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Husar:
I'm fed up with german-arse-licker raulmarrio !!!

The way he defends germans in THIS VERY TOPIC IS DISGUSTING !!!!

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Husar:
GERMANS GENOCIDIZING SERBS:



http://serbianna.com/blogs/savich/?cat=3

"The Kragujevac Massacre, 1941


German Wehrmacht soldier points to the body of a Serbian civilian from Kragujevac that is still alive after mass executions that will be finished off. Above, German troops assemble Serbian civilians for execution outside of Kragujevac.

The Kragujevac Massacre of October 20, 1941 was one of the most horrific war crimes of World War II. On October 20, 1941, German Army troops rounded up 2,300 Serbian men and boys from the town of Kragujevac who were then executed. In all, 7,000 Serbian men and boys were executed in the area around Kragujevac during the months of September and October, 1941.

The Kragujevac Massacre is virtually unknown in the US and in the West. Instead, US accounts focus on manufactured and falsified propaganda constructs such as Srebrenica and Racak, “massacres” that have been shown to be hoaxes and US propaganda constructs.

Communist historiography falsified the Kragujevac massacre. The role of Serbian resistance forces and insurgents, the Chetnik guerrillas, was falsified and deleted. The Communist Partisans falsified the facts to create a false and bogus picture of themselves as resisting the German occupation forces while the Serbian Chetnik guerrillas were “collaborationist”. This was a totally false and bogus conception manufactured by Communist and Croatian hacks and historians after the war.

The actual facts have finally emerged. We can finally get an accurate picture of what really happened in Kragujevac and grasp the circumstances that led in one of the most horrendous massacres of World War II and of the 20th century.

We now know that the Serbian Chetnik guerrillas and insurgents played a major role in the resistance to the German military occupation of Serbia. We can now more accurately assess and judge the Serbian Chetnik guerrilla role in the events and action surrounding the Kragujevac massacre of 1941.

The Kragujevac massacre is crucial because it was conducted by German Army soldiers, by the Wehrmacht, not by the Waffen SS or German military police or security troops. Like the earlier German Army executions of Serbian civilians in Pancevo in Vojvodina on April 21-22, 1941, these were random executions of Serbian civilians in reprisal for Serbian resistance, allegedly for the killings by Serbian resistance forces of a German Waffen SS officer and nine local ethnic German volksdeutsche who were actively assisting the German occupation forces by open and active collaboration, espionage, and sabotage. The executions were conducted by the German Army to put down a Serbian insurgency or resistance movement.

Similarly, the Kragujevac Massacre was an attempt by the German Army to quell and to put down the Serbian insurgency and resistance by executing Serbian civilians at random. For every German soldier killed, 100 Serbian civilians would be executed. For every German soldier wounded, 50 Serbs would be executed. The German military occupation forces had never encountered this level of resistance and opposition from an occupied country. Both the level and extent of resistance were unprecedented and unparalleled. The countermeasures the German Army used to put down this insurgency were similarly unparalleled and unprecedented. For this reason, the massacre in Kragujevac is important in World War II history."








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GO BACK TO YOUR GERMAN HELL RAULMARRIO,
DISGRACE AND SHAME ON YOU !!!!

Husar:
GEMANOPHILES,
READ THIS WELL,
BEFORE YOU EVER POST IN THIS SECTION:
"Kragujevac ‘41: The 65th Anniversary of the Kragujevac Massacre
Thursday, October 19th, 2006
The Kragujevac massacre of October 20-21, 1941 was one of the most horrific Nazi war crimes during World War II. Serbian civilians from Kragujevac were executed by the German occupation army even though no attacks were made in the city. German General Franz Boehme wanted to fill the quota of one hundred Serbian civilians executed for every German soldier killed, fifty Serbian civilians executed for every German soldier wounded. Because not enough hostages could be found, however, Serbian students from the Kragujevac high school along with their teachers were rounded up and executed. The massacre occurred during the Serbian insurgency or guerrilla resistance movemnet that began in the summer of 1941. The Serbian insurgency was the first major resistance to the German Nazi New Order in Europe. In this regard, it was unprecedented and unique. The German military occupation forces responded with unprecedented “reprisals” and indiscriminate mass executions of civilians.

On September 28, 1941, Serbian Chetnik guerrillas captured the 6th Company of the 920th Landesschuetzen or Security Battalion of the German Army which had occupied Gorni Milanovac in central Serbia. The supreme German military commander in Serbia, General Franz Boehme, sent German occupation troops to the region to carry out reprisals. One of the units that Boehme sent in the “punitive expedition” was the 1st Battalion of the 724th Wehrmacht Infantry Regiment, commanded by Major Paul Koenig. The 3rd Battalion of the 749th Wehrmacht Infantry Regiment had been ambushed and attacked by Serbian Chetnik guerrillas as it advanced from Gorni Milanovac to Kragujevac. The Serbian guerrilla forces killed 10 German Wehrmacht troops and wounded 26. Major Paul Koenig, whose forces were deployed at the time in the city of Kragujevac, ordered that a “comprehensive reprisal” against Serbian civilians in Kragujevac be undertaken.

