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  • 12
    May
    2013
    11:00am, EDT

    Never too late: Nazi hunters tirelessly pursue 50 elderly Auschwitz war criminals

    Valery Hache / AFP - Getty Images

    Investigators are trying to track down 50 suspected Auschwitz guards who are believed to be living in Germany. The gate at the former Nazi death camp, which is located in Poland, reads "Arbeit macht frei" -- or "work will set you free."

    By Ian Johnston and Andy Eckardt, NBC News

    MAINZ, Germany -- In their search for justice that has endured for decades, the biggest challenge Nazi hunters face is time. 

    The knowledge that war criminals are escaping prosecution through death by natural causes means their task has never been more pressing.

    On Monday, German state police arrested a 93-year-old man accused of being a guard at the Auschwitz concentration camp. Hans Lipschis is the first suspect to be facing charges as part of a drive launched earlier this year to track down 50 suspected Auschwitz guards who are believed to be living in Germany.

    Most of those involved in the murder of about 6 million Jews in the Holocaust and still alive will now be in their 90s, a ripe old age for people who carried out one the most heinous crimes in the history of humanity.

    But that doesn't stop Kurt Schrimm, director of Germany’s Central Investigation Center for Nazi Crimes. His agency employs 20 people, including seven focusing on the Auschwitz cases. 

    "Someday there will be no more Nazi criminals to go after and then our organization will shut down," he said. "But until then, we will exhaust all investigation possibilities."

    After years of frustration, Nazi hunters have also been given fresh hope by a German court's landmark ruling that has made it simpler to prosecute cases by opening the door to charges of "accessory to murder."

    Efraim Zuroff, Israel director of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Jerusalem, said he planned to ask German companies to help fund a renewed campaign to find the remaining war criminals and take advantage of the ruling, which came during the successful prosecution of John Demjanjuk.

    Demjanjuk, an autoworker who lived in the U.S. for years after the war, was convicted in 2011 of 28,060 counts of being an accessory to murder and sentenced to five years in prison.

    Although he died a free man in a nursing home in Germany – he was released pending his appeal – the court’s ruling that he could be convicted on his service record alone was “a total game-changer,” Zuroff said.

    “Until that point … German prosecutors could not try a case unless they had evidence of a specific crime with a specific victim,” he said.

    “Demjanjuk was convicted solely for his service as an armed SS guard at a death camp,” he added. “As a result, this opened up a whole new potential number of people to bring to justice.”

    Valery Hache / AP

    Convicted Nazi death camp guard John Demjanjuk leaves a courtroom after a guilty verdict in Munich, Germany, on May 12, 2011.

    Zuroff said there were usually three obstacles to holding Nazi war criminals to account: Finding them; getting enough evidence; and persuading the authorities to act.

    The Demjanjuk ruling changed that in Germany.

    “Now in Germany, all of a sudden, all you have is one task – all you have to do is find people, because you can prove service with documents,” Zuroff said. “You don’t have to have someone who says, ‘I saw this bastard kill my fellow inmate.’”

    Schrimm said that the Demjanjuk case prompted his agency to start "looking at old files with a renewed focus."

    He added: “Today, any job in a concentration camp can be sufficient evidence towards a conviction as accessory to murder."

    It is a ray of hope in an otherwise gloomy picture. 

    “Once the Nuremberg Trials had been completed [in 1949], the prosecution of Nazi war criminals never became a serious priority in any country outside of the Soviet Union,” Zuroff added. “The failure to do more to hold the perpetrators of the Holocaust accountable is naturally a source of frustration and disappointment for me personally, as someone who has devoted practically my entire adult life to that mission."

    The Holocaust saw approximately 6 million Jews – about two-thirds of the pre-World War II Jewish population in Europe – murdered to fulfill Adolf Hitler’s infamous “Final Solution.”

    Roma Gypsies, Slavic people such as Poles and Russians, communists, socialists, disabled people, Jehovah’s Witnesses, homosexuals and others were also slaughtered in large numbers.

