Jan Udo Holey: Difference between revisions
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In ''Geheimgesellschaften'', Holey combines science-fiction, [[esotericism]], [[Nazi occultism|Nazi-mythology]], [[ufology]] and "[[Zionist]] global domination" theories. He also employs ''[[The Protocols of the Elders of Zion]]'' as a source. He believes the [[Rothschild family|Rothschilds]] head a Jewish conspiracy to rule the world and associates them with a mysterious cabal called the [[Illuminati]], who plan a [[New World Order (conspiracy theory)|New World Order]]. Holey and his followers claim that they are not anti-semitic, but rather that they speak out against powerful Jewish interests in high finance and politics.<ref>[http://www.infosekta.ch/is5/themen/esoterik_stutz1999.html#VanHelsing ''Van Helsing: Ideologischer Kern unverändert''] ("Van Helsing: Ideological core unchanged", article in a Swiss antiracist publication 1999)</ref> |
In ''Geheimgesellschaften'', Holey combines science-fiction, [[esotericism]], [[Nazi occultism|Nazi-mythology]], [[ufology]] and "[[Zionist]] global domination" theories. He also employs ''[[The Protocols of the Elders of Zion]]'' as a source. He believes the [[Rothschild family|Rothschilds]] head a Jewish conspiracy to rule the world and associates them with a mysterious cabal called the [[Illuminati]], who plan a [[New World Order (conspiracy theory)|New World Order]]. Holey and his followers claim that they are not anti-semitic, but rather that they speak out against powerful Jewish interests in high finance and politics.<ref>[http://www.infosekta.ch/is5/themen/esoterik_stutz1999.html#VanHelsing ''Van Helsing: Ideologischer Kern unverändert''] ("Van Helsing: Ideological core unchanged", article in a Swiss antiracist publication 1999)</ref> |
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==Publicist Activities== |
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==Publishing activities== |
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At the age of 14, Holey read Bram Stoker's novel ''Dracula'', which inspired him to use the pseudonym "van Helsing" for his publications.<ref name="Heller/Mägerle" /> He explains that the Illuminati, which several of his books target, are also made up of "bloodsuckers."<ref name="meinhardt">Birk Meinhardt: [http://www.sueddeutsche.de/kultur/rechtsextreme-esoterik-arier-im-mikrowellen-krieg-1.607069 ''Aryan in the Microwave War.''] In: ''Süddeutsche.de''. March 15/16, 2008.</ref> |
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In the late eighties, Holey wrote his first book ''Secret Societies and their Power in the 20th Century'', which was published in March 1994 by Ewert-Verlag and mainly sold in esoteric bookstores.<ref>Chantal Magnin and Marianne Rychner: ''Structural Commonalities of Two World Views: Esotericism and Antisemitic Conspiracy Theory''. In: ''Tangram. Bulletin of the Federal Commission against Racism'', No. 6 (1999), p. 43.</ref> Within a few months, it became a bestseller. In 1995, the publication of ''Secret Societies 2'' followed. The pseudonym was uncovered in July 1996 by critical reports in the magazine ''esotera'' and ''Der Spiegel''.<ref>{{Der Spiegel | ID=9133761 | Title=Dracula's UFO | No=51 | Year=1996 | Date=December 16, 1996 | Pages=73}}</ref> By the time the Jewish Community in Mannheim filed a complaint for incitement to hatred, which stopped the store sales, both books had probably sold more than 100,000 copies.<ref>[https://www.merkur.de/lokales/regionen/verschwoerungstheoretiker-verbindungen-rechte-ecke-157971.html Conspiracy Theorists with Connections to the Right Wing?], Article from April 7, 2009 by Matthias Holzapfel on Merkur.de</ref> The case was dismissed by the Mannheim District Court "due to lack of local jurisdiction."<ref>Arnon Hampe: ''Holey, Jan Udo.'' In: [[Wolfgang Benz]] (Ed.): ''[[Handbook of Antisemitism]]. Vol. 2: People''. De Gruyter Saur, Berlin 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-44159-2, p. 375 (accessed via [[Walter de Gruyter|De Gruyter]] Online).</ref> A complaint followed in Switzerland, after which both books were confiscated and indexed in both the Federal Republic of Germany and Switzerland by the Federal Department for Media Harmful to Young Persons. |
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At the age of 14, Holey read [[Bram Stoker's]] novel [[Dracula]], which inspired him to use the pseudonym "van Helsing" for his publications.[3] He justified this by saying that the [[Illuminati Order]], against which several of his books are directed, also consisted of "bloodsuckers".[5] |
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Holey was first mentioned in reports of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution in the ''Report of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution Baden-Württemberg 1996'', where he was reported under the heading "Right-Wing Extremist Influence on the Esoteric Scene." This was followed by mentions in the Austrian Office for the Protection of the Constitution 2000<ref>Report of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution 2000 Austria, 2001, p. 23</ref> and by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution in 2004 and 2005, where Holey was described as a "right-wing extremist esotericist."<ref>Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution: {{Webarchive | url=http://www.verfassungsschutz.de/de/publikationen/verfassungsschutzbericht/vsbericht_2004/vsbericht_2004.pdf | wayback=20070929092223 | text=''Constitutional Protection Report 2004''}} (PDF; 3.5 MB); p. 106; Constitutional Protection Report 2005, p. 118</ref> Holey also made inroads into the social sciences as a "right-wing extremist esotericist."<ref>Thomas Fliege, Kurt Möller, ''Right-Wing Extremism in Baden-Württemberg'', Belchen-Verlag 2001, p. 99; Ines Aftenberger, ''The New Right and Neo-Racism'', Grazer Universitätsverlag 2007, p. 64; Johann Dolanski, ''The Universe as it Really is: The Dolan Theory: Presented Based on the Latest Scientific and Technical Research'', Turia & Kant Verlag 2008, p. 125</ref> |
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At the end of the 1980s, Holey wrote his first book, "Secret Societies and Their Power in the 20th Century", which was published in March 1994 by Ewert-Verlag and sold mainly in esoteric bookstores.[6] After just a few months, it became a bestseller. The publication of Secret Societies 2 followed in 1995. The pseudonym was exposed in July 1996 by critical reports in the magazine [[esotera]] and [[Der Spiegel]].[7] By 1996, when the Jewish community in Mannheim filed a complaint for incitement, which stopped the sales in the shops, more than 100,000 copies of both books had probably been sold.[8] The proceedings were discontinued by the Mannheim Regional Court "due to a lack of local jurisdiction".[9] A complaint was filed in Switzerland, whereupon the two books were confiscated and indexed in both the Federal Republic of Germany and Switzerland. |
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Since the late 1990s, he has been publishing his works in the Amadeus Verlag, founded by his mother in 1998. Since December 31, 2009, he has been the CEO there. ''Blick nach Rechts'' wrote that he is considered the "most well-known representative of brown esotericism" with his publishing house.<ref>Blick nach Rechts: [http://www.bnr.de/category/stichworte/amadeus-verlag-0 Ama Deus Verlag: “Bloodlines of the Illuminati”], Review, accessed on May 21, 2014.</ref> This publishing house also operates the website ''dieunbestechlichen.com''; the imprint lists Holey as editor-in-chief. The site promises "uncensored news - politically incorrect and free!"<ref>Matthias Pöhlmann: ''Right-Wing Esoterism. When alternative thinking and extremism dangerously mix.'' Herder, Freiburg 2021, p. 94</ref> |
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Holey was first mentioned in reports by the Office for the Protection of the Constitution in Baden-Württemberg in 1996, where he was reported on under the heading "Right-wing extremist influence on the esoteric scene". This was followed by mentions in the Austrian Office for the Protection of the Constitution's report in 2000[10] and by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution in 2004 and 2005, where Holey was described as a "right-wing extremist esotericist".[11] Holey is also making inroads into the social sciences as a "right-wing extremist esotericist".[12] |
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From 2007 to 2010<ref>Bernd Merling: {{Webarchiv|url=http://antifaschismus2.de/blogs-und-websites/130-secrettv |wayback=20140712011935 |text=''secret.tv.'' }} In: ''Antifaschismus2.de''. January 3, 2010, accessed on January 26, 2014.</ref> he operated the web TV channel Secret.tv, through which he spread his esoteric and conspiracy-theoretical theses.<ref>Bernd Hüttner, ''Handbook of Alternative Media 2011/2012: Print Media, Free Radios, Archives & Publishers in Germany, Austria and Switzerland'', AG SPAK Books 2011, p. 65.</ref> A film created by Holey and Stefan Erdmann about the Cheops Pyramid was distributed through this channel. The Evangelische Zentralstelle für Weltanschauungsfragen (Protestant Central Office for World Views) calls the Internet channel a "film portal for brown esotericism."<ref>Evangelische Zentralstelle für Weltanschauungsfragen, [http://www.ezw-berlin.de/html/15_880.php Schöne neue Verschwörungswelt: Secret TV - a new film portal for brown esotericism], accessed on March 20, 2016</ref> The "Handbook of Alternative Media" describes the channel as "right-wing extremist internet TV."<ref>G. Hooffacker / Peter Lok: Right-Wing Extremist Internet TV. In: Bernd Hüttner (Ed.), Handbook of Alternative Media 2011/2012. Print Media, Free Radios, Archives & Publishers in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, AG Spak: Wasserburg 2011, p. 65.</ref> |
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Since the end of the 1990s he has been publishing his works in the Amadeus publishing house, founded by his mother in 1998. He has been the managing director there since December 31, 2009. Blick nach Rechts wrote that he and his publishing house are considered the "best-known representative of brown esotericism".[13] This publishing house also runs the website dieunbestechlichen.com; the imprint names Holey as editor-in-chief. The site promises "uncensored news - politically incorrect and free!"[14] |
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In his books, Helsing draws on the conspiracy theories of authors Gary Allen and Des Griffin and their works ''The Insider'' (1970) and ''Who Rules the World'' (1976). In particular, he relies on the American ufologist Milton William Cooper, whom he also personally knew and extensively quoted from his work "Behold a Pale Horse."<ref>Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: ''Black Sun. Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity''. NYU Press, New York 2002, p. 297.</ref> Holey asserts a global conspiracy of the Illuminati, which he includes Freemasons and Jews in.<ref name="Jaecker" /> He holds the view that Hitler was inspired by Bulwer-Lytton's book ''The Coming Race'' (1871) and Ossendowski's title ''Beasts, Men and Gods'', for which there is no evidence. However, with these claims, Holey perpetuates neo-Nazi stereotypes, as many passages of authors Bulwer-Lytton and Ossendowski have contributed to the formation of neo-Nazi legends alongside theosophical sources.<ref>Martin Brauen: ''Dream World Tibet: Western Deceptions.'' Paul Haupt Berne, Bern; Stuttgart; Vienna 2000, ISBN 3-258-05639-0. p. 73.</ref> |
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From 2007 to 2010[15] he ran the web TV channel Secret.tv, on which he spread his esoteric and conspiracy theory theses.[16] A film about the Great Pyramid of Giza made by Holey and Stefan Erdmann was also broadcast on it. The Evangelical Central Office for Ideological Questions calls the Internet broadcaster a "film portal for brown esotericism".[17] The "Handbook of Alternative Media" describes the broadcaster as "right-wing extremist Internet TV".[18] |
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In October 2011, an extensive interview about his new book ''Hitler Survived in Argentina'' was published on the internet portal ''Kopp-Online'' of the Kopp Verlag. On December 23, 2011, a foreword by Holey was also published there in its original length.<ref name=Hunger /> |
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In his books, Helsing draws on the conspiracy theories of the authors Gary Allen and Des Griffin and their works The Insiders (1970) and Who Rules the World (1976). In particular, he relies on the American ufologist Milton William Cooper, whom he also knew personally and from whose work Behold a Pale Horse he quotes extensively.[19] Holey claims a worldwide conspiracy of the Illuminati, among whom he counts Freemasons and Jews.[20] He is of the opinion that Hitler was inspired by Bulwer-Lytton's book The Coming Race (1871) and Ossendowski's title Animals, Men and Gods, for which there is no evidence whatsoever. However, Holey is using these claims to feed neo-Nazi clichés, as many passages by the authors Bulwer-Lytton and Ossendowski, in addition to theosophical sources, have contributed to the creation of neo-Nazi legends.[21] |
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===Legal Disputes=== |
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In October 2011, a long interview about his new book Hitler survived in Argentina appeared on the Kopp-Verlag's Kopp-Online internet portal. On December 23, 2011, Holey's foreword appeared there in its original length.[22] |
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In 1996, both books ''Secret Societies'' were removed from the market by order of the Jewish Community in Mannheim following a confiscation order by the Amtsgericht Mannheim due to incitement to hatred.<ref name="meining" /> Despite the criminal proceedings against Holey on charges of incitement to hatred being dropped in 1998 for formal reasons<ref name="meining" />, both books remained banned because their content was “highly antisemitic.”<ref>Katharina Nocun, Pia Lamberty: ''Fake Facts: How Conspiracy Theories Determine our Thinking'' Quadriga, Berlin 2020, ISBN 978-3869950952, p. 115.</ref> |