In retaliation, on 19 October, German military forces burned down several villages in the Groznice area. Wehrmacht occupation troops executed 422 Serbian civilians. On the next day, October 20, German reprisal operations continued in Kragujevac as German troops rounded up 2,300 men and boys for execution. The Serbian civilians were held overnight in the city public plaza and the barracks building and shot outside of the city on October 21. The executions were by troops of the 1st Battalion of the 724th Wehrmacht Infantry Regiment.

All Serbian males between the ages of 16 and 60 were taken to district military headquarters for identification, then to huts overlooking the town. Civil servants were rounded up from city offices and 300 students over 16 were taken from the high school along with 18 teachers.

The executions were carried out to fill the quota. A telegram between the Plenipotentiary of the German Foreign Ministry and the military commander in Serbia explained the reason why civilians from Kragujevac were chosen for execution:

“The executions in Kragujevac occurred although there had been no attacks on members of the Wehrmacht in this city, for the reason that not enough hostages could be found elsewhere.”

An announcement from the local German command office in Kragujevac on October 21, 1941, was as follows:

“For every dead German soldier, 100 residents have been executed, and for every wounded German soldier, 50 residents have been executed, and before all others, Communists, bandits, and their assistants were targeted, all totaling 2,300.”

On October 29, Felix Benzler, sent this report to his ministry, noting that 2,300 Serbian civilians had been executed in Kragujevac:

“In the past week there have been executions of a large number of Serbs … in Kragujevac, as reprisals for the killing of members of the Wehrmacht in the proportion of 100 Serbs for one German. … in Kragujevac 2,300.”

The total number of Serbian civilians executed in Kragujevac and the surrounding area is estimated at 5,000-7,000."




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Husar:
"Before they were executed, the Serbian civilian hostages were allowed to write notes and letters to their families and relatives from the barracks building where they were held.

Ljubisa Jovanovic, a student at the Kragujevac high school, wrote a note to his parents:

“Dear mom and dad for the last time Love Ljubisa”

Pavle Ivanovic, also a student at the high school, wrote a note for his father:

“Dad, Miso and I are in the old barracks. Bring us lunch, my jumper too and a blanket. Bring us some jam Pavle Dad go to the schoolmaster if that matters dad send us something to eat. Mom uncle Peter is also here. Send him 3 packs of tobacco and some t. paper Pavle”

Stevan Vuletic, a worker, wrote:

“Children revenge your father Stevan”

Borivoje Ivanovic, a worker, wrote a note for his wife:

“take care of the children my last words Bora Promise never(r) leav(e) the children”

Gligorije Djordjevic wrote:

“My children don’(t) forget your father … Gligorije them gonna kill me innocent so help me God… Dear Mother take care of my little orphans”

Miloje Prokic, a worker, wrote:

“Mileva take care of my Mile my best Miloje Goodbye I’m dying and dunno nothing about Velja Bogdan and Selimi(r) Farewell for good”

Viktor Krizbaher, a fireman in the city, wrote:

“take care of the children it grieves me I’m so cold and hungry bumped against something and it hurts now I’ll come back but dunno when just take care of the children Viktor we are in the old barracks”

Dragoljub Mladenovic, a carpenter, wrote a note for his wife:

“Darling please take Care of the children don’t leave them never and Goodbye”

Svetislav Miljkovic wrote:

“My dear sweet Children Mile and Andra and Militza and Miso and My Dear home your father sends you hi(s) las(t) words so long I’m going to die God bless you all your father Tile”

Radisav Simic, a laborer, wrote:

“Good-bye Mitza I die today. Good-bye my dearest my last thought was you Be happy my son even without me. Good-bye —Radisav”

Lazar Pantelic, a teacher and an associate director at the Kragujevac high school, wrote a note for his wife and children:

“My dearest my beloved, Mira, kiss the children for me Children, listen to mother and take care of yourselves Goodbye for ever Love your dad Laza Oct. 21, 1941.”

 

Husar:
GERMANIACS, READ THIS :

"Belgrade ‘41: “Most terrible scene, which I photographed ever”
Saturday, October 7th, 2006
On April 21-22, 1941, German Wehrmacht photographer Gerhard Gronefeld photographed what he regarded as the “most terrible scene, which I photographed ever.” This scene was the mass hanging and mass shooting of Serbian civilians by the German Army in Pancevo, a city in Vojvodina northeast of Belgrade. Thirty-six Serbian civilians were rounded up at random and executed by German occupation forces, the Gross Deutschland Regiment under Oberstleutnant Wilhelm-Hunert von Stockhausen, following the Axis invasion of Yugoslavia on April 6, 1941.

