• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Marguerite LaDue

Finding clarity in the chaos

  • Email
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • About Me
  • How I Can Help
  • Staying on Course
  • Food for Thought
  • Q & A
  • What Others Say
  • Contact Me

Staying on Course

Reflections on the Journey

Hitler Is a Monster…Is It True?

November 3, 2016 By Marguerite LaDue 18 Comments

Recently, a friend shared a Slavic folk tale figure, popular with his high school students, named Baba Yaga. I was intrigued that she ate children and, unlike other witches, could not be killed. I commented that seemed like an awfully scary story for young minds. But he explained the tales were designed to teach children about the monsters they may encounter in their lives, and he wanted to encourage them to find resourceful solutions.

I asked my friend if he believes in monsters. He said yes, to which I replied, “Well, I don’t.”

I could see it took him by surprise.

“What about Hitler? He was certainly a monster,” my friend commented.

“Hitler was not a monster. He was unconscious,” I responded.

Since this is a fairly new friendship I figured I wouldn’t pursue the topic, certain my “against the grain” thinking would have him questioning what kind of person he was hanging around with.

But the dialogue stuck with me and seemed relevant given our current world environment. I challenged myself to see if I could write a blog to clearly articulate my position. I realize I may be on a slippery slope with many readers but I’m committed to exposing the thinking that has resulted in much happiness and peace for me.

Words represent ideas, so I do my best to be precise in my word choice, which helps me to be crystal clear in my thinking. Distinctions are key to me. One of the definitions of “monster,”, according to Merriam-Webster is “an extremely wicked or cruel person.” Most people would simply say Hitler was a bad man, end of story. To me his thinking was faulty and so his behavior was wicked and cruel, not the man himself. A Course in Miracles has taught me that the essence of all of us—Hitler included—is love. He was unconscious, or unaware, of this truth and was listening to, believing, and being guided by fear and not the voice for love within his mind. His crime was mental illness. He believed something that did not exist in truth. Is he a bad man or a sick man?

Long ago I exchanged my close-minded belief in “bad people” to a belief that “there are no bad people, only misguided ones.” This came directly from an “ah ha” moment I had when contemplating the rationale for the childhood abuse I experienced from my father. Somewhere a thought surfaced. Your father is not bad, he is sick.” Hmmm, now that’s something to consider. “Sick” meant unwell; that he was perhaps in pain and needed help. This distinction made all the difference in the world. That tiny shaft of light offered me an opportunity to see him differently, with compassion, and eventually, with love. This healed and freed both of us from the judgment and condemnation I held.

The sickness all our so-called monsters are suffering from is a lack of love. Being unconscious of the love within them, they project their fear and self-condemnation onto others; we end up with monstrous attitudes and behavior that is contagious and spreads exponentially like a virus. The fear within our minds eagerly bears witness to these “bad” people and down into the swamp we all go.

I choose to see differently. Sickness calls for healing. I see a brother in pain crying out for love. Rather than reinforce his fear, and thereby mine, I pray to see him truly and through the eyes of love, appealing within me to “the perfect love that casts out fear.” In this way I remove the barriers to love’s presence and instead am able to hold the vision for others and myself of our true identity. This vision is what raises me above perceived differences with another and reminds me of our common heritage. I have the power to stop faulty thinking where it begins —in my mind—and to dispel fear with love. This does not mean we condone monstrous behavior. It means we no longer condemn the person and add to the madness, but instead offer healing and hope, and doesn’t that feel like the right response?