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As a result, the author sought to portray the banning of his books in the introduction and first part of his writing as constitutionally questionable.<ref>Wolfgang Bittner: ''Satan's Sworn Brothers – Attacks and Antitheses against German Freemasonry 1970-2000.'' 453 p., Bodem Verlag, ISBN 3-934215-01-7. pp. 132–133.</ref> He wrote his legal interpretation on page 14 of the first part: |
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==Legal disputes== |
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{{Quote|[The book...] is directed exclusively against the background forces, world conspirators, Freemasons, Rotary, [...] However, these groups are not part of the German population within the meaning of Article 130 of the German Criminal Code and thus not the target of this provision […]}} |
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In 1996, both books Geheimgesellschaften were taken off the market at the request of the Jewish community in Mannheim following a confiscation order by the Mannheim District Court for incitement.[23] |
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In 2001, the Mannheim Regional Court lifted the confiscation order.<ref name="vs-bericht_2004">Federal Ministry of the Interior: ''Constitutional Protection Report 2004'', Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Berlin 2004, ISSN 0177-0357, p. 106.</ref> However, the indexing in both countries was not lifted. |
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Despite the criminal proceedings against Holey for incitement being dropped in 1998 for formal reasons,[23] both books were banned because the content was "highly anti-Semitic".[24] |
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==Reception and Evaluation of Publications== |
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In Switzerland, Holey's books were banned for violating the 1995 anti-racism law.[25] |
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According to Hubert Michael Mader from the Austrian Landesverteidigungsakademie, Holey managed to achieve the most significant coup of right-wing extremism after 1945 with his bestsellers. He incorporates various themes that have long been familiar in the esoteric scene and are unspectacularly received. According to him, the new aspect is that he sharpens them with unusually numerous right-wing extremist ideas and mixes them with interpretations based on his conspiracy theories, suggesting that the world, especially Germany, is threatened with destruction by secret societies. Jews are said to be leading this conspiracy. To a large extent, he mixes his own claims with the right-wing extremist writings of Holocaust deniers and ufologists such as Miguel Serrano, Wilhelm Landig, and the British anthroposophist Trevor Ravenscroft. Holey advocates authoritarian state and social concepts, whitewashes National Socialism, and denies Germany's war guilt.<ref name=mader38>Hubert Michael Mader: ''Studies and Reports. Political Esotericism – a Right-Wing Extremist Challenge.'' Landesverteidigungsakademie, Vienna 1999. p. 38–39 and p. 47.</ref> Holey assumes from the outset that his critics are afraid of (mental) change. He claims that he does not want to manipulate anyone, but his publications repeatedly create the impression that he intends to "reprogram" his readers mentally.<ref>Hubert Michael Mader: ''Studies and Reports. Political Esotericism – a Right-Wing Extremist Challenge.'' Vienna: Landesverteidigungsakademie 1999. p. 107f and p. 131.</ref> |
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Rüdiger Sünner counts Holey among the disciples of the "Black Sun," who adapt Nazi myths of the superiority of former "Aryan" prime cultures such as Thule and Atlantis and incorporate them into their fantastic treatises, in which the Third Reich is glorified or its crimes denied. In particular, Serrano and Holey have contributed to the modernization of right-wing esotericism by incorporating UFO legends.<ref>Rüdiger Sünner: ''The Black Sun. Unleashing and Abuse of Myths in National Socialism and Right-Wing Esotericism.'' Second Edition, Verlag Herder, Freiburg im Breisgau 1999. p. 230.</ref> Historian Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke notes that Holey's advocacy for humanity and the esoteric New Age ethos merely mask his antisemitic motives.<ref>Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: ''In the Shadow of the Black Sun.'' Marix Verlag, Wiesbaden 2009, ISBN 978-3-86539-185-8, p. 555–556.</ref> The ''Handbook of Antisemitism'' dedicates an article to Holey. In it, he is attributed to the “so-called neo-Germanic-pagan scene” because he combines neo-right mythology and esotericism. Stefan von Hoyningen-Huene includes him among the "esoteric conspiracy theorists."<ref>Stefan von Hoyningen-Huene, ''Religiosity among right-wing extremist-oriented youth'', LIT Verlag 2003, p. 60.</ref> |
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As a result, the author tried to present the ban on his books as constitutionally questionable in the introduction and in the first part of his text.[26] On page 14 of the first part, he wrote his legal interpretation: |
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Tobias Jaecker also categorizes Holey within the esoteric spectrum, in which the belief in world conspiracy occupies a central position.<ref name="Jaecker">Tobias Jaecker, ''Antisemitic Conspiracy Theories after September 11: New Variants of an Old Interpretive Pattern'', LIT Verlag 2005, p. 56.</ref> Armin Pfahl-Traughber sees in Holey's works the connection of esoteric with right-wing extremist ideological pieces.<ref>Armin Pfahl-Traughber, ''Freemasons and Jews, Capitalists and Communists as Target Images of Right-Wing Extremist Conspiracy Ideologies from the Kaiserreich to the Present'', In: Uwe Backes, ''Right-Wing Ideologies in History and Present Day'', Böhlau Verlag 2003, p. 225.</ref> Wolfgang Wippermann regards Holey's claims as exemplary of esoteric conspiracy ideologies, which, as can be seen from his writings, closely resemble national socialist ideology “down to the last detail.”<ref>Wolfgang Wippermann: ''Agents of Evil. Conspiracy Theories from Luther to the Present.'' be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, p. 146.</ref> According to Ursula Caberta, he is the most well-known German conspiracy theorist.<ref>Ursula Caberta: ''Black Book of Esotericism.'' Gütersloher Verlagshaus, 2nd edition 2011, p. 104.</ref> With his bestsellers, esotericism has become the most important gateway for right-wing extremist ideologies in the German-speaking world. |
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"[The book...] is directed exclusively against the background powers, world conspirators, Freemasons, Rotarians, [...] but these groups are not part of the German population within the meaning of Section 130 of the Criminal Code and are therefore not the object of this provision [...]" |
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The trend of the esoteric scene towards right-wing extremist positions became apparent shortly after Holeys books were released, with the appearance of fifty to sixty esoteric right-wing extremist conspiracy books. The leader of the self-proclaimed "Aryan elite" Armanen Order, Adolf Schleipfer, promotes and recommends Holey's first volume of "Secret Societies" as a fundamental work on the topic of lodge entanglements that could replace entire libraries. Der Spiegel wrote in its edition 51/1996 about the "Secret Societies" Volume 1 and 2: "Holey's conspiracy theories read like a mixture of Mein Kampf, wild science fiction, and black magic." In May 1996, the news magazine Focus reported on the ban of his books in Switzerland. |
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In 2001, the Mannheim Regional Court overturned the confiscation order.[27] The indexing in both countries was never carried out. |
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== |
====''Secret Societies and their Power in the 20th Century''==== |
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In "Secret Societies and their Power in the 20th Century" (two volumes), Holey combines science fiction, esotericism, Germanic mythology, Christian numerology, and ufology, and speaks of a "worldwide conspiracy of the – identified as Jewish in origin – 'Illuminati' to the detriment of the world and especially Germany." In 1773, Mayer Amschel Rothschild is said to have conspired with twelve other Jewish financiers in Frankfurt to pave the way for their world government through three world wars by the year 2000. Holey explicitly refers to the "Protocols of the Elders of Zion", a published antisemitic fiction from the early 20th century that is supposed to prove the Jewish world conspiracy. Through his dramatic presentation, suggesting an extraterrestrial battle over the fate of our civilization, Holey was able to spread his Manichaean antisemitism in the New Age scene, according to Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke. To underline the credibility of the Protocols, Holey extensively relied on the conspiracy theorist Milton William Cooper. Objections that the Protocols are based on forgeries were commented on by Holey as: "The question of authenticity is incomprehensible to me. This would be equivalent to stating that the Ten Commandments are not genuine. It is completely irrelevant whether the Ten Commandments are from God, an extraterrestrial, or Mr. Müller. The origin is completely irrelevant. It is the same with the 'Protocols'. The things described in them are being applied." |
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According to Hubert Michael Mader of the Austrian National Defense Academy, Holey's bestsellers were probably the most significant coup of right-wing extremism after 1945. He processed various topics that had long been common in the esoteric scene and were received unspectacularly. These - and this is what is new - he sharpened them with an unusually large number of right-wing extremist ideas and mixed them with interpretations based on his conspiracy theories, according to which the world, especially Germany, was threatened with annihilation by secret societies. Jews were leading this conspiracy. To do this, he essentially mixed the right-wing extremist writings of the Holocaust deniers and ufologists Miguel Serrano, Wilhelm Landig and the British anthroposophist Trevor Ravenscroft with some original sources. Holey advocated authoritarian ideas of the state and society, whitewashed National Socialism and denied Germany's war guilt.[28] Holey assumes from the outset that his critics are afraid of (mental) change. Although he claims that he does not want to manipulate anyone, his publications repeatedly give the impression that he intends to mentally "reprogram" his readers.[29] |
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Apart from the Protocols, Holey relies on numerous antisemitic and revisionist authors such as David Irving, David L. Hoggan, Germar Rudolf, and other Holocaust deniers. There is also a spiritual kinship with the intellectual father of the right-wing extremist European Workers Party (EAP), Lyndon LaRouche, with whom Holey shows solidarity. Holey views LaRouche as an opponent of the secret global conspirators who fell victim to a judicial scandal orchestrated by the American establishment and was wrongly branded a right-wing extremist by the Anti-Defamation League. |
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Rüdiger Sünner counts Holey among the disciples of the "Black Sun", who adapt Nazi myths about the superiority of former "Aryan" cultures, such as Thule and Atlantis, and incorporate them into their fantastic treatises in which the Third Reich is glorified or its crimes are denied. Serrano and Holey in particular have contributed to a modernization of right-wing esotericism by including UFO legends.[30] |
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Citing the conspiracy theorist William Guy Carr, Holey claims, among other things, that the origin of the Protocols dates back centuries and that they are a plan to achieve world domination. According to Holey, a "Jewish banking system," especially the Rothschild family, works with the Illuminati as the "true rulers" on a global conspiracy. These intentionally triggered the Second World War to make the United States dependent on high finance through its enormous costs. Their ultimate goal is a New World Order. Other classic antisemitic ideologies propagated by Holey include the ritual murder legend, speculations about an alleged worldwide power of the Jewish lodge B’nai B’rith, and the claim that Jews are actually devil worshipers. He distinguishes between Semitic Jews and Khazars and Ashkenazi Jews, whom he counts as his true enemies. Furthermore, he prints several pages of the malicious translation of the Talmud by Johannes Pohl, which was published by the NSDAP for antisemitic propaganda in 1943. Additionally, Holey claims that Helmut Kohl was Jewish and originally named Henoch Kohn, and that HIV was artificially created on behalf of the alleged Jewish Illuminati. |
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The historian Goodrick-Clarke notes that Holey's advocacy of humanity and the esoteric New Age ethos merely conceals his anti-Semitic motives.[31] The Handbook of Antisemitism devotes an article to Holey. In it, he is assigned to the "so-called new Germanic-pagan scene" because he combines new right mythology and esotericism.[1] Stefan von Hoyningen-Huene counts him among the "esoteric conspiracy theorists".[32] |
