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Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts
Showing posts with label WWII. Show all posts

Monday, April 28, 2025

This Day in History > Red Cross White Buses save thousands of women and children from Ravensbruk

 

From Ravensbrück to freedom: The story of Sweden’s daring ‘White Bus’ rescue


Europe

In April 1945, as Nazi Germany is on the brink of defeat, the Swedish Red Cross launches the largest rescue operation of World War II. The mission – arranged in secret between a Swedish aristocrat and Adolf Hitler’s right-hand man, SS chief Heinrich Himmler – ultimately saves 15,000 prisoners from Nazi camps. One of the destinations is Ravensbrück, the main concentration camp for female prisoners, where thousands of women are evacuated on board Sweden’s now-iconic “White Buses”.




In the spring of 1945, an extraordinary rumour had begun to circulate among the prisoners in the Ravensbrück concentration camp. Word was that the Red Cross, which in the past few weeks had negotiated the distribution of food packages and the evacuation of a handful of the camp’s worst-off inmates, planned a much larger rescue operation, potentially bringing hundreds of them to Sweden.

“I walked around and whispered to myself: ‘Lakes and forests, lakes and forests.’ It became like a mantra for me,” Anika Neyssel, a 26-year-old Dutch woman interned for her involvement in the French resistance movement, said in her post-Ravensbrück testimony.

The timing was crucial. It was the final phase of the war, and as the Allies pressed on from the West and Russia’s Red Army from the East, the Nazi camp guards had drastically ramped up their efforts to eliminate any remaining evidence of their systematic atrocities. Ever since October – when camp commander Fritz Suhren had received the order to execute 2,000 prisoners per month – the white, thick smoke billowing from the crematory had become a sickening constant. But now, the ovens were working so hard, the chimneys had begun spitting out big red flames.

“Ravensbrück already had a gas chamber and a crematory, but an additional gas chamber from Auschwitz had been brought in and installed in the camp. We could literally smell the daily executions. The horror was indescribable,” Selma Van de Perre, a Jewish resistance fighter from the Netherlands recalled in her 2020 memoir “My Name Is Selma”.

By then, Van de Perre wrote, she and the other inmates had already come to the same chilling conclusion: “The Germans were panicking and wanted to leave as few witnesses as possible.”

The already poor living conditions in the camp had also worsened. Infectious diseases like Typhus, Diphtheria and Tuberculosis were spreading like wildfire, killing the weak and starved inmates like flies. 


The miracle babies who survived Ravensbruck

But just as the women braced for the worst, dozens of buses from the Swedish Red Cross pulled up outside the camp’s barbed wire fences. For many, rescue had arrived. 

Between April 23 and April 25, and in several different convoys that travelled under the guise of night, some 2,500 women – most of them from Belgium, France Poland, the Netherlands and Scandinavia – were brought on the buses past the abandoned trenches and bombed-out remains of Hitler’s “Third Reich” to safety in Sweden.

Some of the 35 buses used in the mission were painted on the ferry over to Denmark.
Some of the 35 buses used in the mission were painted on the ferry over to Denmark. © Swedish Red Cross

Secret talks

The last-minute rescue was no coincidence. It was the result of months of secret negotiations between Count Folke Bernadotte, vice president of the Swedish Red Cross and son of Sweden’s Prince Oscar, and Hitler’s right-hand man, SS chief Himmler.

“Most of this happened behind Hitler’s back,” Ulf Zander, a Swedish historian at the University of Lund and expert on World War II, explained.

Himmler had at this point realised the Germans were going to lose the war and had hoped that the premature release of some of the Nazis’ prisoners would buy him goodwill.

“He lived in a complete fantasy world,” Zander explained. “Before he committed suicide [on May 23, 1945, three days after being captured by the British, and two weeks after Germany’s May 8 surrender.  eds. note], he still believed he could become Germany’s new leader and negotiate with at least some of the Allies.” 

Please continue reading on France24 at:

Banking on Himmler’s illusions




Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Russian / Ukrainian History You Probably Never Knew > Is Naziism reviving in Ukraine? Argentina to release Post WWII Nazi files

 

Mainstream media dismisses NeoNaziism in Ukraine as a Russian propaganda program. But MSM is a far cry from being honest when it comes to Russia or Ukraine.


Israel hits out at Ukrainian glorification of WWII Nazi collaborator

People tend to “not check what happened in the past,” acting Ambassador to Russia Alexander Ben Zvi has said
Israel hits out at Ukrainian glorification of WWII Nazi collaborator











Israel opposes Ukraine’s glorification of World War II Nazi collaborator Stepan Bandera, the Jewish state’s acting ambassador to Russia, Alexander Ben Zvi, has told TASS. In comments published on Monday, Ben Zvi confirmed that Israeli authorities are aware of the Bandera cult in Ukraine and have raised the issue with Kiev.

