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George Lincoln Rockwell - A National Socialist Life
By Dr. William
Pierce
On the eighteenth of June, 1945, a little over six
weeks after the death of Adolf Hitler, Rudolf Hess wrote the following words in
a letter to his wife, from his prison cell:
You will readily imagine how often during the last few weeks my thoughts
have turned to the years gone by: to this quarter of a century of history,
concentrated for us in one name and full of the most wonderful human
experiences. History is not ended. It will sooner or later take up the threads
apparently broken off forever and knit them together in a new pattern. The
human element is no more and lives only in memory. Very few people have been
privileged, as we were, to participate from the very beginning in the growth of
a unique personality, through joy and sorrow, hope and trouble, love and hate,
and all the manifestations of greatness, and further, in all the little
indications of human weakness, without which a man is not truly worthy of love…
Even
when one has been privileged to witness the manifestations of greatness, it may
be exceedingly difficult to describe adequately in words those manifestations
and thereby to paint a true picture of a unique and great personality. When one
has not the basis of a quarter-century of participation in the growth of such a
personality, but less than two years, the task is especially difficult. It
would be a vain hope, then, to expect the pages which follow to reflect the
true greatness of the man. That greatness will be best reflected in the
fruition of his life’s work in years to come.
Here,
however, we can at least hope to evoke an image of the man, imperfect and
incomplete though it may be, which will serve to inspire those National
Socialists who did not have the privilege of knowing him personally.
GEORGE LINCOLN ROCKWELL was born on
March 9, 1918, in Bloomington, a small coal-mining and farming town in central
Illinois. Both his parents were theatrical performers. His father, George
Lovejoy Rockwell, was a twenty-eight-year-old vaudeville comedian of English
and Scotch ancestry. His mother, born Claire Schade, was a young German-French
toe-dancer, part of a family dance team. His parents were divorced when he was
six years old, and he and a younger brother and sister lived alternately with
their mother and their father during the next few years.
The
young Rockwell passed the greater part of his boyhood days in Maine, Rhode
Island, and New Jersey. His father settled in a small coastal town in Maine,
and Rockwell spent his summers there; attending school in Atlantic City and,
later, in Providence during the winters. Some of his fondest memories in later
years were of summer days spent on the Maine beaches, or hiking in the Maine
woods, or exploring the coves and inlets of the Maine coast in his sailboat,
which he built himself, starting from an old skiff. Rockwell acquired what was
to be a lifelong love of sailing and the sea during those early years spent
with his father in Maine.
Aside
from a bit more traveling about than the average child, it is difficult to find
anything extraordinary in his childhood environment. He lived in the midst
neither great poverty nor great wealth; he had an affectionate relationship
with both his parents, despite their divorce; he was a sound and healthy child,
and there seems to be no evidence of prolonged unhappiness or turmoil in his
childhood. If he later recalled with greater pleasure the times spent with his
father than those spent with his mother, this can be attributed either to the
greater opportunities to satisfy his youthful longing for adventure that life
on the Maine coast offered relative to that in the city, or to the fact that
his mother lived with a domineering sister of whom young Rockwell was not fond.
And
yet, even as a boy he displayed those qualities of character which were later
to set him off from the common run of men. His most remarkable quality was his
responsiveness to challenge. To tell the boy Rockwell that a thing was
impossible, that it simply could not be done, was to awaken in him the
irresistible determination to do it. He has described an experience he had at
the age of ten which illustrates this aspect of his character.
A
juvenile gang of some of the tougher elements at the grammar school he was
attending in an Atlantic City coastal suburb had singled him out for hazing. He
was informed that he was to be given a cold dunking in the ocean, and that he
should relax and submit gracefully, as resistance would be futile. Instead of
submitting, he ferociously fought off the entire gang of his attackers on the
beach, wildly striking out with his fists and feet, clawing, biting, and
gouging until the other boys finally abandoned their aim of throwing him in the
water and retire to nurse their wounds.
Later,
as a teenager, he found that the challenge of a stormy sea affected him in much
the same way as had the challenge of the juvenile gang. When other boys brought
their boats into dock because the water was too rough, young Rockwell found his
greatest pleasure in sailing. He loved nothing better than to pit his strength
and his skill against the wild elements. As the wind and the waves rose so did
his spirits Wrestling with tiller and rigging in a tossing boat, drenched with
spray and blasted by fierce gusts, he would howl back at the wind in sheer
animal joy.
This
peculiar stubbornness of his nature-call it a combative spirit, if you
will-coupled with an absolute physical fearlessness, which led him into many a
dangerous and harebrained escapade as a boy, gave him the willpower as a man to
undertake without hesitation ventures at which ordinary men quailed; throughout
his life it led him to choose the course of action which his reason and his
sensibility told him to be the right course regardless of the course those
about him were taking; ultimately it provided the driving force which led him
to issue a challenge and stand alone against a whole world, when it became
apparent to him that that world was on the wrong course. This trait provides
the key to the man.
Two
other characteristics he displayed as a boy were an omnivorous curiosity and a
stark objectivity. He attributed his curiosity, as well as the artistic talents
which he early displayed, to his father, who also exhibited these traits, but
the source of his rebellious spirit and his indomitable will is harder to
assign. They seem to have been the product of a rare and fortuitous combination
of genes, giving rise to a nature markedly different from that of his immediate
forebears.
He
entered Brown University in the fall of 1938, as a freshman. His major course
of study was philosophy, but he was also very interested in the sciences. He
used the opportunity of staff work on student periodicals to exercise his
talents in drawing and creative writing. In addition to his curricular,
journalistic, and artistic activities, he also found time for a substantial
amount of skirt chasing and other collegiate sports, including skiing and
fencing; he became a member of the Brown University fencing team.
While
at Brown he had his first head-on encounter with modern liberalism. He enrolled
in a sociology course with the naive expectation that, just as in his geology
and psychology courses he would learn the scientific principles underlying
those two areas of human knowledge, so in sociology would he learn some of the
basic principles underlying human social behavior.
He
was disappointed and confused, however, when it gradually became apparent to
him that there was a profound difference in the attitudes of sociologists and,
say, geologists toward their subjects. Whereas the authors of his geology
textbooks were careful to point out there were many things about the history
and the structure of the earth which were as yet unknown, or only imperfectly
known, it was clear that there were indeed fundamental ideas and well-established
facts upon which the science was based and that both his geology professor and
the authors of geology textbooks were sincerely interested in presenting these
ideas and facts to the student in an orderly manner, with the hope that he
would thereby gain a better understanding of the nature of the planet on which
he lived.
In
sociology, he found the basic principles far more elusive. What was
particularly disturbing to him, though, was not so much the complexity of the
concepts as the gnawing suspicion the waters had been deliberately muddied. He
redoubled his efforts to get to the roots of the subject or, at least, to
understand where the hints, innuendoes, and roundabout promptings led: „I
buried myself in my sociology books, absolutely determined to find why I was
missing the kernel of the thing.“
The
equalitarian idea that the manifest differences between the capabilities of
individuals and between the evolutionary development of various races can be
accounted for almost wholly by contemporary environmental effects-that there
really are no inborn differences in quality worth mentioning among human
beings-was certainly one of the places his sociology textbooks were leading:
I was bold enough to ask Professor Bucklin if this were the idea, and he
turned red in anger. I was told it was impossible to make any generalizations,
although all I was asking for was the fundamental idea, if any, of sociology. I
began to see that sociology was different from any other course I had ever
taken. Certain ideas produced apoplexy in the teacher, particularly the
suggestion that perhaps some people were no-good biological slobs from the day
they were born. Certain other ideas, although they were never formulated and
stated frankly, were fostered and encouraged-and these were always ideas
revolving around the total power of environment.
Although
he did not clearly recognize it for what it was at that time, young Rockwell
had partially uncovered one of the most widely used tactics of the modern
liberals. When the clever liberal has as his goal miscegenation, say, he
certainly does not just blurt this right out. Instead he will write novels,
produce television shows, and film motion pictures which, subtly at first and
then more and more boldly, suggest that those who engage in sexual affairs with
Negroes are braver, better, more attractive people than those who don’t; and
that opposition to miscegenation is a vulgar and loutish perversion, certain
evidence of being a ridiculous square at best and a drooling, violent redneck
at worst. But if one tries to pin him down and asks him why he is in favor of
miscegenation, he will reply in a huff that that is not what he is aiming at at
all, but only „justice, or fairness,“ or „better understanding between the
races.“
And
so when Rockwell naively went right to the heart of the matter in Professor
Bucklin’s sociology class, he got an angry reprimand. The racial equalitarians
have gotten much bolder in the last thirty years, but at that time Rockwell was
merely aware that they wanted him to accept certain ideas without actually
those ideas out into the open arena of free discussion where they would be
subject to attack:
I still knew little or nothing about communism or its pimping little
sister, liberalism, but I could not avoid the steady pressure, everywhere in
the University, to accept the ideas of massive human equality and the supremacy
of environment.
