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Mein Kampf in Arabic

Mein Kampf (Arabic: كفاحي, romanizedKifāḥī; lit.'My Struggle'), Adolf Hitler's 900-page autobiography outlining his political views, has been translated into Arabic a number of times since the early 1930s.

The front cover of the 1995 edition of Mein Kampf issued by Bisan Publishers and sold in London. This edition was a republishing of a translation first published in 1963.

Translations

Translations between 1934 and 1937

The first attempts to translate Mein Kampf into Arabic were extracts in various Arab newspapers in the early 1930s. Journalist and Arab nationalist Yunus al-Sabawi published translated extracts in the Baghdad newspaper al-Alam al-Arabi, alarming the Baghdadi Jewish community.[1] Lebanese newspaper Al Nida also separately published extractions in 1934.[2] The German consulate denied it had been in touch with Al Nida for these initial translations.[1]

Whether a translation published by the Nazi regime would be allowed, ultimately depended on Hitler.[1] Fritz Grobba, the German ambassador to the Kingdom of Iraq, played a key role in urging the translation.[2] The largest issue was the book's racism. Grobba suggested modifying the text "in ways that correspond to the sensitivities of the race conscious Arabs", such as changing "anti-Semitic" to "anti-Jewish", "bastardized" to "dark" and toning down arguments for the supremacy of the "Aryan race".[2]

Hitler wanted to avoid allowing any modifications, but accepted the Arabic book changes after two years. Grobba sent 117 clippings from al-Sabawi's translations, but Bernhard Moritz, an Arabist consultant for the German Government who was also fluent in Arabic, said the proposed translation was incomprehensible and rejected it. This particular attempt ended at that time.[2][1]

Subsequently, the Ministry of Propaganda of Germany decided to proceed with the translation via the German bookshop Overhamm in Cairo.[1] The translator was Ahmad Mahmud al-Sadati, a Muslim and the publisher of one of the first Arabic books on National Socialism: Adolf Hitler, za'im al-ishtirakiya al-waṭaniya ma' al-bayan lil-mas'ala al-yahudiya. "(Adolf Hitler, leader of National Socialism, together with an explanation of the Jewish question)."[1] The manuscript was presented for Dr. Moritz's review in 1937. Once again, he rejected the translation, saying it was incomprehensible.[2]

1937 translation

Al-Sadati published his translation of Mein Kampf in Cairo in 1937 without German approval.[1] According to Yekutiel Gershoni and James Jankowski, the Sadati translation did not receive wide circulation.[3] However, the local Arab weekly Rose al-Yūsuf then used passages from an original 1930 German version to infer that Hitler deemed the Egyptians a "decadent people composed of cripples."[2] The review raised angry responses. Hamid Maliji, an Egyptian attorney wrote:[4]

Arab friends:...The Arabic copies of Mein Kampf distributed in the Arab world do not conform to the original German edition since the instructions given to Germans regarding us have been removed. In addition, these excerpts do not reveal his [Hitler's] true opinion of us. Hitler asserts that Arabs are an inferior race, that the Arabic heritage has been pillaged from other civilizations, and that Arabs have neither culture nor art, as well as other insults and humiliations that he proclaims concerning us.

Another commentator, Niqula Yusuf, denounced the militant nationalism of Mein Kampf as "chauvinist".[citation needed]

The Egyptian journal al-Isala stated that "it was Hitler's tirades in Mein Kampf that turned anti-Semitism into a political doctrine and a program for action". al-Isala rejected Nazism in many publications.[5]

Attempts at revision

A German diplomat in Cairo suggested that instead of deleting the offending passage about Arabs, it would be better to add to the introduction a statement that "Egyptian people" were differentially developed and that the Egyptians standing at a higher level themselves do not want to be placed on the same level with their numerous backward fellow Egyptians.'"[2] Otto von Hentig, a staff member of the German foreign ministry suggested that the translation should be rewritten in a style "that every Muslim understands: the Koran," to give it a more sacred tone.[2] He said that "a truly good Arabic translation would meet with extensive sympathy in the whole Arabic speaking world from Morocco to India."[2] Eventually the translation was sent to Arab nationalism advocate Shakib Arslan. Arslan, who lived in Geneva, Switzerland, was an editor of La Nation arabe, an influential Arab nationalist paper. He also was a confidant of Haj Amin al-Husseini, a Palestinian Arab nationalist and Muslim leader in the British Mandate of Palestine, who met with Hitler.[2]