Gerhard Gronefeld (1911-2000) began working in 1935 for Heinrich Hoffmann, who was the official photographer of the NSDAP, the German Nazi Party, and who was Adolf Hitler’s personal photographer. He photographed the Summer Olympics in Berlin in 1936. He later worked for the German magazine “Freude und Arbeit” and the “Berliner Illustrierter Zeitung”. During World War II, he was assigned to a “propaganda company” of the German Army. He was a war photographer and correspondent in Belgium, France, Poland, the Soviet Union, Yugoslavia, Serbia, and the Balkans. Using a Carl Zeiss Ikon Contax camera, he documented not only the events of the war, but also Wehrmacht “retaliatory measures” against civilians, hostages, and guerrillas. He photographed the German Army executions of 36 Serbian civilians in Pancevo on April 21-22, 1941 during the Balkans campaign, the invasion of Yugoslavia. Gronefeld regarded the Pancevo executions of Serbian civilians as the most important that he took, and the ones that had the most impact on him personally. In a March 7, 1997 interview to the Associated Press, he recalled the Wehrmacht’s executions of the Serbian civilians in Pancevo:

“These eyes will always pursue me”

By TERRENCE PETTY

MUNICH, Germany (AP) - Thirty-six Serb civilians visit Gerhard Gronefeld sometimes as he sleeps. He photographed them, just before they were hanged or shot to death by a German army unit in 1941.

On those haunted nights, waking him in terror, is his memory of the pleading eyes of the Serb victims - 35 men and one woman.

“Those eyes, those eyes. They will never give me peace,'’ says the 85-year- old Gronefeld, who went from battle to battle across Europe as a propaganda photographer in the German armed forces.

Eleven of his photographs of the reprisal massacre in Pancevo, Serbia, are part of a traveling exhibit that documents atrocities committed in the Balkans and the Soviet Union by Germany’s regular armed forces, the Wehrmacht.

The exhibit has caused a furor during its current stop in Munich. The governing conservative party of Bavaria state calls it an insult to the Wehrmacht. Leftist politicians retort that critics of the exhibit are trying to gloss over history. And about 5,000 neo-Nazis marched through Munich on March 1 to protest the display.

The exhibit confronts Germans with a fact many would rather not admit: Ordinary soldiers, not just special units like the Nazi SS elite guard, killed Jews and other civilians.

Of hundreds of photos in the Wehrmacht exhibit, only Gronefeld’s were taken by a professional photographer assigned to the Wehrmacht. The German army destroyed most evidence of its involvement in the Holocaust and other atrocities.

Suspecting that his photos of the killings would likely be destroyed, Gronefeld never turned them over to his superiors. Nor was he asked for the photos. Gronefeld says he kept the pictures because he wanted to some day tell the world what happened at Pancevo.

Gronefeld says he did not like Hitler or his ideas, and refused to join the Nazi party. But he willingly took photos for the Wehrmacht after he was drafted into a propaganda unit in 1940.

“I never saw myself as a soldier, but as a photographer. I didn’t even know how to shoot a gun,'’ says Gronefeld, who is now confined to a wheelchair.

After the war, Gronefeld did freelance work for German publications and for foreign magazines such as Life and Look.

Gronefeld rode on German patrol boats off the coast of England, photographed triumphant German troops after they marched into Paris, and accompanied Wehrmacht units as they invaded the Soviet Union. His wartime pictures appeared in German publications to illustrate army victories.

Gronefeld says the execution at Pancevo was the only atrocity he witnessed. The 36 civilians were rounded up at random in revenge for the killing of two SS officers by Serb partisans.

Gronefeld photographed the civilians being taken to the cemetery, where they were executed. He snapped frame after frame as the victims were made to stand on chairs, nooses were placed over their heads and the chairs were kicked away.

“In their eyes before they died, I saw their last appeal for mercy,'’ Gronefeld recalled.

After 18 died on the gallows, the remainder were taken to the cemetery wall and executed by firing squad. Gronefeld photographed a soldier who drew his pistol and finished off a wounded victim.

At the time, he says, he understood the Wehrmacht’s desire to avenge the death of German soldiers. But he also felt pity for the victims, and still does.

“They were completely innocent of any wrongdoing,'’ he says.

This site shows Gronefeld holding a book of his most famous photographs, including the executions in Pancevo by members of the Gross Deutschland Regiment.

Gerhard Gronefeld as a Wehrmacht photographer in 1944.

One of the most famous photographs of World War II, Gronefeld photographed the executions of Serbian civilians in the Pancevo cemetery showing officer of Gross Deutschland finishing off Serbian civilian.

PHOTOs 1

PHOTOs 2

PHOTOs 3

PHOTOs 4

PHOTO: Mass hanging of Serbian civilians in Pancevo, April 22, 1941.

The executions of Serbian civilians were filmed in color by Gottfried Kessel of the propaganda company of the Gross Deutschland Regiment. The film stills on this site show the executions and hangings. Thirty-six Serbian civilians were killed, thirty-five men and one woman. Preceeding the executions, there are stills of the Nazi occupation of Pancevo, then the “capital” of the Banat, a region of Serbia settled by ethnic Germans or Volksdeutsche, the Donauschwaben, which was under direct Nazi military occupation and administration during the war. [Warning: Disturbing and graphic images of war crimes.].

A still from the film by Gottfried Kessel showing the hanging of Serbian civilians in the Pancevo cemetery.

This is a clip from the Kessel film of the executions in Pancevo, the first 3 minutes of the clip."

From:

http://serbianna.com/blogs/savich/?cat=3

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