Why did Hitler want to be a Muslim?

Our bad “Fate that we have chosen the wrong faith”. So Hitler once complained to his architect, Albert Sper. “Why should we have Christianity with its mildness and wisdom?”, he asked. For the Nazi leader, Islam was “the believing of men” (Männerregion) Clean as well. “The soldiers of Islam” went to a military paradise, [...]
Our bad “Fate that we have chosen the wrong faith”. So Hitler once complained to his architect, Albert Sper. “Why should we have Christianity with its mildness and wisdom?”, he asked. For the Nazi leader, Islam was “the believing of men” (Männerregion) Clean as well.
“The soldiers of Islam” went to the military paradise, with the beautiful “frequent names” and the “summer super”, “a true land paradise”. This, Hitler argued, suits the German “emment”, rather than the Jewish “and the folly of Christian priests”. Historian David Mottadel of Cambridge University writes in his book “Islam and the war of Nazi Germany” that Nazi politics was one of the most powerful “odas to politicise and instrumentalise Islam in modern history”.
Hitler praised Turkey's first president, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, for submitting religion to the state, expulsion of Greeks and the massacre against Armenians. Motadel writes that during World War II, Muslims fought on both sides, but only between Nazis and Muslims had a political-spiritual relationship.
Both groups hated liberal democracy, Jews and Bolsheviks.
In April 1942, Hitler became the first European leader to declare Islam to be “unable to commit acts of terrorism”, the ILJ text broadcasts. During the war, Balkan Muslims were included by Nazi authorities on the list of well-bred “people in Europe”.
Palestinian Arab leader Haj Amin al Hussain, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem, recruited several thousand of the German <x0m>mlymilian”, as the first non-German volunteers to serve as volunteers in Hitler's Schutzstaffel (SS).
In November 1944, Himmler, the commander of the SS, and the Grand Mufti established the Imperial Military School in Dresden under the care of the SS. After the war ended, some Muslim Nazis fled and entered Saudi Arabia's government as advisers.