Arslan's 960-page translation was almost completed when the Germans requested to calculate the cost of the first 10,000 copies to be printed with "the title and back of the flexible cloth binding... lettered in gold."[1] On 21 December 1938 the project was rejected by the German Ministry of Propaganda because of the high cost of the projected publication.[2][1]

1963 translation

A new translation was published in 1963, translated by Luis al-Haj. Some authors claim that al-Hajj was a Nazi war criminal originally named Luis Heiden who fled to Egypt after World War II. However, Arabic sources[6] and more recent publications identify him as Louis al-Hajj (لويس الْحاج), a translator and writer from Lebanon, who later became the editor in chief of the newspaper al-Nahar (النَّهار) in Beirut, and who translated parts of Mein Kampf from French into Arabic in 1963.[7] Al-Hajj’s translation contains only fragments of Hitler’s 800-page book.

1995 edition

The book was republished in 1995 by Bisan Publishers in Beirut.[8]

As of 2002, news dealers on Edgware Road in central London, an area with a large Arab population, were selling the translation.[8] In 2005, the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center, an Israeli think tank, confirmed the continued sale of the Bisan edition in bookstores in Edgware Road.[9] In 2007 an Agence France-Presse reporter interviewed a bookseller at the Cairo International Book Fair who stated he had sold many copies of Mein Kampf.[10]

Role in Nazi propaganda

One of the leaders of the Syrian Ba'ath Party, Sami al-Jundi, wrote: "We were racialists, admiring Nazism, reading its books and the source of its thought... We were the first to think of translating Mein Kampf."[1]

According to Jeffrey Herf, "To be sure, the translations of Hitler's Mein Kampf and The Protocols of the Elders of Zion into Arabic were important sources of the diffusion of Nazi ideology and anti-Semitic conspiracy thinking to Arab and Muslim intellectuals. Although both texts were available in various Arabic editions before the war began, they played little role in the Third Reich's Arab propaganda."[2]

Mein Kampf and Arab nationalism

Mein Kampf has been pointed to as an example of the influence of Nazism for Arab nationalists. According to Stefan Wild of the University of Bonn, Hitler's philosophy of National Socialism – of a state headed by a single, strong, charismatic leader with a submissive and adoring people – was a model for the founders of the Arab nationalist movement. Arabs favored Germany over other European powers, because "Germany was seen as having no direct colonial or territorial ambitions in the area. This was an important point of sympathy", Wild wrote.[1] They also saw German nationhood—which preceded German statehood—as a model for their own movement.

In October 1938, anti-Jewish treatises that included extracts from Mein Kampf were disseminated at an Islamic parliamentarians' conference "for the defense of Palestine" in Cairo.[11][1][12]

