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In The News / How a Top Nazi's Brother Saved Lives
« Last post by Mehar on May 02, 2012, 08:06:08 PM »
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In downtown Vienna under the Nazis, two members of the SA had decided to humiliate an old woman. A crowd gathered and jeered as the stormtroopers hung a sign bearing the words "I'm a dirty Jew" around the woman's neck. Suddenly, a tall man with a high forehead and thick mustache pushed his way angrily through the mob and freed the woman. "There was a scuffle with two stormtroopers, I hit them and was arrested immediately," the man later said in a matter-of-fact statement.

Despite this open act of rebellion, the man was released immediately. He only had to say his name: Albert Göring, brother of Hermann Göring, the commander of the German air force and Hitler's closest confidant.

Years later, after the fall of the Third Reich, Albert Göring was arrested once again, this time by Americans. Again he gave his name, but this time it had the opposite effect.

"The results of the interrogation of Albert Göring … constitutes as clever a piece of rationalization and 'white wash' as the SAIC (Seventh Army Interrogation Center) has ever seen," American investigator Paul Kubala wrote on September 19, 1945. "Albert's lack of subtlety is matched only by the bulk of his obese brother."

Kubala's interpreter, Richard Sonnenfeldt, was likewise skeptical. "Albert told a fascinating story, but one I had trouble believing," he commented.


http://www.spiegel.de/international/germany/0,1518,830893,00.html
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Network Announcements / Please read: an important announcement
« Last post by Mehar on April 27, 2012, 09:46:45 PM »
It is with a heavy heart that I announce the passing of Frank Spence (Anml_341 on our forums). I was informed earlier today that Frank passed away on Thursday night due to a heart attack. I ask that forum readers join us in offering our condolence to the family of Mr. Spence.
 


RIP friend.
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It's the place brave but foolhardy Brits risked everything to escape from in World War Two.

But now those looking for a different kind of escape are heading back to the notorious Colditz - after the former prison camp in southern Germany was turned into a hotel.

Tours from the UK are offering overnight stays for guests paying £20 a night to get the ultimate 'prisoner experience' at the castle once used by the Nazis to hold troublesome Allied PoWs.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2127239/Escape-Colditz-Notorious-Nazi-PoW-prison-reopens-20-night-hotel.html
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The Home Front / Re: WW-II Canadian PoW Camps to be Historic Event
« Last post by Mehar on April 04, 2012, 09:22:56 AM »
That's excellent news, it's great to see that things are finally beginning to move forward!
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The Home Front / Re: WW-II Canadian PoW Camps to be Historic Event
« Last post by Anml_341 on March 27, 2012, 03:46:59 PM »
Announcement by the Minister of the Environment, the Honourable Peter Kent - March 27th, 2012. Minister Kent made a number of announcements regarding Military Historic matters including this one:


