The view on Christianity presented in Hitler's Table Talk is very Nietzschean, where Christianity is seen as representing a form of slave morality.
In Hitler's Table Talk, Hitler (or whoever actually authored the text) said that Kant, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche are the "greatest of our thinkers", but that Schopenhauer has been "far surpassed by Nietzsche" (https://archive.org/details/HitlersTableTalk_1941_1944):
In the Great Hall of the Linz Library are the busts of Kant, Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, the greatest of our thinkers, in comparison with whom the British, the French and the Americans have nothing to offer. His complete refutation of the teachings which were a heritage from the Middle Ages, and of the dogmatic philosophy of the Church, is the greatest of the services which Kant has rendered to us. It is on the foundation of Kant's theory of knowledge that Schopenhauer built the edifice of his philosophy, and it is Schopenhauer who anni- hilated the pragmatism of Hegel. I carried Schopenhauer's works with me throughout the whole of the first World War. From him I learned a great deal. Schopenhauer's pessimism, which springs partly, I think, from his own line ofphilosophical thought and partly from subjective feeling and the experiences of his own personal life, has been far surpassed by Nietzsche.
Hitler gave Mussolini a 24-volume set of books by Nietzsche as a gift for his 60th birthday in 1943. From "Hitler's War" by David Irving (http://www.fpp.co.uk/books/Hitler/2001/HW_Web_dl.pdf):
He lavished gifts on the Italian dictator. Henriette Hoffmann has described how Hitler was to be seen in his favourite Munich cafe with a bookbinder, inspecting leather samples for a presentation set of the philosopher Nietzsche's works for Mussolini: Hitler rubbed the leather skins, sniffed them, and finally rejected them all with the pronouncement, 'The leather must be glacier-green' - meaning the bleak blue-green of the glaciers from which Nietzsche's Zarathustra contemplated the world. [...] All that was known was that he was still alive, because Hitler's sixtieth birthday gift to him - a twenty-four-volume set of Nietzsche - was duly acknowledged by the deposed dictator.
Bookmarks