During the Suez war

In a speech to the United Nations immediately following the Suez Crisis in 1956, Israeli Foreign Minister Golda Meir claimed that the Arabic translation of Mein Kampf was found in Egyptian soldiers' knapsacks. In the same speech she also described Gamal Abdel Nasser as a "disciple of Hitler who was determined to annihilate Israel".[13] After the war, David Ben-Gurion likened Nasser's Philosophy of the Revolution to Hitler's Mein Kampf,[14] a comparison also made by French Prime Minister Guy Mollet, though Time Magazine at the time discounted this comparison as "overreaching".[15] "Seen from Washington and New York, Nasser was not Hitler and Suez was not the Sinai," writes Philip Daniel Smith, dismissing the comparison.[15] According to Benny Morris, however, Nasser had not publicly called for the destruction of Israel until after the war, but other Egyptian politicians preceded him in this regard.[14] The second generation of Israeli history textbooks included a photograph of Hitler's Mein Kampf found at Egyptian posts during the war. Elie Podeh writes that the depiction is "probably genuine", but that it "served to dehumanize Egypt (and especially Nasser) by associating it with the Nazis."[16]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Stefan Wild (1985). "National Socialism in the Arab near East between 1933 and 1939". Die Welt des Islams. Brill Publishers. XXV (1): 126–173. JSTOR 1571079.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Jeffrey Herf (30 November 2009). Nazi propaganda for the Arab world. Yale University Press. pp. 24–26. ISBN 978-0-300-14579-3.
  3. ^ Yekutiel Gershoni; James Jankowski (21 October 2009). Confronting Fascism in Egypt: Dictatorship versus Democracy in the 1930. Stanford University Press. p. 180. ISBN 978-0-8047-6344-8.
  4. ^ Emily Benichou Gottreich; Daniel J. Schroeter (1 July 2011). Jewish Culture and Society in North Africa. Indiana University Press. p. 309. ISBN 978-0-253-22225-1.
  5. ^ Yekutiel Gershoni; James Jankowski (21 October 2009). Confronting Fascism in Egypt: Dictatorship versus Democracy in the 1930. Stanford University Press. p. 157. ISBN 978-0-8047-6344-8.
  6. ^ "كتاب أسود". Al-Hayat newspaper. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  7. ^ Drißner Gerald (1 October 2017). "The Arabic verb: "to behave like Adolf Hitler"". Arabic for Nerds. Retrieved 1 October 2017.
  8. ^ a b Sean O'Neill and John Steele (19 March 2002). "Mein Kampf for sale, in Arabic". The Daily Telegraph. UK.
  9. ^ . Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center. 10 October 2005. Archived from the original on 17 August 2011. Retrieved 7 August 2011.
  10. ^ . Agence France-Presse. 2 February 2007. Archived from the original on 30 March 2012. Retrieved 2 August 2011.
  11. ^ Klaus-Michael Mallmann; Martin Cüppers (1 July 2010). Nazi Palestine: The Plans for the Extermination of the Jews in Palestine. Enigma Books. pp. 31–37. ISBN 978-1-929631-93-3.
  12. ^ David Patterson (18 October 2010). A Genealogy of Evil: Anti-Semitism from Nazism to Islamic Jihad. Cambridge University Press. p. 104. ISBN 978-0-521-13261-9.
  13. ^ Golda Meir (1973). Marie Syrkin (ed.). A land of our own: an oral autobiography. Putnam. pp. 96. ISBN 9780399110696.
  14. ^ a b Benny Morris (1 September 1997). Israel's border wars, 1949–1956: Arab infiltration, Israeli retaliation, and the countdown to the Suez War. Clarendon Press. p. 286. ISBN 978-0-19-829262-3.
  15. ^ a b Philip Daniel Smith (2005). Why war?: the cultural logic of Iraq, the Gulf War, and Suez. University of Chicago Press. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-226-76388-0.
  16. ^ Elie Podeh (2000). The Arab–Israeli conflict in Israeli history textbooks, 1948–2000. Bergin & Garvey. p. 112. ISBN 978-1-59311-298-1.