    Zuroff said that no one really knew how many people were involved in the killings, let alone how many were still alive.

    But, asked to estimate, he reckoned that “probably not more than 10 to 15 percent” of tens of thousands of Nazi war criminals had been brought to justice.

    The Simon Wiesenthal Center publishes an annual “most wanted” list, and also rates countries based on their willingness to take action. Only the United States got the top rating in 2013; Germany was among five countries in the second-highest group.

    Zuroff said that “to their credit” Germany was one of the few countries that would bring prosecutions.

    In contrast Austria, which became part of the Hitler’s Third Reich in 1938, was “horrific, terrible, the worst,” Zuroff said.

    “They haven’t succeeded in taking action against a Nazi war criminal in more than 30 years. It’s not because there are no Nazis in Austria,” he said. “There’s a country that until 20 years ago … got away with claiming they were Hitler’s first victim. Austrians played a very leading role in the murders carried out by the Third Reich.”

    Zuroff said it was “impossible” to get prosecutions in the Baltic countries, “especially in Lithuania.”

    “They were the worst because they had a vast number of collaborators,” he said. “They don’t like punishing their own people and would prefer to think of themselves as victims of communism and not killers of Jews, which they were. They were outstanding killers of Jews.”

    Avner Shalev, chairman of Yad Vashem, Israel’s official memorial to victims of the Holocaust, said the survivors "live with the memories every day."

    "Bringing the perpetrators to justice sends an important educational and moral message to society at large: These kinds of crimes will not be tolerated, and there are no free passes," he said. "Although unfortunately many of the perpetrators escaped justice, nevertheless each trial sends an important message."

    Germany and its allies controlled most of Europe during World War II, including Norway, France, Italy, Greece, the Balkans, Poland and deep into the then Soviet Union.

    Lydia Brenners was just 9 years old when she was caught up in a horrific massacre of Jews in Novi Sad in modern-day Serbia by Hungarian forces in 1942. Nazi-allied Hungary had annexed the area in 1941.

    Brenners said she was forced to go to with her father, mother and sister to a local theater where many Jewish people were being gathered. They were taken in groups to the banks of the River Danube, where they were shot dead. A total of more than 1,200 civilians are thought to have been killed, according to The Associated Press.

    “Slowly we came nearer and nearer [to the end of the line],” said Brenners, now 81 and living in Rishon Letzion, Israel. “Today I know it was for killing. Then … I didn’t know, maybe the older people understood.”

    “In the row behind me, there was an auntie of one of my girlfriends. I knew her. She was holding a baby in her hands,” she said. “After a few minutes … [she] burst out with nerves and started to shout, ‘I cannot bear it anymore.’”

    “The soldiers came and took her,” she said, despite efforts of others who surrounded her in an unsuccessful attempt to save her. “She did not come back from there.”

    But then came an order from Budapest to stop the killing and Brenners and her family were released. They then took the train to Budapest that day and hid in the city until it was taken by Soviet troops toward the end of the war.

    Brenners said years later she met a woman who said she was the child of her friend’s aunt. The woman was still trying to find out how she survived.

    Brenners said she remembered an officer on a horse -- who was addressed as “Shanny” -- overseeing the massacre and the gendarmes referring to lists of names when deciding who should be taken.

    She said “Shanny” was a nickname for Sandor Kepiro, a gendarme officer accused of helping organize the killings.

    Kepiro was given a 10-year prison sentence over the Novi Sad massacre by a Hungarian court in 1944, but this was overturned after Germany formally occupied Hungary later that year, according to The Associated Press.

    Kepiro, who lived in Argentina after the war, admitted he was present and supervised the identities of those being rounded up, but denied knowing they were killed until later, the news service said.

