Photo reblogged from Smile with 18,155 notes
Real-life Grave of the Fireflies: (Photo) Stoic Japanese orphan, standing at attention having brought his dead younger brother to a cremation pyre, Nagasaki, by Joe O’Donnell 1945
This photograph was taken by an American photojournalist, Joe O’Donnell, in Nagasaki in 1945.
He recently spoke to a Japanese interviewer about this picture:
“I saw a boy about ten years old walking by. He was carrying a baby on his back. In those days in Japan, we often saw children playing with their little brothers or sisters on their backs, but this boy was clearly different. I could see that he had come to this place for a serious reason. He was wearing no shoes. His face was hard. The little head was tipped back as if the baby were fast asleep.
“The boy stood there for five or ten minutes. The men in white masks walked over to him and quietly began to take off the rope that was holding the baby. That is when I saw that the baby was already dead. The men held the body by the hands and feet and placed it on the fire.
“The boy stood there straight without moving, watching the flames. He was biting his lower lip so hard that it shone with blood. The flame burned low like the sun going down. The boy turned around and walked silently away.”
This has been one of the most depressing things I have read.
(And I am most ashamed to say all this time I thought the characters from Grave of the Fireflies were fictional. For goodness’ sake, the movie was based on a semi-autobiography. As a kid I never really liked that movie given its atmosphere, and now, knowing this just made it more disturbing and depressing.)
*attempts to pull heart out of the paper shredder* Things like this should never happen again.
Source: ace-su
Post reblogged from HISTORICITY (was already taken) with 58 notes
historicity-was-already-taken:
Lately I’ve been studying nineteenth century German Jewry, and my studies made me wonder what exactly Kaiser Wilhelm II thought of Hitler. So I poked around a bit, and found that the Kaiser had written the following about the Jews in regards to the loss of the First World War: “[Germany had been] egged on and misled by the tribe of Judah. Let no German ever forget this, nor rest until these parasites have been destroyed and exterminated from German soil!…[The Jews are a] nuisance that humanity must get rid of some way or other. I believe the best would be gas!” He also wrote in 1941 that “We must drive Judah out of England just as he has been chased out of the Continent…the Jews [are] being thrust out of their nefarious positions in all countries, whom they have driven to hostility for centuries.”
Kaiser Wilhelm II abdicated the throne of Germany on November 9, 1918. He lived the rest of his life in exile in the Netherlands. As the Nazi Party began to gain power in Germany, the former Kaiser was one of their initial supporters because he believed that the Party’s success would lead to the restoration of the monarchy. Hitler, however, never would have supported this endeavor as he did not think highly of the former Kaiser and blamed him (along with the Jews) for Germany’s loss of World War I.
In terms of Wilhelm’s former statements on Jews, it could be assumed that he would have approved of the Final Solution. However, he decried Kristallnacht, calling it mindless gang violence and going so far as to state that “For the first time, I am ashamed to be a German.”
Perhaps his approval grew as the Third Reich began to use gas as Wilhelm had suggested earlier, and as they generally began to carry out the Final Solution in a more streamlined manner, but that is simply conjecture. All we can know for sure is that, after Hitler’s initial successes in the outset of WWII, Wilhelm sent Hitler a telegram reading “Congratulations, you have won using my troops.”
Wilhelm died of an artery blockage a few weeks before the invasion of the Soviet Union.
Source: historicity-was-already-taken
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Photo reblogged from queer & anonymous with 41,762 notes
Nightwitches
Die NachtHexen
Ночные ведьмы
for those not in the know, night witches were russian lady bombers who bombed the shit out of german lines in WW2. Thing is though, they had the oldest, noisiest, crappest planes in the entire world. The engines used to conk out halfway through their missions, so they had to climb out on the wings mid flight to restart the props. the planes were also so noisy that to stop germans from hearing them combing and starting up their anti aircraft guns, they’d climb up to a certain height, coast down to german positions, drop their bombs, restart their engines in midair, and get the fuck out of dodge.
their leader flew over 200 missions and was never captured.
HOLY SHIT THIS IS RAD AS FUCK
HOLY SHIT
omg that is just so cool aaaa
Russians get shit done apparently.
Source: sovietico
Photo reblogged from History Of Europe with 177 notes
Otto von Bismarck (1815-1898), 1st Chancellor of the German Empire
Source: historyofeurope
Photo reblogged from I Am Sasha. with 414 notes
Princess Margaret of Prussia, ca. 1905.
Source: legrandcirque
Photo reblogged from Once Upon a Time in War with 34,439 notes
Ordinary people. The courage to say no.
The photo was taken in Hamburg in 1936, during the celebrations for the launch of a ship. In the crowd, one person refuses to raise his arm to give the Nazi salute. The man was August Landmesser. He had already been in trouble with the authorities, having been sentenced to two years hard labor for marrying a Jewish woman.
We know little else about August Landmesser, except that he had two children. By pure chance, one of his children recognized her father in this photo when it was published in a German newspaper in 1991. How proud she must have been in that moment.
I enjoy things like this immensely.
Source: senrinomichi.com
Photoset reblogged from I Am Sasha. with 24 notes
Stalin’s Starvation of Ukraine – Seventy Years Later,
World Still Largely Unaware Of TragedyBy Askold Krushelnycky, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty
A famine deliberately engineered by the regime of Josef Stalin 70 years ago claimed millions of lives, mostly in Ukraine but also in some other parts of the Soviet Union. It is today considered one of the worst atrocities of the Soviet regime and a terrifying act of genocide. Even so, the famine of 1933 is relatively unknown. RFE/RL correspondent Askold Krushelnycky examines the reasons behind this and reports on a campaign to draw attention to the atrocity.