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The secret global conspirator network of the 'Illuminati' in Holey's ideology encompasses various organizations and associations, including the UN. Intriguing secret puppeteers behind the UN are said to have "caused all wars of the last two centuries themselves." The UN troops are an "international police force" to control independent states like Libya and Iran, which are defamed as aggressors by the (coordinated) international mass media. Holey presents a distorted revisionist view of history that leaves essential facts unconsidered and aligns with former NS propaganda in many areas, such as the question of alleged Jewish declarations of war against Germany, distorted depictions of Poland's role and the question of war guilt. To support his revisionist themes, he uses well-known neo-Nazi material like the Morgenthau Legend and asserts that German and Japanese peace offers were systematically ignored because the Illuminati elite wanted to destroy both countries to maximize investment opportunities and facilitate their integration into a planned global dictatorship. His conspiracy theories resembled a mixture of Mein Kampf, wild science fiction, and black magic. He describes a black magic-acting Tibetan order that was significantly involved in the establishment and shaping of the Third Reich. There is an underground organization called the "Black Sun," which, according to neo-fascists, operates underground bases and colonies worldwide inhabited by millions of Reich Germans. One of these bases is located at over 5000 meters in the Himalayas. Therefore, China invaded Tibet, tortured and killed Tibetan monks on behalf of Masonic Illuminati, to locate and eliminate the Reich Germans, hence thwarting the creation of a new "German Empire of Light." However, the Chinese endeavor failed because the Reich German colonies were located in hidden valleys under the protection of the highest Tibetan lodge, the "Gelugpa" or "Yellow Caps," who also protect the "Ariannis" (descendants of aliens and current inhabitants of underground realms). |
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Tobias Jaecker also assigns Holey to the esoteric spectrum, in which belief in a global conspiracy occupies a central position.[20] Armin Pfahl-Traughber sees in Holey's works the combination of esoteric and right-wing extremist ideological elements.[33] Wolfgang Wippermann sees Holey's claims as exemplary of esoteric conspiracy ideologies which, as can be seen from his writings, are "to the letter" of the National Socialist ones.[34] According to Ursula Caberta, he is the best-known German conspiracy theorist.[35] Through his bestsellers, esotericism has become the most important gateway for right-wing extremist ideologies in German-speaking countries. |
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In a clever montage of facts, unverifiable witness statements, half-truths, and far-fetched interpretations, Holey claims that Adolf Hitler attempted to find the entrances to the underground realm of Agartha inhabited by Aryans in the Himalayas using two SS expeditions, in order to make contact with the descendants of the Aryan godmen in their capital city of Shamballa. The king of Shamballa is said to be 'Rigden Iyepo', the King of the World, represented on the surface by the Dalai Lama. Other colonies of Hitler's 'last battalion' are said to be located in Neuschwabenland (Antarctica), the Andes, Greenland, the Canary Islands, African mountain ranges, Iraq, Japan, and the inner Earth. Holey writes of Allied attempts to attack the German colony in Antarctica, as well as the detonation of two atomic bombs over Neuschwabenland in 1958 which allegedly did not defeat the German colony. From this, he concludes that the German Reich still exists and never surrendered, with only the German Wehrmacht represented by Dönitz capitulating. Holey claims to have learned from a courier of the 'Black Sun' that in 1994 there was a standing army of 6 million soldiers worldwide, consisting of infiltrated Aldebarans, Arianns, and Reich Germans. This army purportedly has 22,000 Reich flying discs, leading the U.S.A. and Russia to initiate the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) program. The middle part of the first volume contains blurry photos of flying discs with swastika and SS symbols. Holey claims these are authentic, obtained personally from the British secret service who found them in hidden SS archives in 1945. Esoteric branches of the Thule Society and the SS (under the name "Black Sun") allegedly possessed UFOs with anti-gravity engines in the 1940s, with which they flew to the Aldebaran star system. Hitler approved the conception and construction of these UFO wonder weapons, with the involvement of Karl Haushofer, Rudolf von Sebottendorf, and Viktor Schauberger. Holey explicitly refers to Rudolf von Sebottendorf and his 'Thule Mythology' when claiming the existence of a 'higher race' from which the Germans originated. |
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The trend of the esoteric scene towards right-wing extremist viewpoints became apparent shortly after Holey's books with the publication of fifty to sixty esoteric right-wing extremist world conspiracy books.[28][36] The chairman of the Armanen Order, which sees itself as the "Aryan elite", Adolf Schleipfer, promotes and recommends Holey's first volume of secret societies as a basic work on the subject of lodge entanglements that replaces entire libraries.[28] Der Spiegel wrote in its issue 51/1996 about the secret societies volumes 1 and 2: "Holey's conspiracy theories read like a mixture of Mein Kampf, wild science fiction and black magic."[28] In May 1996, the news magazine Focus reported on the ban on his books in Switzerland.[37] |
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====''Don't touch this book!''==== |
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==Secret societies and their power in the 20th century (two volumes)== |
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After the confiscation of his two conspiracy books by the Mannheim District Court for inciting anti-Semitic hate speech, Holey portrayed himself as a victim of conspiracy in his 2004 work ''Hands off this book!'' and marketed his alleged martyrdom in the advertising text as "the last secrets of our 'enlightened' world". According to [[Amazon.com|Amazon]], 165,000 copies of this most successful of his books were sold in Germany in 2010. Holey claims that the book deals with finding one's own personality. According to Ulrike Heß-Meining, he once again shows his right-wing extremist anti-Semitic views in this book, albeit in a more subtle form. |
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In Secret Societies, Holey combines science fiction, esotericism, Germanic mythology, Christian numerology and ufology and speaks of a "worldwide conspiracy of the 'Illuminati' - identified as being of Jewish origin - to the detriment of the world and Germany in particular". In 1773, Mayer Amschel Rothschild is said to have come up with a plan with twelve other Jewish financiers in Frankfurt's Judengasse to pave the way for their world government by starting a total of three world wars by the year 2000. Holey explicitly refers to the Protocols of the Elders of Zion,[38] an anti-Semitic fiction published at the beginning of the 20th century that is supposed to prove the Jewish world conspiracy. Through his dramatic style of portrayal, with which he suggests an extraterrestrial battle for the fate of our civilization, Holey was able to spread his Manichaean anti-Semitism, according to Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke, in the New Age scene.[25] To underline the credibility of the Protocols, Holey relied extensively on conspiracy theorist Milton William Cooper.[39] In response to objections that the protocols were demonstrably based on forgeries, he commented: |
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====Other Books==== |
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“I also find the question of authenticity incomprehensible. That would be like saying that the Ten Commandments are not authentic. It is completely irrelevant whether the Ten Commandments are from God, an alien or from Mr. Müller. […] The origin is completely irrelevant. It is the same with the ‘Protocols’. The things that are described in them are applied.”[40] |
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Holey's third book, ''The Third World War,'' was published in 1996 and contains prophecies from various fortune tellers. In the book ''Operation Aldebaran: Contacts with Humans from Another Solar System'' (1997), Holey deals with Aryan-looking extraterrestrials who are said to have come to Earth in UFOs to perform genetic manipulations on humanity. In 1998, ''The Inner World: The Secret of the Black Sun'' was released, which discusses the alleged invention of the Nazis, the Reichsflugscheiben, which are said to be stationed in the inner hollow earth today. In 1999, Holey reported on the legal proceedings against him in ''The Jan van Helsing File'' and portrayed himself and his ideas as victims of conspiracies. In 2000, he wrote about psychic children who could communicate with the dead and read auras in ''The Children of the New Millennium.'' ''Who's Afraid of the Bogeyman?'' (2005) explores near-death experiences, with the author also claiming to have conducted media interviews with death. In collaboration with Stefan Erdmann, Holey published ''The Millennium Lie: On the Trail of the Pyramid Mystery'' in 2008, which claims that the pyramids were actually water power plants. Previously, Holey had presented the same theory in his DVD film "The Cheops Lie". In April 2009, Holey released ''The 1-Million-Euro Book,'' which is inspired by bestsellers like ''[[The Secret|The Secret]]'' by Rhonda Byrne and presents wealth as a result of one's inner attitude. In 2010, ''Secret Societies 3 - War of the Freemasons'' was published, featuring an alleged interview with a "high-degree Freemason" who confirms Holey's own claims. In 2011, Holey co-authored a book spreading the conspiracy theory that Adolf Hitler escaped from Berlin to Argentina in 1945. In 2020, the title ''We Kill Half of Humanity - and It Will Happen Quickly!'' was released, claiming that the "elite" plans to eliminate "inferior" peoples through diseases and plagues to transition the surviving rest into the "green-socialist [[New World Order (conspiracy theory)|New World Order]]"; according to the book, Corona is just the beginning - Holey purportedly knew about a supposed "Corona plan" since August 2019. Holey co-authored the book ''Handbook for Gods'' with his father Johannes Holey in 2021, providing esoteric insights through the "clairvoyant" Johannes and discussing why the Illuminati, whom he considers the masterminds behind world events, censor everything that could jeopardize their alleged machinations. |
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In addition to the Protocols, Holey relies on numerous anti-Semitic and historical revisionist authors such as David Irving, David L. Hoggan, Germar Rudolf and other Holocaust deniers.[41] Another intellectual affinity exists with the spiritual father of the right-wing extremist European Workers’ Party (EAP), Lyndon LaRouche, with whom Holey expresses solidarity. Holey considers LaRouche to be an adversary of the secret world conspirators who fell victim to "a judicial scandal staged by the American establishment" and was wrongly branded a right-wing extremist by propaganda from the Anti-Defamation League.[42] |
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====Film==== |
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Citing conspiracy theorist William Guy Carr, Holey claims, among other things, that the Protocols originated centuries ago and that they are a plan to gain world domination. According to Holey, what he calls a "Jewish banking system", in particular the Rothschild family, is working with the Illuminati as the "true rulers" on a global conspiracy.[43] They deliberately triggered the Second World War in order to make the United States dependent on high finance through its enormous costs. Their ultimate goal is a New World Order. Other classic anti-Semitic ideologemes that he spreads are the ritual murder legend - allegedly the foundling Kaspar Hauser was murdered by Jews for religious reasons -, the legend of the Jewish declaration of war on Germany in September 1939, speculation about the alleged global power of the Jewish lodge B'nai B'rith and the claim that Jews are actually devil worshippers.[44] In doing so, he distinguishes between Semitic Jews and Khazars and Ashkenazi Jews, whom he counts among his true enemies. He then printed a few pages of the malicious translation of the Talmud by Johannes Pohl, which was published by the NSDAP in 1943 for anti-Semitic propaganda.[45] In addition, Holey claims that Helmut Kohl is Jewish and was originally called Henoch Kohn and that HIV was artificially created on behalf of the allegedly Jewish Illuminati.[44] |
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Holey's network Secret TV produced the film ''The Cheops Lie.'' In addition, Secret TV sponsored the 2008 animated film ''Fabian the Goldsmith,'' which promotes a similar conspiracy theory to Holey's in ''Secret Societies'': "Fabian the Goldsmith" allegedly founded the secret society of the "Enlightened" and has been directing world events ever since. According to the Federal Ministry of the Interior, the film "subtly conveys anti-Semitic stereotypes about 'power junkies of financial dynasties' who gain 'power over the masses'."<ref>German Federal Ministry of the Interior/Independent Expert Group on Antisemitism: ''Antisemitism in Germany - current developments'' (2018), p. 125</ref> The film was produced with the support of the Kopp Verlag. Other claims from Holey's work, such as the planned tattooing of a barcode on people by the "Enlightened," are also reflected in the film. |
