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  1. 5 days ago · In this work, Johannes Sachslehner, an Austrian historian and prolific author, offers a biography of the Austrian bishop Alois Hudal, notorious for his complicated relationship with National Socialist ideology and for his involvement in the postwar effort to enable refugees and war criminals to escape to South America.

  2. 5 days ago · For our book reviews we have a double contribution from Martin Menke, writing on Johannes Sachslehner’s biography of controversial Bishop Alois Hudal as well as on Giuliana Chamedes’ study of the Vatican response to communism and fascism.

  3. 5 days ago · In June 1944, a young Hungarian woman, born in 1920, received the order that she had to vacate her apartment, taking with her only the things she could carry. She noted in her account, “My packing was very simple indeed: just the bare minimum of the most needed items. As we were leaving, the apartments were sealed….

  4. 3 days ago · Michael Hesemann ha trovato documenti da cui si dimostra che Pio XII inviò suo nipote Carlo Pacelli dal monsignore austriaco Alois Hudal affinchè facesse pressioni sul generale Reiner Stahel, comandante militare di Roma. Hudal chiedeva di fermare immediatamente l'arresto degli ebrei.

  5. 3 days ago · Der österreichische Bischof Alois Hudal, Rektor der Anima in Rom, äußert in einem Wiener Zeitungsaufsatz: “Der Bolschewismus ist nicht eine … Parteirichtung, sondern eine Seelenhaltung, in der ein stark nihilistischer Zug dekadenten Judentums eine bedeutende Rolle spielt.”

  6. 2 days ago · Alois Hudal: österreichischer Bischof und Fluchthelfer diverser Naziverbrecher 77 19. Mai Frederick Maurice Powicke: britischer Mittelalterhistoriker 83 19. Mai Walter Russell: US-amerikanischer Maler, Bildhauer, Architekt, Philosoph und Mystiker 92 19. Mai Johann Segitz: deutscher Politiker (SPD), MdB 64 20. Mai Russell A. Gausman

  7. 3 days ago · It was not until 1901 that German psychiatrist Alois Alzheimer identified the first case of what became known as Alzheimer's disease, named after him, in a fifty-year-old woman he called Auguste D. He followed her case until she died in 1906 when he first reported publicly on it. [ 239 ]