Marguerite LaDue

November 6, 2016

Filed Under: Staying on Course

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Malvina Simon says

    November 6, 2016 at 7:34 am

    My Dear Marguerite,
    As you well know I love you dearly!
    Slippery ground for sure…As you well know I support your position regarding coming from a place of love and compassion, but choosing Hitler as an example is really stretching it!
    Hitler was certainly unconscious about being HUMANE but he made very conscious decisions that brought the world to it’s knees. Murdering and torturing millions of children, women and men I believe is inexcusable. He ripped babies out of their mother’s wombs, did heinous experiments on twins, tried to destroy entire races of people, the list goes on ad nauseam!!
    If that does not fit the word “monster’ as defined by the dictionary I cannot imagine what does. I do understand where you are coming from with this, but I do believe in certain situations, there is no way to excuse monstrous behavior. By doing so it gives this type of monstrous behavior an excuse! OOO

    Reply
    • Marguerite LaDue says

      November 7, 2016 at 9:40 am

      Mal thank you so much for your impassioned, sincere and loving response! Yes for sure I chose an example that has tremendous emotional charge to it. This is how the world works – degrees for everything – a little of this is not as harmful as a lot of that. This is where we get tricked up. My thinking informs me that we are either coming from love or we are not; we are coming from Truth or we are not. No shades of gray.
      You are absolutely correct Hitler made very conscious decisions that brought the world to it’s knees. My point is he made those decisions from a sick mind, from a fearful mind. That sickness in no way changes his Truth and the Truth of all of us – we are love and have forgotten this. I believe our purpose is to remember and the best way I have learned how is to see someone else, as “monstrous” as they may appear, with love. Yes the behavior that results from this thinking is not excusable however we can choose to see beyond our five senses and to open our minds and hearts to joining and love. I in no way wish to coerce anyone I am simply trying to expose my thought processes and to share that my experience thinking this way enables me to deal with all of the “monsters” I encounter, in various forms, throughout the day with love and compassion resulting in much peace and happiness. Am I perfect? Hell no but I have a practice that helps me suffer less and experience joy more. Thanks sweetheart as your comments help me clarify my thinking even more. I love you. xoxoxo

      Reply
  2. Donna Colfer says

    November 6, 2016 at 8:30 am

    Beautifully written! Thank you for the reminder that love and forgiveness is much more healing than fear. It’s not always easy to do when we’ve been taught our whole lives to do the opposite. Time for a newer and more peaceful point of view which you are giving here! Thank you, Marguerite! Love, Donna

    Reply
    • Marguerite LaDue says

      November 7, 2016 at 9:45 am

      Thank you Donna. Oh the resistance to doing this is so great! As I’ve learned through my study of A Course in Miracles we must unlearn everything we have taught ourselves. It’s not easy yet my experience has shown me that when I’m willing to open my mind and entertain a different perspective life becomes so much more rewarding and effortless. Love you honey. xoxo

      Reply
  3. Rose-Marie Frojd says

    November 6, 2016 at 12:08 pm

    Marguerite,
    That is so true, well written, I totally am with you in that thinking! Thank you for sharing!
    Much Love,
    Rose-Marie

    Reply
    • Marguerite LaDue says

      November 7, 2016 at 9:47 am

      Rose-Marie so glad to know that we think similarly. Hitler is an extreme example yet this way of thinking applies to any and all difficulties we find ourselves in and enables us, as no doubt you experience, to live more freely and peacefully. Thank you for sharing. With love xoxoox

      Reply
  4. Eileen says

    November 6, 2016 at 1:16 pm

    Bravo Marguerite. I especially love that last paragraph.

    Reply
    • Marguerite LaDue says

      November 7, 2016 at 9:49 am

      Thank you Eileen, I’m happy this blog appealed to you! Tough changes to engrained, wide-spread thinking but oh the rewards!!

      Reply
  5. Pamela says

    November 7, 2016 at 3:10 am

    Marquerite,

    I am reading your blog as I sit in my 86 -year- old mother’s hospital room and couldn’t agree with you more. Mother is in the height of another one of her manic bi-polar episodes sparked by a urinary tract infection. Normally a beautiful, brilliant, kind and rather demure lady, she is paranoid. Her mind cannot stop racing. I do not recognize her face as hateful babbling and animal-like sounds spew from her mouth. She is reacting to hallucinations. People are chasing her. Trying to hurt her. Monsters, she says. This is painful and heart-breaking to watch as a daughter. Especially when she turns her anger toward me.