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In Holey's ideology, the secret global conspiracy network of the 'Illuminati' includes various organizations and associations, including the UN. Intriguing secret puppet masters behind the UN have themselves "caused all the wars of the last two centuries." The UN troops are an "international police force" to bring independent states such as Libya and Iran, which are vilified as aggressors by the (aligned) international mass media, under control. Holey paints a distorted, revisionist picture of history that ignores essential facts and in many areas agrees with former Nazi propaganda, for example on the issue of alleged Jewish declarations of war on Germany, historically distorted representations of Poland's role and the question of war guilt.[46] To support his historical revisionist themes, he uses well-known neo-Nazi material such as the Morgenthau legend and claims that German and Japanese peace offers were systematically ignored because the Illuminati elite wanted to raze both countries to the ground under the guise of democracy and liberalism in order to maximize the subsequent investment opportunities and facilitate integration into a planned global dictatorship.[47] |
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His conspiracy theories sound like a mixture of Mein Kampf, wild science fiction and black magic. He describes a Tibetan order that practices black magic and that played a key role in the creation and formation of the Third Reich. There is an underground organization called the "Black Sun" that, according to neo-fascists, operates underground bases and colonies all over the world that are inhabited by millions of Germans. One of these bases is located at an altitude of over 5,000 meters in the Himalayas. China therefore invaded Tibet, tortured and killed Tibetan monks on behalf of the Masonic Illuminati in order to locate and liquidate the Germans and thereby prevent the creation of a new German Empire of Light. However, the Chinese plan failed because the German colonies were located in hidden valleys and were under the protection of the highest Tibetan lodge, the "Gelugpa" or "Yellow Caps", who also protected the "Ariannis" (descendants of aliens and current inhabitants of underground kingdoms).[48][49] |
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In a clever montage of facts, unverifiable witness statements, partial truths and absurd interpretations, Holey claims that Adolf Hitler used two SS expeditions to try to find the entrances to the underground kingdom of Agartha in the Himalayas, inhabited by Aryans, in order to be able to make contact with the descendants of the Aryan gods in their capital Shamballa. The king of Shamballah is called Rigden Iyepo, the king of the world, who is represented above ground by the Dalai Lama.[50] Other colonies of the last battalion built up by Hitler are in New Swabia (Antarctica), the Andes, Greenland, the Canary Islands, African mountain ranges, Iraq, Japan and in the Earth's interior. Holey writes of futile attempts by the Allies to attack the German colony in Antarctica. Even the detonation of two atomic bombs over New Swabia in 1958 failed to defeat the German colony. From this he concludes that the German Reich still exists and has never surrendered, but only the German Wehrmacht represented by Dönitz.[51] Holey learned from a courier for the "Black Sun" that in 1994 there was a standing army of 6 million soldiers worldwide, consisting of infiltrated Aldebarans, Ariannis and Reich Germans. This army had 22,000 Reich flying discs. This is why the USA and Russia launched the SDI program.[49] The middle section of the first volume contains blurred photos of flying discs with swastikas and SS symbols. Holey claims that these are authentic. He received them personally from the British secret service, which found them in hidden SS archives in 1945. Esoteric subdivisions of the Thule Society and the SS (called "Black Sun") had already owned UFOs with anti-gravity engines in the 1940s, with which they flew as far as the Aldebaran star system. Hitler approved the design and construction of these UFO wonder weapons, in which Karl Haushofer, Rudolf von Sebottendorf and Viktor Schauberger were involved.[52] Holey explicitly refers to Rudolf von Sebottendorf and his Thule mythology when he claims the existence of a "higher race" from which the Germanic tribes emerged.[1] |
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==Hände weg von diesem Buch!== |
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After the Mannheim District Court confiscated his two conspiracy books for anti-Semitic incitement, Holey portrayed himself as a conspiracy victim in his 2004 work Hands off this book! and marketed his supposed martyrdom in the advertising text as "the last secrets of our 'enlightened' world".[53] According to Amazon, 165,000 copies of this book, which is the most successful of his books to date and also deals with various fringe scientific topics, were sold in Germany in 2010.[54] Holey claims that the book is essentially about finding one's own personality. According to Ulrike Heß-Meining, he once again shows his right-wing extremist anti-Semitic views in this book, albeit in a more subtle form.[54] |
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Other books |
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Holey's third book, The Third World War, was published in 1996 and contains prophecies from various fortune tellers. In the book Operation Aldebaran. Contacts with people from another solar system. (1997), Holey deals with Aryan-looking extraterrestrials[5] who are said to have come to Earth in UFOs to carry out genetic manipulation on humanity.[55] In 1998, The Inner World: The Secret of the Black Sun was published. The book is about an alleged invention of the National Socialists, the Reich flying discs, which are now said to be stationed in the hollow interior of the Earth. In 1999, Holey reported in The Jan van Helsing File on the criminal trial against him and portrayed himself and his ideas as victims of conspiracies. In 2000, in The Children of the New Millennium, he tells of children with psychic abilities who have contact with the dead and can read auras. Who's Afraid of the Black Man?, published in 2005, deals with near-death experiences, the author also claims to have conducted media interviews with death. In 2008, Holey published The Millennium Lie: On the Trail of the Pyramid Riddle with Stefan Erdmann; the book claims that the pyramids were hydroelectric power stations. Holey had previously processed the same thesis in his DVD film: "The Cheops Lie". In April 2009, Holey published The 1 Million Euro Book, which is based on bestsellers such as The Secret - The Secret of Rhonda Byrne and presents wealth as a result of inner attitude. In 2010, Secret Societies 3 - War of the Freemasons was published, an alleged interview with a "high-ranking Freemason" who confirms Holey's own claims. In 2011, Holey co-authored a book that spreads the conspiracy theory that Adolf Hitler escaped from Berlin to Argentina in 1945.[56] In 2020, the title We're Killing Half of Humanity - and It's Going to Be Quick! was published. on the market, claiming that the "elite" is planning to "get rid of 'inferior' peoples through diseases and epidemics" in order to "transfer the surviving rest into the green-socialist New World Order"; Corona is just the beginning - Holey claims to have been informed about an alleged "Corona plan" since August 2019. With his father Johannes Holey, Holey wrote the title Handbook for Gods, published in 2021. In it, both offer esoteric insights through the "clairvoyant Johannes" and discuss the question of why the Illuminati, whom he considers to be the masterminds of world events, censor everything that could pose a threat to their supposed machinations.[57] |
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Film |
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Holey's channel Secret TV produced the film The Cheops Lie. Secret TV also sponsored the 2008 animated film Fabian the Goldsmith, which represents a similar conspiracy theory to Holey's in secret societies: "Fabian the Goldsmith" founded the secret society of the "enlightened" and has been directing world events ever since.[58] The film, which according to the Federal Ministry of the Interior "subtly conveys anti-Semitic clichés about 'power junkies of the financial dynasties' who gain 'power over the masses'",[59] was produced with the support of the Kopp publishing house.[22] Other claims from Holey's work, such as the "enlightened" planning to tattoo a barcode on people, can also be found in the film. |
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==List of works== |
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==Works list== |
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===Books=== |
===Books=== |
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====Under own name==== |
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* ''The Inner World. The Secret of the Black Sun.'' Novel. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 1998, ISBN 3-9805733-1-1. |
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* ''The Jan van Helsing File. A documentation of the banning of two books in the "freest country in German history".'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 1999, ISBN 3-9805733-9-7. |
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* ''The Children of the New Millennium. Psychic children changing the world''. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2001, ISBN 3-9807106-4-5. |
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====Under |
====Under the pseudonym "Jan van Helsing"==== |
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* ''Secret Societies and their Power in the 20th Century''. ISBN 3-89478-069-X (indexed and confiscated in Germany in 1996, lifting of confiscation order in 2001). |
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* ''Secret Societies 2 (the Interview)''. ISBN 3-89478-492-X (indexed and confiscated in Germany in 1996, lifting of confiscation order in 2001). |
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Die innere Welt. Das Geheimnis der schwarzen Sonne. Roman. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 1998, ISBN 3-9805733-1-1. |
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* ''Book 3 – The Third World War''. Ewert, Lathen (Ems) 1996, ISBN 3-89478-573-X. |
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Die Akte Jan van Helsing. Eine Dokumentation über das Verbot zweier Bücher im „freiesten Land deutscher Geschichte“. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 1999, ISBN 3-9805733-9-7. |
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* ''Operation Aldebaran. Contacts with beings from another solar system. The sensational experiences of the Feistle family.'' Ewert, Lathen (Ems) 1997 (Copyright year), ISBN 3-89478-220-X. |
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Die Kinder des neuen Jahrtausends. Mediale Kinder verändern die Welt. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2001, ISBN 3-9807106-4-5. |
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* ''Hands off this Book!'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2004, ISBN 3-9807106-8-8. |
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* ''Who's Afraid of the Boogeyman...?'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2005, ISBN 3-9807106-5-3. |
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====Under the pseudonym “Jan van Helsing”==== |
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* ''National Security – The Conspiracy. Top secret projects in technology and space travel.'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2005, ISBN 3-938656-25-5. |
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* ''The Millennium Lie. On the trail of the pyramid mystery.'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2008, ISBN 3-938656-30-1 (with Stefan Erdmann). |
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Geheimgesellschaften und ihre Macht im 20. Jahrhundert. ISBN 3-89478-069-X (indexed and confiscated in Germany in 1996, confiscation order lifted in 2001). |
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* ''The 1-Million-Euro Book'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2009, ISBN 3-938656-99-9 (with Dr. Dinero). |
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Geheimgesellschaften 2 (das Interview). ISBN 3-89478-492-X (indexed and confiscated in Germany in 1996, confiscation order lifted in 2001). |
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* ''Secret Societies 3 – War of the Freemasons.'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2010, ISBN 978-3-938656-80-8. |
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* ''Hitler Survived in Argentina.'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2011, ISBN 978-3-938656-20-4 (with Abel Basti). |
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Unternehmen Aldebaran. Kontakte mit Menschen aus einem anderen Sonnensystem. Die sensationellen Erlebnisse der Familie Feistle. Ewert, Lathen (Ems) 1997 (Copyright year), ISBN 3-89478-220-X. |
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* ''politically incorrect: inconvenient facts and dangerous truths that one is no longer allowed to speak out!'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2012, ISBN 978-3-938656-60-0 (with Michael Morris, Andreas Popp, Johann Georg Schnitzer, Michael Friedrich Vogt, Stefan Erdmann, Ben Morgenstern, Johannes Holey, Rudolf Passian) |
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Hände weg von diesem Buch! Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2004, ISBN 3-9807106-8-8. |
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* ''If Patients Knew This - True Causes, Effective Therapies'' Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2021, ISBN 978-3-938656-75-4 (with Vera Wagner) |
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* With Jason Mason: ''UFOs and the Ringmakers of Saturn. NASA discovers huge spaceships in the rings of Saturn – and keeps it secret. New military whistleblowers report on the Secret Space Program and the return of the white gods!'' Amadeus Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, Fichtenau 2024. ISBN 978-3-98562-021-0. ISBN 3-98562-021-0 |
