislike.
During the interview on the live radio show, he said he loved Goebbels, who was actually the speaker at the moment the photo was taken. He did not salute because he had worked his shoulders too hard that day. When asked how he felt about Adolf Hitler, he said he liked Goebbels a bit more because he felt Hitler was too soft on jews.
Unlike Landmesser, who does not resemble Wegert in any way, Wegert looks exactly like the man in the photo, and was obviously identified by the interviewers, co-workers, and others.
Wegert's family, years after his death, have said that he refused to salute on religious grounds, and that the sore arm story was simply a cover. It may be true, who knows? But either way, Wegert is definitely the man in the photo, not Landmesser.
His family has presented documentation of Wegert's employment at Blohm-Voss at that time which is obviously stronger evidence than a colorful tale, as well as family photographs that appear to be the same exact man in the famous photograph, as evidence.[2][3][4][5][6]
References
- ↑ shipyard worker in Hamburg https://www.washingtonpost.com The Washington Post January 2014
- ↑ Photo of the Day (en-US) (2016-01-25).
- ↑ Gerhard Paul, Das Jahrhundert der Bilder 1900 bis 1949, Verlag Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2009, Seite 494 rechte Spalte Absatz 3), as quoted in [1]. Quote: "In the meantime another Family from Hamburg has identified the man as a relative. It is Gustav Wegert (1890–1959) who worked as a metalworker at Blohm & Voss. As a believing Christian he generally refused the Salute. In spite of this he was an avid National Socialist.
- ↑ 1936 – Just one refused the salute.
- ↑ The German Non-Saluter Myth – Beachcombing's Bizarre History Blog (26 October 2014).
- ↑ Brajovic, Predrag (2018-04-21). Mr. Wegert and Mr. Landmesser: People, Numbers and the Tipping Point (en).