To: Ichy Smith who wrote (6470 ) 3/29/2007 5:30:51 PM From: Proud_Infidel Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 20106 German shows parallels of Radical Islam and Nazism In his book "How was it possible?", a former German soldier and Hitler Youth member, issues a plea to the world not to stand pat in the face of radical Islam as it did with Nazism.speroforum.com “How Was it Possible?” is the autobiography written by former Hitler youth and German soldier, Hilmar von Campe. While describing his life and remorse as an active participant in the Second World and the Holocaust, Von Campe warns the world that it faces greater challenges today then it did with Adolph Hitler. Von Campe lived through years of National Socialist - Nazi - government and brain-washing. After the war, he learned about the Holocaust and Nazi atrocities. It was then that he came to grips with his own contribution to these horrors and his moral responsibilities for them. He has personally offered an apology to the former director of the Holocaust Memorial Center in Washington, Dr. David Weinstein, and for the suffering Germany inflicted on the Jewish people. Von Campe told Weinstein, "that the crimes of the Nazis were only possible because of the moral cowardice of so many of us non-Nazis." "Hilmar is in a unique position to illuminate the mindset that allowed Hitler to rationalize the extermination of millions of Jews - given his personal travails during that tragic era. Americans would do well to heed his insights into similar dangers they are facing with Radical Islam today", said Dr. James C. Dobson of Focus On The Family. Von Campe said “The growth of the Third Reich in Eastern Europe was infinitesimal as compared today to that of Radical Islam. The powerful delivery system of the Internet makes it possible for terrorist organizations to spread their message of hate and violence to a worldwide audience, with a simple 'key stroke.'" Von Campe lectures at churches and other venues in the United States as he compares the Nazi philosophy to that of Radical Islam. Now a US citizen, Von Campe was German soldier during the Second World War and interned by Yugoslavia as a prisoner of war.