The Protocols of the Elders of Zion is one of the most notorious anti semitic publications to date. In 1864 Maurice Joly wrote The Dialogue in Hell Between Machiavelli and Montesquieu which does not ever explicitly mention Jewish people but it is believed that many of the ideas in the Protocols of the Elders of Zion were based on this document. Another supposed novel that the Protocols of the Elders of Zion is based off of is the novel Biarritz, published in 1868 by the Prussian writer Hermann Goedsche, within which the original twelve Jewish tribes met in secrecy in the Jewish cemetery in Prague. Then a fragmented copy was first published in 1903 in a Russian newspaper though the exact origins of the document are still shrouded in mystery. The text itself is a Jewish conspiracy for world domination and is a supposed transcription of a meeting between the elder Jewish leaders that are discussing the so-called ‘protocols’ for how to rule the world. In 1905 Sergei Nilus would include the text in the appendix of his book, The Great in the Small: The Coming of the Anti-Christ and the Rule of Satan on Earth and by 1917, Nilus would have published four editions of the Protocols. By 1920 the text was published in the first non-Russian language and began to continually gain traction and be published in Poland, France, England, and the United States as well. The popularity of this novel allows it to fall into the hands of non other than Adolf Hitler who would write in his novel, Mein Kampf, “To what extent the whole existence of this people is based on a continuous lie is shown by the Protocols of the Wise men of Zion, so infinitely hated by the Jews…For once this book has become the common property of a people, the Jewish menace may be considered as broken”. In 1933 the Nazi party would then publish 23 editions of the book before the start of World War II. And we all know what happened after that…