    Kepiro was tried again in Hungary but acquitted in 2011, with a court ruling there was insufficient evidence against him, the AP reported. The prosecution appealed, saying the judges’ decision was “unfounded,” and so did the defense, which complained the ruling had not actually cleared Kepiro.

    However, Kepiro died in September 2011, an innocent man in the eyes of the law, a hero to some in Hungary, but a killer who escaped justice to Zuroff and his fellow Nazi hunters.

    Ian Johnston reported from London. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

    Related:

    • German police arrest 93-year-old suspected of being Auschwitz guard
    • 'Nazi Bride' case highlights rising influence of women in far-right movement
    • A retired teacher's courageous campaign: Tackling neo-Nazi hate

    705 comments

    As Germany does not have a death sentence, most they will get is a few yrs. in prison. I don't think that is fitting punishment. They killed, or helped kill people, they also need the death sentence.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, europe, nazi, holocaust, world-war-ii, featured, simon-wiesenthal-center, war-criminals
  • 6
    May
    2013
    1:08pm, EDT

    German police arrest 93-year-old suspected of being Auschwitz guard

    Hulton Archive / Getty Images

    The gates of the Nazi concentration camp at Auschwitz, Poland, circa 1965. The sign above reads "Arbieit Macht Frei," or "Work Makes You Free." German police on Monday arrested a 93-year-old man suspected of having been a guard at the camp.

    By Andy Eckardt, Producer, NBC News

    German state police on Monday arrested a 93-year-old man suspected of being a former guard at the notorious Auschwitz concentration camp during the Holocaust, the prosecutor's office said in a statement.

    A news release did not name the suspect, in accordance with German law, but it said he had been arrested on suspicion of being an accessory to murder.

    The suspect had served as a guard at the camp in Poland from the autumn of 1941 until its liberation in early 1945, the prosecutor's office said in the statement.

    Following a search of the man’s apartment, the suspect was brought before a judge and was in investigative custody while an arraignment was being prepared, the statement said.

    A spokesperson for the prosecutor’s office could not immediately be reached for comment.

    According to German media reports, the prosecutor’s office had launched an investigation against the man in November 2012.

    About 1.1 million people, including 960,000 Jews, died at Auschwitz, according to the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum.

    772 comments

    To the brilliant comments above...what if you were a kid and watched your parents, family members and friends murdered and you saw this particular man who was the alleged guard.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: germany, arrest, holocaust, world-war-ii, nazis, featured, concentration-camps, auschwitz, suspected-guard
  • Updated
    5
    May
    2013
    9:43am, EDT

    'Charlie Two Shoes': A story of wartime loyalty and friendship

    As a boy, "Charlie Two Shoes" was adopted by U.S. Marines stationed in China after World War II. His old Marine buddies helped him emigrate from Communist China to the U.S. in 1983. Some of those friends joined Charlie when he recently returned to a much-changed China for the first time in 30 years. NBC's Ian Williams reports.

    By Ian Williams, correspondent, NBC News

    BEIJING – Next weekend, an 80-year-old Chinese American called Charlie Tsui will give the commencement address at the College of the Ozarks in Missouri.

    The events which shaped Tsui's life took place well before any of the 270 students receiving their bachelor degrees were born, though his story of loyalty and friendship easily bridges the generational divide.

    Tsui was born in a village just outside the Chinese coastal city of Qingdao, which is where he first met U.S. Marines, stationed there at the end of the World War II. He lived in a hut just beyond the barbed wire of the Marine compound. It was a time of immense turmoil in China, which was gripped by a civil war that would eventually lead to the Communists taking over in 1949.

    Tsui would bring the Marines boiled eggs and warm peanuts from his village.

    The Marines adopted him, gave Tsui food and clothes, taught him English and paid for him to go to the American school in the city. They also gave him a nickname: “Charlie Two Shoes,” since his original Chinese name, Tsui Chi Hsii, was tough to pronounce.

    NBC News

    Charlie Tsui, nicknamed "Charlie Two Shoes" as a child by the U.S. Marines who became like brothers to him in Qingdao, China after World War II.

