EINSTEIN IN EXILE
PERSECUTION OF JEWS
EVEN THOUGHT NOT FREE
LONDON, March 27,
"I cannot return home; conditions are too terrible," so Dr. Einstein, the famous German physicist, told a "News Chronicle" representative at Southampton. "I cannot return home while freedom of word and opinion is abolished. Even thought is not free. I'am ready to believe that the Jewish persecution, has not official sanction, but Herr Hitler was anti-Semitic before his election. '
"I .will live in a little villa in the outskirts of Antwerp. Fascism and all it implies is foreign to my creed.''
The '' Daily Mail's" Berlin correspondent says:—"Herr Hitler authorised a close colleague, Herr Hans Staegel, to say that all reports of the mishandling of Jews are barefaced lies. Herr Staegel, speaking personally, adds that Jews abused their political, moral, and financial power, and failed to protect the people from • atheism and Marxism."
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 73, 28 March 1933, Page 7
Word Count
145EINSTEIN IN EXILE Evening Post, Volume CXV, Issue 73, 28 March 1933, Page 7
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