the new order - nazi lauck nsdap-ao · 2015-10-29 · of the legal arm of the nsdap/ao from the...
TRANSCRIPT
Your Responsibility !
The greater the threat, the more desperate the
situation, the worse the odds…all the more im-
portant is the maximum effort by every single
individual. Waiting for more “favorable circum-
stances” or “until the time is ripe” is never a
choice. Perhaps it is in terms of specific tactical
moves, but not terms of deciding between some
kind of meaningful action and inaction.
The fight to save our race will be a long and
difficult one. Maintaining our morale is essential
in the long run.
Individual comrades, leaders, and organizations
will rise and fall. But the fight goes on! Neigh-
borhoods and cities – perhaps even regions and
entire countries (!) - may be lost. But the fight
goes on! Years, decades, lifetimes, even centuries
may pass before final victory is won.
My mentors included comrades who carried on
the fight even after TWO World Wars and the
Each individual among us should act and work in his manner as if he were
alone, and as if the well-being of future generations rested solely on him.
Johann Gottlieb Fichte
continued on page 6
Shame on the man who cannot defend him-
self. George Slyutermann von Langeweyde
November 2015 (126) Number 107/185 Founded 1975
The New Order
2
This Lexicon is translated from the Lexikon
der Neuen Front, written in the mid-1980’s,
by Michael Kühnen. Kühnen was the leader
of the legal arm of the NSDAP/AO from the
late 1970’s until his death in 1991. These are
his personal views. They do not necessarily
reflect official NSDAP/AO positions.
Work Front [Arbeitsfront]
National Socialism strives for a folkish social-
ism, which is embodied in the economic order of
corporativism. During the period of struggle, the
party alone is the will-bearer and political ad-
vance guard organization in this struggle for the
socialist folk community; after the revolution,
the state as well will enable and achieve the con-
struction of socialism through a total political
mobilization in order to so shape the New Order.
Just as the party must in the process initially
achieve power and then introduce total mobiliza-
tion in all areas of state existence, so does this
task of the political advance guard organization,
of the will-bearer and promotion of total mobili-
zation in the sphere of the national economy -
and hence within the corporations - fall to the
Work Front.
The Work Front is an auxiliary and hence part
of the National Socialist party. It is obligated to
the ethic of the worker, represents the economic
interests of all working folk comrades, and eases
the execution of the central planning of the na-
tional economy locally in the factories and eco-
nomic organizations.
The Work Front is divided into occupation
groups, factory groups and factory cells, and has
a one-third share in all factories and businesses
above a certain size. It also offers candidates for
factory board elections and the self-
administration of the corporations, who must
and should win through a free choice of person-
ality.
The Work Front is not a state institution, rather
an auxiliary of the party and hence, before and
after the revolution, practically the union move-
ment. It encompasses employers as well as em-
ployees on the basis of the National Socialist
worldview and of the party program.
The efforts of the New Front in its factory cell
work and in the demand for a free union move-
ment hence serve in the final analysis the crea-
tion of this Work Front. At the present stage of
the political struggle, the establishment of the
Work Front will take place with the help of a
mass organization of this New Front, but more
care than usual must be taken that it remains
totally under the control of the cadres, so that the
Work Front built up and emerging from it can
later achieve its National Socialist leadership
task in the national economy and its corpora-
tions.
Lexicon
Part 6
3
by the Kampfgruppe J.P., the captured U.S.
soldiers were taken to a meadow to wait there
for their transport to the front line. Peiper left
back some of his men as guards. He himself
drove at the head of his tanks far in front of the
following troops to Ligneuville. As most of the
Kampfgruppe troops arrived in Baugnez, the
troops remained there chatted with their com-
rades left behind. A Spähwagen had a break-
down and was repaired. Suddenly a soldier sit-
ting on a tank startled and noticed that some of
the American prisoners had made use of their
inattentiveness and wanted to flee. But a shot
fired from his handgun caused panic among the
prisoners who were running away in all direc-
tions. Submachine guns were used and 21
Americans shot while fleeing.
After the capitulation the men of the 1st SS
Continued on page 4
Jochen Peiper’s
Final Struggle Jochen Peiper was born on January 30th 1915
as the son of an officer’s family in Berlin. He
belonged to the Leibstandarte SS Adolf Hitler.