The Detention of Second World War Military Prisoners of War and of Enemy Aliens Sent to Canada from Great Britain
From 1940 to 1947, Canada was the wartime “home” for more than 38,000 prisoners of war and of “enemy aliens” sent from Great Britain. This detention constitutes an important element of Canada’s contribution to the Allied war effort and defence strategy, as camps located throughout the country were used to hold combatants from the German armed forces as well as merchant mariners and Great Britain’s enemy aliens far from the theatres of war. On the home front, the detention benefited Canadian society, notably through the establishment of work programs for the production of non-military goods essential to the domestic economy and the employment of members of the Veterans Guard of Canada as camp guards. Internationally, Canada’s fair treatment of military prisoners was noted, and it influenced the permanent post-war settlement of former detainees in Canada.
In the first years of conflict, the British government had amassed a significant military prisoner and civilian internee population, and, until 1940, they were safely detained in Great Britain. As the threat of German invasion loomed, however, this population posed a security threat and a resource drain. Consequently, the British government requested the transfer of its enemy aliens and prisoners of war. With its vast open spaces and available resources for such an operation, Canada was an ideal location for housing some of these men.
The effort involved an intricate network of 26 permanent and dozens of temporary internment camps in remote areas throughout Canada. While the bulk of the population that was detained at the request of the British government was made up of combatants from the battlefields, waters, and airspace of Europe and Africa, it also included German and Italian merchant mariners, seized from ships in the Atlantic or Canadian ports. As well, some 4,000 “enemy aliens” who had been arrested in Great Britain due to fears of pro-Nazi action were sent by the British and then interned in these camps. Most of these enemy aliens were returned to England or released in Canada by November 1943. By 1948 all prisoners of war had been repatriated, with the exception of a handful of escapees and those who had died here.
Despite the unpopularity of German prisoners of war within Canada, they were relatively well treated. Indeed, their detention in Canada was seen as a model of compliance with the 1929 Geneva Convention. Often, the experience of prisoners of war in Canadian camps created a fondness for Canada, with hundreds of them eventually immigrating here after the war. As well, the camps directly affected the country’s war-time economy, as many detainees provided labour in agriculture, forestry, lumbering, construction, and in other non-military work projects. Furthermore, the need for camp security led to the employment of members of the Veterans Guard of Canada, composed primarily of First World War veterans who were keen to participate in the war effort.

Next steps are the plaque wording and approval, unveiling ceremony date, and the actual unveiling ceremony.
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Welcome to the forums budman,

Very well put together account, thanks for the link!
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The Home Front / Re: WW-II Canadian PoW Camps to be Historic Event
« Last post by Anml_341 on March 09, 2012, 08:11:07 AM »
Former POW Paul Mengelberg (96) gave a presentation to the History students at Lakehead University recently.  In the audience were representatives of Parks Canada and Ontario Provincial Parks.   His hour long presentation was based around answering questions from the students as to what it was like being a German POW in Canada.  The presentation was recorded.  A video is being made incorporating his chat for presentation at the unveiling ceremony. 
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In The News / PoW story shared with students
« Last post by Mehar on March 03, 2012, 07:28:33 PM »
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From 1940 to 1942, Paul Mengelberg looked out at the Northern Ontario wilderness from behind barbed wire, not knowing that he would one day call the very same landscape his home.

On Tuesday, 96-year-old Mengelberg, a former prisoner of war, gave a presentation to Walter Epp’s curricular and instruction in history class at Lakehead University.
“For us it is a unique opportunity to speak to or hear from a person who actually witnessed and took part in the events that we spent a lot of time reading about in text books,” Epp said. “It’s a rare privilege.”

This is the third time Epp has invited Mengelberg to speak, and he said it is always interesting to hear about Mengelberg’s experiences during the Second World War. Epp added that it is also important to hear the stories from all perspectives.

“It gives it a personal context and provides an opportunity for the students to actually take part or hear a person that has witnessed these events,” he said. “And it’s a first-hand account, not a second-hand account or interpreted.”

Mengelberg was born in 1916 in Cologne, Germany. Growing up, Mengelberg was like any other boy, going to school and spending time with friends. But in the backdrop was a country devastated by the First World War and rising unrest in the 1920s and ’30s.

http://www.chroniclejournal.com/content/news/local/2012/02/29/pow-story-shared-students
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In The News / Legendary wartime courier dies
« Last post by Mehar on February 22, 2012, 10:05:11 PM »
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Jozef Uznanski, one of Poland's celebrated wartime couriers, has passed away in his native Zakopane at 87.

A skier, mountain guide and rescuer, Jozef Uznanski fought in Poland's official underground army (AK) during World War II. His intimate knowledge of the highlands of southern Poland made him an invaluable courier during the Nazi occupation.
 
His mountains exploits became the stuff of legend. On one occasion, he was compelled to abandon a cable car before it reached the peak of the Kasprowy Wierch mountain. Having been tipped off by the conductor that the Germans were waiting for him at the top, he strapped on his skis and descended the slope from an intermediate stop.

http://thenews.pl/1/9/Artykul/90990,Legendary-wartime-courier-dies
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