Victory of Judaism over Germanism: Viewed from a Nonreligious Point of View

Wilhelm Marr

Although the term “anti-Semitism” was coined in 1860 by a liberal Jew named Moritz Steinschneider, it was Wilhelm Marr, a German nationalist, erstwhile socialist, and lifelong pamphleteer and agitator who popularized the term and added a layer of pseudo-scientific racial theorizing to anti-Jewish hatred when he published his best-known and best-selling work, The Victory of Judaism over Germanism, on this date in 1879. Marr worked as a businessman and journalist and married a series of four women, the first three of whom Jewish or part-Jewish. A German nationalist who favored unifying the German states into a nation, Marr argued that Jews should be excluded from that unification unless they were thoroughly committed to assimilation. The Pan-German League in which he was active would eventually adopt Marr’s racist ideas and bar Jews from membership — yet in the final years of his life (he died at 84 in 1904) this patriarch of Nazism actually renounced his conjuring of “the business of anti-Semitism” in an essay, “Testament of an Anti-Semite.”

Click Here to Read:  Victory of Judaism over Germanism: Viewed from a  Nonreligious Point of View by Wilhelm Marr publsihed in Bern by Rudolph Costenoble in 1879, Translation Copyright © 2009 Gerhard Rohringer on the Kevin MacDonald.net website.