Mein Kampf (Stackpole Sons)/Afterword
Afterword
On the 9th of November, 1923, in the fourth year of its existence, the National-Socialist German Workers’ Party was dissolved and forbidden throughout the entire Reich. Today in November, 1926, it is free again throughout the entire Reich, and is stronger and more solid than ever.
All persecutions of the movement and of its leaders, all abuse and all slander could not affect it. The correctness of its ideas, the purity of its purposes, the will to sacrifice on the part of its adherents made it emerge from all suppression with increased vigor.
If, in the world of our present parliamentary corruption, it concentrates more and more upon the deepest meaning of its battle and feels itself to be the pure embodiment of race and person, and arranges itself accordingly, it is bound, with almost mathematical certainty, to be victorious in its battle when the time comes. And Germany, likewise will, gain as a matter of course the position on this earth that she deserves if she is organized and led by the same principles.
A state which in the days of race-poisoning endeavors to cultivate its best racial elements is bound to become some day the lord of earth.
May the adherents of our movement never forget this, if the magnitude of the sacrifices should ever induce them to make an anxious comparison with the possible success.