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The global power of freemasonry - Gnostic Liberation Front

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In the magic Astrum Argentinum (Silver Star) lodge, which<br />

resembled a masonic lodge, Crowley taught black magic. He took his<br />

30 members from the Mysteria Mystica Maxima. He appointed himself<br />

Master <strong>of</strong> the Temple (Magister Templi). During the Second World<br />

War, Churchill consulted Crowley on issues <strong>of</strong> magic. After that, he<br />

began to use his famous V-sign.<br />

Hitler's first teacher <strong>of</strong> magic was a short Jewish hunchback, Ernst<br />

Pretzsche, who ran an occult bookshop in Vienna. He occasionally<br />

gave Hitler food, when he was hungry and pawned his occult books.<br />

Pretzsche had grown up in Mexico City where his father had been<br />

an apothecary. He had studied the ritual magic <strong>of</strong> the Aztecs. After<br />

the family had returned to Europe and Ernst Pretzsche had opened<br />

his bookshop, he became acquainted with the magician Guido von<br />

List, who in his Blood Lodge claimed he could make evil spirits<br />

materialize. When this lodge was exposed, it led to a scandal in the<br />

German-speaking countries.<br />

Pretzsche told the young Hitler <strong>of</strong> black magic and disclosed the<br />

secret behind astrological and alchemical symbols (Ken Anderson,<br />

"Hitler and the Occult", New York, 1995, p. 75).<br />

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