Bandera was a leader in the militant Organization of Ukrainian Nationalists (OUN) and headed the Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) during World War II. The group collaborated with Nazi Germany to massacre over 100,000 Poles, Jews, Russians, and Soviet-aligned Ukrainians.

Despite the UPA-ordered genocide, Bandera and other UPA members were declared national heroes by former Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko in 2010 – a designation reaffirmed by the current Kiev leadership. Ukrainian nationalists continue to celebrate Bandera with annual torchlight marches, referring to him as the “father of the nation.”

“We have stated this more than once. It’s just that people do not check what happened in the past. Our ambassadors to Ukraine even wrote notes of protest at one time,” Ben Zvi said when asked to clarify Israel’s stance on the issue. He added that the Israeli Foreign Ministry is “well aware” of the matter.

His comments appear to contradict recent remarks by Israeli Foreign Minister Gideon Sa’ar. At a press briefing marking Israel’s presidency of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance (IHRA) earlier this month, Sa’ar said he was unaware of Bandera’s veneration in Ukraine.

“First of all, I didn’t know about it. I will check it,” the minister said, adding he would issue a condemnation “if there is a necessity.”

Israel’s Foreign Ministry and its embassy in Kiev have issued several statements denouncing Ukraine’s honoring of Nazi collaborators over the years. However, no such statement has been made since 2022, with embassy officials telling Haaretz they “have made our position clear many times, but apparently there is nothing we can do, at least at the moment.”

Moscow has repeatedly warned of a Nazi revival in Ukraine and cited “denazification” as one of the main goals of its military operation against Kiev. Western media and officials, however, have downplayed Nazi imagery in Ukraine, often dismissing criticism as “Russian propaganda.”


For more on the NeoNazi influence in Ukraine please visit:

Sexual Violence on Women and Girls a Casualty of War > Unspeakable sexual violence in the Ukraine proxy war

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Argentina to release Nazi files


“No reason” to withhold information about the protection the country extended to fugitives after WWII, a senior official has said
Argentina to release Nazi files











Argentina plans to declassify government documents concerning Nazi fugitives who found sanctuary in the Latin American nation following Germany’s defeat in World War II.

The commitment to transparency was announced on Monday by President Javier Milei’s chief of staff, Guillermo Francos, during an interview with the TV channel DNews. He said the president made the decision after a meeting last month with US Senator Steve Daines, who strongly advocated for the public release of the files.

Francos stated that the president believes “there is no reason to withhold information” about the protection afforded to Nazis in Argentina, adding that most of the documents slated for release are housed within the Defense Ministry. Some of the files pertain to financial matters involving services from Swiss banks, he added.

According to estimates, as many as 10,000 war criminals utilized so-called ‘ratlines’ to escape Europe and settle elsewhere as the Axis powers fell on the continent. Around half are believed to have chosen Argentina – a nation known for its reluctance to grant extradition requests — as their refuge.

Among those were Holocaust architect Adolf Eichmann and infamous death camp doctor Josef Mengele. Eichmann was captured by Israeli intelligence operatives and taken to Israel for trial, while Mengele drowned in 1979 after suffering a heart attack.

The influx took place mostly during the first presidency of controversial Argentinian leader Juan Peron, whose government from 1946 to 1955 explicitly supported Nazi exiles. Peron pursued a policy that mixed elements of authoritarianism and populists components that critics believed was influenced by fascism.

Milei’s pledge to unveil the Nazi files follows an earlier decree aimed at accelerating the release of records concerning the Argentine armed forces’ actions during the military dictatorship from 1976 to 1983. The tumultuous period, known as “the last junta,” began with a coup against Isabel Peron, the president’s widow and successor, when his second term was cut short by his death in 1974.

The junta conducted a brutal crackdown on political dissent, resulting in tens of thousands of deaths and disappearances. Presidential spokesman Manuel Adorni said that the government seeks to prevent political manipulation of this tragic period through complete disclosure.



Thursday, June 6, 2024

D-Day Heroes > Where did they come from? Ronald Reagan, Joe Biden, Ben Shapiro

 

The question we should be asking on the 80th anniversary of D-Day is the question Reagan asked: where do we find such men? The Greatest Generation was produced by a generation of churchgoing Christian mothers and fathers. 4% illegitimacy rate. 96% belief in God. 73% church membership. We've rejected all of those things and produced generations of narcissists instead.