Marcus Eli Ravage

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Marcus Eli Ravage (Revici) (June 25, 1884, Barlad, Romania – October 6, 1965 Grasse, France) was a Jewish American immigrant writer who wrote many books and articles about immigration in America and Europe between the world wars. Best known for his autobiographical book An American in the Making (1917), he is of high-significance through the internet by virtue of his 1928 article, "A Real Case Against the Jews," which the 1930s German public-information ministry and concerned persons down to the present have used as evidence that the world is dominated by Jewish anti-European genocidal racists.[1] He was also a biographer of the Rothschild family as well as of Napoleon's second wife Marie Louise.

His articles "A real case against the Jews" and "Commissary to the Gentiles", published in the January and February 1928 issues of Century Magazine were translated as "a devastating admission" first in the Czernowitz Allgemeine Zeitung on Sept. 2, 1933. It was then re-translated as A voice in the wilderness; Jewish rabbi on Hitler's anti-Semitism by Right Cause in Chicago.[2]

Works

Anthologies

  • R. E. Stauffer, ed. (1922). "The New Immigration". The American Spirit in the Writings of Americans of Foreign Birth. The Christopher publishing house. pp. 151–159. 

References

Sources

  • Christopher Clausen, "Grandfathers," in My Life with President Kennedy (University of Iowa Press, 1994).
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