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Henry Ford's The International Jew: The World's Foremost Problem


THE SEVEN LOST ARTICLES
Never before seen in print since their initial publication in
The Dearborn Independent newspaper in 1921 and 1922.

Andrew Hamilton

The Dearborn Independent, owned and operated by automaker Henry Ford from 1919 to 1927, was a weekly Michigan paper published on Saturdays. It consisted of feature articles, together with shorter pieces and filler material. It did not aim to cover current “news” as such.

The newspaper gained fame, and among the legions of Politically Correct, infamy, for its “The International Jew” series, which was critical of Jewish power and had enormous worldwide impact. Translated into 16 languages, it was particularly influential in Germany in the 1920s, where it went through several German language editions.

The series ran for a little under two years. During that time neither the paper nor the series’ installments missed a single Saturday, not even Christmas Day.

By 1925 the Independent reached a circulation of 900,000, second only to the New York Daily News in the United States.

Behind the scenes enormous personal, familial, psychological, emotional, social, legal, and economic pressures, and no doubt terrorist threats and acts as well, were directed against Henry Ford and his associates in a determined effort to stop publication of the articles.

At no time was the bulk of the paper’s content devoted to Jews. The majority of articles covered a wide range of human interest topics unrelated to race, which still make interesting reading today.

Blatant falsehoods about the paper’s content by Jewish “scholars,” such as the preposterous 1980 lie that Dearborn Independent editor William J. Cameron “explicitly attacked Jews on every page except ‘Mr. Ford’s Page,” go unchallenged by anybody. Well-heeled academic and media perjurers get away with anything when it comes to racial defamation of Whites.

Jewry forced Ford to close the Independent, which carried no advertising, in 1927, and issue a public apology for telling the truth about Jews, which he did. The humiliating apology Ford signed was dictated to him by the powerful Jew Louis Marshall of the American Jewish Committee, a man “The International Jew” had written about.

Needless to say, the relentless persecution of Ford did not stop, but continued to the end of his life.

Eighty of “The International Jew” articles were collected and reprinted in four separate volumes between November 1920 and May 1922, and have been available in hard-to-find underground paperback editions ever since. The 4-volume work remains a classic, the best single work on the Jewish Problem, and is highly recommended for everyone. The series is as relevant and important today, a century later, as when it first appeared. (I recommend avoiding a 1-volume abridgement that is also available.)

Except for Volume 1, the articles in book form were not strictly sequential by date in terms of their appearance in the newspaper.

Seven articles in the newspaper series were not included in the books, and have never been republished. These “lost articles” are of the same caliber and educational value as the rest. There is no obvious reason for their omission, though the publishers did state in the preface of Volume 2 that two articles had been omitted “in the interest of compactness.” One of them was published in a later volume.

Here, for the first time, you can read all seven omitted articles, together (also for the first time) with the brief "Jewish World Notes" filler sections that accompanied them (and most other entries in the series). In the list below, only "A Glimpse of Jewish International Politics" (August 20, 1921) lacked a "Jewish World Notes" section at the end.

To be clear, the "Jewish World Notes" segments were not parts of the original two-page article(s). In newsprint they were clearly marked-off sections at the bottom of the articles' second page used to fill in remaining space. None of them were later reprinted in the books. They are included to give a better feel for what The Dearborn Independent experience was like.

In order of publication, the 7 lost articles are:

Gentile Fall Involved in Hope of Jewish Rule (December 25, 1920)

The Jews’ “Defenders” Make a Poor Showing (March 26, 1921)

Jewish Leaders Scheme for Gentile Support (April 2, 1921)

A Little Jewish Luncheon With John Spargo (April 9, 1921)

A Glimpse of Jewish International Politics (August 20, 1921)

Pro-Jewish Scout in the Daily Newspapers (October 29, 1921)

The Leo Frank Case—Are the Jews Clever? (December 3, 1921)