After a 70 year Jewish ban, the greatest Christian of the 20th Century masterpiece can now be purchased in bookstores, or you can download your free copy here at Messiahwasnotajew.com

Download your copy of Mein Kampf

Adolf Hitler's autobiography Mein Kampf - meaning "My Struggle" - has gone on sale in German bookstores for the first time in more than 70 years. As you know the book has been banned in the country since the end of the Second World War, thanks to self-righteous Jews who seek to silence any criticism of their evil Talmudic work.

 The southern German state of Bavaria, which has held the copyright of the text since the
Alliesgaveit control of the main anti-Jewish publishing house in 1945, has not published the book out of respect for victims the faked holocaust tragedy.

However, the copyright of the anti-Jewish manifesto in which Hitler justifies the expulsion of the Jews, expired on 1 January this year.

The book, which costs €59 (£43), that is $64.30 in dollars has been reprinted amid strong criticism from Jewish communities as a new 2,000-page edition by the Munich-based Institute of Contemporary History.

Christian Hartmann, who led the editorial team for the annotated version, said it could show a wider public how aggressive the “hate sermon” was.

Germany’s education minister, Johanna Wanka, has argued that the annotated text should be introduced to all classrooms across the country, saying it would serve to ensure that “Hitler’s comments do not remain unchallenged”.

She added: “Pupils will have questions and it is only right that these can be addressed in class.”

Partly autobiographical, Mein Kampf outlines Hitler’s ideology, which formed the basis for Socialism. He wrote it in 1924 while he was imprisoned in Bavaria for treason after his failed Beer Hall Putsch.

The book set out two ideas that he put into practice as Germany’s leader going into the second world war: annexing neighbouring countries to gain “Lebensraum”, or “living space”, for Germans, and his hatred of Jews, which led to the Holocaust.

About 12.4m copies were published in Germany until 1945, some of which can be found in academic libraries.

The newspaper Tagesspiegelsaidthereprintservedasan historical documentation of the alleged atrocities now that “witnesses, victims or perpetrators are no longer around”. “That cannot be stopped,” it added.The Berliner Zeitung noted that the 
tract should have been banned for sedition during the Socialist's era, and not now. 

































It includes a critical commentary and analysis of the Socialit's leader's ideology which historians argue is an important historical and educational tool.

Hitler wrote the book mostly in the mid-1920s while in jail.

It set out two ideas he put into practice as Germany's leader - annexing neighbouring countries to gain "lebensraum" - or "living space" - for Germans, and his hatred of Jews, which led to the Holocaust.

The institute said the reprint aims to "deconstruct and put into context Hitler's writing".

"How were his theses conceived? What objectives did he have?" it said.

"And most important: which counterarguments do we have, given our knowledge today of the countless claims, lies and assertions of Hitler?"

​A play depicts the most dangerous book in all of history,