Salvador Borrego

Salvador Borrego Escalante
BornSalvador Borrego Escalante
(1915-04-24)24 April 1915
Mexico City, Mexico
Died8 January 2018(2018-01-08) (aged 102)
Mexico City, Mexico
OccupationWriter

Salvador Borrego Escalante (24 April 1915 – 8 January 2018) was a Mexican journalist and historical revisionist writer.[1][2][3]

He published fifty-three books in fields such as military history, politics, economics, journalism, philosophy and religion. His texts have been heavily criticized and he has been accused of anti-Semitism because he places international Jewish capital and Zionist ideology as the cause of World War II.[4]

Borrego has been considered by some critics and readers as an apologist and sympathizer of fascism.[5]

  1. ^ "Antisemitism and the Extreme Right in Spain (1962–1997)". Archived from the original on September 26, 2013. Retrieved March 16, 2015. A special issue of CEDADE's bulletin included contributions by Léon Degrelle, Wilfred von Oven (Goebbels' assistant in the Ministry of Propaganda), Salvador Borrego (Mexican neo-Nazi propagandist and writer), Florentin Rost van Tonningen (wife of Dutch Nazi leader Meinoud van Tonningen), Thies Christophersen (German Nazi propagandist sheltered in Denmark)... In addition, CEDADE produced a "Wagnerian Travel Guide" and a reprint of Degrelle's book, Fascinating Hitler.
  2. ^ Buchrucker, Cristián (1996). "The extreme right in Argentina and its post‐war evolution". Patterns of Prejudice. 30 (4): 5–16. doi:10.1080/0031322X.1996.9970201. ...Henry Ford's The International Jew, Hidden Origins of the Second World War by the Mexican Nazi sympathizer Salvador Borrego...
  3. ^ LAURA RAFAEL (September 2006). "THE ROLE OF HISTORY IN THE RECENT MEXICAN NOVEL A STUDY OF FIVE HISTORICAL NOVELS BY ELENA GARRO, CARLOS FUENTES, FERNANDO DEL PASO, PACO IGNACIO TAIBO II AND ROSA BELTRÁN" (PDF). Retrieved March 16, 2015. Some historians consider historical revisionism as a strongly politically-determined pseudohistory. While some of them are highly-regarded historians trying to decipher past events to shed light on new discoveries, others pretend to influence their readers and manipulate them in a political way. In Mexico, the historian Salvador Borrego is considered as a revisionist. The dangers of this way of researching the past are evident through the example of a radical version of it: the denial of the Holocaust, by a group that claimed to be historical revisionists that arose after the Second World War. They disputed, with little or no evidence, widely accepted facts about the Holocaust inventing hypotheses such as the fact that no Jews were gassed or that the Holocaust was a Zionist conspiracy
  4. ^ Zócalo (2018-01-12). "Salvador Borrego Escalante" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-10-27.
  5. ^ "Salvador Borrego: vigente "la derrota mundial"". Proceso (in Spanish).

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