Saturday, January 21, 2017

Adolf Hitler With His Favorite Little Girl,



n.d., One web capture Dec. 26, 2016, then the memories went POOF!



bring back nostalgia and memories


These Pictures of Adolf Hitler with Helga Goebbels, His Favorite Little Girl, Show Another Side of the Fuhrer

Helga was the oldest of Goebbels’ six children and she was always said to be Hitler’s favorite little girl.

Kathe Hubner, who worked for the Goebbels family for the last two years of the Second World War, refuses to comment on this, saying only that it is a question which journalists have always pestered her with – she always refused to answer their questions – and that Hitler was friendly to all children.


Whatever Hitler felt about Helga, her feelings about him are evident in these photographs from the 1930s.

Helga was 12 years old when she died. She was murdered by her parents in Berlin on 1 May 1945, the day both parents committed suicide. Bruises found on her body postmortem (mostly on her face) led to wide speculation that she had struggled against receiving a cyanide capsule, which was used to kill her by crushing it between her teeth.




































Vintage, Everyday Reality


A short-lived blog post from 2016, whose low-concept name rendered series like this a bit, well---surreal.




bring back nostalgia and memories




The Liberation of Bergen-Belsen Concentration Camp – Incredible Photos Showing The Reality of The Death Camps at The End of WWII

In the spring of 1945, photographs and witness accounts from the liberation of camps like Bergen-Belsen afforded the disbelieving world outside of Europe its first glimpse into the abyss of Nazi depravity. These incredible photographs below were taken by LIFE photographer George Rodger in April 1945 when he accompanied the British 11th Armoured Division (the fabled “Black Bull”) into the camp just days earlier.

(Photos: George Rodger—The LIFE Picture Collection/Getty Images)



German boy walking down a dirt road lined w. the corpses of hundreds of prisoners who have died of starvation nr. Bergen extermination camp.





British doctor using DDT while delousing newly freed female prisoners at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




Female prisoners in the newly liberated Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




Female prisoners sifting through garbage for food at the recently liberated Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




Portrait of Magdalene Kessal, 25, a domestic servant who served as SS girl at Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.




New internees of the freshly liberated Bergen Belsen concentration camp include this pair of French brothers, Charles and Louis Perret, wearing white boots they took from the Germans.




German guard being forced to put bodies of prisoners into a mass grave at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




British doctor administers delousing treatment of DDT up the skirt of an embarrassed looking female prisoner who is among the 60,000 prisoners just released from Bergen Belsen concentration camp after its liberation by Allied forces.




Weak and dying prisoners stretch out on dirt bank behind Bergen Belsen barracks after the concentration camp was liberated by Allied troops.




German SS soldier who passed out from carrying corpses being carried by two others at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.





Female SS soldiers filling mass grave w. corpses while under guard by British soldiers at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




Corpses lying on ground at the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp.




Liberated women at concentration camp prepare for DDT dusting against vermin.




Dead and dying prisoners at the newly liberated Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




Annalese Kohlmann, former Nazi female guard noted for her cruelty, now a prisoner in the recently liberated Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




Male & female German SS soldiers being forced to load corpses onto trucks under British guard at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




British doctors using DDT to delouse newly liberated prisoners at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




Newly liberated prisoners waiting on line for food at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.



Newly liberated prisoners at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp lining up for food shortly after Allied forces overran the area.




Female German camp guards being forced to unload truck full of the bodies of deceased prisoners at the Bergen Belsen concentration camp.




Body of a dead inmate of the Bergen Belsen concentration camp shortly after the liberation of the camp by Allied troops.




Four web captures from 2016, then---technical difficulties

Feb. 5, 2016
https://web.archive.org/web/20160205225420/http://www.vintag.es/2016/02/the-liberation-of-bergen-belsen.html

March 2, 2016
https://web.archive.org/web/20160302074636/http://www.vintag.es/2016/02/the-liberation-of-bergen-belsen.html

April 2, 2016
https://web.archive.org/web/20160402061216/http://www.vintag.es/2016/02/the-liberation-of-bergen-belsen.html

May 3, 2016
https://web.archive.org/web/20160503191910/http://www.vintag.es/2016/02/the-liberation-of-bergen-belsen.html

The "Lviv Pogroms" in 1941


bring back nostalgia and memories


FRIDAY, OCTOBER 21, 2016

30 Shocking Historical Photos of the Lviv Pogroms in 1941

The city of Lvov (L'viv) in southeastern Poland was occupied by the Soviet Union in 1939, under the terms of the German-Soviet Pact. There were over 200,000 Jews in Lvov in September 1939; nearly 100,000 were Jewish refugees from German-occupied Poland. The Germans subsequently occupied Lvov after the invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941.

Encouraged by German forces to begin violent actions against the Jewish population in Lvov, Ukrainian nationalists massacred about 4,000 Jews in early July 1941. Another pogrom, known as the Petliura Days, was organized in late July. This pogrom was named for Simon Petliura, who had organized anti-Jewish pogroms in the Ukraine after World War I. For three days, Ukrainian militants went on a rampage through the Jewish districts of Lvov. They took groups of Jews to the Jewish cemetery and to Lunecki prison and shot them. More than 2,000 Jews were murdered and thousands more were injured.

In early November 1941, the Germans established a ghetto in the north of Lvov. German police shot thousands of elderly and sick Jews as they crossed the bridge on Peltewna Street on their way to the ghetto. In March 1942, the Germans began deporting Jews from the ghetto to the Belzec extermination camp.

By August 1942, more than 65,000 Jews had been deported from the Lvov ghetto and murdered. Thousands of Jews were sent for forced labor to the nearby Janowska camp. In early June 1943, the Germans destroyed the ghetto, killing thousands of Jews in the process. The remaining ghetto residents were sent to the Janowska forced-labor camp or deported to Belzec.





























































































Posted October 21, 2016
http://www.vintag.es/2016/10/30-shocking-historical-photos-of-lviv.html

Two web captures

Oct. 24, 2016
https://web.archive.org/web/20161024153614/http://www.vintag.es/2016/10/30-shocking-historical-photos-of-lviv.html


Dec. 12, 2016
https://web.archive.org/web/20161212154538/http://www.vintag.es/2016/10/30-shocking-historical-photos-of-lviv.html

Then

This site can’t be reached

www.vintag.es unexpectedly closed the connection.