See also

mein, kampf, arabic, mein, kampf, arabic, كفاحي, romanized, kifāḥī, struggle, adolf, hitler, page, autobiography, outlining, political, views, been, translated, into, arabic, number, times, since, early, 1930s, front, cover, 1995, edition, mein, kampf, issued,. Mein Kampf Arabic كفاحي romanized Kifaḥi lit My Struggle Adolf Hitler s 900 page autobiography outlining his political views has been translated into Arabic a number of times since the early 1930s The front cover of the 1995 edition of Mein Kampf issued by Bisan Publishers and sold in London This edition was a republishing of a translation first published in 1963 Contents 1 Translations 1 1 Translations between 1934 and 1937 1 2 1937 translation 1 3 Attempts at revision 1 4 1963 translation 1 5 1995 edition 2 Role in Nazi propaganda 3 Mein Kampf and Arab nationalism 4 During the Suez war 5 References 6 See alsoTranslations EditTranslations between 1934 and 1937 Edit The first attempts to translate Mein Kampf into Arabic were extracts in various Arab newspapers in the early 1930s Journalist and Arab nationalist Yunus al Sabawi published translated extracts in the Baghdad newspaper al Alam al Arabi alarming the Baghdadi Jewish community 1 Lebanese newspaper Al Nida also separately published extractions in 1934 2 The German consulate denied it had been in touch with Al Nida for these initial translations 1 Whether a translation published by the Nazi regime would be allowed ultimately depended on Hitler 1 Fritz Grobba the German ambassador to the Kingdom of Iraq played a key role in urging the translation 2 The largest issue was the book s racism Grobba suggested modifying the text in ways that correspond to the sensitivities of the race conscious Arabs such as changing anti Semitic to anti Jewish bastardized to dark and toning down arguments for the supremacy of the Aryan race 2 Hitler wanted to avoid allowing any modifications but accepted the Arabic book changes after two years Grobba sent 117 clippings from al Sabawi s translations but Bernhard Moritz an Arabist consultant for the German Government who was also fluent in Arabic said the proposed translation was incomprehensible and rejected it This particular attempt ended at that time 2 1 Subsequently the Ministry of Propaganda of Germany decided to proceed with the translation via the German bookshop Overhamm in Cairo 1 The translator was Ahmad Mahmud al Sadati a Muslim and the publisher of one of the first Arabic books on National Socialism Adolf Hitler za im al ishtirakiya al waṭaniya ma al bayan lil mas ala al yahudiya Adolf Hitler leader of National Socialism together with an explanation of the Jewish question 1 The manuscript was presented for Dr Moritz s review in 1937 Once again he rejected the translation saying it was incomprehensible 2 1937 translation Edit Al Sadati published his translation of Mein Kampf in Cairo in 1937 without German approval 1 According to Yekutiel Gershoni and James Jankowski the Sadati translation did not receive wide circulation 3 However the local Arab weekly Rose al Yusuf then used passages from an original 1930 German version to infer that Hitler deemed the Egyptians a decadent people composed of cripples 2 The review raised angry responses Hamid Maliji an Egyptian attorney wrote 4 Arab friends The Arabic copies of Mein Kampf distributed in the Arab world do not conform to the original German edition since the instructions given to Germans regarding us have been removed In addition these excerpts do not reveal his Hitler s true opinion of us Hitler asserts that Arabs are an inferior race that the Arabic heritage has been pillaged from other civilizations and that Arabs have neither culture nor art as well as other insults and humiliations that he proclaims concerning us Another commentator Niqula Yusuf denounced the militant nationalism of Mein Kampf as chauvinist citation needed The Egyptian journal al Isala stated that it was Hitler s tirades in Mein Kampf that turned anti Semitism into a political doctrine and a program for action al Isala rejected Nazism in many publications 5 Attempts at revision Edit A German diplomat in Cairo suggested that instead of deleting the offending passage about Arabs it would be better to add to the introduction a statement that Egyptian people were differentially developed and that the Egyptians standing at a higher level themselves do not want to be placed on the same level with their numerous backward fellow Egyptians 2 Otto von Hentig a staff member of the German foreign ministry suggested that the translation should be rewritten in a style that every Muslim understands the Koran to give it a more sacred tone 2 He said that a truly good Arabic translation would meet with extensive sympathy in the whole Arabic speaking world from Morocco to India 2 Eventually the translation was sent to Arab nationalism advocate Shakib Arslan Arslan who lived in Geneva Switzerland was an editor of La Nation arabe an influential Arab nationalist paper He also was a confidant of Haj Amin al Husseini a Palestinian Arab nationalist and Muslim leader in the British Mandate of Palestine who met with Hitler 2 Arslan s 960 page translation was almost completed when the Germans requested to calculate the cost of the first 10 000 copies to be printed with the title and back of the flexible cloth binding lettered in gold 1 On 21 December 1938 the project was rejected by the German Ministry of Propaganda because of the high cost of the projected publication 2 1 1963 translation Edit A new translation was published in 1963 translated by Luis al Haj Some authors claim that al Hajj was a Nazi war criminal originally named Luis Heiden who fled to Egypt after World War II However Arabic sources 6 and more recent publications identify him as Louis al Hajj لويس ال حاج a translator and writer from Lebanon who later became the editor in chief of the newspaper al Nahar الن هار in Beirut and who translated parts of Mein Kampf from French into Arabic in 1963 7 Al Hajj s translation contains only fragments of Hitler s 800 