tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-261349495107498373.post6589164596767543851..comments2024-03-02T13:30:04.798-06:00Comments on ETA - Expose Them All: Killing and Expulsion of Germans in Czechoslovakia in 1945ETAhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/10360347929160003380noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-261349495107498373.post-23761773685478153272023-07-24T15:52:04.773-06:002023-07-24T15:52:04.773-06:00Regarding Theresienstadt, the Red Cross reported, ...Regarding Theresienstadt, the Red Cross reported, “…where there were about 40,000 Jews deported from various countries, was a relatively privileged ghetto” (Vol. III, p. 75).<br /><br />“The Committee’s delegates were able to visit the camp at Theresienstadt (Terezin) which was used exclusively for Jews and was governed by special conditions … From information gathered by the Committee, this camp had been started as an experiment by certain leaders of the Reich … These men wished to give the Jews the means of setting up a communal life in a town under their own administration and possessing almost complete autonomy … two delegates were able to visit the camp on April 6, 1945.<br />They confirmed the favourable impression gained on the first visit” (Vol. I, p. 642).<br />https://historicaltribune.wordpress.com/2016/10/04/internment-camps-irc-records-disclose-more-than-just-death-figures-of-271301-from-typhus-during-wwii-soviet-sabotage-and-german-patronage/Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-261349495107498373.post-62273924916322860562023-07-24T15:37:05.941-06:002023-07-24T15:37:05.941-06:00No Evidence Of Genocide
One of the most important ...No Evidence Of Genocide<br />One of the most important aspects of the Red Cross Report is that it clarifies the true cause of those deaths that undoubtedly occurred in the camps toward the end of the war. Says the Report: "In the chaotic condition of Germany after the invasion during the final months of the war, the camps received no food supplies at all and starvation claimed an increasing number of victims. Itself alarmed by this situation, the German Government at last informed the ICRC on February 1st, 1945 ... In March 1945, discussions between the President of the ICRC and General of the S.S. Kaltenbrunner gave even more decisive results. Relief could henceforth be distributed by the ICRC, and one delegate was authorised to stay in each camp ..." (Vol. III, p. 83).<br />https://archive.org/details/ReportOfTheInternationalCommitteeOfTheRedCrossOnItsActivitiesDuring/ReportOfTheInternationalCommitteeOfTheRedCrossOnItsActivitiesDuringTheSecondWorldWarseptember11939-June301947Vol.2/mode/2upAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-261349495107498373.post-3956130775464875822023-07-24T15:33:58.089-06:002023-07-24T15:33:58.089-06:00The Czechs had been treated by the Germans as equa...The Czechs had been treated by the Germans as equals and were better nourished than many Germans. One had sat next to the Czechs in railroads, movies or cafés; no difference was made - except that the Czechs did not have to enlist and had no losses to lament.<br />https://www.wintersonnenwende.com/scriptorium/english/archives/whitebook/desg23.htmlAnonymousnoreply@blogger.com