- Adolf Hitler
Adolf Hitler (20 April 1889 - 30 April 1945) was the leader of the National Socialist German Workers Party (The Nazi party). He was appointed Chancellor of Germany in 1933, and became FAhrer (leader) [2] in 1934, remaining in power until his suicide in 1945.
- Martin Luther
Martin Luther was a German monk, theologian, and church reformer. Luther's theology challenged the authority of the papacy by emphasizing the Bible as the sole source of religious authority and the church as a priesthood of all believers. According to Luther, salvation was attainable only by faith in Jesus as the messiah, a faith unmediated by the church. These ideas helped to inspire the Protestant Reformation and changed the course of Western civilization.
- Mel Gibson
Mel Columcille Gerard Gibson (born January 3 1956) is an American-born actor, director, and producer raised primarily in Australia. After establishing himself as a household name with the "Mad Max" and "Lethal Weapon" series, Gibson went on to direct and star in the Academy Award-winning "Braveheart". Gibson's direction of "Braveheart" made him the sixth actor-turned-filmmaker to receive an Oscar for Best Director.
- Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
(born October 28, 1956) is the 6th and current president of the Islamic Republic of Iran. He became president on 6 August 2005 after winning the 2005 presidential election. Ahmadinejad's current term will end in August, 2009, but he will be eligible to run for one more term in office in 2009 presidential elections. Before becoming president, he was the Mayor of Tehran. He is the highest directly elected official in the country, but, …
- David Irving
David John Cawdell Irving is a British writer specializing in the military history of World War II. He is the author of 30 books, including "The Destruction of Dresden" (1963), "Hitler's War" (1977), "Uprising!" (1981), "Churchill's War" (1987), and "Goebbels — Mastermind of the Third Reich" (1996).
- Jesse Jackson
Jesse Louis Jackson, Sr. (born October 8, 1941) is a professional civil rights activist and Baptist minister. He was a candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1984 and 1988, and is a prominent leader of the American Christian left. He is the father of Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr.
- David Duke
David Ernest Duke is a former member of the Louisiana House of Representatives, a candidate in presidential primaries for both the Democratic and Republican parties, and former Grand Wizard of the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan. Duke is a self-styled "white nationalist," and he is commonly referred to by his opponents as a white supremacist. He says he does not think of himself as a racist, however, …
- Henry Ford
Henry Ford (July 30, 1863 - April 7, 1947) was the founder of the Ford Motor Company and father of modern assembly lines used in mass production. His introduction of the Model T automobile revolutionized transportation and American industry. He was a prolific inventor and was awarded 161 U.S. patents. As sole owner of the Ford Company he became one of the richest and best-known people in the world.
- Louis Farrakhan
Louis Farrakhan (born Louis Eugene Walcott, May 11, 1933), is the head of the Nation of Islam. Farrakhan is the leader of African-American Muslims inside and outside the Nation of Islam. Farrakhan has been the center of much controversy, and critics have, among other things, claimed that his views are racist and antisemitic Farrakhan denies these charges.
- Abraham Foxman
Abraham Henry Foxman (born 1940) is the current National Director and chairman of the Anti-Defamation League of B'nai B'rith.
- Joseph Goebbels
Paul Joseph Goebbels (29 October 1897–1 May 1945) was a German politician and Minister for Public Enlightenment and Propaganda during the National Socialist regime from 1933 to 1945. He was one of Adolf Hitler's closest associates and most devout followers. Goebbels was known for his zealous, energetic oratory and virulent anti-Semitism. Goebbels earned a Ph.D. from Heidelberg University in 1921, …
- Israel Shamir
Israel Shamir is a writer and journalist who is known as a controversial anti-Zionist. He is a citizen of Sweden, where his legal name is Adam Ermash (previously Jöran Jermas). Critics (including several pro-Palestinian activists) have accused Shamir of anti-Semitism and of misrepresenting his background and career.
- Matthias Küntzel
Matthias Küntzel, is a German author and a political scientist. He is a research associate at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and a member of Scholars for Peace in the Middle East.
