Nobody in the Vatican had any problems with that passage or Mein Kampf in general because they must have understood it like I and others do, others who are not blind with hate against Germans.
So now anybody who doesn't agree with your reading is blind with hatred for Germans ? I wasn't aware that reading comprehension and logic were dependent on such strong emotions one way or another. Here I though I was soberly analysing the meaning of a sentence; little did I know, I was actually being overcome by a storm of intense emotion. :rolleyes:
Anybody who doesn't support German nationalism and believe that the future of the world relies in some crucial way on the survival of the German race hates the Germans -- i.e., wishes them evil ? I don't see how somebody could hold either of those positions without being moved by a truly extreme and un-Catholic obsession with his German ethnicity. Some people are not fixated on German pretensions and Germany because they simply don't buy into German claims to global importance. I, for one, reject as silliness the German claim to unique importance and therefore neither hate Germans nor am a German nationalist. Firstly, I am not German, so that is the first reason for me to not be overly concerned with what typically concerns Germans. Secondly, Germany to me seems to be a country like any other country that does not descend from the Roman Empire. It is notable for many of its accomplishments and many of its problems, but then again so is Russia, so is Turkey, so is China, so is Japan, so is Iran.