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Nationale Sicherheit – Die Verschwörung. Streng geheime Projekte in Technologie und Raumfahrt Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2005, ISBN 3-938656-25-5. |
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Die Jahrtausendlüge. Auf der Spur des Pyramidenrätsels. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2008, ISBN 3-938656-30-1 (with Stefan Erdmann). |
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Das 1-Million-Euro-Buch Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2009, ISBN 3-938656-99-9 (with Dr. Dinero). |
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Geheim-Gesellschaften 3 – Krieg der Freimaurer. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2010, ISBN 978-3-938656-80-8. |
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Hitler überlebte in Argentinien. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2011, ISBN 978-3-938656-20-4 (with Abel Basti). |
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politisch unkorrekt: unbequeme Tatsachen und gefährliche Wahrheiten, die man nicht mehr aussprechen darf! Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2012, ISBN 978-3-938656-60-0 (with Michael Morris, Andreas Popp, Johann Georg Schnitzer, Michael Friedrich Vogt, Stefan Erdmann, Ben Morgenstern, Johannes Holey, Rudolf Passian) |
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Wenn das die Patienten wüssten – Wahre Ursachen, Wirksame Therapien Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2021, ISBN 978-3-938656-75-4 (with Vera Wagner) |
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Mit Jason Mason: UFOs und die Ringmacher des Saturn. Die NASA entdeckt riesige Raumschiffe in den Saturnringen – und hält es geheim. Neue militärische Whistleblower berichten über das Geheime Weltraumprogramm und die Rückkehr der weißen Götter! Amadeus Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, Fichtenau 2024. ISBN 978-3-98562-021-0. ISBN 3-98562-021-0 |
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===Audiobooks=== |
===Audiobooks=== |
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* Stefan Erdmann: ''Interview with Jan van Helsing''. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2006, ISBN 3-938656-01-8. |
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===Films=== |
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Stefan Erdmann: Interview mit Jan van Helsing. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2006, ISBN 3-938656-01-8. |
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* ''The Cheops Lie'' |
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* ''Fabian the Goldsmith'', 2008 |
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===Film=== |
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Die Cheops-Lüge |
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Fabian, der Goldschmied, 2008 |
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==Literature== |
==Literature== |
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* Arnon Hampe: ''Holey, Jan Udo.'' In: Wolfgang Benz (Ed.): ''Handbook of Antisemitism. Vol. 2: Persons''. De Gruyter / Saur, Berlin 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-44159-2, pp. 375 f. (accessed via De Gruyter Online). |
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* Friedrich Paul Heller, Anton Maegerle: ''The Language of Hate: Right-wing extremism and nationalist esotericism: Jan van Helsing and Horst Mahler.'' Schmetterling-Verlag, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-89657-091-9. |
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* Hubert Michael Mader: ''Studies and Reports. Political Esotericism - a right-wing extremist challenge.'' Landesverteidigungsakademie, Vienna 1999, ISBN 3-901328-36-X. |
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==External links== |
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Arnon Hampe: Holey, Jan Udo. In: Wolfgang Benz (ed.): Handbook of Anti-Semitism. Vol. 2: People. De Gruyter / Saur, Berlin 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-44159-2, p. 375 f. (accessed via De Gruyter Online). |
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* [https://dieunbestechlichen.com ''The Incorruptibles.'' Website of Jan Udo Holey] |
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Friedrich Paul Heller, Anton Maegerle: The Language of Hate: Right-Wing Extremism and Nationalistic Esotericism: Jan van Helsing and Horst Mahler. Schmetterling-Verlag, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-89657-091-9. |
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* {{DNB-Portal|122552989}} |
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Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and Reports. Political Esotericism - a Right-Wing Extremist Challenge. National Defense Academy, Vienna 1999, ISBN 3-901328-36-X. |
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* Holocaust Reference: Jan van Helsing, [http://www.h-ref.de/literatur/h/helsing-jan-van/geheimgesellschaften-1.php Secret Societies 1] and [http://www.h-ref.de/literatur/h/helsing-jan-van/geheimgesellschaften-2.php Secret Societies 2] |
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* [http://www.zeit.de/1998/23/esoterik.txt.19980528.xml/fullview ''Brown Esotericism on the Rise''] in ''ZEIT'' (1998) |
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==Weblinks== |
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Die Unbestechlichen. Website of Jan Udo Holey |
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Literature by and about Jan Udo Holey in the catalogue of the German National Library |
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Holocaust-Referenz: Jan van Helsing, Geheimgesellschaften 1 sowie Geheimgesellschaften 2 |
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Brown esotericism on the rise in ZEIT (1998) |
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==References== |
==References== |
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<references /> |
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{{Authority control|GND=122552989|LCCN=nb96001342|VIAF=69813204}} |
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Arnon Hampe, Holey, In: Werner Bergmann, Brigitte Mihok, Wolfgang Benz (Hrsg.), Handbuch des Antisemitismus: Judenfeindschaft in Geschichte und Gegenwart, Band 2 Personen, Walter de Gruyter 2009, S. 375 f. |
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Oliver Schröm: Braune Esoterik auf dem Vormarsch: Viele Bücher aus der New-Age-Szene zeichnen ein rassistisches Weltbild. In: Zeit Online. 28. Mai 1998, S. 1, abgerufen am 28. August 2017. |
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Friedrich Paul Heller, Anton Maegerle: Die Sprache des Hasses: Rechtsextremismus und völkische Esoterik: Jan van Helsing und Horst Mahler. Schmetterling-Verlag, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-89657-091-9, S. 126. |
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Hubert Michael Mader: Studien und Berichte. Politische Esoterik – eine rechtsextreme Herausforderung. Wien: Landesverteidigungsakademie 1999. S. 85f und S. 104f. |
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Birk Meinhardt: Arier im Mikrowellen-Krieg. In: Süddeutsche.de. vom 15./16. März 2008. |
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Chantal Magnin und Marianne Rychner: Strukturelle Gemeinsamkeiten zweier Weltdeutungen: Esoterik und antisemitische Verschwörungstheorie. In: Tangram. Bulletin der Eidgenössischen Kommission gegen Rassismus, Nr. 6 (1999), S. 43. |
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Draculas Ufo. In: Der Spiegel. Nr. 51, 1996, S. 73 (online – 16. Dezember 1996). |
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Verschwörungstheoretiker mit Verbindungen in die rechte Ecke ?, Artikel vom 7. April 2009 von Matthias Holzapfel auf Merkur.de |
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Arnon Hampe: Holey, Jan Udo. In: Wolfgang Benz (Hrsg.): Handbuch des Antisemitismus. Bd. 2: Personen. De Gruyter Saur, Berlin 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-44159-2, S. 375 (abgerufen über De Gruyter Online). |
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Verfassungsschutzbericht 2000 Österreich, 2001, S. 23 |
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Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz: Verfassungsschutzbericht 2004 (Memento vom 29. September 2007 im Internet Archive) (PDF; 3,5 MB); S. 106; Verfassungsschutzbericht 2005, S. 118 |
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Thomas Fliege, Kurt Möller, Rechtsextremismus in Baden-Württemberg, Belchen-Verlag 2001, S. 99; Ines Aftenberger, Die Neue Rechte und der Neorassismus, Grazer Universitätsverlag 2007, S. 64;Johann Dolanski, Das Weltall, wie es wirklich ist: Dolan-Theorie : nach den neuesten technisch-wissenschaftlichen Forschungen dargestellt, Turia & Kant Verlag 2008, S. 125 |
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Blick nach Rechts: Ama Deus Verlag: „Blutlinien der Illuminati“, Rezension, abgerufen am 21. Mai 2014. |
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Matthias Pöhlmann: Rechte Esoterik. Wenn sich alternatives Denken und Extremismus gefährlich vermischen. Herder, Freiburg 2021, S. 94 |
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Bernd Merling: secret.tv. (Memento vom 12. Juli 2014 im Internet Archive) In: Antifaschismus2.de. 3. Januar 2010, abgerufen am 26. Januar 2014. |
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Bernd Hüttner, Handbuch Alternativmedien 2011/2012: Printmedien, Freie Radios, Archive & Verlage in der BRD, Österreich und der Schweiz, AG SPAK Bücher 2011, S. 65. |
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EZW, Schöne neue Verschwörungswelt: Secret TV - ein neues Filmportal für braune Esoterik, abgerufen am 20. März 2016 |
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G. Hooffacker / P. Lokk: Rechtsextremes Internet-TV. In: Bernd Hüttner (Hg.), Handbuch Alternativmedien 2011/2012. Printmedien, Freie Radios, Archive & Verlage in der BRD, Österreich und der Schweiz, AG Spak: Wasserburg 2011, S. 65. |
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Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: Black Sun. Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity. NYU Press, New York 2002, S. 297. |
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Tobias Jaecker, Antisemitische Verschwörungstheorien nach dem 11. September: neue Varianten eines alten Deutungsmusters, LIT-Verlag 2005, S. 56. |
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Martin Brauen: Traumwelt Tibet: westliche Trugbilder. Verlag Paul Haupt Berne, Bern; Stuttgart; Wien 2000, ISBN 3-258-05639-0. S. 73. |
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Anna Hunger: Gut vernetzt – Der Kopp-Verlag und die schillernde rechte Publizistenszene. In:Stephan Braun, Alexander Geisler, Martin Gerster (Hrsg.): Strategien der extremen Rechten: Hintergründe – Analysen – Antworten. 2. aktualisierte und erweiterte Auflage, Springer Fachmedien, Wiesbaden 2015, ISBN 978-3-658-01983-9, S. 430. |
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Stefan Meining: Rechte Esoterik in Deutschland. Ideenkonstrukte, Schnittstellen und Gefahrenpotentiale, in: Politischer Extremismus als Bedrohung der Freiheit (59 Seiten, pdf; 2,2 MB), Thüringer Landesamt für Verfassungsschutz, Erfurt 2003, Seite 45–84. |
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Katharina Nocun, Pia Lamberty: Fake Facts: Wie Verschwörungstheorien unser Denken bestimmen Quadriga, Berlin 2020, ISBN 978-3869950952, S. 115. |
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Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: Im Schatten der Schwarzen Sonne. Marix Verlag Wiesbaden 2002, ISBN 978-3-86539-185-8, S. 563. |
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Wolfgang Bittner: Satans verschworene Brüder – Angriffe und Antithesen gegen die Deutsche Freimaurerei 1970–2000. 453 S., Bodem Verlag, ISBN 3-934215-01-7. Seite 132–133. |
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Bundesministerium des Innern: Verfassungsschutzbericht 2004, Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz, Berlin 2004, ISSN 0177-0357, S. 106. |
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Hubert Michael Mader: Studien und Berichte. Politische Esoterik – eine rechtsextreme Herausforderung. Landesverteidigungsakademie, Wien 1999. S. 38–39 und S. 47. |
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Hubert Michael Mader: Studien und Berichte. Politische Esoterik – eine rechtsextreme Herausforderung. Wien: Landesverteidigungsakademie 1999. S. 107f und S. 131. |
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Rüdiger Sünner: Schwarze Sonne. Entfesselung und Mißbrauch der Mythen in Nationalsozialismus und rechter Esoterik. Zweite Auflage, Verlag Herder, Freiburg im Breisgau 1999. S. 230. |
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Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: Im Schatten der Schwarzen Sonne. Marix Verlag, Wiesbaden 2009, ISBN 978-3-86539-185-8, S. 555–556. |
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Stefan von Hoyningen-Huene, Religiosität bei rechtsextrem orientierten Jugendlichen, LIT-Verlag 2003, S. 60. |
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Armin Pfahl-Traughber, Freimaurer und Juden, Kapitalisten und Kommunisten als Feindbilder rechtsextremistischer Verschwörungsideologien vom Kaiserreich bis zur Gegenwart, In: Uwe Backes, Rechtsextreme Ideologien in Geschichte und Gegenwart, Böhlau Verlag 2003, S. 225. |
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Wolfgang Wippermann: Agenten des Bösen. Verschwörungstheorien von Luther bis heute. be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, S. 146. |
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Ursula Caberta: Schwarzbuch Esoterik. Gütersloher Verlagshaus, 2. Auflage 2011, S. 104. |
