US Army's Final Interrogation Report of Albert Hartl, 9th January 1947.
Who was Albert Hartl? The introduction of the interrogation report states:
HARTL is a renegade Catholic priest who was active in Nazi church politics for the SD, Gestapo and RSHA from 1934 to 1945.
--pg. 1
Hartl was intimately familiar not only with individual high-ranking Jesuits and the Jesuit community, but also with the Jesuit modes of operation in the intelligence sphere:
While a student, HARTL joined the Jesuit youth movement, Neu Deutschland, which embodied the Boy Scout principles of outdoor life on a Catholic basis, and was soon put in charge of the Theologians Fachschaft for all Germany. HARTL wrote frequently for the publication of this organization.
During his early student days, HARTL supported himself by working during vacations, but after 1925, owing to numerous scholarships he received, he was able to devote more time to the Bund Neu Deutschland and thus came to know many of the leading Jesuits of Germany.
--pg. 3
HARTL, who had made an intensive study of the intelligence methods of the Jesuits, used them as a model, and was thus in a position to inform Germany's leaders not only on general church policy in Germany, but also on extremely important plans and measures of the Church as well as on the world political situation of the Church.
--pg. 10
From 1941 to 1943, Hartl was dispatched to Russia on a mission to report on the intellectual trends in the area. He wrote in his memoirs that the Soviet Union's collective farms (called kolkhosi) were explicitly based on those of the Jesuit reductions in Paraguay:
Very little agricultural land is privately owned. Most of it was grouped together in kolkhosi and sovkhosi. The organization of the kolkhosi is a familiar one, for they have been copied from the collective farms of the Paraguayan Jesuit State.
--pg. 54
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