Prague, 8 April 2003 (RFE/RL) — Estimates of how many people died in Stalin’s engineered famine of 1933 vary. But they are staggering in their scale — between seven and 11 million people.
But despite the horrific number of people who died, the world is relatively unfamiliar with this grisly chapter in Soviet history which claimed lives on the same scale as the holocaust. One of the main reasons is that the Germans were eventually defeated, and thousands of eyewitnesses told their stories about concentration camps and massacres. The experience was also captured unforgettably in photographs, film, and written accounts, and many of those responsible for the genocide were captured and put on trial.
Lyubomyr Luciuk is the director of research at the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association. He explained why there was no such opportunity to investigate the famine in the Soviet Union.
British historian Robert Conquest is an expert on the period and his 1986 study of the famine, “Harvest of Sorrow,” brought much information about the tragedy to Western audiences for the first time. Conquest said another contrast between the famine and the holocaust is that while Adolf Hitler had written down much of what he intended to do, Stalin did not go on record about the famine.
Conquest said that while most historians now accept that a devastating famine took place, some skeptics remain that try to find a justification for Stalin’s behavior.
But Conquest said more evidence has emerged since the disintegration of the USSR allowed greater access to Soviet archives. He says he himself has uncovered documented evidence that shows Stalin knew that hundreds of thousands of peasants were trying to enter Russia in search of food.
Conquest is in no doubt that the famine was primarily aimed at Ukrainians and that Stalin hated not only the country peasants but even senior Communist leaders, like Mykola Skrypnyk, who eventually killed himself.
Luciuk of the Ukrainian Canadian Civil Liberties Association has a different theory for why news of the famine never reached the West. He blamed a number of Western journalists based in Moscow at the time who knew of the forced starvation but chose not to write about it or deliberately covered it up.
The journalist he says played the most influential role in the cover-up was “The New York Times” correspondent Walter Duranty. A drug addict with a shady reputation, Duranty was also an avid fan of Stalin’s, whom he described as “the world’s greatest living statesman.” He was granted the first American interview with the Soviet leader and received privileged information from the secretive regime.
Duranty confided to a British diplomat at the time that he thought 10 million people had perished in the famine. But when other journalists who had traveled to Ukraine began writing about the horrific famine raging there, Duranty branded their information as anti-Soviet lies. Conquest believes that Duranty was being blackmailed by the Soviet secret police over his sexual activities, which reportedly included bisexuality and necrophilia.
The year before the famine, in 1932, Duranty won the Pulitzer Prize, America’s most coveted journalism award, for a series of articles on the Soviet economy. Liciuk says members of the Ukrainian diaspora, as well as Ukrainian politicians and academics, earlier this month launched a campaign to have Duranty’s award posthumously revoked. He said he hopes the campaign will make more people in the world aware of the famine.
A spokesman for the Pulitzer board, Sid Gissler, said the board has considered withdrawing Duranty’s prize on previous occasions but had decided against doing so because it had not been awarded for articles related to the famine. He said he sympathized with the Ukrainian campaign, and added the board would reconsider the question again later this year.
Duranty died in 1957 an impoverished drunk. Luciuk said that when details about the famine finally came into the open, Duranty was credited with coining the famously callous phrase, “You can’t make an omelet without breaking eggs.”
Luciuk said he hopes Ukraine, meanwhile, will do more to educate its own population about the famine. Since gaining independence, successive Ukrainian governments have done little to publicize the episode for fear of instigating a controversy with the country’s still-powerful Communist Party, which continues to deny the famine was deliberately organized. Moreover, many of those who took part in the executions, deportations, and confiscation of food are still alive and receiving state pensions.
In February, the Ukrainian parliament conducted a special hearing about the famine. The deputy prime minister for humanitarian issues, Dmytro Tabachnuk, said the famine was a deliberate terrorist act that claimed the lives of up to 10 million people. He said the government is planning to build a National Famine Memorial Complex.
Source: ukemonde.com
Photo reblogged from glam breakfast with 603 notes
Russian children having a meal of molasses bread and coffee in a Displaced Persons Camp during World War II. Photograph by William Vandivert. Germany, April 1945.
Source: legrandcirque
Photo reblogged from I Am Sasha. with 201 notes
Wojtek (1942–1963) was a Syrian brown bear cub found in Iran and adopted by soldiers of the 22nd Artillery Supply Company of the Polish II Corps. To get him on a British transport ship when the unit sailed from Egypt to fight with the British 8th Army in the Italian campaign, he was officially drafted into the Polish Army as a private and was listed among the soldiers of the 22nd Artillery Supply Company of the Polish II Corps. During the Battle of Monte Cassino, Wojtek assisted his unit in transporting ammunition, never dropping a single crate. Following demobilization on November 15, 1947, Wojtek was given to the Edinburgh Zoo. There Wojtek spent the rest of his days, often visited by journalists and former Polish soldiers, some of whom would toss him cigarettes, which he then proceeded to smoke. Wojtek died in December 1963, at the age of 22.
Pictured: Wojtek with a Polish soldier, ca. 1945.
Reblog Wojtek. ALWAYS. ~ C:
Source: legrandcirque
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