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Eduard Gugenberger, Franko Petri und Roman Schweidlenka: Weltverschwörungstheorien. Die neue Gefahr von Rechts. Deuticke, Wien 1998, S. 198 und S. 274. |
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Eduard Gugenberger, Franko Petri und Roman Schweidlenka: Weltverschwörungstheorien. Die neue Gefahr von Rechts. Deuticke, Wien 1998, S. 199. |
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Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz: Argumentationsmuster im rechtsextremistischen Antisemitismus (Memento vom 22. November 2009 im Internet Archive) (PDF; 1,4 MB). November 2005, S. 10f. |
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Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: Im Schatten der Schwarzen Sonne. Arische Kulte, Esoterischer Nationalsozialismus und die Politik der Abgrenzung. Marix Verlag, Wiesbaden 2009, S. 556. |
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Anton Maegerle: Vom Obersalzberg bis zum NSU. Die extreme Rechte und die politische Kultur der Bundesrepublik 1988–2013. Edition Critic, Berlin 2013, S. 117. |
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Wolfgang Wippermann: Agenten des Bösen. Verschwörungstheorien von Luther bis heute. be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, S. 148. |
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Hubert Michael Mader: Studien und Berichte. Politische Esoterik – eine rechtsextreme Herausforderung. Wien: Landesverteidigungsakademie 1999. S. 40–41. |
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infoSekta: Van Helsing: Ideologischer Kern unverändert. |
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Wolfgang Wippermann: Agenten des Bösen. Verschwörungstheorien von Luther bis heute. be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, S. 148 f. |
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Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: Im Schatten der Schwarzen Sonne. Arische Kulte, Esoterischer Nationalsozialismus und die Politik der Abgrenzung. Marix Verlag, Wiesbaden 2009, S. 559. |
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Hubert Michael Mader: Studien und Berichte. Politische Esoterik – eine rechtsextreme Herausforderung. Wien: Landesverteidigungsakademie 1999. S. 60–68. |
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Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: Im Schatten der Schwarzen Sonne. Marix Verlag Wiesbaden 2002, ISBN 978-3-86539-185-8, S. 558. |
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Martin Brauen: Traumwelt Tibet: westliche Trugbilder. Verlag Paul Haupt Berne, Bern; Stuttgart; Wien 2000, ISBN 3-258-05639-0. S. 66. |
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Hubert Michael Mader: Studien und Berichte. Politische Esoterik – eine rechtsextreme Herausforderung. Wien: Landesverteidigungsakademie 1999. S. 70–71. |
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Martin Brauen: Traumwelt Tibet: westliche Trugbilder. Verlag Paul Haupt Berne, Bern; Stuttgart; Wien 2000, ISBN 3-258-05639-0. S. 69–72. |
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Hubert Michael Mader: Studien und Berichte. Politische Esoterik – eine rechtsextreme Herausforderung. Wien: Landesverteidigungsakademie 1999. S. 69. |
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Rüdiger Sünner: Schwarze Sonne. Entfesselung und Mißbrauch der Mythen in Nationalsozialismus und rechter Esoterik. Zweite Auflage, Verlag Herder, Freiburg im Breisgau 1999. S. 220–221. |
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Wolfgang Benz: Die Protokolle der Weisen von Zion – Die Legende von der jüdischen Weltverschwörung. C.H. Beck, München 2007, S. 94. |
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Ulrike Heß-Meining, Right-Wing Esotericism in Europe, In: Uwe Backes, Patrick Moreau (Hg.), The Extreme Right in Europe, Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht 2011, S. 394–396. |
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Wolfgang Wippermann: Agenten des Bösen. Verschwörungstheorien von Luther bis heute. be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, S. 147–148 und S. 190. |
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Richard J. Evans: Das Dritte Reich und seine Verschwörungstheorien. Wer sie in die Welt gesetzt hat und wem sie nutzen. DVA, München 2021, S. 272. |
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Matthias Pöhlmann: Rechte Esoterik. Wenn sich alternatives Denken und Extremismus gefährlich vermischen. Herder, Freiburg 2021, S. 91, 93, 141 |
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siehe hierzu Informationsportal gegen Rechtsextremismus. |
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Bundesministerium des Innern/Unabhängiger Expertenkreis Antisemitismus: Antisemitismus in Deutschland – aktuelle Entwicklungen (Memento des Originals vom 29. Dezember 2021 im Internet Archive) Info: Der Archivlink wurde automatisch eingesetzt und noch nicht geprüft. Bitte prüfe Original- und Archivlink gemäß Anleitung und entferne dann diesen Hinweis. (2018), S. 125 |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Holey, Jan Udo}} |
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==Publications== |
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[[Category:Author (Antisemitism)]] |
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'''Books published under his pen name ''Jan van Helsing'':''' |
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[[Category:Propagator of a conspiracy theory]] |
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* ''Geheimgesellschaften und ihre Macht im 20. Jahrhundert'', 1995, {{ISBN|3-89478-069-X}} |
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[[Category:Person associated with anti-Masonic beliefs]] |
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* ''Geheimgesellschaften 2 (das Interview)'', 1995, {{ISBN|3-89478-492-X}} |
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[[Category:Ufology]] |
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* ''Buch 3 – Der dritte Weltkrieg'', 2005, {{ISBN|3-9805733-5-4}} |
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[[Category:Esoteric literature]] |
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* ''Unternehmen Aldebaran'', 1997, {{ISBN|3-89478-220-X}} |
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[[Category:Authors]] |
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* ''Hände weg von diesem Buch'', 2004, {{ISBN|3-9807106-8-8}} |
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[[Category:German literature]] |
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* ''Wer hat Angst vor'm schwarzen Mann...?'', 2005, {{ISBN|3-9807106-5-3}} |
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[[Category:21st-century literature]] |
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[[Category:German]] |
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[[Category:Born 1967]] |
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[[Category:Male]] |
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{{Persondata |
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'''Books published under his real name ''Jan Udo Holey'':''' |
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|NAME=Holey, Jan Udo |
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* ''Die Akte Jan van Helsing'', {{ISBN|3-9805733-9-7}} |
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|ALTERNATIVE NAMES=Helsing, Jan van (Pseudonym) |
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* ''Die innere Welt'', {{ISBN|3-9805733-1-1}} |
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|SHORT DESCRIPTION=German author of revisionist history, conspiracy theory, and right-wing esoteric books |
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* ''Die Kinder des neuen Jahrtausend'', 2005, {{ISBN|3-9807106-4-5}} |
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|DATE OF BIRTH=22 March 1967 |
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|PLACE OF BIRTH=Dinkelsbühl |
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==References== |
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|DATE OF DEATH= |
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{{reflist}} |
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|PLACE OF DEATH= |
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}} |
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==External links== |
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* [http://www.jan-van-helsing.de/index.php Jan Udo Holey's Website] (German) |
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* [http://www.h-ref.de/literatur/h/helsing-jan-van/geheimgesellschaften-1.php Article debunking ''Geheimgesellschaften (Part 1)''] (German) |
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* [http://www.h-ref.de/literatur/h/helsing-jan-van/geheimgesellschaften-2.php Article debunking ''Geheimgesellschaften (Part 2)''] (German) |
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{{Authority control}} |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Holey, Jan Udo}} |
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[[Category:1967 births]] |
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[[Category:Living people]] |
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[[Category:Occultism in Nazism]] |
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[[Category:German conspiracy theorists]] |
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[[Category:Antisemitism in Germany]] |
Revision as of 22:50, 1 June 2024
You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in German. (March 2021) Click [show] for important translation instructions.
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Jan Udo Holey | |
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Born | Dinkelsbühl, Western Germany | 22 March 1967
Pen name | Jan van Helsing |
Occupation | Writer |
Nationality | German |
Genres | historical novel, documentary |
Subject | conspiracy theories, ancient history |
Literary movement | Esotericism |
Years active | 1993– |
Notable works | "Don't Touch This Book!" "Secret Societies and Their Power in The 20th Century“ |
Jan Udo Holey (born 22 March 1967 in Dinkelsbühl), and often known by his pen name Jan van Helsing, is a controversial German author who embraces conspiracy theories involving subjects such as world domination plots by freemasons, Hitler's continuing survival in Antarctica following World War II, the structure of the earth as hollow, and others. His theories draw from sources such as The Protocols of the Elders of Zion.[1]
His books Geheimgesellschaften (Secret Societies) and Geheimgesellschaften 2 have been banned in Germany,[citation needed] France[2] and Switzerland for inciting anti-semitic hatred.
The majority of his books, such as Die Kinder des neuen Jahrtausends. Mediale Kinder verändern die Welt (Children of the New Millennium, and how They Change the World) are non-political and deal exclusively with esoteric subjects.
Life
Holey was the middle child of a wealthy family. His mother called herself a clairvoyant, and his father wrote three books dealing with gnostic and esoteric subject matter. Holey claims to have attended schools in Crailsheim, Bammental (near Heidelberg), Cambridge (in the United Kingdom), and Munich.
Holey chose his nom de plume "van Helsing", after he read Bram Stoker's vampire-novel Dracula at the age of fourteen.
Today, Holey runs his own publishing house, which publishes his own works as well as of others holding similar interests and viewpoints.
The Landesamt für Verfassungsschutz Baden-Württemberg (the State Office for the Protection of the Constitution of Baden-Württemberg) first referred to Holey in a 1996 report entitled "Rechtsextremistische Einflußnahme auf die Esoterikszene" (Right-Wing Extremist Influences on the Esoteric Scene).
Political opinions
Holey draws from many esoteric and conspiracy theories, many of which originate in the United States of America. His writings encompass such varied themes as Nostradamus, reincarnation, conspiracy theories regarding John F. Kennedy and Uwe Barschel's murders. According to his detractors, Holey's books are largely plagiarized from other sources, many of which are conspiracy theorists of questionable repute. The author believes he is banned as part of a larger conspiracy.
In Geheimgesellschaften, Holey combines science-fiction, esotericism, Nazi-mythology, ufology and "Zionist global domination" theories. He also employs The Protocols of the Elders of Zion as a source. He believes the Rothschilds head a Jewish conspiracy to rule the world and associates them with a mysterious cabal called the Illuminati, who plan a New World Order. Holey and his followers claim that they are not anti-semitic, but rather that they speak out against powerful Jewish interests in high finance and politics.[3]
Publicist Activities
At the age of 14, Holey read Bram Stoker's novel Dracula, which inspired him to use the pseudonym "van Helsing" for his publications.[4] He explains that the Illuminati, which several of his books target, are also made up of "bloodsuckers."[5]
In the late eighties, Holey wrote his first book Secret Societies and their Power in the 20th Century, which was published in March 1994 by Ewert-Verlag and mainly sold in esoteric bookstores.[6] Within a few months, it became a bestseller. In 1995, the publication of Secret Societies 2 followed. The pseudonym was uncovered in July 1996 by critical reports in the magazine esotera and Der Spiegel.[7] By the time the Jewish Community in Mannheim filed a complaint for incitement to hatred, which stopped the store sales, both books had probably sold more than 100,000 copies.[8] The case was dismissed by the Mannheim District Court "due to lack of local jurisdiction."[9] A complaint followed in Switzerland, after which both books were confiscated and indexed in both the Federal Republic of Germany and Switzerland by the Federal Department for Media Harmful to Young Persons.
