World-Service
(Redirected from World Service)
World-Service (German, Welt-Dienst and French, Service Mondial) was an international National Socialist news agency founded December 1, 1933 in Erfurt, Germany by Ulrich Fleischhauer. World-Service issued news bulletins in eight languages. [1] The service would run advertisements in their bulletins for various Shirt Movements throughout the world.[1]
From 1936 to 1938 World-Service sponsored the international conference of the Pan-Aryan Anti-Jewish Union. World-Service was also known as the International Correspondence for Enlightenment on the Jewish Question.
Contents
Chronology
- December 1, 1933 - June 15, 1939, World-Service (Erfurt: Bondung-Verlag) edited and headed by its founder, Ulrich Fleischhauer.
- July 1, 1939 - September 1, 1943, World-Service (Frankfurt am Main: Welt-Dienst-Verlag) edited and headed by August Schirmer.
- September 15, 1943 - January 1945 [end of publication], World-Service (Frankfurt am Main: Welt-Dienst-Verlag) under the direction of Kurt Richter.
Notes
- ↑ Fascism: The fascist epoch, by Roger Griffin and Matthew Feldman, page 369
See also
- Transocean News Service
- List of Nationalist 'Internationals'
- Fichte Bund
- Johannes Klapproth
- Vladimir Kositzan