    I was 16 when it happened the first time. I looked at the disease as a monster that was possessing her. I suffered greatly. I reacted with fear and wanted to control it – make it go away and pretend it never happened. I could not see that by doing this I was in my own crazy-making mind believing in and actually feeding monsters myself.

    46 years later I sit here day after day quietly tending my own thoughts that still, at times, want to take back over. But now I understand the disease is not a monster, it is an imbalance. It is not the essence of my mother. I agree with you. The most loving response is to show up, anchor myself in the light and respond with love to the beauty I see within her. Breath. After breath. After breath. Thank you, my wise friend, for your beautiful reminder this day.

    Reply
    • Marguerite LaDue says

      November 7, 2016 at 10:06 am

      Jay I so appreciate you sharing such a personal experience and for articulating how you are actively practicing a different way of seeing. I join with you in holding your mother in the light of her truth and am so grateful that you are willing and courageous enough to find a better, more loving and peaceful way to deal with such an emotional and challenging situation. Something that helped me when I would walk into my mother’s hospital room (done far more often than seemed fair) – I would look at her and silently say within me “you are wholly loved and wholly loving.” It didn’t matter how many times I had to remind myself of this truth as it helped me to reinforce her light and mine as well and to give her and myself a much needed gift of peace, not fear. Holding you in the light of your beautiful Self. I love you xoxoxo

      Reply
  6. John Zephir says

    November 7, 2016 at 7:25 am

    Hi Marguerite,
    First I had to a take a super deep breathe when I read this post. My initial reaction before reading it was oh no she didn’t lol. Having said, that these are very deep and profound statements that are hard for most people to digest. But it is rooted in truth which is shared in many biblical scriptures , we are reminded to hate the sin (or condemned action) but love the sinner ( the doer of those actions). While Hilter is an extreme example and probably sends shivers down most peoples spine but believe or not he was just a man that truly was misguided in his thoughts and his deed which you deemed as illness or sickness. Whether that is the correct term for it or not is really not relevant. What we are called to do is always love first and offering healing to all. I do not view myself as a religious person but I have strong christian beliefs and Christ have given the ultimate example of offering up his life for all of mankind. I remember having a conversation with a pastor one day and recall making the comment that there are going to be a lot of confused people in heaven asking each other how did “so and so get here”. It is always easy to judge when you are not in the situation or have the fullness of how things come to be. It was Christ who challenged the accusers of the woman caught in the act of adultery by simply stating “he who is without sin, let him cast the first stone”. These comments where directed at holy men of the day and one by one they dropped their rocks and dispersed. Christ simply then asked her where are all of your accuser? She responded they are gone and he sent her on her way. So the net of what I am saying is we are called to see beyond pain, suffering, sin or whatever you want to call it, and should always extend love and healing to others. Easy to say but hard to put into practice but that should be our desire and the meditation of our heart. How not to Judge, how to love and how to heal. I think the article is bold and challenging on how we view the world through our lenses.. All the best ..

    xoxoxo
    JZ

    Reply
    • Marguerite LaDue says

      November 7, 2016 at 10:18 am

      Oh John you put it so eloquently! Yes we are called to extend love and healing to others and when we do this it is actually extended to ourself as evidenced by the peace we feel and experience. It is very hard to put into practice as it goes against the grain of the predominant thinking in the world. My inspiration comes from Jesus as despite the hatred projected on to him his overriding message as demonstrated by his words and actions is “teach only love for that is what you are.” And yes I pray to not judge and to see truly as he did. Thank you so much for sharing. I love you. xoxo

      Reply
  7. Matisun says

    November 7, 2016 at 2:20 pm

    Wow – extremely powerful! And a very courageous post! I join you in the truth of our being- we remain as God created us! This is not easy subject matter and the ego always feels the need to condemn and punish where in my heart I feel God is kinder than that. I believe He remains unconditionally loving, and we’re not used to that kind of Love. I hear God whispering to all those who have forgotten who they are and have acted without love; “You have been mistaken, choose again. I shall keep your True Identity safe for you.” I have known His grace when I have forgotten who I am and thought or acted lovelessly, toward myself or others- it is the most precious of gifts. Thank God for God or we’d be doomed….We all yearn for our innocence, and compassion and forgiveness help us experience that- by the grace of God may we open our hearts to love and forgiveness. May God give us the strength and courage to be willing to see things differently….

