Mein Kampf by Adolf Hitler
Volume Two - A Reckoning
Conclusion
On November 9, 1923, in the fourth
year of its existence, the National Socialist German Workers' Party was
dissolved and prohibited in the whole Reich territory. Today in November,
1926, it stands again free before us, stronger and inwardly firmer than
every before.
All the persecutions of the movement
and its individual leaders, all vilifications and slanders, were powerless
to harm it. The correctness of its ideas, the purity of its will, its
supporters' spirit of self-sacrifice, have caused it to issue from all
repressions strong than ever.
If, in the world of our present
parliamentary corruption, it becomes more and more aware of the
profoundest essence of its struggle, feels itself to be the purest
embodiment of the value of race and personality and conducts itself
accordingly, it will with almost mathematical certainty some day emerge
victorious from its struggle. Just as Germany must inevitably win her
rightful position on this earth if she is led and organized according to
the same principles.
A state which in this age of racial
poisoning dedicates itself to the care of its best racial elements must
some day become lord of the earth.
May the adherents of our movement never
forget this if ever the magnitude of the sacrifices should beguile them to
an anxious comparison with the possible results.
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