Two very interesting books about a piece of history no one acknowledges or talks about. “Orderly and Humane” by R. M. Douglas and “Forgotten Voices” by Ulrich Merten. Immediately after the Second World War, the victorious Allies authorized and helped to carry out the forced relocation of German speakers from their homes across central and southern Europe to Germany. The numbers were...
World War 2
This category contains everything on the topic World War 2 and all articles are related to the Maier files series. The posts are short and relevant concerning subject areas associated to World War II
The memory of the Rhine Meadow Camps, where thousands of German soldiers were held as prisoners by the Western Allies after World War II, remains disturbingly absent in Germany’s collective memory. This omission is not just a matter of historical oversight; it reflects deeper political motivations and the reluctance of mainstream historians to confront uncomfortable truths. For decades, the fate...
In the harrowing depths of history, certain events are etched with such darkness that they transcend the boundaries of time, becoming a relentless reminder of human suffering. The tragic tale of Breslau and East Prussia during the final months of World War II is one such chapter—a narrative of terror, desolation, and unimaginable human cruelty. In the Maier Files series,...
Mr. Lipinski wrote a controversial book, “The Horus Lodge,” (Die Horus Loge) or rather the statements of his grandfather are very controversial in this book. These statements contain an eerie echo to Rolf Naumann’s narrative that formed the basis for the Maier files series. Mr. Lipinski’s grandfather, Herbert Lipinski, a German-Polish translator for Willy Brandt, Erich Honecker, German industrialist Berthold...
Part 2 – Dennis Wheatley, Crowley and Ian Fleming Adventitiously Dennis Wheatley was a dear companion of the mysterious essayist Joan Grant who composed top of the line books about reincarnation. Novels such as “The Winged Pharaoh” taking into account her own particular life in Ancient Egypt. Grant practised Rosicrucian-sort sex magic rituals with her psychiatrist spouse. She was additionally...
We already mentioned some occult and secret society members who influenced war and pre-war decisions in England and worked for the intelligence services. In Germany there was a strange character named Baron Rudolf von Sebottendorf. It has also been claimed that his real name was Adam Alfred Rudolf Glauer. He founded the Germanen Order society and in 1919 he got...
A closer look at the conventional German flying saucer project in Prag. And the Schriever-Habermohl project as mentioned in the German news magazine Die Deutsche illustrierte. You can read the article here: https://www.maier-files.com/flying-saucer-invented-in-germany/ Rudolf Schriever and his flying saucer project. Schriever was an engineer and test pilot. We couldn’t find much about Otto Habermohl but he was certainly an engineer. Another player...
Did you know that witches consider amber as the best gemstone for locking thoughts and memories in place and keeping them safe? Known for its soothing properties Amber was used medicinally for thousands of years for headaches, heartaches, and pains of all kinds. (another hint in the Maier-files puzzle). One of the important threads in the Maier files series is...
When we think of WWII, the images are often stark, chilling, and well-documented: battles fought on bloodied soil, cities reduced to rubble, and the unyielding resilience of a world enduring turmoil. Yet, as historian Miriam Gebhardt’s Als die Soldaten kamen (When the Soldiers Came) shows us, an even darker narrative lurks behind these well-documented horrors—one that mainstream history has largely...
There is the strange case of Heinrich Himmler and his unlikely death. In April 1945, as the end of the Third Reich loomed, Hitler’s number one found a sudden and urgent desire to make peace with the ‘Allies’. When he was rebuffed, and his treason made public, Hitler ordered his arrest. Luckily for Himmler, Hitler promptly committed suicide in...
In The Women Who Flew for Hitler, Clare Mulley unveils the intertwined yet contrasting lives of Hanna Reitsch and Melitta von Stauffenberg, two of Nazi Germany’s female test pilots. These two women, while sharing a passion for flying and a commitment to their country, could not have been more different in their views and moral convictions. Mulley’s book is a...
“…how did it happen that scientists from the 1940s understood exactly where they were heading? They had applied after all ideas from XXI century physics… What arguments did they lay down (before the launch of work) that caused them to win the race for funds…? …The unusualness of all this is summed up by the fact, that descriptions of mercuric...