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SS Warrior-Poet

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Kurt Eggers was the editor of the SS newspaper Das
Schwarze Korps and an SS war correspondent. After he
was killed on the Russian front in 1943, an SS regiment was
named after him: the SS-Standarte Kurt Eggers.
In short, Kurt Eggers was a true National Socialist warriorpoet,
whose works provide a fascinating look into the soul
of the ideal SS warrior.

462 pages, Unknown Binding

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About the author

Kurt Eggers

39 books15 followers
Kurt Eggers (1905-1943) was a German author and poet, and a member of the SS.

After his father forbid him to go to military cadet school Eggers attended education on a training ship.

In 1919 he joined Garde-Kavallerie-Schützen-Division which was responsible for taking down the Spartacus Rebellion. After that he joined the Deutschvölkischen Schutz- und Trutzbund and was involved in the 1920 Kapp-Putsch.

In 1939 he joined the German army and served as an company leader of a tank division until he fell in 1943 in the russian city of Belograd.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Shortsman.
244 reviews35 followers
July 7, 2024
Eggers spends way too much time in this collection hating on Christianity. He seems to have believed that Christianity had no purpose other than making the Germanic peoples weak, which is odd considering the first Christians most likely hadn't met any other Germanics than a couple of legionnaries stationed in Judea.
Profile Image for Krieger.
15 reviews
March 3, 2023
Kurt's main focus through this book was to convey the true moral background of National Socialism. He explains how the modern cult of weakness and pacifism has nearly destroyed the west and continues consistently in it's psychological attacks using Christian morals and teachings, as well as through the propaganda and tyranny of the anonymous powers (the papacy, the international financiers, and the freemasons/liberal democratic globalists).
I'm a Christian myself but didn't have an issue reading the anti-Christian parts of it, because it is not anti-Christian in the annoying atheistic type of way, rather it was more like Nietzsche. I think Kurt Eggers, however, explains everything much clearer than Nietzsche. Kurt's writing style is powerful, succinct, and easy to understand. Kurt was clearly a man of firm and passionate ideals and it shows through the entire book. I would wholeheartedly recommend this book. I read it via audiobook.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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