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Project Revives Nazi Atrocities in Striking Color

thevalemagazine.com

46 points by montrose 7 years ago · 34 comments

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NeedMoreTea 7 years ago

I thought I recognised the name on the main gallery site. Witold Pilecki[0] was an astonishingly brave Polish cavalry officer who volunteered to be incarcerated in Auschwitz[1]. They wanted to get intelligence out and if possible organise resistance in the camp. He escaped after over 2 years, and volunteered to fight during the Warsaw uprising.

Edit: He survived that but was executed after the war by the Poles after a show trial and conviction for espionage. He'd been collecting evidence of Soviet atrocities in Poland.

[0] https://facesofauschwitz.com/gallery/witold-pilecki/ [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witold_Pilecki#Auschwitz

swampthinker 7 years ago

Anyone know where you can find the other photos?

mgkimsal 7 years ago

what's the silver/metal thing on peoples' heads in the left side photo?

davidw 7 years ago

> Photo of 14-year-old Auschwitz inmate Czesława Kwoka. The girl was murdered with a phenol injection into the heart in 1943

There were not "very fine people on both sides".

adamnemecek 7 years ago

This will be very controversial but lately I've been wondering why is it that Germany's atrocities are still talked about however similar atrocities committed by the Allies are ignored.

Let's take Britains rule in India, particularly the Bengal famine of 1943 that killed 2-3 million people (as it happened around the same time as concentration camps).

https://yourstory.com/2014/08/bengal-famine-genocide/

Let's not even get into Belgium rule in Congo.

Is this just a "History is Written By the Victors”? I'm not trying to vindicate Hitler, but what's up with this?

  • ap3 7 years ago

    Whataboutism aside, a big difference is EIC or Churchill did not try to depopulate Bengal or target it’s native population.

    In Germany, the Jewish population was blamed for the countries problems and their extermination was a stated objective of the government’s policy. Concentration camps, gas chambers - they even extended this to other countries: Belgium, France, Poland, Russia

    Famines are caused by environmental issues, a monsoon affects crops or bad policy like Mao in China or Kim in NK

    • __sr__ 7 years ago

      > Famines are caused by environmental issues, a monsoon affects crops or bad policy like Mao in China or Kim in NK

      Maybe — but at the same time tonnes of grains — which should have been sent to provide relief to the affected — were being sent to British troops fighting all over the world.

    • adamnemecek 7 years ago

      > Whataboutism aside,

      Nice use of a meme word. My point was that you need to look at history in context.

      > a big difference is EIC or Churchill did not try to depopulate Bengal or target it’s native population.

      This is disputed https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/not-his-fines...

      > Famines are caused by environmental issues, a monsoon affects crops or bad policy like Mao in China or Kim in NK

      Famines can be manufactured which I believe the Bengali famine was. Holodomor was planned https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holodomor

  • dddddaviddddd 7 years ago

    Maybe the global reach of WWII? The examples you mention involved a few nations at most.

  • eyalm 7 years ago

    The Nazis established a massive, systemic and vicious program for the complete annihilation of any "enemy" of the aryan race, and by "enemy" we are talking about innocent jews, Romani and many more (although, the complete annihilation of the jewish people was it's main target). You may know this as the "Final Solution". I'm not aware of any event in modern human history that resembles the scale, the intent, the execution level and the pure evil that makes the final solution program.

    This does not mean that other atrocities done by any other group of people (including the "allies") are not horrific and should not be condemned or remembered. But, the final solution should always be remembered as an extreme, unique and singular event in modern human history.

  • __sr__ 7 years ago

    Bengal famine is just one example. Read about the history of the Indian subcontinent from around 1000 AD to 1947 AD.

    • adamnemecek 7 years ago

      I'm well aware. I picked that one because it was literally happening at the same time as holocaust.

  • erikpukinskis 7 years ago

    I think part of it is Jewish organizations have done a great job investing in historians and museums to do the work.

    Someone in another thread mentioned a lack of museums about the American holocaust. That stuck in my head. Now I’m thinking about how we fund historians and museums to teach that timeline better.

    • incadenza 7 years ago

      What does the American holocaust refer to? EDIT: if it’s the initial European conquest and genocide, perhaps the lack of photographic / contemporary documentation makes a museum more difficult?

      • adamnemecek 7 years ago

        Yeah, that's what it refers to. I agree that the lack of contemporary documentation might be a major factor.

  • Yoric 7 years ago

    I'll start by answering the part of your questions about other atrocities. I believe it's as simple as: the Holocaust happened in Europe, which is where most of the developed world was looking at the time. Also, the West had managed to convince itself that it had outgrown atrocities, only to see them appear in its courtyard.

    Now, as to why we are still talking about it, I believe it's a pretty good thing.

    This does not mean that we should not also talk about other atrocities. Definitely, they should be taught and discussed and shown.

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