Holey was first mentioned in reports of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution in the Report of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution Baden-Württemberg 1996, where he was reported under the heading "Right-Wing Extremist Influence on the Esoteric Scene." This was followed by mentions in the Austrian Office for the Protection of the Constitution 2000[10] and by the Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution in 2004 and 2005, where Holey was described as a "right-wing extremist esotericist."[11] Holey also made inroads into the social sciences as a "right-wing extremist esotericist."[12]
Since the late 1990s, he has been publishing his works in the Amadeus Verlag, founded by his mother in 1998. Since December 31, 2009, he has been the CEO there. Blick nach Rechts wrote that he is considered the "most well-known representative of brown esotericism" with his publishing house.[13] This publishing house also operates the website dieunbestechlichen.com; the imprint lists Holey as editor-in-chief. The site promises "uncensored news - politically incorrect and free!"[14]
From 2007 to 2010[15] he operated the web TV channel Secret.tv, through which he spread his esoteric and conspiracy-theoretical theses.[16] A film created by Holey and Stefan Erdmann about the Cheops Pyramid was distributed through this channel. The Evangelische Zentralstelle für Weltanschauungsfragen (Protestant Central Office for World Views) calls the Internet channel a "film portal for brown esotericism."[17] The "Handbook of Alternative Media" describes the channel as "right-wing extremist internet TV."[18]
In his books, Helsing draws on the conspiracy theories of authors Gary Allen and Des Griffin and their works The Insider (1970) and Who Rules the World (1976). In particular, he relies on the American ufologist Milton William Cooper, whom he also personally knew and extensively quoted from his work "Behold a Pale Horse."[19] Holey asserts a global conspiracy of the Illuminati, which he includes Freemasons and Jews in.[20] He holds the view that Hitler was inspired by Bulwer-Lytton's book The Coming Race (1871) and Ossendowski's title Beasts, Men and Gods, for which there is no evidence. However, with these claims, Holey perpetuates neo-Nazi stereotypes, as many passages of authors Bulwer-Lytton and Ossendowski have contributed to the formation of neo-Nazi legends alongside theosophical sources.[21]
In October 2011, an extensive interview about his new book Hitler Survived in Argentina was published on the internet portal Kopp-Online of the Kopp Verlag. On December 23, 2011, a foreword by Holey was also published there in its original length.[22]
Legal Disputes
In 1996, both books Secret Societies were removed from the market by order of the Jewish Community in Mannheim following a confiscation order by the Amtsgericht Mannheim due to incitement to hatred.[23] Despite the criminal proceedings against Holey on charges of incitement to hatred being dropped in 1998 for formal reasons[23], both books remained banned because their content was “highly antisemitic.”[24]
As a result, the author sought to portray the banning of his books in the introduction and first part of his writing as constitutionally questionable.[25] He wrote his legal interpretation on page 14 of the first part:
[The book...] is directed exclusively against the background forces, world conspirators, Freemasons, Rotary, [...] However, these groups are not part of the German population within the meaning of Article 130 of the German Criminal Code and thus not the target of this provision […]
In 2001, the Mannheim Regional Court lifted the confiscation order.[26] However, the indexing in both countries was not lifted.
Reception and Evaluation of Publications
According to Hubert Michael Mader from the Austrian Landesverteidigungsakademie, Holey managed to achieve the most significant coup of right-wing extremism after 1945 with his bestsellers. He incorporates various themes that have long been familiar in the esoteric scene and are unspectacularly received. According to him, the new aspect is that he sharpens them with unusually numerous right-wing extremist ideas and mixes them with interpretations based on his conspiracy theories, suggesting that the world, especially Germany, is threatened with destruction by secret societies. Jews are said to be leading this conspiracy. To a large extent, he mixes his own claims with the right-wing extremist writings of Holocaust deniers and ufologists such as Miguel Serrano, Wilhelm Landig, and the British anthroposophist Trevor Ravenscroft. Holey advocates authoritarian state and social concepts, whitewashes National Socialism, and denies Germany's war guilt.[27] Holey assumes from the outset that his critics are afraid of (mental) change. He claims that he does not want to manipulate anyone, but his publications repeatedly create the impression that he intends to "reprogram" his readers mentally.[28]
Rüdiger Sünner counts Holey among the disciples of the "Black Sun," who adapt Nazi myths of the superiority of former "Aryan" prime cultures such as Thule and Atlantis and incorporate them into their fantastic treatises, in which the Third Reich is glorified or its crimes denied. In particular, Serrano and Holey have contributed to the modernization of right-wing esotericism by incorporating UFO legends.[29] Historian Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke notes that Holey's advocacy for humanity and the esoteric New Age ethos merely mask his antisemitic motives.[30] The Handbook of Antisemitism dedicates an article to Holey. In it, he is attributed to the “so-called neo-Germanic-pagan scene” because he combines neo-right mythology and esotericism. Stefan von Hoyningen-Huene includes him among the "esoteric conspiracy theorists."[31]
Tobias Jaecker also categorizes Holey within the esoteric spectrum, in which the belief in world conspiracy occupies a central position.[20] Armin Pfahl-Traughber sees in Holey's works the connection of esoteric with right-wing extremist ideological pieces.[32] Wolfgang Wippermann regards Holey's claims as exemplary of esoteric conspiracy ideologies, which, as can be seen from his writings, closely resemble national socialist ideology “down to the last detail.”[33] According to Ursula Caberta, he is the most well-known German conspiracy theorist.[34] With his bestsellers, esotericism has become the most important gateway for right-wing extremist ideologies in the German-speaking world.
The trend of the esoteric scene towards right-wing extremist positions became apparent shortly after Holeys books were released, with the appearance of fifty to sixty esoteric right-wing extremist conspiracy books. The leader of the self-proclaimed "Aryan elite" Armanen Order, Adolf Schleipfer, promotes and recommends Holey's first volume of "Secret Societies" as a fundamental work on the topic of lodge entanglements that could replace entire libraries. Der Spiegel wrote in its edition 51/1996 about the "Secret Societies" Volume 1 and 2: "Holey's conspiracy theories read like a mixture of Mein Kampf, wild science fiction, and black magic." In May 1996, the news magazine Focus reported on the ban of his books in Switzerland.
Secret Societies and their Power in the 20th Century
In "Secret Societies and their Power in the 20th Century" (two volumes), Holey combines science fiction, esotericism, Germanic mythology, Christian numerology, and ufology, and speaks of a "worldwide conspiracy of the – identified as Jewish in origin – 'Illuminati' to the detriment of the world and especially Germany." In 1773, Mayer Amschel Rothschild is said to have conspired with twelve other Jewish financiers in Frankfurt to pave the way for their world government through three world wars by the year 2000. Holey explicitly refers to the "Protocols of the Elders of Zion", a published antisemitic fiction from the early 20th century that is supposed to prove the Jewish world conspiracy. Through his dramatic presentation, suggesting an extraterrestrial battle over the fate of our civilization, Holey was able to spread his Manichaean antisemitism in the New Age scene, according to Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke. To underline the credibility of the Protocols, Holey extensively relied on the conspiracy theorist Milton William Cooper. Objections that the Protocols are based on forgeries were commented on by Holey as: "The question of authenticity is incomprehensible to me. This would be equivalent to stating that the Ten Commandments are not genuine. It is completely irrelevant whether the Ten Commandments are from God, an extraterrestrial, or Mr. Müller. The origin is completely irrelevant. It is the same with the 'Protocols'. The things described in them are being applied."
Apart from the Protocols, Holey relies on numerous antisemitic and revisionist authors such as David Irving, David L. Hoggan, Germar Rudolf, and other Holocaust deniers. There is also a spiritual kinship with the intellectual father of the right-wing extremist European Workers Party (EAP), Lyndon LaRouche, with whom Holey shows solidarity. Holey views LaRouche as an opponent of the secret global conspirators who fell victim to a judicial scandal orchestrated by the American establishment and was wrongly branded a right-wing extremist by the Anti-Defamation League.
Citing the conspiracy theorist William Guy Carr, Holey claims, among other things, that the origin of the Protocols dates back centuries and that they are a plan to achieve world domination. According to Holey, a "Jewish banking system," especially the Rothschild family, works with the Illuminati as the "true rulers" on a global conspiracy. These intentionally triggered the Second World War to make the United States dependent on high finance through its enormous costs. Their ultimate goal is a New World Order. Other classic antisemitic ideologies propagated by Holey include the ritual murder legend, speculations about an alleged worldwide power of the Jewish lodge B’nai B’rith, and the claim that Jews are actually devil worshipers. He distinguishes between Semitic Jews and Khazars and Ashkenazi Jews, whom he counts as his true enemies. Furthermore, he prints several pages of the malicious translation of the Talmud by Johannes Pohl, which was published by the NSDAP for antisemitic propaganda in 1943. Additionally, Holey claims that Helmut Kohl was Jewish and originally named Henoch Kohn, and that HIV was artificially created on behalf of the alleged Jewish Illuminati.
The secret global conspirator network of the 'Illuminati' in Holey's ideology encompasses various organizations and associations, including the UN. Intriguing secret puppeteers behind the UN are said to have "caused all wars of the last two centuries themselves." The UN troops are an "international police force" to control independent states like Libya and Iran, which are defamed as aggressors by the (coordinated) international mass media. Holey presents a distorted revisionist view of history that leaves essential facts unconsidered and aligns with former NS propaganda in many areas, such as the question of alleged Jewish declarations of war against Germany, distorted depictions of Poland's role and the question of war guilt. To support his revisionist themes, he uses well-known neo-Nazi material like the Morgenthau Legend and asserts that German and Japanese peace offers were systematically ignored because the Illuminati elite wanted to destroy both countries to maximize investment opportunities and facilitate their integration into a planned global dictatorship. His conspiracy theories resembled a mixture of Mein Kampf, wild science fiction, and black magic. He describes a black magic-acting Tibetan order that was significantly involved in the establishment and shaping of the Third Reich. There is an underground organization called the "Black Sun," which, according to neo-fascists, operates underground bases and colonies worldwide inhabited by millions of Reich Germans. One of these bases is located at over 5000 meters in the Himalayas. Therefore, China invaded Tibet, tortured and killed Tibetan monks on behalf of Masonic Illuminati, to locate and eliminate the Reich Germans, hence thwarting the creation of a new "German Empire of Light." However, the Chinese endeavor failed because the Reich German colonies were located in hidden valleys under the protection of the highest Tibetan lodge, the "Gelugpa" or "Yellow Caps," who also protect the "Ariannis" (descendants of aliens and current inhabitants of underground realms).
In a clever montage of facts, unverifiable witness statements, half-truths, and far-fetched interpretations, Holey claims that Adolf Hitler attempted to find the entrances to the underground realm of Agartha inhabited by Aryans in the Himalayas using two SS expeditions, in order to make contact with the descendants of the Aryan godmen in their capital city of Shamballa. The king of Shamballa is said to be 'Rigden Iyepo', the King of the World, represented on the surface by the Dalai Lama. Other colonies of Hitler's 'last battalion' are said to be located in Neuschwabenland (Antarctica), the Andes, Greenland, the Canary Islands, African mountain ranges, Iraq, Japan, and the inner Earth. Holey writes of Allied attempts to attack the German colony in Antarctica, as well as the detonation of two atomic bombs over Neuschwabenland in 1958 which allegedly did not defeat the German colony. From this, he concludes that the German Reich still exists and never surrendered, with only the German Wehrmacht represented by Dönitz capitulating. Holey claims to have learned from a courier of the 'Black Sun' that in 1994 there was a standing army of 6 million soldiers worldwide, consisting of infiltrated Aldebarans, Arianns, and Reich Germans. This army purportedly has 22,000 Reich flying discs, leading the U.S.A. and Russia to initiate the Strategic Defense Initiative (SDI) program. The middle part of the first volume contains blurry photos of flying discs with swastika and SS symbols. Holey claims these are authentic, obtained personally from the British secret service who found them in hidden SS archives in 1945. Esoteric branches of the Thule Society and the SS (under the name "Black Sun") allegedly possessed UFOs with anti-gravity engines in the 1940s, with which they flew to the Aldebaran star system. Hitler approved the conception and construction of these UFO wonder weapons, with the involvement of Karl Haushofer, Rudolf von Sebottendorf, and Viktor Schauberger. Holey explicitly refers to Rudolf von Sebottendorf and his 'Thule Mythology' when claiming the existence of a 'higher race' from which the Germans originated.
Don't touch this book!
After the confiscation of his two conspiracy books by the Mannheim District Court for inciting anti-Semitic hate speech, Holey portrayed himself as a victim of conspiracy in his 2004 work Hands off this book! and marketed his alleged martyrdom in the advertising text as "the last secrets of our 'enlightened' world". According to Amazon, 165,000 copies of this most successful of his books were sold in Germany in 2010. Holey claims that the book deals with finding one's own personality. According to Ulrike Heß-Meining, he once again shows his right-wing extremist anti-Semitic views in this book, albeit in a more subtle form.