page book 1995 edition Edit The book was republished in 1995 by Bisan Publishers in Beirut 8 As of 2002 news dealers on Edgware Road in central London an area with a large Arab population were selling the translation 8 In 2005 the Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center an Israeli think tank confirmed the continued sale of the Bisan edition in bookstores in Edgware Road 9 In 2007 an Agence France Presse reporter interviewed a bookseller at the Cairo International Book Fair who stated he had sold many copies of Mein Kampf 10 Role in Nazi propaganda EditOne of the leaders of the Syrian Ba ath Party Sami al Jundi wrote We were racialists admiring Nazism reading its books and the source of its thought We were the first to think of translating Mein Kampf 1 According to Jeffrey Herf To be sure the translations of Hitler s Mein Kampf and The Protocols of the Elders of Zion into Arabic were important sources of the diffusion of Nazi ideology and anti Semitic conspiracy thinking to Arab and Muslim intellectuals Although both texts were available in various Arabic editions before the war began they played little role in the Third Reich s Arab propaganda 2 Mein Kampf and Arab nationalism EditMein Kampf has been pointed to as an example of the influence of Nazism for Arab nationalists According to Stefan Wild of the University of Bonn Hitler s philosophy of National Socialism of a state headed by a single strong charismatic leader with a submissive and adoring people was a model for the founders of the Arab nationalist movement Arabs favored Germany over other European powers because Germany was seen as having no direct colonial or territorial ambitions in the area This was an important point of sympathy Wild wrote 1 They also saw German nationhood which preceded German statehood as a model for their own movement In October 1938 anti Jewish treatises that included extracts from Mein Kampf were disseminated at an Islamic parliamentarians conference for the defense of Palestine in Cairo 11 1 12 During the Suez war EditIn a speech to the United Nations immediately following the Suez Crisis in 1956 Israeli Foreign Minister Golda Meir claimed that the Arabic translation of Mein Kampf was found in Egyptian soldiers knapsacks In the same speech she also described Gamal Abdel Nasser as a disciple of Hitler who was determined to annihilate Israel 13 After the war David Ben Gurion likened Nasser s Philosophy of the Revolution to Hitler s Mein Kampf 14 a comparison also made by French Prime Minister Guy Mollet though Time Magazine at the time discounted this comparison as overreaching 15 Seen from Washington and New York Nasser was not Hitler and Suez was not the Sinai writes Philip Daniel Smith dismissing the comparison 15 According to Benny Morris however Nasser had not publicly called for the destruction of Israel until after the war but other Egyptian politicians preceded him in this regard 14 The second generation of Israeli history textbooks included a photograph of Hitler s Mein Kampf found at Egyptian posts during the war Elie Podeh writes that the depiction is probably genuine but that it served to dehumanize Egypt and especially Nasser by associating it with the Nazis 16 References Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l Stefan Wild 1985 National Socialism in the Arab near East between 1933 and 1939 Die Welt des Islams Brill Publishers XXV 1 126 173 JSTOR 1571079 a b c d e f g h i j k l Jeffrey Herf 30 November 2009 Nazi propaganda for the Arab world Yale University Press pp 24 26 ISBN 978 0 300 14579 3 Yekutiel Gershoni James Jankowski 21 October 2009 Confronting Fascism in Egypt Dictatorship versus Democracy in the 1930 Stanford University Press p 180 ISBN 978 0 8047 6344 8 Emily Benichou Gottreich Daniel J Schroeter 1 July 2011 Jewish Culture and Society in North Africa Indiana University Press p 309 ISBN 978 0 253 22225 1 Yekutiel Gershoni James Jankowski 21 October 2009 Confronting Fascism in Egypt Dictatorship versus Democracy in the 1930 Stanford University Press p 157 ISBN 978 0 8047 6344 8 كتاب أسود Al Hayat newspaper Retrieved 1 October 2017 Drissner Gerald 1 October 2017 The Arabic verb to behave like Adolf Hitler Arabic for Nerds Retrieved 1 October 2017 a b Sean O Neill and John Steele 19 March 2002 Mein Kampf for sale in Arabic The Daily Telegraph UK Exporting Arabic anti Semitic publications issued in the Middle East to Britain Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center 10 October 2005 Archived from the original on 17 August 2011 Retrieved 7 August 2011 Massive Cairo book fair sets religious tone Agence France Presse 2 February 2007 Archived from the original on 30 March 2012 Retrieved 2 August 2011 Klaus Michael Mallmann Martin Cuppers 1 July 2010 Nazi Palestine The Plans for the Extermination of the Jews in Palestine Enigma Books pp 31 37 ISBN 978 1 929631 93 3 David Patterson 18 October 2010 A Genealogy of Evil Anti Semitism from Nazism to Islamic Jihad Cambridge University Press p 104 ISBN 978 0 521 13261 9 Golda Meir 1973 Marie Syrkin ed A land of our own an oral autobiography Putnam pp 96 ISBN 9780399110696 a b Benny Morris 1 September 1997 Israel s border wars 1949 1956 Arab infiltration Israeli retaliation and the countdown to the Suez War Clarendon Press p 286 ISBN 978 0 19 829262 3 a b Philip Daniel Smith 2005 Why war the cultural logic of Iraq the Gulf War and Suez University of Chicago Press p 66 ISBN 978 0 226 76388 0 Elie Podeh 2000 The Arab Israeli conflict in Israeli history textbooks 1948 2000 Bergin amp Garvey p 112 ISBN 978 1 59311 298 1 See also EditAntisemitism in Islam Antisemitism in the Arab world Contemporary imprints of The Protocols of the Elders of Zion History of the Jews under Muslim rule Relations between Nazi Germany and the Arab world Mein Kampf in English Persecution of Jews in the Muslim world Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mein Kampf in Arabic amp oldid 1154238631, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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