Typically,
this pressure resulted not in acquiescence but in his determination to stand up
for what seemed to him to be reasonable and natural. He satirized the
equalitarian point of view, not only in his column in the student newspaper,
but also in one of his sociology examination papers! The nearly catastrophic
consequences of this bit of insolence taught him the prudence of holding his
tongue under certain circumstances.
As
he began his junior year at Brown, the alien conspiracy to use America as a
tool to make the world safe for Jewry was shifting its propaganda machine into
high gear. National Socialist Germany was portrayed as a nation of depraved
criminals whose goal was the enslavement of the world-including America.
Hollywood, the big newspapers, and his liberal professors - always the most
noisily vocal action at any university-all pushed the same line, unabashedly appealing
to the naive idealism of their audience: „Hitler must be stopped!“
And,
like millions of other American patriots, Lincoln Rockwell fell for the smooth
lies and the clever swindle, backed as they were by the authority of the head
of the American government. Neither he nor his millions of compatriots realized
that the conspiracy had reached into the White House, and that its occupant had
sold his services to the conspirators:
It is typical of my political naivete of that time that when the propaganda
about Hitler began to be pushed upon us in large doses, I swallowed it all,
unable even to suspect that somebody might have an interest in all this, and
that it might not be the interest of the United States or our people… It became
obvious that we would have to get into the war to stop this ‘horrible ogre’ who
planned to conquer America so we were told, and so I believed.
Thus,
in March, 1941, convinced that America was in mortal danger from „the Nazi
aggressors,“ Rockwell left his comfortable life at the university and offered
his services to his country’s armed forces. Shortly after enlisting in the
United States Navy, he received an appointment as an Aviation Cadet and began
flight training at Squantum, Massachusetts. He received his first naval commission,
as an ensign, on December 9, 1941 - two days after the Pearl Harbor attack. He
served as a naval aviator throughout World War II, advancing from the rank of
ensign to lieutenant and winning several decorations. He commanded the naval
air support during the American invasion of Guam, in July and August, 1944. He
was promoted to lieutenant commander in October, 1945, and shortly thereafter
returned to civilian life, where he hoped to make a career for himself as an
artist.
While
still in the navy, he had married a girl he had known as a student at Brown
University. The marriage was not a particularly happy one, although it was
destined to last more than ten years.
The
first five years after leaving the navy were spent as an art student, a
commercial photographer, a painter, an advertising executive, and a publisher,
in Maine and in New York. Then in 1950, with the outbreak of war in Korea,
Lieutenant Commander Rockwell returned to active duty with the United States
Navy and was assigned to train fighter pilots in southern California. There
almost by chance, the political education of thirty-two-year-old Lincoln
Rockwell began.
It
was in 1950 that Senator Joseph McCarthy’s investigations into subversive
activities and treasonous behavior on the part of a number of United States
government employees and officials began to receive wide public notice.
Rockwell, like every honest citizen, was horrified and angered by these
disclosures of treachery. But he was puzzled as much as he was shocked by the
violent, hysterical, and vicious reaction to these disclosures which came from
a certain segment of the population. Why were so many persons-and, especially,
so many in the public-opinion-forming media-frantically determined to silence
McCarthy and, failing that, to smear and discredit him?
McCarthy
was an American with a distinguished record. A war hero, like Rockwell he had
entered his country’s armed forces as an enlisted man and emerged as a
much-decorated officer. He had won the Distinguished Flying Cross for his
combat performance in World War II. Now that he was flushing from cover the
rats who had sold out the vital interests of the country for which he had
fought, Rockwell could not understand why any responsible and loyal citizen
should seek to defame the man or block his courageous efforts:
I began to pay attention, in my spare time, to what it was all about. I
read McCarthy speeches and pamphlets and found them factual, instead of the
wild nonsense which the papers charged was his stock-in-trade. I became aware
of a terrific slant in all the papers against Joe McCarthy, although I still
couldn’t imagine why.
At
this time an acquaintance gave Rockwell some anti-Communist tracts to read. One
of the things he immediately noticed about them was their strongly anti-Semitic
tone. Although manifest public evidence obliged him to agree with some of the
charges made by the authors of these tracts-for example, that there were
extraordinarily disproportionate numbers of Jews both among McCarthy’s
attackers and among the subversives his investigations were unearthing-he found
many of their claims too far-fetched to be credible. In particular, the charge
that communism was a Jewish, not a Russian, movement seemed ridiculous when
Rockwell considered the fact that Jews were so firmly entrenched in
capitalistic enterprises and always had been; capitalism, supposedly the deadly
enemy of communism, was the traditional Jewish sphere of influence.
One
anti-Communist tabloid went so far as to cite various items of documentary
evidence in support of its seemingly wild claims, and Rockwell decided to call
its bluff by looking into this „evidence“ for himself. On his next off-duty day
he went to the public library in San Diego, and what he found there changed the
course of his life-and will yet change the course of world history. In his own
words: „Down there in the dark stacks of the San Diego Public Library, I got my
awakening from thirty years of stupid political sleep... “
Rockwell
was staggered by the evidence he uncovered in the library; it left no doubt,
for instance, that what had been described in his school textbooks as the „Russian“
Revolution was instead a Jewish orgy of genocide against the Russian people. He
even found that in their own books and periodicals the Jews boasted
more-or-less openly of the fact! In a Jewish biographical reference work
entitled Who’s Who in American Jewry he found a number of prominent Bolsheviks
proudly listed, although by no stretch of the imagination could they be
considered Americans. Among them were Lazar Kaganovitch, the Butcher of the
Ukraine, and Leon Trotsky (Lev Bronstein), the bloodthirsty Commissar of the
Red Army, who was given credit in the book for liquidating „counter-revolutionary
forces“ in Russia.
Another
book, written by a prominent „English“ Jew, boasted that „the Jews to a greater
degree than . . . any other ethnic group . . . have been the artisans of the
Revolution of 1917.“ An estimate was given in the book that „80% of the
revolutionaries in Russia were Jews.“
Musty
back issues of Jewish newspapers told the same story, and they were backed up
by official U.S. government records. One volume of such records, which had been
published twenty years previously, contained ministerial reports from Russia of
brutal frankness. Typical of the material in these records was the following
sentence written by the Dutch diplomatic official, Oudendyk, in a 1918 report
to his government from Russia:
I consider that the immediate suppression of Bolshevism is the greatest
issue now before the World, not even excluding the war which is still raging,
and unless as above stated Bolshevism is nipped in the bud immediately it is
bound to spread in one form or another over Europe and the whole world as it is
organized and worked by Jews who have no nationality; and whose one object is
to destroy for their own ends the existing order of things.
Shocking
as were these revelations, Rockwell was even more disturbed by the fact that
the general public was oblivious to them. Why were these things not in school
history text? Why was he told over and over again by the radio and newspapers
and magazines of Adolf Hitler’s „awful crime“ in killing so many Jews, but
never told that the Jews in Russia were responsible for the murder of a vastly
larger number of Gentiles?
Other
questions presented themselves. He had been told that England’s attack on
Germany was justified by Hitler’s attack on Poland. But what of the Soviet
Union, which had invaded Poland at the same time? Why no English declaration of
war against the Soviet Union? Could it be because the government there was in
Jewish hands? Who was responsible for the conspiracy of silence on these and
other questions? He grimly resolved to find out. And, later, as the facts
gradually fitted into place and the whole, sordid picture began to emerge, he
saw before him an inescapable obligation.
An
honest man, when he becomes aware that some dirty work is afoot in his
community, will speak out against it and attempt to rouse his neighbors into
doing the same. What if he finds, though, that most of his neighbors do not
want to be bothered; that many of his neighbors are already aware of what is
afoot but prefer to ignore it because to oppose it might jeopardize their
private affairs; that some of his neighbors- some of his ,wealthiest and most
influential neighbors, the leaders of the community-are themselves engaged in
the dirty work? If he is an ordinary man, he may grumble for a while about such
a sorry state of affairs, but he will adapt himself as best he can to it. He
will soon see there is nothing to be gained by sticking his neck out, and he
will go on about his business.
Human
nature being what it is, he will very likely ease his conscience by trying to
forget as rapidly as possible what he has learned; perhaps he will even
convince himself eventually that there is really nothing wrong after all-that
his initial judgement was in error, and that the dirty work was really not
dirty work but merely „progress.“ If, on the other hand, he is an extraordinary
man with a particularly strong sense of duty, he will continue to oppose what
he knows to be wrong and bound to work evil for the community in the long run.
He may continue to point out to his neighbors, even after they have made it
clear that they are not interested, that the dirty work should be stopped; he
may write pamphlets and deliver speeches; he may even run for public office on
a „reform“ ticket.
But
even so, being a reasonable man and no „extremist,“ he will feel himself
obliged to give the malefactors the benefit of the doubt which must surely
exist as to their motives. And perhaps their position is, indeed, not wholly
wrong? Surely, some sort of reasonable compromise which will be fair to all
concerned is the best solution. If the evildoer had been working alone when
discovered, hanging would, of course, be the only admissible solution to the
problem: a fitting and total repudiation by the community of his evil deeds.
