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1899: “The Jews of Germany” published today attempted to garne | This day in jew history

1899: “The Jews of Germany” published today attempted to garner sympathy for anti-Christs because of Count Walter Puckler-Muskau's somewhat successful attempt to follow in the steps of Adolf Stoeker, attempting to make his countrymen aware of jewish machinations. During his lectures in Berlin he encouraged his audience to wage a merciless war on ‘godless, lying, thievish Jews'.
In his addresses, mostly delivered in Berlin, he advised breaking into their stores, plundering, whipping, driving them from their homes, and killing them. From his constant repetition of "beat the Jews," "crack their skulls," "kick them out," and "thrash them," he has received the nickname "Dreschgraf" (the thrashing Count). The anti-jew journals, especially the Berlin "Staatsbürgerzeitung," which published his addresses, have greeted him as a worthy ally; yet some have repudiated his appeals to violence.
He was jailed in 1905, in which he appealed that one of the judges, Simonson, was jewish.