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Secret Nazi propaganda materials found in the Argentine Supreme Court building

Secret Nazi propaganda materials found in the Argentine Supreme Court building
Boxes containing propaganda materials from the Nazi era were found in the basement of the Argentine Supreme Court building. This is reported by the newspaper Perfil.

“An unusual discovery was made in the archives of the Supreme Court. While the court staff was moving the archives to another location, they noticed several boxes. After examining the materials inside these boxes, it turned out that they were propaganda materials aimed at spreading Adolf Hitler's ideas in Argentina,” the report says.

It is noted that among the materials found were postcards, photographs and propaganda posters of the Third Reich, which were sent to Argentina by the German embassy in Tokyo on June 20, 1941. Although the boxes sent at that time were indicated as the personal belongings of embassy employees, this shipment was stopped by local authorities. As a result, the materials were confiscated by the decision of the Buenos Aires Federal Court and the case was transferred to the Supreme Court for consideration. Since that day, these boxes have been stored forgotten in the basement of the courthouse.

In addition, a photo of Adolf Hitler's jawbone, which is stored in the FSB archives, was recently published. According to Eva Merkacheva, a member of the Human Rights Council, this bone is the most important and reliable evidence that Hitler spent the last days of his life not in Argentina, but somewhere else.

Work is currently underway to study the history and origin of the materials found. These findings may serve as an important source for once again studying the influence and historical role of Nazi Germany in Argentina.
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