Leon Degrelle, the leader of the Belgian Nazis, led during the war with the USSR, first the national Walloon formation as part of the Wehrmacht (373-infantry battalion), and then the SS assault brigade Wallonia, later deployed in the eponymous Grenadier SS volunteer division. Degrrel himself positively assessed Germany's actions in the war, so in April 1941 he sent a letter to Hitler, in which he asked to be accepted into the German army - "I know that foreigners can not serve in your army. But didn't I suffer enough for the Third Reich that you didn't make an exception for me? Call me wherever you want. To aviation, to tank troops, to the most modest, most miserable post in the SS. It doesn’t matter where, but I would be happy and proud to put my life at the disposal of your ideals.”
https://odysee.com/@Vader:1/Leon-DeGrelle---The-Epic-Story-Of-The-Waffen-SS:a Odysee link to documentary.
Degrelle seemed to be the connection to Miguel Serrano, if I remember correctly. I was reading some of Serrano's writings on Hitler's UFOs, it was pretty interesting.
2 years ago1 point(+1/-0)Edited 2022-10-14 02:19:321 child
That hyperborean_studios user on ConPro got me looking into it. I was wondering what sort of connection Serrano had to the actual SS because I wasn't sure why or how he was so confident in all the stuff he writes about. But I guess one of the connections was Degrelle. He also knew Julius Evola.
I bought a little book of his on Hitler and the UFO, it's pretty insane. He basically claims they did succeed in making UFOs and Hitler escaped to Antarctica.
Hyperborean_studios also recommended The Forbidden Religion, which effectively claims a sort of platonic/gnostic world view with a Demiurge, Yahweh is not a good guy, the bible is inversion. The implication was that the Aryan lodges actually followed this esoteric worldview. The author there is Jose Maria Herrou Aragon.
There's one more guy he recommended, Nimrod de Rosario, who wrote about Hyperborea (a lot of these guys did as well). Everyone recommend this book of his "El Misterio de Belicena Villca" but I don't think there's an English translation. And it's $$$.
But basically it was all the South American Aryans and they said they got their teachings from secret SS schools they ran in South America. Serrano wrote a book called "Adolf Hitler: The Ultimate Avatar". They basically believed he was an avatar of the Aryan spirit and that's where a lot of the esoteric Hitlerism comes from.
It's pretty wild stuff, it's so out there that it's hard to really qualify it, some of it comes across like science fiction. But I've been on a slow path to looking into it and it's been fun and intriguing.
I edited my comment with some other names and books I remembered, in case you're interested.
I also found this kind of weird Wikipedia-like site when I was looking these guys up when I first learned about this stuff. It led me to a lot of other people and books to bookmark:
https://odysee.com/@Vader:1/Leon-DeGrelle---The-Epic-Story-Of-The-Waffen-SS:a Odysee link to documentary.
Hmm. Now that is a interesting rabbit hole to look down.
Thanks.
I'm skimming the Wikipedia articles. There are probably good videos on Bitchute or Odysee going a deeper into these ideas.
I bought a little book of his on Hitler and the UFO, it's pretty insane. He basically claims they did succeed in making UFOs and Hitler escaped to Antarctica.
Hyperborean_studios also recommended The Forbidden Religion, which effectively claims a sort of platonic/gnostic world view with a Demiurge, Yahweh is not a good guy, the bible is inversion. The implication was that the Aryan lodges actually followed this esoteric worldview. The author there is Jose Maria Herrou Aragon.
There's one more guy he recommended, Nimrod de Rosario, who wrote about Hyperborea (a lot of these guys did as well). Everyone recommend this book of his "El Misterio de Belicena Villca" but I don't think there's an English translation. And it's $$$.
But basically it was all the South American Aryans and they said they got their teachings from secret SS schools they ran in South America. Serrano wrote a book called "Adolf Hitler: The Ultimate Avatar". They basically believed he was an avatar of the Aryan spirit and that's where a lot of the esoteric Hitlerism comes from.
It's pretty wild stuff, it's so out there that it's hard to really qualify it, some of it comes across like science fiction. But I've been on a slow path to looking into it and it's been fun and intriguing.
I also found this kind of weird Wikipedia-like site when I was looking these guys up when I first learned about this stuff. It led me to a lot of other people and books to bookmark:
https://es.metapedia.org/wiki/Nimrod_de_Rosario