In 1938 he became the adjutant of Reichsführer
SS Heinrich Himmler. But as the war started,
he wanted to serve at the front line. He com-
manded the 10th SS Leibstandarte A.H. compa-
ny in Poland, Holland, Belgium and in France.
In 1941 he fought in Russia with the 3rd Pan-
zergrenadier battalion of the SS Panzergrena-
dier regiment 2. He replaces the 320th infantry
division of General Postel, encircled in Khar-
kov. On March 19th 1943 he takes Bielgorod.
In September 1943 he is in Italy. In November
of the same year he fights for the Reich in Jito-
mir and with the 1st army breaks through the
encirclement at Kamenets Podolsk. Until Octo-
ber 1944 he fought at the West Front. On De-
cember 16th 1944 – under the command of
Sepp Dietrich’s 6th Panzer army – he is at the
spearhead of the offensive in the Ardennes
with his 1st SS Panzer division L.A.H.
He advanced to La Gleize near Stavelot. Cut
off from the rest of the army, he was encircled.
But he could escape with his men, on foot and
in icy cold, leaving back all the war material.
Always fighting under Sepp Dietrich’s com-
mand, he battled the Soviets until the end, at
the west of the Danube near Vienna. The same
way in the alps at St. Pollen and Krems where
he and his men finally surrendered to the
Americans. He made it to SS-
Obersturmbannführer and bearer of the
Knight’s Cross with Swords.
After Germany’s capitulation this flawless,
noble-minded and incredibly brave soldier was
imprisoned, beaten and humiliated. He was
accused of having ordered the execution of
American POWs at Baugnez near Malmedy
during the offensive in the Ardennes: Caught
4
Panzer division were tracked down and taken
to the camp Zuffenhausen. 400 were trans-
ferred to the prison of Schwäbisch Hall near
Stuttgart. Peiper’s troops consisted of mostly
very young soldiers. One was 16, two were 17,
eleven were 18 and eight were 19 years old. 22
of the 72 convicts were thereby below the age
of 20; all of them were tortured in order to
force any confessions. Peiper was an example
for his crew, and under his command the team
made well. There was never any betrayal
among his units. The men were taken to the KZ
Dachau where 72 of the 74 accused were con-
victed at a show trial. One commited suicide,
one was Alsatian and was handed over to a
French court. 43 – among them Peiper, who
was called to account for his men’s actions –
were sentenced to death by hanging, 22 to life
imprisonment, eight to 20, eleven to ten years
of prison. The trial was later newly heard and
the sentence to death was replaced by life im-
prisonment. After eleven years of custody, J.
Peiper was released as the last of his comrades
in December 1956.
In January 1957 he started to work for Por-
sche in Frankfurt. Syndicates demanded his
dismissal. Afterwards he worked for VW in
Stuttgart, but there he was dismissed as well
because of leftist agitation. With this he real-
ized that he could not remain any longer in
Germany and moved with his family to France.
During the offensive in 1940 he had become
acquainted with the region around the Langres
Plateau and already at that time he loved it as a
beautiful and quiet place. He then helped a
French POW, a German-friendly nationalist,
who had to work in Reutlingen for some rela-
tives of Peiper like a forced labor convict in a
garage. But there was a regulation between
France and Germany, enabling the release of
two French POWs for every voluntary worker
willing to work in Germany. On Peiper’s rec-
ommendation that man, Gauthier, was allowed
to return to his family. He had not forgotten
Peiper and as he had to leave Germany in 1957,
it was Gauthier who helped him and sold him
the watermill of Traves. That building was in
bad condition and Peiper did not have the nec-
essary financial means to restore the mill. SS-
Obersturmbannführer Erwin Ketelhut has after-
wards taken over the water mill and in 1960
Peiper made build a house in Spannplate, high
up on the bank of the Saone, hidden by bushes,
not to see from the streets and like a military
fortification. He had lived there – despite
threats and anonymous phone calls – quite
peacefully for over sixteen years.
