Sigrid Hunke

After 1957, she went to Morocco and stayed two years in Tangier (Tanja), after which she returned to Bonn.According to the historian Felix Wiedemann, Hunke was a pioneer for the religious concepts of right-wing intellectual circles of the "New Right".

Hunke had an impact on part of the so-called "New Right" with her construction of an "allegedly pro-European paganism" and her "decidedly pro-Arab attitude."

According to the psychologist Birgit Rommelspacher, Hunke is an influential theorist of the "New Right" with regard to the role of the "Nordic woman" in society.

Pierre Krebs, himself a pioneer of the "New Right" in Germany and founder of the Thule Seminar, emphasized the identity-political work of his colleague Hunke and called her a "magician of life, as a sacred keeper of identity, origin and heritage".

"[6] The scholar Sylvain Gouguenheim includes a lengthy description of her work in an appendix to his book Aristote au Mont-Saint-Michel under the heading “The Legacy of Sigrid Hunke”.

[7] This book discusses the factors that have contributed to the expansion of Arab culture,[7] and give a thorough description of what happened in Spain and Sicily, two regions of Europe that were governed by Muslims for centuries.

in her argument that earlier Muslim advancements in these fields served as the basis for later scientific and technological achievements in Europe.