    Reply
    • Marguerite LaDue says

      November 9, 2016 at 8:56 am

      Thank you so much Sis. Yes this is not easy subject matter and emotions run high. Yet I feel strongly, as you do, that we are being called to remember and see the truth of ourselves and all our brothers and sisters and to love when it appears hardest to do so. It’s easy to love someone that is lovable yet can we challenge ourselves to love those that are not with the understanding that that is what they are crying out for? Every time I can see past the deed and love the truth of the individual I am actually reinforcing the love I believe I am and not adding to the fear.
      So grateful we’re walking this walk together. I love you. xoxox

      Reply
  8. Keith says

    November 8, 2016 at 7:36 am

    Marguerite,
    Nicely written. We must never forget that even Hitler, being unconscious and in his illusionary world and all the horrible things that he had done,still had a soul underneath it all. Best article you have written my opinion.
    xxxooo
    Keith

    Reply
    • Marguerite LaDue says

      November 9, 2016 at 9:00 am

      Well put Keith! Yes underneath it all is the truth of who he is and while he has forgotten we can remember for him. Thank you honey. I love you xooxo

      Reply
  9. Jarrett says

    November 8, 2016 at 11:55 pm

    This is disgusting. This is the thought process that got Trump elected. As someone who was raised Jewish, I’m unbelievably disappointed of you.

    Reply
    • Marguerite LaDue says

      November 11, 2016 at 6:48 am

      I’m sorry you feel this way Jarrett and no doubt you’re not alone. I understand. Am simply presenting another way of looking at our “monsters.” For sure it was an extreme example and to my way of thinking there are no exceptions or degrees. Radical? Yes. But if we’re going to stop the insanity we have to stop doing what we’ve always done and be willing to see things differently. I love you. xoxo

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Jarrett Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Let’s stay in touch

Sign up to receive a little inspiration in your inbox. I'll send out a blog post once or twice a month and perhaps an update now and then.

Recent Posts

False Positive

July 10, 2021

Taming the Beast

June 5, 2021

Learning To Receive

May 15, 2021

Wanting and Not Wanting the Peace of God

May 1, 2021

Not This? Something Better!

April 17, 2021

Extended Family

August 21, 2021

"We draw the circle of our family too small." Mother Teresa … [Read More...] about Extended Family

False Image

August 14, 2021

"No one can fail but your idea of him." A Course in Miracles … [Read More...] about False Image

A True Calling

July 31, 2021

"Not what do I want to do, rather what does the Universe want to do through me?" Eckhart Tolle … [Read More...] about A True Calling

Changing the World

July 24, 2021

"The world as we have created it is a process of our thinking. It cannot be changed without changing … [Read More...] about Changing the World

Wise Counsel

July 17, 2021

"If he is indeed wise he does not bid you enter the house of his wisdom, but rather leads you to the … [Read More...] about Wise Counsel

Archive

  • August 2021
  • July 2021
  • June 2021
  • May 2021
  • April 2021
  • March 2021
  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • September 2020
  • September 2018
  • July 2018
  • June 2018
  • April 2018
  • February 2018
  • January 2018
  • December 2017
  • October 2017
  • September 2017
  • August 2017
  • June 2017
  • May 2017
  • April 2017
  • March 2017
  • February 2017
  • January 2017
  • December 2016
  • November 2016
  • October 2016
  • September 2016
  • August 2016
  • July 2016

Copyright © 2026 Marguerite LaDue · Log in

 

Photos of Marguerite LaDue by In Her Image   |  Website design by Dianna Jacobsen Design