On July 11th 1976 he bought some wire for a
kennel in a shop in Vesoul, the capitol of that
department. The salesman was an Alsatian:
Paul Cacheux, member of the communist party,
recognized through his accent that he was Ger-
man and asked him whether he had been in
France during the war. Peiper paid with a
check with his name and address on it. Paul
Cacheux looked up Peiper’s name in the
"brown list" where all wanted Germans were
registered. He passed his data over to the Re-
sistance. On June 22nd 1976 the French com-
munist newspaper "L’Humanité" wrote: „What
does this Nazi do in France?". It was demanded
to force Peiper to leave France. Flyers showing
Peiper as a war criminal and Nazi were distrib-
uted to people in Traves. "Peiper, we’ll deliver
you a 14 July!" was smeared on walls. July 14th
is of course the French national holiday.
The morning of July 13th Peiper sent his wife,
suffering from cancer, back to Germany. He
himself did not want to leave his house because
he expected it to be burned down. His neighbor
Ketelhut had suggested to pass the night in the
water mill but Peiper rejected that offer. He did
not want Ketelhut staying with him either,
since he would have shot any attackers. "No",
he said, "It’s been already killed enough."
Jochen Peiper waited on the veranda of his
house from where he could observe the Saone
river. Erwin Ketelhut had lent him his rifle. At
10:30 pm he heard a noise in the bushes and
saw a dozen men climbing up the river bank.
He shot in the air to intimidate the drunk in-
truders. She called him to come outside. He did
that and opened the door in order to talk to
them.
What happened afterwards can only be told
by the culprits. Obersturmbannführer Jochen
Peiper’s body was found charred and only one
meter in size, he had no hands and feet. He
Jochen Peiper’s Final Struggle
continued on page 5
5
died at about 1:00 am. The house was burned
down, the ceiling broken in. What happened
between 11:30 pm and 1:00 am? Was the Ober-
sturmbannführer alive when he was mutilated?
Was he still alive when he was burned? The
culprits had poured gas on the floor, lit with a
mixture of petrol and motor oil. Peiper lay in
his bedroom, on the left side with his back to
the wall, one arm bowed before his chest.
Nothing had fallen upon him. He died by the
immense heat. The body was not cremated but
shrunken.
Erwin Ketelhut and the French having known
and liked him shared the opinion that this
knightly man, having defied so many dangers,
should not have died this way. The murderers
had driven with their car over a meadow to the
river bank where two barges lay ready. With
them they had crossed the Saone and after-
wards had to climb up the steep bank through
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bushes. After the murder they ran the other
way back over the meadows, in front of the
house, to the street. The firemen searched the
river for missing body parts. The French po-
lice’s investigation work took six months. The
communists from Vesoul and the Resistance
members were questioned. Nobody knew any-
thing! Then the case was shelved. Nobody was
ever arrested or punished! The area of Traves is
not densely populated, there are only about ten
inhabitants per square kilometer. Everybody
knows everyone there and the people know
everything about each other.
The culprits are known to the inhabitants, but
the people say nothing. In the night from 13th
to 14th July we have a protest vigil for Ober-
sturmbannführer and bearer of the Knight’s
Cross Jochen Peiper. The injustice made to him
will not remain unpunished! With this cruel
death Jochen Peiper has paid his last respects to
his people and his homeland.
Jochen Peiper’s Final Struggle
6
I was in a Danish hotel with my English com-
rade, Mike. We were not wanted by the Danish
police, but they nonetheless kept us under tight
surveillance as a professional favor to their
West German counterparts. Especially since
the hotel was only a couple hundred yards from
the West German border!
One cold, dark, rainy night Mike and I decid-
ed to have some fun.
We quietly left the hotel and started heading
for a wooded area along the border. In no time
the “shadows had flashlights”. We managed to
return to our hotel room unseen and, carefully
watching through the windows of our unlit
room, observed several Danish plainclothes
men scurrying around in the rain looking for
us.
“Mike,” I commented, “if they would just
send up a couple attractive lady agents, they
could keep EXACT track of us without need-
ing so many men.”
Mike liked that idea, too. Unfortunately,
these Danes were not quite THAT progressive.
* * * * *
I was in a holding cell for prisoners being
transferred from one prison to another. The
other prisoners were killing time by comparing
notes on the various German prisons they had
been in.