- Israel Shahak
Israel Shahak (April 28, 1933 - July 2, 2001) was a Polish-born Israeli Professor of Chemistry at Hebrew University in Jerusalem, the former president of the Israeli League for Human and Civil Rights, and an outspoken critic of the Israeli government and of Israeli society in general. Shahak's writings on Judaism have been the source of considerable controversy
- Wilhelm Marr
Wilhelm Marr was a German agitator and theorist, who coined the term "antisemitism" as a euphemism for the German "Judenhass", or "Jew-hate". Marr was an unemployed journalist, who claimed that he had lost his job due to Jewish interference. A political conservative, he was influenced by the conservative pan-German movement, as expounded by Johann Gottfried von Herder, who developed the idea of the "Volk", …
- Alfred Rosenberg
"'"' (January 12, 1893 Reval (nowadays Tallinn) – October 16, 1946) was an early and intellectually influential member of the Nazi party, who later held several important posts in the Nazi government. He is considered the main author of key Nazi ideological creeds, including its racial theory, persecution of the Jews, "Lebensraum", abolition of the Treaty of Versailles, and opposition to "degenerate" modern art. He is also known for his rejection of Christianity.
- Gilad Atzmon
Gilad Atzmon (born June 9, 1963) is a jazz musician, author and anti-Zionist activist, who was born in Israel and currently lives in London. He was born a secular Israeli Jew in Tel Aviv, and trained at the Rubin Academy of Music in Jerusalem. He studied philosophy in Germany and moved to London at age 32.
- Daniel Goldhagen
Daniel Jonah Goldhagen (born 1959) is an Jewish-American political scientist. He is best known for his book, "Hitler's Willing Executioners" (1996), which posits that ordinary Germans not only knew about, but also supported, the Holocaust because of a unique and virulent "eliminationist" antisemitism in the German identity, which had developed in the preceding centuries.
- Ahmed Rami
Ahmed Rami is a secular Swedish writer and Holocaust denier. He gained attention as the founder of the radio station Radio Islam, which now functions as a website. His extreme political ideas are far from mainstream Swedish Islam. Rami was born in Tafraoute, Morocco, where he was an army officer and still claims to have close ties with General Mohamed Oufkir. He sought and obtained political asylum in Sweden in 1973, …
- Joseph Massad
Joseph Andoni Massad is an Associate Professor of Modern Arab Politics and Intellectual History at Columbia University. He is of Palestinian Arab descent from a Christian family. He became the center of a controversy over Anti-Zionism, antisemitism, and academic freedom in 2004 and 2005.
- Willis Carto
Willis Allison Carto (born July 17, 1926 in Indiana) is a longtime figure on the far right wing of American politics. He describes himself as Jeffersonian and populist, although the Anti-Defamation League and other critics say he promotes thinly-disguised antisemitism and Neo-Nazism.
- Lyndon Larouche
Lyndon Hermyle LaRouche, Jr. (born September 8, 1922 in Rochester, New Hampshire) is an American political activist and founder of several political organizations in the United States and elsewhere, jointly referred to as the LaRouche movement. He is known as a perennial candidate for President of the United States, having run in eight elections since 1976, once as a U.S. Labor Party candidate and seven times as a candidate for the Democratic Party nomination.
- Ahmed Yassin
Sheikh Ahmed Ismail Yassin was the co-founder (with Abdel Aziz al-Rantissi) and the spiritual leader of the militant Palestinian Islamist organization Hamas, originally calling it "the Palestinian Wing of the Muslim Brotherhood". In addition to being nearly blind, he was a paraplegic and had to use a wheelchair after a playground accident in his youth. He was assassinated by an Israeli helicopter gunship.
- David Mamet
David Alan Mamet (born) is an American author, essayist, playwright, screenwriter, and film director. His works are known for their clever, terse, sometimes vulgar dialogue, arcane stylized phrasing, and for his exploration of masculinity. As a playwright, he received Tony nominations for "Glengarry Glen Ross" (1984) and "Speed-the-Plow" (1988). As a screenwriter, he received Oscar nominations for "The Verdict" (1982) and "Wag the Dog" (1997).
- Houston Stewart Chamberlain
Houston Stewart Chamberlain (September 9, 1855 - January 9, 1927) was a British-born naturalized German natural scientist, and author of popular scientific and political philosophy books (includes those on Richard Wagner, Immanuel Kant and Johann Wolfgang Goethe) as well as proponent of a nationalist and pan-Germanic antisemitism.
- Bobby Fischer
Robert James "Bobby" Fischer is a United States-born chess Grandmaster who in 1972 became the only US-born chessplayer to become the official World Chess Champion. In 1974 he officially resigned the title when FIDE, the international chess federation, refused to accept his conditions for a title defense. He is a regular candidate in considerations of the greatest chess player of all time.
