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9 votes
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Lovers in Auschwitz, reunited seventy-two years later. He had one question
7 votes -
'A present from Norway and it's dead' – Christmas tree unites London in dismay
8 votes -
Finland marks 80th anniversary of brutal conflict with the Soviet Union
3 votes -
From an Oslo forest comes the Christmas gift Norway gives Britain every year – a towering tree for London's Trafalgar Square
7 votes -
How a cargo ship helped win WW2: The Liberty Ship story
4 votes -
How did the US Navy win the Battle of Midway?
5 votes -
Why are plastic army men still from WW2?
15 votes -
Down to seven vets, Pearl Harbor survivors' group in California holds final meeting
15 votes -
Raoul Wallenberg is thought to have saved as many as 30,000 Jews but his descendants do not know how, when or why he died
7 votes -
How Chagall’s daughter smuggled his work out of Nazi-occupied Europe
6 votes -
Navajo code talkers: The last of the living WWII heroes share their stories
11 votes -
Hiroshima and Nagasaki on the cutting room floor
4 votes -
Andrey Fedorov – Yeltsin considered selling ceded Karelia territory to Finland in 1991
8 votes -
Would the German population more or less readily believe the Holocaust today as compared to 1945?
This is something I was thinking about. When I read about the end of the second world war, the thing which surprises me the most is how easily the German population accepted that their government...
This is something I was thinking about. When I read about the end of the second world war, the thing which surprises me the most is how easily the German population accepted that their government really committed such atrocities (Yes, I used Holocaust in the title, but I mean any genocide commited).
I was wondering how it might go down in our current culture with the emergence of Fake News and alternative "facts"; our post-fact culture. Would they more readily dismiss it as a photoshopped image? Would the impact be mitigated by the meme-ification of genocide?
(To a mod: The title should say « more or less »)
12 votes -
Eastern Front of WWII animated: 1944/1945
6 votes -
A Japanese American newspaper chronicles the ‘searing’ history of immigrant incarceration
8 votes -
Classified maps and documents reveal the careful planning that went into the D-Day invasion, as Allied commanders orchestrated how to begin liberating Europe from Nazi tyranny.
9 votes -
Long-lost shipwreck found off Victorian coast, seventy-seven years after being torpedoed by Japanese submarine in WWII
4 votes -
Seven decades after the bomb, children of Hiroshima victims still worry about hidden health effects
8 votes -
MP40
8 votes -
During WWII, Bletchley Park was home to codebreaking and tea shenanigans
5 votes -
Eastern Front of WWII animated: 1943/44
5 votes -
Yiddish Glory (with Sophie Milman) — Shpatsir in Vald (A Walk in the Forest) (2016)
4 votes -
Kindertransport children to get 2,500 euros in compensation from German government
4 votes -
Weekly game discussion thread 3: Battlefield V
Let's give this discussion format another try. The new Battlefield is now out, and I'm sure I'm not the only wave playing it. What are your thoughts?
9 votes -
Becoming Anne Frank - Why did we turn an isolated teenage girl into the world’s most famous Holocaust victim?
7 votes -
High Flight
Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of earth, And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings; Sunward I've climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth Of sun-split clouds, — and done a hundred things...
Oh! I have slipped the surly bonds of earth,
And danced the skies on laughter-silvered wings;
Sunward I've climbed, and joined the tumbling mirth
Of sun-split clouds, — and done a hundred things
You have not dreamed of — Wheeled and soared and swung
High in the sunlit silence. Hov'ring there
I've chased the shouting wind along, and flung
My eager craft through footless halls of air...
Up, up the long, delirious, burning blue
I've topped the wind-swept heights with easy grace
Where never lark or ever eagle flew —
And, while with silent lifting mind I've trod
The high untrespassed sanctity of space,
Put out my hand, and touched the face of God.
---By John Gillespie Magee Jr6 votes -
Shockwaves from WWII bombing raids reached the edge of space
13 votes -
Eichmann in Jerusalem (1963)
7 votes -
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to apologize Nov. 7 for 1939 decision to turn away Jewish refugees fleeing Nazis
19 votes -
A band of Polish mathematicians figured out much about how German Enigma encoding machines operated, years before Alan Turing did
6 votes -
WW2 Eastern Front animated: 1942
6 votes -
I survived the Warsaw ghetto. Here are the lessons I’d like to pass on
10 votes -
Fox News violates Poland's holocaust law with reference to "Polish death camp"
14 votes -
Hiroshima - a 1946 piece exploring how six survivors experienced the atomic bombing and its aftermath
9 votes -
The fallen of World War II
7 votes -
Thoughts on the World Wars
I've been consuming a ton of media about the world wars lately. There seems to be an inexhaustible supply of historical fiction, records, memoires, and documentaries. But so far, very few things...
I've been consuming a ton of media about the world wars lately. There seems to be an inexhaustible supply of historical fiction, records, memoires, and documentaries. But so far, very few things have come close to painting a cohesive picture.
Most of it focuses on hot spots like Verdun, Pearl Harbor, Dunkirk, Normandy, the haulocaust, the atomic bomb, enigma, u-boats, the luftwaffe, Stalingrad... And I can see why. Even on a microcosm level, the conditions of the stories are unimaginable.
The issue I'm having is that I feel like our cultural memory of these events his been eroded over time. We have these impressions of what we think it was like, but not an overarching understanding of the complex series of events throughout the 20th century. We have an overabundance of records, photographs, film, and documentation in general, but maybe it's the overabundance that makes the digestion such an insurmountable undertaking.
What are your experiences with studying this time period? How do you feel about the quality of your understanding? And finally, do you have any recommendations for myself and others?
14 votes -
A warning to those visiting Auschwitz
8 votes -
Three myths most Americans believe (Japanese surrender in WW2, Cold War, nuclear bomb threat)
7 votes -
Bear necessities: The big brown bear who helped Polish troops in WWII
4 votes