One particularly seedy looking fellow – ap-
parently a “veteran” in this regard – astonished
younger, less “well-traveled” inmates with his
tales of a “co-ed” prison he had been in. It
sounded like the type of institution a XXX-
rated film could be based on.
Naturally, I felt cheated…
* * * * *
The lady reporter had a sexy voice. When I
finally met her, I was pleased to see the rest of
her wasn’t bad, either.
She had brought along a photographer. They
had rented a separate room in the hotel, be-
cause they wanted to have a nice “Nazi” back-
ground for the photo session. After the inter-
view, the three of us went to the “shooting”
room.
When we opened the door, we found several
beds pushed together in the middle of the
room.
I turned to her and asked with a straight face:
“Just what kind of pictures are we going to take
here?”
…Many years later, a lady French photojour-
nalist rented a hall for a “shoot” with me. The
hotel manager actually asked her “what kind of
pictures” were involved, explaining that a pre-
vious customer had used the hall for taking
“naughty pictures”. (I suppose I should have
felt flattered.)
Fun Under the Swastika
Part 5
Your Responsibility!
disaster of 1945! None of us of the postwar gener-
ation has experienced anywhere near that amount
of suffering and despair! Their example provides
us with both encouragement and obligation!
Make no mistake! We have lost far more people
– including some of the best and most dedicated
comrades - to a breakdown of morale than to
“enemy action”. Nobody is immune to despair
and exhaustion, but we can and must take steps to
combat this!
On the one hand, each of us must take his role
in this fight seriously. On the other hand, none of
us should overestimate his own significance.
Nonetheless, even one apparently tiny act of re-
sistance can have far reaching repercussions. His-
tory has shown this time after time. Nobody can
foresee the future. But we can all plant as many
seeds as possible…and hope that at least one
grows into a mighty oak!
Gerhard Lauck
continued on page 8
On the Knife’s Edge
One must have courage one’s whole life.
It is not enough to pension it off from a cer-
tain time as if it had fulfilled its duty and
obligation. Otherwise what one had bravely
won and build for himself in the course of
half a life would slip through his fingers in
an hour of weakness. Whoever has courage
can also lose a battle, for he knows, er will
win the fight at the end. Whoever has cour-
age must be able to risk something. We
Germans possess the shining example of
real courage in Adolf Hitler.
We ask ourselves: What can happen to
us, since we can lead by the living example
resolution? Even if Adolf Hitler’s move
from success to success had not given us
the trust in him, the spirit he has shown in
hours of most difficult decision would ele-
vate and encourage us. How often has he
taken up the fight even when the outcome
was doubtful!
When he was driven by the inner com-
mand of the born fighter, he brought victo-
ry to his banner. Our folk knows that, and
looking back at Hitler’s path it becomes
completely calm and confident. Never was
the best cause in the world in the best
hands like it is today.
Courage is necessary is tackle a personal
life goal which by general conception and
the restraints of bourgeois justification
seemed to be completely closed to the
young Hitler. More courage was necessary
to throw everything personal behind one-
self and to totally dedicate oneself solely to
Germany’s cause when the war broke out
in 1914. What courage Adolf Hitler
demonstrated in the war is known world-
wide. The Iron Cross First Class that the
corporal took home from the world war is
an enduring sign and symbol of it.
The unknown soldier showed great cour-
age in overcoming his own despair when
he defiantly and grimly made the decision
to become a politician.
Now he stood in public life and fought
resolutely for the souls of a handful of peo-
ple, whom he wanted to equip with his own
confidence. In the first years of struggle he
had to individually convince each follower
of his cause and anchor his faith in Germa-
ny in him. He had, regardless of all depri-
7
The Führer’s Courage
The Führer’s Example in Hours of Greatest Distress
An Example of Faith and Confidence for the Entire Folk
The Führer’s Courage
vations, avoided neither small nor big ef-
forts in order to assemble a group of unwa-
vering men around himself. By all bour-
geois criteria he would have had every rea-
son and justification to tenderly nurture the
small young plant of his life work that was
just taking root, and to protect it against
even the slightest breeze. But he wanted it
to become a mighty tree. If the thin tree
defied the storm, then it would grow and
become twice as strong. Otherwise it would
not have deserved life. So he sowed wind
and harvested storm.
