A mother and her young boy are
gathering mushrooms in the German forest. The boy finds some poisonous ones.
The mother explains that there are good mushrooms and poisonous ones, and, as
they go home, says:
“Look, Franz,
human beings in this world are like the mushrooms in the forest. There are good
mushrooms and there are good people. There are poisonous, bad mushrooms and
there are bad people. And we have to be on our guard against bad people just as
we have to be on guard against poisonous mushrooms. Do you understand that?”
“Yes, mother,”
Franz replies. “I understand that in dealing with bad people trouble may arise,
just as when one eats a poisonous mushroom. One may even die!”
“And do you
know, too, who these bad men are, these poisonous mushrooms of mankind?” the
mother continued.
Franz slaps his
chest in pride:
“Of course I
know, mother! They are the Jews! Our teacher has often told us about them.”
The mother
praises her boy for his intelligence, and goes on to explain the different
kinds of “poisonous” Jews: the Jewish pedlar, the Jewish cattle-dealer, the
Kosher butcher, the Jewish doctor, the baptised Jew, and so on.
“However they
disguise themselves, or however friendly they try to be, affirming a thousand
times their good intentions to us, one must not believe them. Jews they are and
Jews they remain. For our Volk they are poison.”
“Like the
poisonous mushroom!” says Franz.
“Yes, my child!
Just as a single poisonous mushrooms can kill a whole family, so a solitary Jew
can destroy a whole village, a whole city, even an entire Volk.”
Franz has
understood.
“Tell me,
mother, do all Gentiles know that the Jew is as dangerous as a poisonous
mushroom?”
Mother shakes
her head.
“Unfortunately
not, my child. There are millions of Gentiles who do not yet know the Jews. So
we have to enlighten people and warn them against the Jews. Our young people,
too, must be warned. Our boys and girls must learn to know the Jew. They must
learn that the Jew is the most dangerous poison-mushroom in existence. Just as
poisonous mushrooms spring up everywhere, so the Jew is found in every country
in the world. Just as poisonous mushrooms often lead to the most dreadful
calamity, so the Jew is the cause of misery and distress, illness and death.”
The author then
concludes this story by pointing the moral:
German youth
must learn to recognise the Jewish poison-mushroom. They must learn what a
danger the Jew is for the German Volk and for the whole world. They must learn
that the Jewish problem involves the destiny of us all.
“The following
tales tell the truth about the Jewish poison-mushroom. They show the many
shapes the Jew assumes. They show the depravity and baseness of the Jewish
race. They show the Jew for what he really is:
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