It would be nice if people could learn from history.
A very difficult time in many parts of the world at present but we must not forget the events of the past either.
It would be nice if people could learn from history.
"Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's enemy action."
"You gotta know when to hold em and know when to fold em".
'Against stupidity, the gods themselves struggle in vain' - Schiller.
"Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's enemy action."
"You gotta know when to hold em and know when to fold em".
We must never use this previous genocide when referencing current genocides. That much I do know.
We must never forget. Always remember. Never forget. IMO
The current perpetrators would be better served keeping quiet this year.
The amount of antisemitism in the world is unbelievable. This is a topic that should never have to be hidden in a secret sub forum.
My wife’s father is Israeli and his parents were from Berlin, he was born in Israel and suffice to say times were hard.
Whatever you think of Israel they have a right to mourn without antisemitic posts.
Last edited by Rodder; 27th January 2024 at 18:11.
Ignoring the current situation the holocaust is something we should never forget. It’s a stain on humanity and that shouldn’t be a controversial opinion.
I went to Auschwitz 40 years ago I lost a day of my life.
The sight of hair and spectacles and the like in the glass fronted rooms still haunts me.
I knew 2 concentration camp survivors, the nicest people you will ever meet.
They where only alive by chance,they never told me of the horrors they saw.
The kindnes and compassion they had for others was untainted by past pains,they never showed hate to anyone.
I have also met and been abused by a German WW2 NAZI soldier.
Some people on this forum are up there with the PO investigators,blindly led by one man who spills his hate everywhere.
Thoughts are with those whose families were touched by the holocaust.
Last edited by oldoakknives; 28th January 2024 at 00:51.
Started out with nothing. Still have most of it left.
Last edited by Passenger; 28th January 2024 at 10:54.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/20...e_iOSApp_Other
Deportations of Jews from Breslau, then part of Germany. Now Wroclaw in Poland.
Last edited by seabiscuit; 28th January 2024 at 11:45.
There's an initiative called 'Stolpersteine' or in English: stumbling stones.
https://stichting-stolpersteine.nl/w...teine/?lang=en
It is basically a copper 'stone' in the pavement to commemorate a Jewish person who was taken away from the address near that copper stone.
The process of getting a Stolpersteine in front of a home somewhere in the Netherlands up to the moment the stone is put into the ground, takes a long time. Our local council has decided to do the right thing: they made a request on behalf of the whole town. Every known address where a person was taken away from should have a stone. In the mean time, the city council has a leading role by putting down granite stones with the same information until the copper ones are placed. They will replace the engraved granite stones.
I used to live in an area of the town where most houses are more than 100 years old. And during the Covid period, my wife and I started to make long walks all across the area and we started noticing those temporary stones. More and more appeared when we walked on the pavement near the old homes. Imagine: "Oh here's a stone!" "And there!" "Here are three more!" Name, day of birth, day of them being murdered. Yes the Nazis ran a tight ship when it came to documenting their crimes.
In the end (and I have written about that in 2020 on these pages) I found out that the number of people (from my town) taken away to concentration camps was much higher than the local dead-count as a result of Covid.
I also wrote about the monument in the park next to my house, commemorating the deportation of > 1100 psychiatric patients from a specialized hospital. Every year, there's a remembrance day and the monument is cleaned and maintained by the school at the other side of the park.
Are we, Dutch, the good people we pretend to be with all those stones? No. 75% of all Jewish people in the Netherlands was taken away and murdered. In Belgium, the number is 'only' 40%. The Anne Frank Stichting in Amsterdam has the answer:
https://www.annefrank.org/en/anne-fr...estern-europe/
A long story that lead to a lot of 'outside the justice system punishments' (to put it euphemistically...) after the war. Another thing the Dutch are reluctant to talk about.
Last edited by thieuster; 28th January 2024 at 14:52.
Do you really think sharing those kind of details on a public forum would be a wise idea? And are they really the kind of things which would be suitable for the G&D? To be honest I really can't see why anyone would be 'curious about the details, circumstances…' either.
Started out with nothing. Still have most of it left.