There is an episode in German history
that has remained unforgettable from gen-
eration to generation and will survive cen-
turies. Frederick the Great’s address to his
generals before the Battle of Leuthen. He
would, so declared the king, against all the
rules of warfare attack the enemy wherever
he met him. He had to do this or Prussia’s
cause was lost. The cavalry regiment that
did not without hesitation attack the enemy,
he would have dismounted and turned into
a garrison regiment; the infantry battalion
that even just stalled during the attack, he
would take away flag and sword and cut off
the braids from their uniforms. “Either we
will beat the enemy or all of us will be bur-
ied by his batteries.”
A few hours later Frederick had won one
of his most miraculous battles for Prussia.
Adolf Hitler and the NSDAP experienced
the Leuthen of the National Socialist move-
ment on November 4, 1921. For the sake of
the great future decisions, the Führer put
himself and his cause on the knife’s edge.
The National Socialist party had to succeed
in public and had to show what sacrifices it
was willing to make, for Adolf Hitler has
impressed on his men: “The members of
the movement should not fear the hostility
of the opponent, rather to view it as the pre-
requisite to their own right of existence.”
The Marxists were firmly determined to
break up a National Socialist rally in Mu-
nich’s Hofbräuhaus. The Führer later
wrote:
“When I entered the vestibule of the
Hofbräuhaus around 7:45, there could be
doubt about the intention. The hall was
bursting full and hence closed by the po-
lice. The opponents, who had arrived very
earlier, were inside the hall and our sympa-
thizers were for the most part outside. I had
the doors to the great hall closed and had
the 45 or 46 men assemble. I told the lads
that they would today for the first time
probably have to remain loyal come what
may, and that none of us may leave the
hall, unless we are carried out dead; I
would myself remain in the hall and did not
believe that even one of them would leave
me; but if I spotted someone proving him-
self a coward, I would personally tear off
his remove his party pion. Then I called on
8
continued on page 10
them to, at the slightest attempt of disrup-
tion, to immediately take action, and to re-
member that the best way to defend oneself
is to oneself attack.”
The disruption attempt was made.
“The hellish noise lasted for twenty
minutes, but then the opponents, who num-
bered perhaps 700 to 800, were for the
most part beaten and thrown down the
steps by my men by my less than fifty
men.”
According the thinking of many people, it
would perhaps have been just a command
of reason, by no means of cowardice, to
have cancelled the meeting. Earlier, every
bourgeois contemporary of Adolf Hitler
would have certainly condemned the opera-
tion as pure insanity. But this man’s cour-
age was greater. Greater, although he
knew what was at stake. Not just a failed
meeting, rather the party’s reputation, the
future of National Socialism and hence
Germany’s future would have been lost.
Schiller’ splendid horseman’s song says:
And if you do not risk your life,
you will never have won life!
That could be Adolf Hitler’s motto.
Never Capitulate!
When after the conclusion of the light-
ning campaign in Poland the Führer de-
scribed the events in liberated Danzig that
had led to the war, and then came to speak
of England’s role, the world learned from
Adolf Hitler’s own mouth about a two
hour ultimatum that the English govern-
ment believed it could send to the German
Reich instead of participation in Musso-
lini’s peace proposal. Concise and sharp as
a knife the Führer had given an answer to
it: “One no longer presents Germany
with an ultimatum, one should note that
in London!”
