General Erich Ludendorff, former German war lord, suffered another blow to his rapidly dwindling prestige today as a result of his Jew-phobia when Count von Dohna, grand master of the German Masonic lodge, brought suit for libel against the general in the courts of Gotha.
In January, 1928, Ludendorff, in a public address, alleged that Count von Dohna, knew of a plot of Jewish Free Masons to murder the Arch-Duke Franz Ferdinand of Austria-Hungary in order to provoke a world war but that von Dohna did not take steps to prevent it and therefore was guilty of high treason.
In court today Count von Dohna produced a letter from General Ludendorff’s first wife, whom he divorced in 1927 after living with her for 25 years, stating that Ludendorff was not pursuing the truth and that he was a neurasthenist who, out of hatred for the Jews, had invented the legend that Germany was the victim of a superstate of powers composed of Jesuits, Jews and Masons.
The case was adjourned for further hearings.
The Archive of the Jewish Telegraphic Agency includes articles published from 1923 to 2008. Archive stories reflect the journalistic standards and practices of the time they were published.