- Michael Neumann
Michael Neumann (born 1946) is a professor of philosophy at Trent University in Ontario, Canada. He is the author of "What's Left?" and "The Rule of Law" and has published papers on utilitarianism and rationality.
- Charles Coughlin
Charles Edward Coughlin (October 25, 1891 - October 27, 1979) was a Canadian-born Roman Catholic priest at Royal Oak, Michigan's National Shrine of the Little Flower Church. He was one of the first political leaders to use radio to reach a mass audience, as more than forty million tuned to his weekly broadcasts during the 1930s.
- Horst Mahler
Horst Mahler (born Haynau, Lower Silesia, January 23, 1936), is a German lawyer and active member within both the Nationaldemokratische Partei Deutschlands (NPD) and the Deutsches Kolleg. The latter is a "far-right" think tank calling for a nationalist-racialist and socialist revolution in Germany. Along with Reinhold Oberlercher and Uwe Meenen, he stands against Western democratic and liberal ideals.
- Robert Michael
Dr. Robert Michael is an American historian. He currently is Professor Emeritus of European History at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, where he has taught about the Holocaust for nearly thirty years. He has published more than 50 articles and eleven books on the Holocaust and the history of Antisemitism.
- Liberty Lobby
Liberty Lobby was a political advocacy organization which existed in the United States between 1955 and 2001. It was founded by Willis Carto. Liberty Lobby was the subject of much criticism from all quarters of the political spectrum. While Liberty Lobby was founded as a conservative political organization, Willis Carto was known to hold strongly anti-Semitic views, and to be a devotee of the writings of Francis Parker Yockey, …
- Jacob Katz
- Pierre-André Taguieff
Pierre-André Taguieff, born in 1946 in Paris, is a philosopher and political economist, and director of research at CNRS (in an "Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris (Sciences Po)" laboratory, the CEVIPOF). He is the author of many essays in sociology, mainly concerning the questions of racism, racialism (or "scientific racism"), antisemitism and historical revisionism.
- Stephen Sizer
The Reverend Dr. Stephen Robert Sizer (b. 1953) is the Anglican Vicar of Virginia Water, Surrey, England. He gained his BA from Sussex, an MA in Theology from Oxford University in 1994 and a PhD from Oak Hill Theological College and Middlesex University. He specialises in Christian Zionism and the theology, politics and history of the Middle East, especially Israel.
- Heinrich von Treitschke
Heinrich Gotthard von Treitschke (September 15, 1834 - April 28, 1896) was a nationalist German historian and antisemitic political writer during the time of the German Empire.
- Eustace Mullins
Eustace Clarence Mullins, Jr. (born 1923) is an American political writer, author, biographer, and the last surviving protege of the famous, 20th century intellectual and writer, Ezra Pound. He is also known as conspiracy theorist and has been accused of anti-Semitism by the Anti-Defamation League. As of 2005, Eustace Mullins is a member of the Southeast Bureau editorial staff of far-right Willis Carto's American Free Press.
- Edouard Drumont
Édouard Adolphe Drumont was a French journalist and writer, founder in 1889 of the Antisemitic League of France. He was born at Paris. He was at first in the government service, but later became a contributor to the press and was the author of a number of miscellaneous works, of which "Mon vieux Paris" (1879) was crowned by the Academy.
- Inayat Bunglawala
Inayat Bunglawala is media secretary of the Muslim Council of Britain. He has written articles for "The Times", "Daily Telegraph", "The Guardian", "Daily Express", "The Observer" and "The Sun" focusing on Islam and current affairs. He is an activist for Islamic concerns and joined the Young Muslims UK in 1987.
- Yitzhak Arad
Yitzhak Arad is a Lithuanian-born Israeli historian and retired IDF brigadier general. A veteran of the Nazi-era Jewish resistance movement in ghetto and partisan combat, he has researched, lectured, and published extensively on the Holocaust. Dr. Yitzhak Arad was born Itzhak Rudnicki in Swieciany (Svencionys) on November 11, 1926. In his youth, he belonged to the Zionist youth movement "Ha-No'ar ha-Tsiyyoni".
- Douglas Reed
Douglas Reed (1895-1976) was a British journalist, playwright, novelist, and author of a number of books on political analysis. His book "Insanity Fair" (1938) was one of the most influential in publicising the state of Europe and the megalomania of Adolf Hitler before the war. According to his obituary in "The Times", Reed was a "virulent anti-Semite."