We know what this language, directed at
a state that until then had viewed itself as
the greatest power on earth, means. Perhaps
the opinion could arise somewhere in the
world could allow himself such a reply –
behind which clearly stand German pride
and German sense of honor – because he is
sure of the military strength and the un-
shakable German folk community. Certain-
ly, there exists no doubt that this confi-
dence especially reinforced the Führer in
giving the British Empire such a pointed as
clear reply, the likes of which an English
statesman has probably not heard in a cen-
tury. Above all, however, these few words
outline the Adolf Hitler’s greatness of
character, who had never done and who
will never do anything the offends the Ger-
man folk’s honor. A man such as Adolf
Hitler does not accept any ultimatum. Quite
the opposite, he rejects anything that could
look like degradation, even if that could be
expected from give under the pressure of a
greatly superior force. What life in honor
is, we Germans have only learned in full
measure again through Adolf Hitler’s per-
son. Because for him life without honor
would be senseless, he has, whenever a
fateful issue has confronted him, chosen
the honorable solution over the comfort-
able one. Nothing could convince us more
fate’s justice and of the desired reward
from Providence than the fact the Adolf
Hitler’s dauntlessness has managed –
against all laws of probability, against all,
hostile forces, against all resistance of the
vastly superior enemy – kept the shield of
his honor spotless and radiantly pure right
up to the summit of victory. Among the
thousands of events when conscience has
place behind before the decision to honest-
ly select struggle and perhaps also destruc-
tion or to renounce victory in favor of a
secure life, let us draw just one event where
the Führer, as in all others without excep-
tion, without second thought cose struggle
and honor and hence conquered the life of
the future.
9
The Führer’s Courage
“Folkish groups planned to hold in Octo-
ber of the year 1922 in Coburg a so-called
‘German Day’. I myself”, so writs the Füh-
rer, “received an invitation to it with the
note that it was desired I would bring an
accompaniment. This request was very
pleasing to me. As an accompaniment I se-
lected 800 S.A. men, which in about 14
companies were to travel by special train
from Munich to the town. This was the first
time that such a train trip was made in Ger-
many. When we arrived at the train station
ion Coburg, a delegation of the ‘German
Day” organizers received us, who handed
us a so-called “agreement”, actually an or-
der from the local unions and the Independ-
ents and Communist Party with the content
that we were only allowed to enter city
with rolled up flags, without music and not
in closed formation.
I immediately rejected this shameful con-
dition and declared the S.A., would mo-
mentarily assemble in companies and
march through the town with music playing
and waving flags.
That is what then happened.”
Coburg Day, an unforgettable day of re-
membrance for the National Socialist party,
was accompanied by violent clashes, which
the bourgeois organizers of the day proba-
bly feared and gladly wished to avoid. In
that the Führer did not avoid this danger,
rather fearlessly met it and from the defen-
sive position of his weak minority went
over to the attack and to the decisive con-
frontation, he did not only avoid a possible
defeat, rather he won a victory previously
held victory. Courage and decisiveness ac-
complished on that day a command of hon-
or.
“And now one could see how the previ-
ously fearfully cowed populace gradually
woke up, gained courage, and dared to
shout greetings to us and how that evening
broke out into spontaneous jubilation at
many places during our departure.”
Whatever sacrifices and losses fearful
souls may have previously feared, the fact
is and remains: Adolf Hitler dared the op-
eration, led it against the laws of probabil-
ity – for these laws are calculated by dry
materialists – successfully and after the
achieved victory over a superior force
brought all of his men unharmed back to
Munich.
Adolf Hitler knows no capitulation, and
he alone has the right, in Germany’s name,
to hurl a thousand-fold “Never!: against any
contemplation of subjugation. He knows
like no other was courage can do.
“Courage accomplishes miracles!” He
declared in spring 1939, when the SS-
Standarte “Deutschland” executed an exem-
plary military maneuver on the troop train-
ing grounds at Munsterlager, at which their
Führer impressed on it this law of personal
courage as the secret of all successes with
minimal losses. It has faithfully upheld this
teaching and just like all other arms-bearers
of the nation, when emergency has required
total effort, affirmed it man for man.
“When human hearts break and human
souls despair, the from the dawn of history
do the greater vanquishers of need and care,
of shame and misery, mental slavery and
physical compulsion look down upon them
and reach out their hand to the despairing.
Woe to the folk that is ashamed to grasp
it!”
The Führer could impress this confident
comfort upon a despairing environment in
the moment of an apparently nearly hope-
less struggle. If today ever just one second
of doubt comes over us, the feeling of im-
measurable joy should raise in our
breast, that not just the greatest strength
and the most powerful weapons stand on
our side, rather that the mightiest vanquish-
er of need and care, of shame and misery is
a contemporary of our life: the Führer!
Continued in the Next Issue
10
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