Other Books
Holey's third book, The Third World War, was published in 1996 and contains prophecies from various fortune tellers. In the book Operation Aldebaran: Contacts with Humans from Another Solar System (1997), Holey deals with Aryan-looking extraterrestrials who are said to have come to Earth in UFOs to perform genetic manipulations on humanity. In 1998, The Inner World: The Secret of the Black Sun was released, which discusses the alleged invention of the Nazis, the Reichsflugscheiben, which are said to be stationed in the inner hollow earth today. In 1999, Holey reported on the legal proceedings against him in The Jan van Helsing File and portrayed himself and his ideas as victims of conspiracies. In 2000, he wrote about psychic children who could communicate with the dead and read auras in The Children of the New Millennium. Who's Afraid of the Bogeyman? (2005) explores near-death experiences, with the author also claiming to have conducted media interviews with death. In collaboration with Stefan Erdmann, Holey published The Millennium Lie: On the Trail of the Pyramid Mystery in 2008, which claims that the pyramids were actually water power plants. Previously, Holey had presented the same theory in his DVD film "The Cheops Lie". In April 2009, Holey released The 1-Million-Euro Book, which is inspired by bestsellers like The Secret by Rhonda Byrne and presents wealth as a result of one's inner attitude. In 2010, Secret Societies 3 - War of the Freemasons was published, featuring an alleged interview with a "high-degree Freemason" who confirms Holey's own claims. In 2011, Holey co-authored a book spreading the conspiracy theory that Adolf Hitler escaped from Berlin to Argentina in 1945. In 2020, the title We Kill Half of Humanity - and It Will Happen Quickly! was released, claiming that the "elite" plans to eliminate "inferior" peoples through diseases and plagues to transition the surviving rest into the "green-socialist New World Order"; according to the book, Corona is just the beginning - Holey purportedly knew about a supposed "Corona plan" since August 2019. Holey co-authored the book Handbook for Gods with his father Johannes Holey in 2021, providing esoteric insights through the "clairvoyant" Johannes and discussing why the Illuminati, whom he considers the masterminds behind world events, censor everything that could jeopardize their alleged machinations.
Film
Holey's network Secret TV produced the film The Cheops Lie. In addition, Secret TV sponsored the 2008 animated film Fabian the Goldsmith, which promotes a similar conspiracy theory to Holey's in Secret Societies: "Fabian the Goldsmith" allegedly founded the secret society of the "Enlightened" and has been directing world events ever since. According to the Federal Ministry of the Interior, the film "subtly conveys anti-Semitic stereotypes about 'power junkies of financial dynasties' who gain 'power over the masses'."[35] The film was produced with the support of the Kopp Verlag. Other claims from Holey's work, such as the planned tattooing of a barcode on people by the "Enlightened," are also reflected in the film.
Works list
Books
Under own name
- The Inner World. The Secret of the Black Sun. Novel. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 1998, ISBN 3-9805733-1-1.
- The Jan van Helsing File. A documentation of the banning of two books in the "freest country in German history". Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 1999, ISBN 3-9805733-9-7.
- The Children of the New Millennium. Psychic children changing the world. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2001, ISBN 3-9807106-4-5.
Under the pseudonym "Jan van Helsing"
- Secret Societies and their Power in the 20th Century. ISBN 3-89478-069-X (indexed and confiscated in Germany in 1996, lifting of confiscation order in 2001).
- Secret Societies 2 (the Interview). ISBN 3-89478-492-X (indexed and confiscated in Germany in 1996, lifting of confiscation order in 2001).
- Book 3 – The Third World War. Ewert, Lathen (Ems) 1996, ISBN 3-89478-573-X.
- Operation Aldebaran. Contacts with beings from another solar system. The sensational experiences of the Feistle family. Ewert, Lathen (Ems) 1997 (Copyright year), ISBN 3-89478-220-X.
- Hands off this Book! Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2004, ISBN 3-9807106-8-8.
- Who's Afraid of the Boogeyman...? Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2005, ISBN 3-9807106-5-3.
- National Security – The Conspiracy. Top secret projects in technology and space travel. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2005, ISBN 3-938656-25-5.
- The Millennium Lie. On the trail of the pyramid mystery. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2008, ISBN 3-938656-30-1 (with Stefan Erdmann).
- The 1-Million-Euro Book Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2009, ISBN 3-938656-99-9 (with Dr. Dinero).
- Secret Societies 3 – War of the Freemasons. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2010, ISBN 978-3-938656-80-8.
- Hitler Survived in Argentina. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2011, ISBN 978-3-938656-20-4 (with Abel Basti).
- politically incorrect: inconvenient facts and dangerous truths that one is no longer allowed to speak out! Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2012, ISBN 978-3-938656-60-0 (with Michael Morris, Andreas Popp, Johann Georg Schnitzer, Michael Friedrich Vogt, Stefan Erdmann, Ben Morgenstern, Johannes Holey, Rudolf Passian)
- If Patients Knew This - True Causes, Effective Therapies Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2021, ISBN 978-3-938656-75-4 (with Vera Wagner)
- With Jason Mason: UFOs and the Ringmakers of Saturn. NASA discovers huge spaceships in the rings of Saturn – and keeps it secret. New military whistleblowers report on the Secret Space Program and the return of the white gods! Amadeus Verlag GmbH & Co. KG, Fichtenau 2024. ISBN 978-3-98562-021-0. ISBN 3-98562-021-0
Audiobooks
- Stefan Erdmann: Interview with Jan van Helsing. Ama Deus Verlag, Fichtenau 2006, ISBN 3-938656-01-8.
Films
- The Cheops Lie
- Fabian the Goldsmith, 2008
Literature
- Arnon Hampe: Holey, Jan Udo. In: Wolfgang Benz (Ed.): Handbook of Antisemitism. Vol. 2: Persons. De Gruyter / Saur, Berlin 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-44159-2, pp. 375 f. (accessed via De Gruyter Online).
- Friedrich Paul Heller, Anton Maegerle: The Language of Hate: Right-wing extremism and nationalist esotericism: Jan van Helsing and Horst Mahler. Schmetterling-Verlag, Stuttgart 2001, ISBN 3-89657-091-9.
- Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and Reports. Political Esotericism - a right-wing extremist challenge. Landesverteidigungsakademie, Vienna 1999, ISBN 3-901328-36-X.
External links
- The Incorruptibles. Website of Jan Udo Holey
- Literature by and about Jan Udo Holey in the German National Library catalogue
- Holocaust Reference: Jan van Helsing, Secret Societies 1 and Secret Societies 2
- Brown Esotericism on the Rise in ZEIT (1998)
References
- ^ Bundesamt für Verfassungsschutz: Argumentationsmuster im rechtsextremistischen Antisemitismus Archived November 22, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. November 2005, p. 10f.
- ^ "Prison avec sursis pour l'auteur d'un livre antisémite", Le Nouvel Observateur, February 9, 2008
- ^ Van Helsing: Ideologischer Kern unverändert ("Van Helsing: Ideological core unchanged", article in a Swiss antiracist publication 1999)
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Heller/Mägerle
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Birk Meinhardt: Aryan in the Microwave War. In: Süddeutsche.de. March 15/16, 2008.
- ^ Chantal Magnin and Marianne Rychner: Structural Commonalities of Two World Views: Esotericism and Antisemitic Conspiracy Theory. In: Tangram. Bulletin of the Federal Commission against Racism, No. 6 (1999), p. 43.
- ^ Der Spiegel, 20 December http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-9133761.html
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(help) - ^ Conspiracy Theorists with Connections to the Right Wing?, Article from April 7, 2009 by Matthias Holzapfel on Merkur.de
- ^ Arnon Hampe: Holey, Jan Udo. In: Wolfgang Benz (Ed.): Handbook of Antisemitism. Vol. 2: People. De Gruyter Saur, Berlin 2009, ISBN 978-3-598-44159-2, p. 375 (accessed via De Gruyter Online).
- ^ Report of the Office for the Protection of the Constitution 2000 Austria, 2001, p. 23
- ^ Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution: Archived (Date missing) at verfassungsschutz.de (Error: unknown archive URL) (PDF; 3.5 MB); p. 106; Constitutional Protection Report 2005, p. 118
- ^ Thomas Fliege, Kurt Möller, Right-Wing Extremism in Baden-Württemberg, Belchen-Verlag 2001, p. 99; Ines Aftenberger, The New Right and Neo-Racism, Grazer Universitätsverlag 2007, p. 64; Johann Dolanski, The Universe as it Really is: The Dolan Theory: Presented Based on the Latest Scientific and Technical Research, Turia & Kant Verlag 2008, p. 125
- ^ Blick nach Rechts: Ama Deus Verlag: “Bloodlines of the Illuminati”, Review, accessed on May 21, 2014.
- ^ Matthias Pöhlmann: Right-Wing Esoterism. When alternative thinking and extremism dangerously mix. Herder, Freiburg 2021, p. 94
- ^ Bernd Merling: Archived (Date missing) at antifaschismus2.de (Error: unknown archive URL) In: Antifaschismus2.de. January 3, 2010, accessed on January 26, 2014.
- ^ Bernd Hüttner, Handbook of Alternative Media 2011/2012: Print Media, Free Radios, Archives & Publishers in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, AG SPAK Books 2011, p. 65.
- ^ Evangelische Zentralstelle für Weltanschauungsfragen, Schöne neue Verschwörungswelt: Secret TV - a new film portal for brown esotericism, accessed on March 20, 2016
- ^ G. Hooffacker / Peter Lok: Right-Wing Extremist Internet TV. In: Bernd Hüttner (Ed.), Handbook of Alternative Media 2011/2012. Print Media, Free Radios, Archives & Publishers in Germany, Austria and Switzerland, AG Spak: Wasserburg 2011, p. 65.
- ^ Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: Black Sun. Aryan Cults, Esoteric Nazism, and the Politics of Identity. NYU Press, New York 2002, p. 297.
- ^ a b Tobias Jaecker, Antisemitic Conspiracy Theories after September 11: New Variants of an Old Interpretive Pattern, LIT Verlag 2005, p. 56.
- ^ Martin Brauen: Dream World Tibet: Western Deceptions. Paul Haupt Berne, Bern; Stuttgart; Vienna 2000, ISBN 3-258-05639-0. p. 73.
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
Hunger
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ a b Cite error: The named reference
meining
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Katharina Nocun, Pia Lamberty: Fake Facts: How Conspiracy Theories Determine our Thinking Quadriga, Berlin 2020, ISBN 978-3869950952, p. 115.
- ^ Wolfgang Bittner: Satan's Sworn Brothers – Attacks and Antitheses against German Freemasonry 1970-2000. 453 p., Bodem Verlag, ISBN 3-934215-01-7. pp. 132–133.
- ^ Federal Ministry of the Interior: Constitutional Protection Report 2004, Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution, Berlin 2004, ISSN 0177-0357, p. 106.
- ^ Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and Reports. Political Esotericism – a Right-Wing Extremist Challenge. Landesverteidigungsakademie, Vienna 1999. p. 38–39 and p. 47.
- ^ Hubert Michael Mader: Studies and Reports. Political Esotericism – a Right-Wing Extremist Challenge. Vienna: Landesverteidigungsakademie 1999. p. 107f and p. 131.
- ^ Rüdiger Sünner: The Black Sun. Unleashing and Abuse of Myths in National Socialism and Right-Wing Esotericism. Second Edition, Verlag Herder, Freiburg im Breisgau 1999. p. 230.
- ^ Nicholas Goodrick-Clarke: In the Shadow of the Black Sun. Marix Verlag, Wiesbaden 2009, ISBN 978-3-86539-185-8, p. 555–556.
- ^ Stefan von Hoyningen-Huene, Religiosity among right-wing extremist-oriented youth, LIT Verlag 2003, p. 60.
- ^ Armin Pfahl-Traughber, Freemasons and Jews, Capitalists and Communists as Target Images of Right-Wing Extremist Conspiracy Ideologies from the Kaiserreich to the Present, In: Uwe Backes, Right-Wing Ideologies in History and Present Day, Böhlau Verlag 2003, p. 225.
- ^ Wolfgang Wippermann: Agents of Evil. Conspiracy Theories from Luther to the Present. be.bra. Verlag, Berlin 2007, p. 146.
- ^ Ursula Caberta: Black Book of Esotericism. Gütersloher Verlagshaus, 2nd edition 2011, p. 104.
- ^ German Federal Ministry of the Interior/Independent Expert Group on Antisemitism: Antisemitism in Germany - current developments (2018), p. 125