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Arabic copy of Adolf Hitler’s ‘Mein Kampf’ found inside child’s room in Gaza

An Arabic translation of Adolf Hitler’s sick manifesto, “Mein Kampf,” was found inside a child’s bedroom at a Hamas terror base in the Gaza Strip, Israeli authorities reported.

The copy of the Nazi leader’s 1925 autobiography outlining his deadly journey into antisemitism and the genocide of millions of Jews and other ethnic minorities during the Holocaust included “annotations and highlights,” Israel Defense Forces said in a post on X on Sunday.

“The book was discovered among the personal belongs of one of the terrorists,” the IDF said in the online post.

“Hamas embraces the ideology of Hitler, the one responsible for the annihilation of the Jewish People.”

The troubling find came as Israeli military forces battle radical Hamas terrorists inside the Gaza Strip following the Oct. 7 sneak attack which left 1,400 Israelis dead.

Israel’s retaliatory offensive has left millions of Palestinians homeless and thousands more dead as military forces from the Jewish State seek out Hamas installations and strongholds.

Gaza has been the scene of intense fighting in recent days as Israeli ground forces advance against the terrorists behind the shocking Oct. 7 assault which almost exclusively targeted civilians. Hamas captured more than 220 hostages in the attack — many of whom were later confirmed to have been killed.

The conflict has sparked clashes between pro-Palestinian protesters and pro-Israeli demonstrators, including at many US college campuses and hotspots in the Big Apple.

Last week, a violent mob of pro-Palestinian protesters swarmed Grand Central Terminal and splattered blood on the New York Times building, part of the rowdy “Flood Manhattan for Gaza” rally.

Ivy League campuses including Columbia, Cornell, Harvard and Yale universities have become hotbeds for antisemitism — prompting an exodus of wealthy board members and donors, including Jewish billionaire Henry Swieca, who announced this week he would resign from the Columbia board.

Last month, a protester in Midtown Manhattan flashed a swastika during one demonstration.

The Nazi emblem is widely acknowledged as the symbol of violent antisemitism worn by the German army during World War II and the Holocaust, during which six million Jews and millions of ethnic Europeans were systematically murdered in the late 1930s and early 1940s.

“Mein Kampf,” which translates to “My Struggle,” was penned by Hitler after he was wounded in World War I, and later provided the outline for the holocaust and became a primer for Nazi atrocities during the war.

The Nazi emblem is widely acknowledged as the symbol of violent antisemitism worn by the German army during World War II and the Holocaust, during which six million Jews and millions of ethnic Europeans were systematically murdered in the late 1930s and early 1940s.

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