But when so many criminals, with so many accomplices, have been engaged for so
long in such an extensive undertaking and have already done such profound
damage, surely the most reasonable solution must be just to admonish the
criminals-if, indeed, it is fair to call them criminals-try to install a few
safeguards against their renewed activity – safeguards which, to be sure, would
not be too grossly inconsistent with the „progress“ (or was it damage?) already
wrought – and then, letting bygones be bygones, try to live with things as they
are.
But,
it is only one man out of tens of millions – the rare and lonely
world-historical figure – who has, first, the objectivity to evaluate such a
situation in terms of absolute and timeless standards and, unswayed by popular
and contemporary considerations of „reasonableness,“ to draw the ultimate
conclusions which those standards dictate; and who then has the strength of
will and character to insist that there must be no compromise with evil, that
it must be rooted out and utterly destroyed, that right and health and sanity
must again prevail, regardless of the commotion and temporary unpleasantness
involved in restoring them.
Rockwell
had seen the facts. To him, it was unthinkable to attempt to wriggle away from
the conclusion they implied. And, as he realized the frightening magnitude of
the task before him, instead of attempting to excuse himself from the
responsibility which his new knowledge carried with it, he felt rising within
him his characteristic response to a seemingly impossible challenge.
It
was a straightforward sense of commitment which had led him to volunteer for
military service in March, 1941, as soon as he had been tricked into believing
that Adolf Hitler was a threat to his country, instead of waiting for Pearl
Harbor. And in early 1951, when he began to understand that he had been tricked
in 1941 and when he began to see who had tricked him and what they were up to
and the terrible damage they had done to his people and were yet planning to
do, that same sense of commitment left only one course open to him, namely, to fight!
He did not stop to ask whether others were also willing to shoulder their
responsibility; his own was perfectly clear to him.
But
how to fight? Where to begin? What to do? The name of one man who had done
something naturally came to his mind: Adolf Hitler. Rockwell has described what
happened next:
I hunted around the San Diego bookshops and finally found a copy of Mein
Kampf hidden away in the rear. I bought it, took it home, and sat down to read.
And that was the end of one Lincoln Rockwell… and the beginning of an entirely
different person.
He
had not, of course, spent nearly thirty-three years completely oblivious to
world events. Many things had bothered him deeply, and he had spent years of
frustrating effort trying to fathom the apparently meaningless chaos into which
the world seemed to be descending. It seemed to him that there must be some
logical relationship between the events of the preceding few decades, but he
could not find the key to the puzzle:
I simply suffered from the vague, unhappy feeling that things were wrong
– I didn’t know exactly how – and that there must be a way of diagnosing the
disease and its causes and making intelligent, organized efforts to correct
that something wrong.
Adolf
Hitler’s message in Mein Kampf gave him the key he had been seeking, and more:
In Mein Kampf I found abundant mental sunshine, which bathed all the
gray world suddenly in the clear light of reason and understanding. Word after
word, sentence after sentence stabbed into the darkness like thunderclaps and
lightning bolts of revelation, tearing and ripping away the cobwebs of more
than thirty years of darkness, brilliantly illuminating the mysteries of the
heretofore impenetrable murk in a world gone mad.
I was transfixed, hypnotized. I could not lay the book down without
agonies of impatience to get back to it. I read it walking to the squadron; I
took it into the air and read it lying on the chart board while I automatically
gave the instructions to the other planes circling over the desert. I read it
crossing the Coronado ferry. I read it into the night and the next morning.
When I had finished I started again and reread every word, underlining and
marking especially magnificent passages. I studied it; I thought about it; I
wondered at the utter, indescribable genius of it...
I reread and studied it some more. Slowly, bit by bit, I began to
understand. I realized that National Socialism, the iconoclastic world view of
Adolf Hitler; was the doctrine of scientific racial idealism – actually a new
religion...
And thus Lincoln Rockwell became a National Socialist. But his
conversion to the new religion still did not answer his question, „What can be
done?“ Eight long years of struggle and defeat lay ahead of him before he would
gain the knowledge he needed to effectively translate his new faith into action
and begin to carry on Adolf Hitler’s great work once again. While he still
lacked the wisdom that could only come in the years ahead, he lacked nothing in
energy and determination. For a year he continued to explore the ramifications
of the new world view he had adopted and also continued his self-education in
several other areas, including the Jewish question.
Then,
in November, 1952, the Navy assigned him to a year of duty at the American base
at Keflavik in Iceland, where he was executive officer and, later, commanding
officer of the Fleet Aircraft Service Squadron there, „Fasron“107. His
promotion to commander came in October, 1953, after he had requested an
extension of his Icelandic assignment for another year. He also met and fell in
love with an Icelandic girl, who became his second wife in the same month he
was promoted. This marriage was far happier than his first. The relative
isolation and solitude he enjoyed in Iceland gave him a further opportunity to
consolidate his thoughts and to plan a campaign of political action based on
his National Socialist philosophy. Feeling that his most urgent need was some
medium for the dissemination of his political message, he considered various
ways in which he might enter the publishing business. He needed to establish a
bridgehead in this industry which would provide him with operational funds and
living expenses as well as give him a vehicle for political expression.
He
finally decided to begin his career with the publication of a monthly magazine
for the wives of American servicemen, primarily because the complete absence of
any competing publication in the field seemed to offer an excellent business
advantage. He felt that he could not only capture this market, thus assuring
himself a steady income, but that service families would provide a particularly
receptive audience for his political ideas. His idea was to employ the utmost
subtlety, disguising his propaganda so carefully that he would not jeopardize
any Jewish advertising accounts the magazine might acquire. He naively thought
that he would deceive the Jews and move the hearts and minds of his readers in
the desired direction simultaneously.
Rough
plans had been laid by the time his service in Iceland was over. His return to
civilian life came on December 15, 1954. Nine months of more planning, hard
work, fund raising, and promotion led to the realization of his ideas with the
publication of his new magazine, for which he chose the name U.S. Lady, in
Washington, in September, 1955.
At
the same time he was getting his magazine underway, he began making personal
contacts in right-wing circles in the Washington area. He attended the meetings
of various groups and then began to organize meetings of his own. Before he
could put his magazine to use as a medium for disguised propaganda, however, he
found himself in serious financial difficulties, due to his lack of capital,
and he was forced to sell the magazine in order to avoid bankruptcy.
With
undiminished enthusiasm, he continued his organizing efforts among the right
wing. Making the same mistake that nearly every other beginner makes, he
assumed that the proper way to proceed lay in coordinating the numerous
right-wing and conservative organizations and individuals-bringing them
together into a right-wing superstructure where they could work effectively for
their common goals. He felt that such a coordination could make an almost
miraculous transformation in the strength of the right-wing position in
America.
To
this end he bought radio advertisements, spoke at dozens of meetings, wrote
numberless letters, and devoted every waking hour to the promotion of his plan
for unity. He created a paper organization, the American Federation of
Conservative Organizations, and continued his tireless efforts to inspire and
mobilize even a few of the hundreds of right-wing groups and individuals with
whom he had established contact, but to no avail: „Our meetings were better and
better attended, but there was no result at all – nothing accomplished.“
He
sadly learned that all the right-wing groups had one weakness in common: their
members loved to talk but were incapable of action. A substantial portion of
them were hobbyists – escapists obsessed with various pet projects and
absolutely invulnerable to reason, or masochists who delighted in moaning
endlessly about treason and decay but who were shocked at the suggestion that
they should help put an end to it. Many were so neurotic that the idea of
engaging them in any prolonged cooperative effort was untenable. Some were
simply insane. Virtually all were cowards. Years of inaction or ineffectiveness
had drained the ranks of the right-wing of the type of human material essential
for any serious undertaking. Very little was left but the sort of dregs with
which nothing could be done.
Unfortunately,
he had failed to heed the Leader’s warning that eight cripples who join arms do
not yield even one gladiator as a result:
And if there were indeed one healthy man among the cripples, he would
expend all his strength just keeping the others on their feet and in this way
become a cripple himself.
By the formation of a federation, weak organizations are never
transformed into strong ones, but a strong organization can and often will be
weakened. The opinion that strength must result from the association of weak
groups is incorrect..
. . . Great, truly world-shaking revolutions of a spiritual nature are
not even conceivable and realizable except as the titanic struggles of
individual formations, never as the undertakings of coalitions.
It
has been said that experience keeps a dear school, and in Rockwell’s case it
was dear indeed. He had exhausted all the money left from the sale of U.S. Lady
by the time the last meeting of his American Federation of Conservative
Organizations, on July 4, 1956, failed to produce any concrete results. He had
to find a new source of income and considered himself fortunate to obtain a
temporary position as a television scriptwriter.
This
lasted only a few months, however, and then he took a position on the staff of
the New York-based conservative magazine, American Mercury, as assistant to the
publisher. He had learned the futility of trying to achieve effective
cooperation between the various right-wing groups and had resigned himself to
forming a new organization.
Rockwell
still had two bitter lessons to learn in the school of experience,
however-lessons which the Leader had set forth clearly in his immortal book,
but which Rockwell, for all his careful study, had failed to take to heart, just
as with the admonition against hoping to gain strength by uniting weaknesses.
