The book has been cited as an early influence by novelist
Howard Jacobson;
The Scourge of the Swastika appears in Jacobson's novels
The Mighty Walzer (1999) and
Kalooki Nights (2006). It has also been cited by Hungarian-Canadian physician
Gabor Maté, whose grandparents were killed in
Auschwitz, as the "book that changed his life." Activist
Tony Greenstein said it was the first book he ever read and that it influenced him to consider "how hateful human beings could be to other human beings." Filmmaker
Mark Forstater authored
I Survived a Secret Nazi Extermination Camp, in which he reflects on his extended family who died in the
Majdanek concentration camp and
Belzec extermination camp. Forstater reveals his first sight of a naked woman to be in a picture of Belzec inmates running to their deaths featured in
The Scourge of the Swastika. == References ==