|
NAZIS SAY THE DARNEDEST THINGS
By Andy Borowitz
The
discovery of the so-called Hitler Book marks the end of
a remarkable hunt through Soviet archives. .. . Perhaps the most
disconcerting
revelation ... is that Hitler had a sense of humour, albeit a
particularly cold
one. —The Times of London.
One
night in Berlin,
Hitler, Goring, and Goebbels walked into a bar. Noticing that the
bartender's
hands were shaking, Hitler asked him what was wrong. "We don't get too
many high-ranking officials of the Third Reich in here," he said.
"Well, at
these prices, I'm not surprised," said Hitler, pulling out a Luger and
shooting him.
Speaking before
an
audience of thousands at the Nuremberg Rally of 1936, Hitler departed
from his
prepared text to share one of his favorite jokes. "A patient
complaining
of a sore throat goes to see a doctor," Hitler began. "After examining
him, the doctor says, Your tonsils have to come out.' The patient says,
'I want
a second opinion.' So the doctor says, 'O.K.—you're also of an inferior
race.'"
On December 7,1941,
Hitler opened a meeting of the Nazi high command as he often did: with
a
knock-knock joke.
"Knock-knock," he said.
"Who's
there?" said Goebbels.
"Tojo,"
he said.
"Tojo
who?"
"Tojo the
Japanese would bomb Pearl Harbor,"
Hitler
said, roaring with laughter.
After the
successful publication of 'Mein Kampf," Hitler immediately started
writing
a sequel. The new book, "Adolf Hitler's 1001 Favorite Insults,"
instantly
became the No. 1 best-seller in Germany
and was an invaluable reference work for Nazi after-dinner speakers.
A quick perusal of the book reveals that not only was Hitler
a Fascist madman bent on world domination; he was also the originator
of the
"yo mama" joke, as these examples show:
'To mama so fat,
the Luftwaffe mistook her for London."
"Yo mama so
lazy, she stopped after she invaded Belgium."
"Yo mama so
dirty, she hasn't taken a bath since the First Reich."
Even in his
dealings with other heads of state, Hitler’s unique sense of humor never failed him.
After signing the Munich Agreement, in 1938, Hitler broke the treaty
less than
a year later by invading Prague.
Incensed, the British Prime Minister, Neville Chamberlain, telephoned
Hitler
and demanded to know why German troops had crossed the agreed-upon
border. Without
missing a beat, Hitler replied, 'To get to the other side."
In 1940, Charlie
Chaplin satirized Hitler in his film 'The Great Dictator." Infuriated, Hitler
vowed to star in a comedy of his own in which he would make merciless fun of
Chaplin. He hired Leni Riefenstahl to direct the film, which had the working title
"The Little Bastard." In his first script meeting with Riefenstahl, Hitler described the
following comic bit: I’ll be dressed in a tramp costume, just
like Chaplin, and we'll do the scene in “The Gold Rush'
where he cooks his shoe and eats it." Riefenstahl looked confused.
"What's
the twist?" she asked. Barely containing his giggles, Hitler said,
"This time, he'll choke on the shoelaces and die."
Even in his final
days in his bunker, Hitler entertained his Nazi colleagues with a
near-constant
stream of jokes, many of the gallows variety. In one that he was
particularly
fond of telling, Hitler and his lawyer appear before St. Peter at the
gates of
Heaven. After St. Peter reads a long list of charges against Hitler,
the Fuhrer’s
lawyer launches into an impassioned defense. Finally, the lawyer rests
his case
and St. Peter speaks up: "Hitler can come in, but you have to go to
Hell." "Hell?"
the lawyer asks. "What did I do?"
"You went to
law school," St. Peter says.
|