He still believed that the enemies of our people could be fought effectively by
the „respectable“ means to which conservatives have always restricted
themselves. He thought to avoid the „stigma“ of anti-Semitism by working
silently and indirectly against treason and racial subversion. This method had
the great advantage of not provoking the enemy, so that one could proceed
peacefully and safely with one’s „silent“ work.
Thus,
while working at American Mercury he began to formulate plans for an
underground, „hard-core“ National Socialist organization, with a right-wing
front and financing by wealthy conservatives. Since the organization was to be,
in effect, National Socialist, with National Socialists at the helm and
carrying out the significant activities, and the conservative front only a
disguise, he happily thought he had a plan which would not be subject to all
the flaws of those of his conservative efforts of the past.
His
new project rapidly foundered on the shoals of reality, however. First he found
that wealthy conservatives suffered from most of the character defects that he
had already observed in not-so-wealthy conservatives. Money could be gotten
from them for „pet“ projects-but not for any serious effort which smacked of
danger, particularly danger of exposure. A more fundamental weakness of the „secret“
approach, however, lay in the fact that it is the surface disguise, the
front-not the hidden core-which determines the quality of the personnel
attracted to an organization. Thus, when his anticipated source of funds balked
and his one National Socialist recruit became discouraged and left, Rockwell
was faced with the prospect of scrapping his new idea and starting again from
nothing.
Sadly
he re-read the words the Leader had written more than thirty years previously: „A
man who knows a thing, recognizes a given danger, and sees with his own eyes
the possibility of a remedy, damned well has the duty and the obligation not to
work ‘silently’, but to stand up openly against the evil and for its cure. If
he does not do so then he is a faithless, miserable weakling who fails either
from cowardice or from laziness and incompetence... Every last agitator who
possesses the courage to defend his opinions with manly forth-rightness,
standing on a tavern table among his adversaries, accomplishes more than a
thousand of these lying, treacherous sneaks.“
It
had taken two years of repeated discouragements and failures to bring this
lesson home to him, but now he understood it. He had finally seen the fallacy
underlying the conservative premise. In his own words:
Although it is made to appear so, the battle between the conservatives
and liberals is not a battle of ideas or even of Political organizations. It is
a battle of terror, and power. The Jews and their accomplices and dupes are not
running our country and its people because of the excellence of their ideas or
the merit of their work or the genuine majority of people behind them. They are
in power in spite of the lack of these things, and only because they have
driven their way into power by daring minority tactics. They can stay in power
only because people are afraid to oppose them-afraid they will be socially
ostracized, afraid they will be smeared in the press, afraid they will lose
their jobs, afraid they will not be able to run their businesses, afraid they
will lose political offices. It is fear and fear alone, which keeps these
filthy left-wing sneaks in power-not ignorance on the part of the American
people, as the conservatives keep telling each other.
Beyond
this however, he was coming to an even more fundamental conclusion: Not only
were conservatives wrong in their evaluation of the nature of the conflict
between themselves and liberals and wrong in their choice of tactics, but their
motives were also wrong; at least, he was beginning to see that their motives
differed fundamentally from his own. Basically, the conservatives are aracial.
Their primary concerns are economic: taxes, government spending, fiscal
responsibility; and social: law and order, honest government, morality. At
worst, their sole interest is the protection of their standard of living from
the encroachments of the welfare state; at best, they are genuinely concerned
about the general decay of standards and the trend toward mobocracy and chaos.
But, as a whole, they show very little concern for the biological problem of
which all these other problems are only manifestations.
Certainly
the right wing was preferable to the left wing in this respect. At least
conservatives tended to have a healthy anti-Semitic instinct. But as long as
their inner orientation was economic-materialistic rather than
racial-idealistic, they would remain primarily interested in the defense of a
system rather than a race, they would continue to look for easy and superficial
solutions rather than fundamental ones, and they would continue to lack that
spirit of selfless idealism essential to ultimate victory. Thus, as the year
1956 drew to a close, Rockwell was certain of one thing: Conservatives would
never, by any stretch of the imagination, be able to offer any effective
opposition to the forces of degeneration and death. As he wrote later, anyone,
when he first discovers what is going on, might be forgiven a certain period of
nourishing the delusion and hope that there is a safe, easy, and „nice“
solution to the problem. But to pursue the same fruitless tactics year after
year is evidence of something else: Conservatives are the world’s champion
ostriches, muttering to each other down under the sand „in secret“, while their
plumed bottoms wave in the breeze for the Jews to kick at their leisure. They
are fooling nobody but themselves.
The
answer would have to be found elsewhere-but where, how?
The
years 1957 and 1958 were difficult ones. As a representative of a New York
management-consultant firm, he spent most of 1957 traveling in New York, New
Jersey, and Pennsylvania, writing and consolidating his thoughts whenever he
could find time. The winter of 1957-58 saw a brief interlude in Atlanta, where
he sold advertising.
During
this period, Rockwell had an experience about which he has never written and
which he related to only a few people. Always a skeptic where the supernatural
was concerned, he was certainly not a man to be easily influenced by omens. Yet
there can be no doubt that he attached special significance to a series of
dreams that he had then. The dreams – actually all variations of a single dream
– occurred nearly every night for a period of several weeks and were of such
intensity that he could recall them vividly upon waking. In each dream he saw
himself in some everyday situation: sitting in a crowded theater, eating at a
counter in a diner, walking through the busy lobby of an office building, or
inspecting the airplanes of his squadron at an airfield hangar.
And
in each dream a man would approach him-theater usher, diner cook, office clerk,
or mechanic – - and say something to the effect, „Mr, Rockwell, there is
someone to see you.“ And then he would be led off to some back room or side
office in the building or hangar, as the case may have been. He would open the
door and find waiting for him inside, always alone – -Adolf Hitler. Then the
dream would end.
One
can most easily interpret these dreams as a case of autosuggestion, but in the
light of later developments Rockwell considered them as a symbolic summons, a
beckoning onto the path for which he was then still groping, whether that
beckoning was the consequence of an internal or an external stimulus.
Early
in 1958 he returned to Virginia. His first effort there was in Newport News,
where he produced political cartoons in collaboration with the publisher of a
small racist magazine which shortly went bankrupt. In Newport News, however, he
met a man who was to play a critical role in changing the course of his political
career: Harold N. Arrowsmith, Jr.
Arrowsmith
was a wealthy conservative with a „pet“ project – but he was not like any other
wealthy conservative Rockwell had met. Independently wealthy as the result of
an inheritance, he had formerly been a physical anthropologist. He had stumbled
into politics rather by accident when a friend on the research staff of a
Congressional investigating committee had asked him for some help with some
library research connected with a case under investigation. In the course of
this work he had, to his surprise, come upon some of the documentary material
that had so startled Rockwell a few years earlier in San Diego.
Being
a trained scholar, a linguist with a dozen languages at his disposal, having
access to all the major libraries and archives of the Western world-and with
unlimited time and money – he was able to follow up his initial discoveries and
soon had unearthed literally thousands of items of evidence. The story they
told was a shocking and frightening one: world wars and revolutions, famines
and massacres-not the caprices of history, but the results of deliberate and
cold-blooded scheming.
Although
he had filing cabinets bulging with military intelligence reports, court
records, photostats of diplomatic correspondence, and other material, he had
not been able to publicize any of his finds. Scholarly journals returned his
carefully written and documented papers with rejection slips, and it soon
became apparent that no publisher of general periodicals would accept them
either. He approached Rockwell with the proposition of printing, publishing,
and distributing some of his documentary material, with full financial backing.
They
formed the „National Committee to Free America from Jewish Domination,“ and
Rockwell moved to Arlington, Virginia, where Arrowsmith provided him with a
house and printing equipment.
Rockwell
had already reached the conclusion that if any progress were to be made, it was
necessary to break out of the right-wing milieu into fresh territory. Right-wingers
had been exchanging and reading one another’s pamphlets for years, with no
noticeable results. They always used the same mailing lists and sent their
propaganda to people who, for the most part, had already heard at least a dozen
variations on the same theme. What was needed was mass publicity, so that some
fresh blood could be attracted into the Movement.
As
the normal channels of mass propaganda were closed to most right-wingers-and
certainly to anyone whose propaganda might prove distressing to Jews-Rockwell
had decided that radical means must be used to force open those channels. He
placed this objective before all others. For, he reasoned, if one is to
mobilize men into an organization – secret or otherwise – for the purpose of
gaining political power, one must first let those men know of one’s existence
and communicate to them at least a bare outline of one’s program. Until a mass
of new raw material – potential recruits – could be stirred up by making a
really significant impact on the public consciousness, there was simply no
sense in proceeding further; he had already spent too much time doing things
the old way. He was, in fact, prepared to take the next-to-last step in his
progress from just another goy to the heir to Adolf Hitler’s mighty legacy. He
decided on public agitation of the most provocative sort-agitation of such a
blatant and revolutionary sort that the mass media could not ignore it.
