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A CBS World News bulletin announcing the death of President Roosevelt on April 12, 1945.

TitleBulletin - Death of FDR
AlbumWWII Radio
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Live coverage of US Marines landing on Iwo Jima (Part II)

(Iwo Jima, Japan - February 19, 1945)

TitleLive coverage of US Marines landing on Iwo Jima (Part II)
AlbumWWII Radio
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Live coverage of US Marines landing on Iwo Jima (Part I)

(Iwo Jima, Japan - February 19, 1945)

TitleLive Coverage Of US Marines Landing On Iwo Jima (Part I)
AlbumWWII Radio
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A special news bulletin from Guam announcing the beginning of the Battle of Iwo Jima.

(February 19, 1945)

TitleBreaking News: Battle of Iwo Jima
AlbumWWII Radio
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Audio of the first Jewish service to take place at Belsen-Bergen concentration camp following its liberation by British forces on April 15, 1945.

TitleFirst Jewish service at Belsen
AlbumWWII Radio

unhistorical:

January 27, 1945: Soviet troops liberate Auschwitz concentration camp.

The Auschwitz concentration camp network, which included Auschwitz II-Birkenau, Auschwitz III-Monowitz, and dozens of smaller satellite camps, collectively made up the largest concentration camp run by the Third Reich over the course of the war. The first prisoners arrived at Auschwitz in May of 1940; by 1945 millions of people had passed through - and died - in Auschwitz, with Rudolf Höss estimating a total death toll at 3,000,000 Jews, plus hundreds of thousands of Poles, Roma, prisoners of war, and any other social and political “undesirables”. Because the Nazis destroyed records and many of the camp facilities in an attempt to mask the extent of their crimes as Red Army forces approached, exact numbers are difficult to ascertain, but the generally accepted death toll is around 1.3 million people, who died from gassing, sickness, and starvation.

The original camp, Auschwitz, served a variety of purposes: a prison to hold enemies of the Third Reich/General Government; a steady source of enslaved laborers; a relatively small-scale extermination camp. Medical (in the loosest sense of the word) experimentation was also performed on prisoners at Auschwitz I, including those conducted by the notorious “Angel of Death”, Josef Mengele. Construction began on Auschwitz-Birkenau in late 1941 in preparation for the implementation of the “Final Solution”. Although it was referred to as a prisoner-of-war camp, there was no hiding what purpose this second camp would serve, thanks to the gas chambers and crematoria that made up the tools of Auschwitz-Birkenau’s murder machine. There was even a separate “Gypsy camp” where thousands of Roma and Sinti prisoners were sent to be exterminated. 

When liberation by oncoming Soviet forces became imminent (which it seemed by late 1944), orders were sent out to blow up the camp’s facilities, along with orders to exterminate the remainder of its prisoners. The latter orders were never carried out, but evacuations (i.e. death marches) to other camps did take place. Sadly, the only prisoners the 322nd Rifle Division of the Red Army managed to free by the time they arrived on January 27, 1945, were those too sick to walk with the rest. They numbered around 7,500, compared to the 50,000 plus who had been forced on the march. One Russian officer describes the scene of the liberation:

They [the prisoners] began rushing towards us, in a big crowd. They were weeping, embracing us and kissing us. I felt a grievance on behalf of mankind that these fascists had made such a mockery of us. It roused me and all the soldiers to go and quickly destroy them and send them to hell.

A child survivor, only ten years old at the time, describes his own experience:

We ran up to them and they gave us hugs, cookies, and chocolate. Being so alone a hug meant more than anybody could imagine because that replaced the human worth that we were starving for. We were not only starved for food but we were starved for human kindness. And the Soviet Army did provide some of that.

In 1947, Rudolf Höss was hanged near Crematorium I of the original Auschwitz camp.

peerintothepast:

Cockpit of a Handley-Page Hampden.

peerintothepast:

Cockpit of a Handley-Page Hampden.

ppsh-41:

“We’re in Berlin!”
Written by Soviet soldiers on a column in the Reichstag

ppsh-41:

“We’re in Berlin!”

Written by Soviet soldiers on a column in the Reichstag

The evolution of post-war Dresden.

(1945 - Ca. 1976)

This day in history:

Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu and his wife Elena are found guilty on a multitude of charges during a brief show trial and executed soon after all on Christmas day. They decided they’d rather be executed together, and so they were.  The end of the Romanian Revolution itself soon followed.

Their deaths also marked the last use of capital punishment within Romania.  After the executions of the Ceaușescus the death penalty was abolished within the country.

The three executioners who shot the couple were chosen through a lottery.  Hundreds of men volunteered in hopes of pulling the trigger, an indication of the level of contempt felt across the country following a violent crackdown and years of oppression.

December 25, 1989 - 23 years ago today