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German Black who lived in and loved Hitler’s Germany

Hans Massaquoi grew up in National Socialist Greater Germany made up of Austria, Germany, Sudetenland, and the Saar). Born on January 19, 1926, in Hamburg where his grandfather had been Liberian consul general, Hans experienced Hitler’s rise to power and life in Germany during the war.

Contrary to myths propagated by the West’s palace press and publishers, that all black people were exterminated or sterilized by the elected government of the Reich, Hans lived and prospered in Germany throughout the duration of the war. And, despite laws that gave German nationals preference over non-Germans in jobs, business, civil service and suchlike, Hans states in his book that he was never persecuted.

In fact, Hans gained an apprenticeship as a teenager after attending a job counselling session at a government-run jobcentre with a member of the SS.

Expecting to be relegated to secondary citizen status, Massaquoi was greeted wherever he went with friendliness. At the appointment, he was offered a seat and asked to present an example of his handiwork.

After showing the official an axe he had fashioned at a local blacksmith’s forge, Massaquoi was surprised to be told that he could ‘be of great service to Germany one day’ when technically-qualified Germans would be needed to go to Africa to train and develop a local workforce if Germany reclaimed its African colonies. 

However, Adolf Hitler in My Last Testament Let God Decide had already said that regaining colonies stolen by Britain as a prize of war in 1919 were not very important to him. On the other hand, Hitler’s Germany, in common with all other trading nations, would be interested in developing Africa.

As a teenager in July 1943, Hans survived the total annihilation of Hamburg during the Operation Gomorrah RAF/USAAF bombing raids that killed 42,600 civilians and wounded 37,000 more.  In 1947 Massaquoi immigrated to the United States on a student visa. In 2001 he released his autobiography ‘Destined to Witness – Growing up black in Nazi Germany.’ 

3 replies »

  1. I would imagine that Hans Massaquoi was treated in school just the same as the one black boy in my school was treated. Just like any other kid. Normal. Based on how likeable he was and nothing else really. In my class, the one black child was actually quite popular.

    Much later, I heard about all the racism that existed in Canada. I was puzzled by that, and thought, hmmmm, that must be in eastern Canada, not here where I live. I just didn’t experience that. They told us we were all racist. Really? Then they told us about systemic racism. I was so puzzled by all that, until later…

    Then I began to learn about their lies, their agenda, white guilt, white genocide, and the “diversity” word, which of course is just code for white genocide. Now it all makes sense.

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    • As a sailor, I had by the time I had reached the age of 26, visited over 60 countries, some several times. I met, worked and lived, socialised too with every ethnicity, cultural and religious persuasion, without ever encountering a problem. As a matter of fact, on at least two occasions my life was saved by an Arab in one incident, an African in another. Thanks, guys.

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  2. Hitler pointed out the Jews, if not the French, brought in these blacks (black soldiers under French control) during the 20s into the Rhineland to basterdize the white German people. I don’t wish to harm nonwhites, but I do not want them in our lands plain and simple.

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