In
May, 1958, Eisenhower had sent U.S. marines to Lebanon to help maintain the
government of President Chamoun in power, against the wishes of the Arab
citizens of that country. The Lebanese Arabs desired closer cooperation with
the other Arab states, but Chamoun, much to the pleasure of the Jews, did not.
The threat of the overthrow of Chamoun and of a pro-Arab government coming into
power in Lebanon, thus adding another member to the Arab bloc opposing the
illegal Jewish occupation of Palestine, led U.S. Jews to press the course of
U.S. intervention upon Eisenhower, always their willing tool. The issue was
much in the public eye during the summer of 1958, and Rockwell decided to use
it as the basis of his first public demonstration-a picket of the White House.
Calling on many of the contacts he had made around the country during the past
few years, he was able to arrange for a busload of young demonstrators to come
to Washington and also to organize protest groups in both Atlanta, Georgia, and
Louisville, Kentucky.
Then
on Sunday morning, July 29, 1958, Rockwell led his group of pickets to the
White House, while the groups in Atlanta and Louisville began their
demonstrations simultaneously. Carrying large signs which Rockwell had designed
and printed himself, these three groups made the first public protest against
Jewish control of the U.S. government since the Jews had silenced their critics
in 1941. It was indeed a momentous occasion: not yet an open National Socialist
demonstration, but a vigorous slap in the face for the enemy-a slap which could
not be ignored, as all the „secret“ right-wing activity had been for years.
Ten
weeks later, on October 12, a synagogue in Atlanta was mysteriously blown up.
Police immediately swooped on Rockwell’s men in Atlanta who had demonstrated in
July. Newspapers around the world carried front-page stories implicating
Rockwell and Arrowsmith in the bombing. Arrowsmith, who felt he was getting
more involved in politics than was comfortable, retrieved his printing
equipment and withdrew Rockwell’s financial support. For the first time,
Rockwell began to get a taste of the difficult times which lay ahead. Hoodlums,
instigated by the newspaper publicity, attacked his home. Windows were broken,
and stones and firecrackers were thrown at his house late at night. Both by day
and by night he and his wife received obscene and threatening telephone calls.
Finally, for the sake of their safety, he felt obliged to send his family to
Iceland.
With
its financial backing gone, the „National Committee to Free America from Jewish
Control“ was no more. The last of Rockwell’s conservative friends evaporated in
the harsh glare of newspaper hate propaganda which was heaped upon him. As the
new year, 1959, came in, he found himself alone in an empty house, without
friends or money or prospects for the future. He had dared to seize the dragon
by the tail and had survived. Yet, in the bleak, cold days of January and
February, 1959, this gave him little comfort as he faced an uncertain and
unpromising future.
... As I sat alone in that empty house or lay alone in that even emptier
bed in the silent, hollow darkness, the full realization of what I was about
bore in upon me with fearful urgency. I realized there was no turning back; as
long as I lived I was marked with the stigma of anti-Jewishness... I could
never again hope to earn a normal living. The Jews could not survive unless
they made an example of me the rest of my life, else too many others might be
tempted to follow my example. My Rubicon had been crossed, and it was fight and
win-or die.
And
then something happened which, in its way, was to be as decisive in his life as
had been his finding Adolf Hitler’s message in Mein Kampf, eight years before,
in San Diego. Again, it was like a guiding hand reaching to him from the
twilight of the past – from a charred, rubble-filled bunker in Berlin – and
showing him the way. Waiting for him at the post office one morning at the
beginning of March was a large carton. In it, carefully folded, was a huge
swastika banner, which had been sent by a young admirer.
Deeply
moved, he carried the banner home and hung it across one end of his living
room, completely covering the wall. He found a small, bronze plaque with a
relief bust of Adolf Hitler, which had been given to him earlier, and mounted
it in the center of the swastika. Then he found three candles and candle
holders, which he placed on a small book-case he had arranged just below the
bronze plaque. He closed the blinds and lit the candles:
I stood there in the flickering candlelight, not a sound in the house,
not a soul near me or aware of what I was doing-or caring.
On
that cold, March morning, alone before the dimly lit altar, Lincoln Rockwell
underwent an experience of a sort shared by few men in the long history of our
race – an experience which comes seldom to this world but which may radically
alter the course of that world when it does. Nearly fifty-three years before, a
similar experience had befallen a man – that time on a cold, November night, on
a hilltop overlooking the Austrian town of Linz.
It
was a religious experience that was more than religious. As he stood there he
felt an indescribable torrent of emotions surging through his being, reaching
higher and higher in a crescendo with a peak of unbearable intensity. He felt
the awe-inspiring awareness for a few moments, or a few minutes, of being more
than himself, of being in communion with that which is beyond description and
beyond comprehension. Something with the cool, vast feeling of eternity and of
infinity – of long ages spanning the birth and death of suns, and of immense,
starry vistas-filled his soul to the bursting point. One may call that
Something by different names-the Great Spirit, perhaps, or Destiny, or the Soul
of the Universe, or God- but once it has brushed the soul of a man, that man
can never again be wholly what he was before. It changes him spiritually in the
same way that a mighty earthquake or a cataclysmic eruption, the subsidence of
a continent or the bursting forth of a new mountain range, changes forever the
face of the earth.
Slowly
the storm subsided, and Lincoln Rockwell – a new Lincoln Rockwell – became
aware once again of the room about him and of his own thoughts. He has
described for us his feeling then:
... Where before I had wanted to fight the forces of tyranny and
regression, now I HAD to fight them. But even more, I felt within me the power
to prevail – strength beyond my own strength – the ability to do the right
thing even when I was personally overwhelmed by events. And that strength has
not yet failed me. Nor will it fail... I knew with calm certainty exactly what
to do, and I knew, in a hard-to-explain sense, what was ahead. It was something
like looking at a road from the air after seeing only the curve ahead from the
ground... Hitler had shown the way to survival. It would be my task on this
earth to carry his ideas... to total, world-wide victory. I knew I would not
live to see the victory which I would make possible. But I would not die before
I had made that victory certain.
And
just as Adolf Hitler had said of his experience on the Freinberg, „In that hour
it began,“ so in that hour it began for Lincoln Rockwell also. He did not
realize it then, of course, but this climactic event had come almost exactly in
the middle of his political life; he had run just half the course from that
fall day in 1950, in the San Diego Public Library, to a martyr’s death in
Arlington in the late summer of 1967.
Before,
he had been a right-winger, a conservative, albeit a more and more openly
anti-Jewish one; before, he had felt the need to keep his National Socialism
concealed; before, while he had admired Adolf Hitler as the greatest thinker in
the history of the race and Mein Kampf as the most important book ever written,
they had not been wholly real to him-and this attitude had resulted in his failure
so often to apply the Leader’s teachings to his own political efforts. Now,
however, he was no longer a conservative, but a National Socialist, and he
would bear witness for his faith before the whole world; now, at last, he
recognized in Adolf Hitler not just an extraordinarily great mind and spirit,
but something immortal, transcendental, more than human; now he saw the Leader
as an embodiment, in a way, of that Universal Soul with which he had briefly
communed; now he was prepared to follow the Leader’s teachings without
reservation, in all things.
At
the same time that these fundamental changes in his outlook took place, he saw
the need for a fundamental change in his political tactics. He recalled the
Leader’s words:
Any man who is not attacked in the Jewish newspapers, not slandered and
vilified, is no true National Socialist. The best measure of the value of his
will is the hostility he receives from the mortal enemy of our people. . .
Every Jewish slander and every Jewish lie is a scar of honor on the body
of our warriors.
The man they have most reviled stands closest to us, and the man they
hate worst is our best friend.
Anyone who picks up a Jewish newspaper in the morning and does not see
himself slandered in it has not made profitable use of the previous day; for if
he had, he would be persecuted, reviled, slandered, abused, befouled. And only
the man who combats this mortal enemy of our nation and of all Aryan humanity
and culture most effectively may expect to see the slanders of this race and
the efforts of this people directed against him.
And
further:
It makes no difference whatever whether they laugh at us or revile us,
whether they represent us as clowns or criminals; the main thing is that they
mention us, that they concern themselves with us again and again, and that we
gradually appear to be the only power that anyone reckons with at the moment.
What we really are and what we really want, we will show the Jewish
journalistic rabble when the day comes.
Rockwell
had already recognized the need for gaining mass publicity by radical means,
but he had flinched at the thought of the slander and vilification, the
mis-representation and ridicule which must inevitably accompany any publicity
he received through the alien-dominated mass media. He had been living in the
conservative dream world and had shared with other right-wingers the
comfortable illusion that one can keep the enemy fooled – even make him think
one is his friend – and fight him effectively at the same time.
Even
as he gradually became more forthright in his statements with respect to the
Jewish question, he retained the feeling that to speak out openly for Adolf
Hitler’s National Socialist world view would be nothing short of suicide.
Thus
he had fallen between two stools after his demonstration of July 29, 1958. He
had been numbed by the virulence of the hatred unleashed against him, and at
the same time found himself crippled by self-imposed limitations in his own
campaign.
