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Vienna professor reveals how 90-year-old Nazi was exposed
Naama Lanir
Published: 18.11.09, 16:44
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10 Talkbacks for this article
1. LET HIM GO, HE CANT PASS THE GATES ANYWAY !
Benjamin ,   singapore   (11.18.09)
UNLESS HASHEM FORGIVES HIM !
2. viele dank, German r good people
ghostq   (11.18.09)
and smart 2.
3. Nazis Living Under Aliases
Barbara ,   Israel   (11.18.09)
I think you have the makings of a good book. The story could start from the present day investigation (of course, to wait to end of trial for the icing on the cake), and go back and forth, past / present day.
4. Pearly Gates
Zionist ,   Miami   (11.18.09)
Someone should help him on his way.
5. @4 zIONIST
Benjamin   (11.18.09)
i WEAR IT WHEN i PLAY GOLF- at night - Pearly Gates :-)
6. austrians were victims?
david ,   tel aviv   (11.18.09)
""Once we thought that we, the Austrians, were the primary victims of the Nazis, and today we understand that we were not the real victims," he said. " since when were austrians victims? maybe in their own minds! the only austrian victims were the austrian jews! "...following the 1938 Anschluss, they would surprise Berlin with their astonishing dedication to National Socialism. During World War II, though they only constituted eight percent of the Third Reich's population, Austrians comprised fourteen percent of the SS and forty percent of Nazi personnel involved in genocide. (Austrians explained these developments to victorious Anglo-Americans and Russians with claims that they were "victims." Their country had been occupied by aggressive, arrogant, pompous, warlike, super-efficient Germans from Germany. How else to deal with occupiers? But this would make it difficult to understand why, some sixty years after the war, at least one out of every four Austrians (that is, those who voted for Joerg Haider's Freedom Party) believes that Hitler wasn't all that bad, the SS was just your usual elite military formation, and National Socialism could have developed highly-successful economic and employment policies if it had not been mismanaged.)" Evan Burr Bukey. Hitler's Austria: Popular Sentiment in the Nazi Era 1938-1945. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press, 2000. xvi + 320 pp. Tables, maps, bibliography and index. $39.95 (cloth), ISBN 0-8078-2516-6.
7. #5 - um.... huh? i don't get it.
(11.19.09)
8. 90 year old nazi
jackie young ,   london england   (11.19.09)
In August 1945, a group of six three-year-old children arrived in England. They had been together since they were between six months and a year old, when they were left in the Ward for Motherless Children at the concentration camp Theresienstadt. Before being liberated by the Russians, these children spent nearly three years in the camp, being cared for by many different prisoners. A Sussex home called "Bulldogs Bank" was donated by Lady Betty Clarke for these children and their care was financed by the Foster Parents' Plan (Young-Bruehl, 1988). Sophie and Gertrud Dann with several helpers were hired to manage the little group. It had been years since any of the children had been inside a home and some had been driven from their homes within the first few days of life. Their apathy and lack of emotion but strong feelings of solidarity towards each other, was most striking when they arrived: "The feelings of the six children toward each other show a warmth and spontaneity that are unheard of in ordinary relations between young contemporaries" (A. Freud and Dann, 1951). As they began to settle, their personalities began to emerge. These six toddlers were described by Anna Freud and Sophie Dann in "An experiment in group upbringing" (1951) and their individual stories were described in "Love despite hate" (Moskovitz, 1983). I was one of those children and reading about this man of 90 years old who may of done terrible things so long ago I do not know the answer to have this man put on trial .Jackie Young formerly Jona Spiegel
9. 8- To: Jackie Young, London, England
Christy ,   Boston, US   (11.20.09)
I think it would be fascinating to hear the stories you have to tell. Perhaps a collection of stories that could be added to the body of WWII collections, before the primary participants are all gone? Please think about it.
10. Love Despite Hate
Jackie Young ,   London   (11.21.14)
The subject was a title of a book that tells a lot about us 6 children from Terezin
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