Most likely of Scotch-Irish origin. It helps to do a little research on the matter before spouting off There's no way to prove to you because it's a covered truth that nobody knows about and you are too ignorant to believe!
Johan Wolf, Vienna, Austria It sounds like you are trying to direct people away from the fact that your own surname, Wolf is what Hitler's sister Paula had changed her name to. So, maybe I do care. I would hate the name Hitler. But, who really cares what his name used to be. It is believed that they have been there since the early or mid s. There was a road with the Hitler name in southern Ohio named after a very respectable family with the name Hitler long before the Nazi era in the 19th century.
I don't know if the name of the road has changed since the days of the Nazis. It would be interesting to find out. His last name was Thomas. He actually played basketball at UCLA throughout the 30's and didn't look at all like the photographs of the "Hitler" we know.
The man with the moustache was a stunt double. Jason Thomas, on the other hand, looked a lot like the actor Tim Allen. I too wanted to know if there are still people with the name Hitler. Also, some research shows that in fact, Schiklgruber, Hiedler, and Hitler are names associated with Adolf Hitler. I don't know where the other names mentioned come from.
I do know there are so many rumors about Hitler, so I try to stay with the facts as I can find them. Yes there is no other Hitler name in the history books besides Schicklgruber. Hitler had his birth records destroyed. Read the Rise and Fall of the 3rd Reich, written from testimony from Hitlers official translator who was present at all foreign dignitary meetings. During WW2 authorities tried to have the town council change the name to Milton but the town refused, stating the symbol and name brought good luck in its native Holland.
A rose by any other name Huette is a hut small house , thus Huetteler is a builder of huts. It was originally Petit Cru meaning small growth. You are not Jewish unless your mother was I researched and found that his mother was RC.
I hate to think that the very people who gladly collaborated with nazis ie vichy french did this to take the heat off the fact that their religions endorsed and perpetuated such genocide against Jews from the time of Constantine till World War II It is not right to blame only Germany I am ashamed of my German heritage It's bigoted and discriminatory and no where to be found in the law of Moses.
That is something the Gentile-hating arbitrary Talmudists came up with. There is no logical reason why if your father is a Jew you are not Jewish if you came from him, it's pure stupidity to insist, "Because it's just been that way for a long time" that therefore it must be true.
That's a clear logical fallacy. He said he was raised not to avoid people of other races but not to mix with them socially or romantically.
But he said he would try to raise his children differently. That's fine, I don't really care," he said. IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser. Politics Covid U. News World Opinion Business.
How it would affect your life, positively or negatively. How your name plays into your identity. We all have our names, but if you don't have an odd name you usually just take it for granted. If you have an odd name, how might that affect you?
How would that shape your life? I wanted to take what is arguably one of the most notorious names in history and do a social study from that perspective. Was it hard getting people to take part? I'd imagine quite a few Hitlers would be happy to keep the name, but not necessarily want to make a big song and dance about it.
For a start, a lot of people with that name don't list it because they don't want prank calls. And yeah, it's also hard to get people to say yes, unfortunately. They assume it's going to be a judgment thing, but one of the points of the film is to not judge a book by its cover. Don't judge someone by their name; judge them by their actions.
There are good people with that name in the film and not so good people with that name in the film. Did you meet anyone who's really struggled with the name? I can go through a couple of scenarios. I mean, you have a guy like Jean Hitler, an older guy—he's probably 83 now—with four daughters, a wife, and a very nice life. He'd say he kept it because it was a family name that was around before Adolf Hitler. Why should he have to change it, you know?
He said it didn't affect him, but for his four daughters going through school… it's probably going to have had an effect on them. One of his daughters ran for, I think, class president, but got heckled off stage and didn't win. So people were affected in some way or another, some worse than others. Were there any people who were totally cool with it? Anyone whose peace with it surprised you? You have a girl like Emily Hittler, who—at the time we filmed her—was She lives in a small town outside of St.
Louis, so she's insulated by her friends and family. Though, we don't know what it's going to be like if she goes to college, gets a job, or leaves town. So a year-old today may not have as strong an opinion on Hitler as we did. Maybe if her name was Bin Laden it would be way worse for her.
I was going to mention that—whether you came across opinions on the name specifically colored by age or culture? Like how there are clothing stores in India named "Hitler" because the name isn't as big a part of the region's history as in Europe or America.
We explored all of that stuff. We explored stuff like that as a storyline in the film—we even explored other names to include in the storyline—but we didn't go there.
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