Now,
however, he had decided that not only would he never again flinch under the
torrent of abuse and slander which his activities were sure to bring down on
him, but he would provoke such attacks by the enemy, looking upon each one as a
„scar of honor“ and also as another small step toward his eventual general
recognition as the opponent of everything the enemy stood for, as „the only
power with which [that enemy] reckoned.“ And he saw that an open avowal of his
National Socialism was not only the strongest irritant he could bring to bear
against his enemy, but it was the only realistic basis for gathering around
himself those elements of the population needed to build a viable and lasting
movement with which eventually to destroy that enemy and restore his own race to
the position of strength and health and honor from which it had abdicated.
Actually,
he carried the Leader’s counsel about the use of the enemy’s own propaganda to
its logical extreme. Looking at the task before him realistically for the first
time, he saw that the problems he faced were so severe that, in order to make
any progress against them, he would be obliged to concentrate all his energies
upon one aspect of those problems at a time.
The
first step was general recognition. His earlier conviction that that goal must
be attained at the expense of every other consideration was now stronger than
ever. Thus, instead of following the natural urge to dissociate National
Socialism from the Hollywood image that Jewry had been building for it for more
than three decades, he temporarily threw all hopes of „respectability“-even
among other National Socialists-aside and set about turning to his own
advantage all the Jews’ previous efforts.
Toward
this end he deliberately pinned on himself the label „Nazi,“ rather than „National
Socialist,“ using this bit of journalistic jargon which had been coined by the
enemy during the early days of struggle in Germany, a term looked upon by
National Socialists with about the same feeling that convinced Marxists must
look upon the designation „commie,“ or „pinko.“ Behind this step-one which was
to cause much misunderstanding and suspicion in days to come-was the
cold-blooded realization that a strutting, shouting uniform-wearing,
Hollywood-style „Nazi“ was vastly more newsworthy, had vastly more „shock value,“
than any mere National Socialist.
As
he pondered over his soul-stirring experience and began to lay new plans for
the future during the next few days, events began flowing in the new channel
marked out for them by the finger of Destiny. Three men, a right-wing
acquaintance and two other men who were strangers to Rockwell, dropped in to
see him one evening. Initially shocked and repelled by the swastika banner in
his living room, they were soon won over by his passionate exposition of the
new cause. Two of the three remained to become his first disciples.
Then
he opened the blinds on his windows, making his swastika banner visible from
the street. He issued swastika armbands to his two recruits, and the three of
them swaggered about the house wearing holstered pistols. Later he mounted an
illuminated swastika on the roof.
The
crowds came to laugh and jeer and throw rocks-but a few remained to listen. His
„stormtroopers“ grew in number from two, to four, to ten.
These
March days in 1959, which witnessed the first genuine rebirth of National
Socialist activity after nearly fourteen years of terror and total suppression,
marked the beginning of the stormiest and most difficult times Rockwell faced.
Harassed by the police with illegal searches and confiscation of his property
and materials, assaulted by thugs and vandals whom the police made no efforts
to apprehend, he and his small group of followers printed and distributed tens
of thousands of leaflets and talked to throngs of curious and hostile visitors
who came to see the „American Fuehrer,“ as the newspapers laughingly called
him. He first chose the name „American Party“ for his embryonic organization,
but soon changed the name to „American Nazi Party.“
Keeping
his initial objective foremost in his mind, he concentrated the activities of
his small group primarily on the distribution of inflammatory leaflets, on
creating public incidents, on haranguing crowds under circumstances especially
chosen to provoke violent opposition – anything and everything, in other words,
to gain mass publicity, to become generally recognized as the opponent of the
Jews and everything they represented, from Marxism to unprincipled capitalism,
from racial degeneration to cultural Bolshevism.
His
first soapbox-style public address was delivered on the Mall, in Washington, on
Sunday, April 3, 1960, and became a regular occurrence for some time
thereafter.
A
letter he wrote to his mother during this early period of public speaking gives
an idea of a few of the difficulties he faced:
7
July, 1960
Dear
Mother:
Thank you for the letter and the help. It is much appreciated... Don’t
pay too much attention to what the papers say, Mother they lie unbelievably.
Last week they tried to murder us again on the Mall here and almost killed
Major Morgan, whom you met, when they dragged him out-ten of them-and stomped
him and left him for dead. But we prevailed, and even though the police, much
against their will, were forced to arrest us for „disorderly conduct“ (for
being attacked by a murderous mob!), the people are with us. This sort of thing
is inevitable, and it will get worse. Now they have tried-yesterday – to have
me heaved in an insane asylum to shut me up, but they were surprised, as I was
relieved, when people rushed forward to offer the huge cash bond they set for
me and I will have a psychiatrist of my own choosing deliver a report, instead
of the two Jews they planned for me. Do not worry about all this. It is
dangerous, painful, and bitter when our own people do not understand what we
are doing and suffering for them, but I am sure that the Lord will not permit
liars and villains to win in the end. You will yet be mighty proud...
Love,
Link
In
May, 1960, the National Socialist Bulletin made its appearance as the first
periodical published by the American Nazi Party. It evolved in to the
Stormtrooper magazine after eight issues. Meanwhile, on February 5, 1960, the
United States Navy, under pressure from Jewish groups, forced Rockwell to
accept a discharge from the Naval Reserve.
Despite
the news quarantine imposed on him, despite beatings and jailings, despite a
chronic lack of funds, despite serious personnel problems, and despite a
thousand other troubles and difficulties, his campaign to gain public
recognition made steady progress. Newspapers found it impossible to completely
avoid mentioning his brash and daring exploits; editors and columnists found
irresistible the temptation to denounce or „expose“ him. Even radio and
television emcees, ever on the prowl for sensation, yielded to temptation and
defied the ban on publicity for Rockwell.
The
image of George Lincoln Rockwell and the America Nazi Party created by the mass
media for public consumption was, of course, a grossly distorted one. Rockwell
had succeeded in forcing the media, more or less against their will, to give
him publicity. Unfortunately, he could not force them to be impartial in their
treatment, or even to be truthful, An interview with him published in the
popular magazine, Playboy, was prefaced with such editorial remarks as: „Unlike
controversial past interviewees Rockwell could not be called a spokesman for
any socially or politically significant minority. But we felt that the very
virulence of Rockwell’s messianic master-racism could transform a really
searching conversation with the 48-year-old Fuhrer into a revealing portrait of
both rampant racism and the pathology of fascism.“
Another
commented: „The question of George Lincoln Rockwell boils down, then, to the
question of how far can America let the hate-mongers go. Will an unsound branch
on the tree of American democracy fall off or will it poison the organism?“
The
really ambitious writers, editors, and reporters did not restrict themselves to
such mildly prejudicial remarks but vied with one another in concocting
outrageous lies about Rockwell. He was accused of cowardice, sadism, selfish
gormandizing, kidnaping: „Like the late Adolf Schickelgruber, on whom he models
himself, he believes in leading from behind-as far behind as possible.“ In one
magazine, he was „quoted“ as boasting that he had once castrated a heckler with
his bare hands,“ and another reported: „George Rockwell’s hysterical raving has
already whipped up the lunatic fringe to the breaking point. Last summer three
of his stormtroopers decided to please the Fuehrer by kidnaping a small Jewish
child in Washington, D.C., and holding him at the Party Headquarters for
several hours. How many more innocent citizens will be subjected to harassment
before Robert F. Kennedy and the Justice Department move in?“
Topping
them all was the story that „Like a true Nazi top dog, he avails himself of
top-dog privileges and orders private meals served in his room. He partakes of
such fancy fare as turtle soup, lobster, and steak while the men eat hash.
Between meals he enjoys sucking kumquats.“ This last flight of fancy is
reminiscent of articles published in the German press (before - 1933) which
portrayed Adolf Hitler as a drunken profligate (Hitler only drank once in his
entire life: the night of his High School Graduation) and lecher who dissipated
the contributions of his followers in high living, champagne parties, and
whoring.
Rockwell
accepted these lies and slanders philosophically, for the alternative to this
Jew-designed public image even was no public image at all. As a matter of fact,
the Jews-and non-Jewish publicists anxious to demonstrate their affection for
the Jews-cannot be given all the blame for this poor image. Rockwell himself
lent a conscious hand to its creation, as he admitted when he said, „... When I
have the rare opportunity to use some mass medium, as was recently the case
when I gave an interview to Playboy, I am forced to walk a careful line between
what I should like to say and what the enemy would like to hear me say. Unless
I deliberately sound at least halfway like a raving illiterate with three loose
screws, such an interview would never be printed.“
The
price he paid for becoming generally recognized as „Mr. Nazi“ was a high one
indeed. Other men with sound racial instincts but without Rockwell’s
understanding of political realities were, naturally enough, appalled by what
seemed to be Rockwell’s ridiculous antics. Most people, even relatively
sophisticated ones who talk knowingly about „managed news,“simply find
incomprehensible the Jewish Big Lie technique.
