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Albert Einstein – The Big Lie about his Genius

Albert Einstein’s first wife was a high-born Mileva (Mitza) Marić.  Mileva was also a brilliant physicist. Like Nikola Tesla, Mileva Marić was an Orthodox Christian Serbian ………………….. Serbia seems to have a habit of producing real geniuses.

On 19 December 1875, Mileva Marić was born into a wealthy family in Titel in Austria-Hungary (today Serbia) as the eldest of three children of Miloš Marić (1846–1922) and Marija Ružić-Marić (1847–1935). Shortly after her birth, her father ended his military career and took a job at the court in Ruma and later in Zagreb.

Albert Einstein and Mileva Marić met at the Polytechnic Institute of Zurich, where she had fought for special permissions to attend and where she received far higher marks than Albert.

Mitza put in as much if not more work on their theories but wasn’t credited because Albert told her their works wouldn’t get published with a woman’s name on them. Many of his lecture notes are in Mitza’s handwriting, and Albert was once heard at a party saying, ‘I need my wife, she helps solve all of my mathematical problems.’

80% of Einstein’s famous works were published during this marriage, referred to as his ‘magic years.’ Those magic years ended abruptly after they divorced due to his infidelity with a relative and abandonment (of his marriage commitments and children).’

The estranged pair had negotiated a court settlement whereby the Nobel Prize money that Einstein anticipated he would soon receive was to be placed in trust for their two boys.

Einstein would receive the prize for his work, and she would receive the money. Under the terms of the agreement, the money was to be held in trust for their two boys, while she was able to draw on the interest.  

After the deceitful Einstein married his cousin Elsa in June 1919, he returned to Zurich to talk to Marić about the children’s future.

Based on newly released letters (sealed by Einstein’s step-granddaughter, Margot Einstein, until 20 years after her death), Walter, Marić eventually invested the Nobel Prize money in three apartment buildings in Zurich to produce income.

In 2022 novel Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus, Mileva Marić is twice mentioned as an example of a pioneering woman scientist whose work was published under that of her famous scientist husband.

Debate over whether Marić was a co-author of some of Einstein’s early work, concluding in the 1905 papers, is based on the following passage from Russian physicist Abram Joffe’s personal memoirs:

In 1905, three articles appeared in the Annalen der Physik, which began three very important branches of 20th-century physics. Those were the theory of Brownian motion, the photon theory of light, and the theory of relativity.

Mileva told a Serbian friend, referring to 1905, that ‘we finished some important work that will make my husband world famous.’  Marić’s brother and other relatives reported eyewitness accounts of Marić and Albert discussing physics together when they were married.  

The power of the Jewish lobby has an ethnic interest in promoting Albert Einstein as a genius without equal. The largely owned and controlled media and publishing houses keep the myth of Albert Einstein’s supposed genius in the public consciousness. In truth, Einstein is just another plagiarist who hijacked and plagiarized Aryan genius for their own ends. PLEASE SHARE OUR STORIES ON SOCIAL MEDIA.

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