Dietrich Eckart
Dietrich Eckart was born in Neumarkt, Bavaria on the 23rd of March, 1868.
The death of Eckart's mother in 1878, when he was only 10 years old, was an event that heavily affected him and made him rebellious against various forms of authority, most notably his father and the various schools he went to as a teenager.
In his early 20's, Eckart started cultivating his interest in literature and spirituality. In 1891, he decided to start writing poems and playwrights. He moved to Berlin in 1899, where he wrote a number of plays. In 1913, after 14 years of living in Berlin, he moved to Munich. Adolf Hitler, who at the time had no association with Eckart, also moved to Munich in 1913 from Vienna.
Dietrich Eckart, along with Gottfried Feder, Anton Drexler, and Karl Harrer, founded the DAP (Deutsche Arbeiterpartei) in January of 1919. The DAP was later rebranded into the NSDAP (Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei, commonly referred to as the "Nazi Party").
All four founders of the DAP were members of the Thule Society (from the Greek "Θούλη"), a Völkisch/Pagan occult group which denied both Abrahamism and communism. Its central ideas were Paganism/Satanism, anti-communism, anti-semitism, and Germanic racialism. There were also references to the "Holy Grail", not as a christian symbol, but rather as a metaphor for the Solar Chakra, where the elixir of life is stored.
The "Holy Grail" (Solar 666 Chakra) is also seen in Satanas's second Sigil:
Adolf Hitler, who soon became the leader of the NSDAP, was mentored by Dietrich Eckart. It is also stated that Eckart was a Dedicated Satanist. Many prominent members of the Third Reich were also members of the Thule Society, including Reichsführer Heinrich Himmler, Hitler's deputy in the NSDAP Rudolf Hess, as well as Reichsmarschall Hermann Göring.
Eckart's most notable work is "Bolshevism from Moses to Lenin", where he exposes christianity and communism as vehicles for Jewish world domination.
In 1923, on his deathbed, Eckart stated the following:
"Follow Hitler! He will dance, but it is I who have called the tune."
Part of Adolf Hitler's "Mein Kampf" was dedicated to Eckart.