These
sound but simple citizens all too often jumped to the not-implausible
conclusion that Rockwell was a kind of agent provocateur, a traitor hired by
the enemy to discredit honest racists and patriots. His correspondence with
some of them displays a mixture of impatience with their inability to perceive
the essence of the real problems facing our race, and a sincere desire to evoke
understanding. The following extracts from a letter to a member of a snobbish
racist group calling itself the „European Liberation Front“ are typical:
Dear
Mr... :
I realize that I am only a stupid, silly American, but I do love this
country, in spite of your denunciation of it. What you hate about it is what
the Jews have done to it, and you are like a man who permits his wife to be
debauched by rapists and then tosses her in the garbage can for it. Shame on
you! „American“ influence on Europe is not American at all, and you damned sure
should know it. The real American influence was Henry Ford, our West, and the
like.
Europe is a tired old man-more like a tired old lady - and if Western
culture is to be saved, it will be saved by the last Western barbarians, the
American barbarians I love. Men like you, suave, polished, educated,
supercilious, and „above“ nasty physical violence, cannot save themselves, let
alone a nation, a culture, or a race. You people with your „European Liberation
Front“ are going at it backwards. You can’t liberate Europe any more with
Europeans. Hitler gave that effort every bit of holy genius within him, and he
was mashed by the American barbarians. You and your egghead gang of dandies are
in love with what is gone and insist on ignoring what is here. Rome is no more.
You keep trying to resurrect it, and you can’t, because there are no more noble
Romans over there, at least not enough to make a real fight of it, Europe is
like one big France – -all empty shell, fine words, pretty songs, and dead men.
We helped kill Europe. If you did liberate it, like France was „liberated,“ it
would sink into degeneracy again in a century..
There are, of course, good, vigorous fighting men in Europe, but they
are swamped by the human garbage left in the wreckage of two wars promoted by
Jews and fought by Americans. I am building National Socialism here, by such
expedients and methods as may be possible, and I am succeeding, in spite of
your looking down your nose at me. . .
Whenever I can get some or the other of you to ditch the „We’re-the-real-National
Socialists“ game and start being National Socialists, I give strength to the
cause to which I have given my life, my family, my comfort, and everything else
I have to give, no matter what you may have been told...
Frankness,
not diplomacy, was his strong point.
In
order to allay hostility and suspicion as much as he could, he was soon obliged
to divert some of his energies from agitation and publicity garnering to a more
sober exposition of his ideas. His first major effort in that direction was the
publication of his political autobiography, This Time the World. Written
hastily in the fall of 1960 between speaking engagements, court appearances,
street brawls, and desperate attempts to raise money to sustain his small
group, he was not able to publish it until a year later. The printing and
binding of the book were done entirely by his untrained stormtroopers, and
their only machinery was a tiny, office-style duplicator. The absolute
sincerity of its tone failed to convince few of its readers, but the
difficulties of distribution, due to the Jewish „quarantine,“ limited its
circulation to a few thousand copies.
In
October, 1961, the first of his Rockwell Reports appeared. Varying in length
from four to thirty-six pages, the Rockwell Report appeared semi-monthly at
first, then monthly, occasionally lapsing into bi-monthly publication during
particularly difficult periods. The Rockwell Reports contained a lively mixture
of National Socialist ideology, current political analysis, prognostication,
political cartoons and drawings, reproductions of pertinent news clippings, and
photographs of Party activities. They all bore his unique stamp and, more than
any other one thing, were responsible for drawing to him the idealistic young
men who formed the cadre of the growing movement.
From
the beginning, Rockwell had understood the necessity for the National Socialist
movement eventually to operate from a worldwide basis. For the ultimate
political goal of the Movement was the establishment of an Aryan world order, a
pax Aryana, as a prerequisite for the attainment of the long-term racial goals
of the Movement. From the spring of 1959, this concept had existed on paper as
the „World Union of Free-Enterprise National Socialists,“ but until the summer
of 1962 it was not implemented beyond an exchange of letters with individual
National Socialists in Europe. In early August, 1962, Rockwell met with
National Socialist representatives from four other nations in the Cotswold
Hills, near Cotswold, England, and the World Union of National Socialists
formally came into existence. On the fifth of August the protocol now known as the
Cotswold Agreements was drawn up, pledging the National Socialist movements of
the United States, Great Britain, France, Germany (including Austria), and
Belgium to a common effort. Annual meetings of the World Union of National
Socialists were originally envisaged, but Fate and circumstances prevented
this. Rockwell was under increasing pressure in America during the next five
years, as the situation there grew steadily more turbulent.
Rockwell’s
original program was divided into three phases. The first phase, beginning in
March, 1959, was to be a phase of provocative but essentially non-constructive
activity, intended to generate publicity and build a public image, no matter
how distorted. The second phase was to be a cadre-building phase, during which
a strong, disciplined, effective, professional National Socialist organization
was to be built and capabilities in propaganda and organizing developed to a
high degree. The third phase was to be one of mass organization.
Phase
one was masterfully executed. Rockwell proved himself an outstanding tactician
in the rough-and-tumble game of smashing through the Jewish blackout barrier.
With cool objectivity, he watched the press heap bucket after bucket of lies
and filth on his image, provoking them to renewed activity whenever they tired.
With keen insight he analyzed the Jewish situation. He understood that though
they occupied the key positions of control in the public-opinion-forming
networks, they were constrained to a large extent by the fact that that control
must remain hidden from the public.
Furthermore,
he understood the fact that a very substantial portion of the reporters,
editors, columnists, newscasters, and even many individual newspaper and
broadcast-station owners are not Jews, and, barring direct and categorical
orders to the contrary from the key Jews, these people can be counted upon to
react in a more-or-less predictable way to a given stimulus. Thus, by taking a
position and making statements which seemed extreme and even ridiculous to the „average
citizen,“ he could entice publicists to quote him widely, thinking thus to
discredit both the man and the philosophy with these average citizens. What
they failed to understand was that before the Movement could profit from any
mass appeal, it had to appeal to a large number of very un-average citizens – fearless
idealists who could form the National Socialist cadre.
And
these men responded in a very different way to Rockwell’s message than did the
liberal publicists or their average audience. They saw beyond the superficial „ridiculousness“
of his message to the kernel of deep truth that it contained. While the average
citizen, incapable of thinking beyond the immediate problems of the day, found
Rockwell’s message „too extreme,“ just as the publicists intended, those who
could extrapolate in their minds the developments of the present to the
consequences of tomorrow-and of a century hence-saw the compelling necessity of
his demands. But such men are rather sparsely distributed throughout the
population, and to reach them Rockwell needed to cast his net very wide; this
the publicists helped him do while they thought to smear him. Rockwell also
understood that the image of him being erected in the minds of the masses,
while a liability now, had a value for the future, when conditions had ripened
so that at least some of those masses were ready for an „extremist.“
Phase
two – cadre building and organizational development – in a sense was co-extant
with phase one, for from the very beginning Rockwell’s publicity began to
attract a few of the idealists needed for phase two, and these men began to
constitute the skeleton of the organizational structure which was later to be
filled out. Even a bit of phase three entered the picture during the first
phase, when Rockwell conducted a campaign to become governor of the state of
Virginia in 1965.
This
election campaign proved to be a period of extremely valuable training not only
for Rockwell but for the leadership personnel of his entire Party. Realizing
the eventual need to develop proficiency at mass campaigning, Rockwell decided
to begin acquiring experience in that direction soon rather than late. As he
later admitted, after winning less than 1.5% of the votes cast, the campaign
also provided a more fundamental lesson and helped him to realistically
re-evaluate the entire status of the Movement. Before, he had taken overly
optimistic view that the Movement would begin to pick up substantial mass
following as soon as it had gained sufficient publicity through his phase-one
activities; that is, he believed that phases two and three would be largely
concurrent.
After
the Virginia campaign, having been reminded once again of the stupendous
inertia of public opinion, he realized that phase two would be much longer than
originally anticipated, and that the beginning of any substantial success from
phase-three activity would have to await two things: a considerable internal
strengthening of the Movement and a considerable worsening of the general
racial-social-economic situation.
With
this first thing in mind, he made the decision in 1966 to inaugurate a general
activity. As mentioned before, the first two phases of Party activity
overlapped to a large extent, and the transition between the two was marked
primarily by a shift of emphasis. Phase one was the „Nazi“ era of the Movement.
Phase two is the beginning of the National Socialist era. In line with this
re-emphasis, the American Nazi Party officially became the National Socialist
White People’s Party on January 1, 1967, and that date can reasonably be
considered to mark the transition. Six months earlier, the appearance of
National Socialist World was a major step in this direction. And six months
after that date – in June, 1967 – a historic re-organizational conference of
the Party leadership was held in Arlington. There Rockwell set the Movement on
its new course, explaining the need for a total professionalization of every
activity, from fund raising to propaganda writing, in order to meet the severe
demands to be expected during the long period of growth and struggle ahead.
He
was now forty-nine years old. For the past eight years he had been working an
average sixteen hours a day, seven days a week. The strain on his physical and
spiritual resources had been severe. Usually he was obliged to concentrate on
the several tasks simultaneously. There was always a demonstration to be
planned, a speech to be prepared, propaganda to be written, a court case to be
fought, money to be raised, and everything to be done under nearly impossible
working conditions, with incessant interruptions. Only the immense vitality of
his rugged, six-foot-four-inch frame and a deep reserve of spiritual strength had
sustained him in the past.
The
course that lay ahead would certainly be no easier; on the contrary, in
addition to the old tasks connected with agitation and publicity, there would
be many new problems to be faced as the Movement continued into its new phase
of activity.
Other
men – strong men – might have yielded to the temptation to remain with a
prescription to which they had become accustomed and not venture from a beaten
path into strange and difficult territory. The slightest trace of subjectivity
would allow them to ring forth a hundred reasons for not changing a modus
operandi which they had found successful in the past. And yet it was
characteristic of Rockwell that he did not hesitate for an instant. When he saw
that the time had come for the Movement to change its tactics and accept a
different set of challenges, he set himself to the new task with the same
determination that he had shown throughout the first phase.
Now
it was necessary to build up a whole new public image for the Party, or, rather,
gradually to transform the grossly distorted image he had induced the enemy to
build for him to one closer to the truth. It was a demanding task, and he spent
the summer of 1967 in laying plans for the future and in finishing his new
book, White Power.
In
one of his last letters, written in August to two faithful Party comrades, man
and wife, he reveals a little of the introspection which occupied his mind at
this decisive time:
Dear
By no means do I get the solid feeling that [you] are clear in your own
minds on what has been done, what should be done now, and what might be done
(or not done) in the future. For this reason, after much of my favorite recent
hobby – tossing and turning – I have arisen as dawn is creeping over this
benighted city to set forth on paper some thoughts which might help.(And often
I find that such efforts to help others, help me in the process.) There is no
plan or overall approach in this letter; it’s just jewels, pearls, and clinkers
from a mind which seems to be in a state of near-collapse and rebellion. First
let me present an insoluble problem within me. Doing my best to learn from
history, I am aware of a fact of all great struggles. There have been millions
of causes, battles, and so on, almost all of them lost. History rarely records
the losers, except when they get hacked up in a particularly interesting and
dramatic manner. But there are some winners, who do get recorded in history and
I have examined these pretty carefully (wishing someday to join their exalted
ranks) to see if there is any common pattern to their activity on this planet
which might be a key to why they won, when almost everybody loses. There is
absolutely no doubt about it; there is such a pattern, even though the causes
and struggles vary in content or aim from Lenin’s Bolshevism to Adolf Hitler’s
National Socialism, from a little old lady set on running her neighbor out of
town to Genghis Khan and his human hamburger machine. The winners in every case
have been more determined, more fanatical in their ruthless refusal to quit,
than their competitors. This would seem to indicate that victory is given to
him who is most persevering. But this has not been true, either. History
abounds with persevering nuts who have repeatedly hopped off hills and
buildings wearing „wings“ and just as repeatedly landed on their behinds until
there was nothing left...
The conclusion I reach from all this is that it takes three things to
make a winner: a good cause, i.e., a cause which is in time, in phase, and
needed; a leader who is unshakeable in his determination to fight as long as he
has a couple of stumps for legs and who can inspire that same will in his
troops; and some plain good luck. As I examine my own cause, leadership, and
luck, I find that it is absolutely impossible for me to make a detached
judgment on whether I am one of the fanatics hopping off a hill with a pair of
Woolworth, glue-and-feathers wings, or whether I am one of the guys who gets
modeled into stone images for the benefit of pigeons. ... I do not think either
of you knows the answer to that one, either. However, I have the advantage over
both of you in that I long, long ago made up my mind that the best thing I can
do with my life – what’s left of it – is to take aim, do my best to control the
inevitable shaking, and never take my eye and heart off the target until it
goes down...
ON
THE 25th OF AUGUST, 1967, a Friday, at two minutes before noon, near his
Arlington headquarters, an assassin’s bullet struck him down.
The
murderer, a man whom Rockwell had expelled from the Party a few months earlier
for his repeated attempts to inject Marxist ideas subtly into Party
publications and for publicly expounding a doctrine of racial Bolshevism, had
lain in ambush atop a nearby building and fired into Rockwell’s car as it drove
by. Ironically, Rockwell had rescued this puffed-up little Bolshevik from the
gutters of New York City eight years before, and he had taken an almost
fatherly interest in him ever since. He had never given up his repeated
attempts to instill a little decency and sense of honor into him, despite
overwhelming evidence that the man was a compulsive liar and thief and an
incurable conspirator. All his well-meant efforts in this direction were
rewarded only with heartache after heartache over the years – and finally with
death, when the vicious little punk he thought he could make into a man found a
chance to „get even“ for being expelled from the Party.
Following
a denial by the United States government of Commander Rockwell’s right to
burial in a national cemetery, his Party comrades had his body cremated, and a
National Socialist memorial service was held in Arlington on the afternoon of
August 30. His eulogy was short but moving.
National Socialist comrades! Fellow White Americans! Today we take upon
ourselves the sorrowful task of laying to rest the mortal remains of our
beloved Commander, Lincoln Rockwell, martyred by the bullet of a cowardly
assassin. To those of us who worked with him every day, to those Party comrades
all over America, and to dedicated National Socialists throughout the world the
staggering loss imposed by his death will only be fully felt in the days and
years of struggle which lie ahead of us all. His inspiration and his will, the
depth of his wisdom and the heroism of his spirit-these are the things which
gave us the motivation and the guidance we sorely needed to keep up the fight
on so many dark days in years past.
The stunning suddenness of his departure and the ensuing turmoil of the
last few days have kept us from yet assessing the magnitude of our loss. But
even harder to bear than this, perhaps, has been utterly shabby-the despicably
shameful-treatment of our fallen Commander by a government of the nation he
served so faithfully throughout all the years of his manhood. George Lincoln
Rockwell gave his life in the struggle against Bolshevism at a time when
thousands of other American fighting men on the other side of the world are
also falling victims to that same Bolshevism – and yet an American government
has denied his request to be laid to rest in the place of his choice.
George Lincoln Rockwell served America for twenty years and through two
wars, risking his life again and again in defense of the land and the people he
loved so well. He was no armchair soldier, but he chose of his own will that
soldierly profession demanding the very highest order of courage and skill: he
was a fighter pilot. His dedication to duty, his daring, his proficiency led
him from the rank of Seaman to that of full Commander, gave him the leadership
of three squadrons, and earned him nine decorations. And an American government
does not hold him fit to be buried beside his fellow fighting men.
George Lincoln Rockwell has sacrificed more and fought harder for the
things he held dear-his native land, his fellow countrymen, and above all his
race-than any man now living. He saw his duty and unflinchingly did it, even
when that duty led him into opposition to nearly all those around him. He saw
further than other men, and he fought harder. Indeed, in this latter regard he
cherished the maxim of the great Leader whose philosophy moulded his own
thoughts: Those who want to live, let them fight; and those who do not want to
fight in this world of eternal struggle do not deserve to live.
He fought, and he died. And yet Lincoln Rockwell is not really dead, for
he built a Movement and he spread an idea, and that Movement was not destroyed
nor that idea silenced by the bullet that struck him down. And so long as that
Movement remains and that idea continues to fill the hearts and minds of men,
the spirit of Lincoln Rockwell lives on.
The ashes of the martyr lie here before us, and we cannot help but be
filled with a solemn sense of tragedy. Yet we are not really here to mourn him,
but to honor him and to rededicate ourselves to the Cause which he served. In
the times ahead we must redouble our efforts, so that he will not have died in
vain. We must let his great sacrifice serve to inspire us onward in our
struggle toward victory-the victory of our people, of our great White race,
over the disease which now afflicts it and the enemies who now oppress it.
Indeed at this moment we must bear in mind that old saying which the Commander
paraphrased for us: ‘The stones and mortar of our Movement are the bones and
blood of its martyrs.’ It is this aspect of his death that he would now want us
to keep uppermost in mind, forgetting our sorrow and filling ourselves with
pride at the knowledge we followed such a leader.
For it was he, Lincoln Rockwell, who again picked up the torch which
fell to earth twenty-two years ago. Adolf Hitler founded our great Movement and
will forever fill a unique position in the saga of our race; but had it not
been for Lincoln Rockwell, Adolf Hitler’s mighty work might well have been in
vain. It was Lincoln Rockwell who set us once again on the upward path when we
had faltered and wanted to go back again. It was his example which inspired us
to do what we knew we should do rather than that which was easiest to do. It
was his hand which led us out of the maze of defeat and degeneration and
despair, and pointed the way toward higher things; and his voice which reminded
us over and over again that we must continue the struggle for our race.
As we lay to rest the mortal remains of Lincoln Rockwell, it is
appropriate to read once again that passage from the Leader’s book which he
loved best. I shall read from chapter twelve of the first volume of the
Commander’s personal copy of Mein Kampf:
When human hearts break and human souls despair, the great vanquishers
of distress and care, of shame and misery, of spiritual slavery and physical
duress look down upon them from the twilight of the past and hold out their eternal
hands to faint-hearted mortals. Woe to the people that is ashamed to grasp
them!
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