    "We were like brothers in the Marine Corps," he recalls. "We love each other, just like brother and sister."

    But the Marines were not able to take Tsui with them when they left shortly before the Communists took control.

    "Leaving him over there when I left in 1947, it was like leaving a wounded Marine behind," said Don Sexton, who was squad leader back then.

    NBC News

    Charlie Tsui as a child in Qingdao, China after World War II.

    For years, the Marines heard nothing of Tsui, who was jailed and then kept under house arrest for seven years for refusing to denounce his Marine buddies.

    In 1983, Tsui did manage to get a letter out, and NBC News was able to track him down. The timing was good, as China was opening up, and the Marines campaigned successfully to get him a visa for the US, his family joining him two years later. He was soon running a successful restaurant business in Chapel Hill, N.C., which of course was the scene over the years of many a Marine reunion.

    But having gotten to the U.S., seemingly in the face of massive odds, he then faced a 17-year-battle with the Immigration and Naturalization Service. He came close to deportation before gaining legal residency and ultimately citizenship under a 1992 law prompted by the Tiananmen Square massacre.

    "He was one special person. Now he's like family," said Carl Frost, one of those Marines.

    In 2002, Tsui was made an "honorary Marine" in an official ceremony at Camp Lejeune. 

    Frost and Sexton were among the members of Tsui's Marine family who recently returned to Qingdao with Tsui for the first time since he left all those years ago. Also on the trip were students from the College of the Ozarks, which sponsored the visit. The college has a program that pairs students with American veterans, taking them back to their battlefields or military stations.

    Today's Qingdao is a very different place, with modern glistening buildings and brash prosperity. NBC News also joined the trip as an at times bewildered Charlie Two Shoes sought out the landmarks of his childhood.

    NBC News

    Charlie Tsui and a group of his old Marine buddies return to Qingdao, China for the first time in 30 years.

    "That was the cave where the Japanese stored their weapons," he said, pointing at the craggy rocks just beyond what is now a sports field, but had been a military parade ground, during the Japanese occupation of the city.

    The old Marines barracks has long since been reclaimed by the city's university. "That's where I slept, up the end there," he said, pointing down a long corridor.

    The old American School is now an elite kindergarten. Remarkably, Tsui's old family home still stands, though much expanded by the migration workers now living there. His village, Chukechuang, has become part of the city's sprawling suburbs. This is where he met an elder brother he'd thought was dead.

     "I was worried. He's alright. He's alright," he said, as the two stood gripping each other's hands.

    The man called "Charlie Two Shoes" by his old U.S. Marine friends leaves China. NBC's Tom Brokaw and Sandy Gilmour report on May 9, 1983.

    When the Americans left, Tsui had moved into an orphanage run by nuns, which is where he developed a strong Christian faith, which he says kept him going through those hard times.

    St. Michael's Cathedral, where he received his first communion, still stands - a city landmark. Tsui would walk 10 miles, there and back, to worship on Sundays until the Communists shut it down.

    Tsui's return visit was during a big Chinese holiday. The beach and promenade at Qingdao was packed. For a moment Tsui was lost in thought, before recalling where the last of the American ships were loaded before leaving. Back then he thought he'd never see his Marine buddies again. But he never gave up hope.

    Related links:

    More NBC News reporting on China in Behind the Wall

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    This story was originally published on Thu May 2, 2013 4:40 PM EDT

    74 comments

    I wish there were more stories out there like this! Not every foreigner is an enemy combatant.

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    Explore related topics: china, world-war-ii, us-marines, communism, mao, updated, ian-williams
  • 16
    Apr
    2013
    11:13am, EDT

    Holocaust survivors remember the horrors of Buchenwald

    Lisi Niesner / Reuters

    Survivor Petro Mischtschuk, 87, from Ukraine, wears his old prisoner's garb as he stands near the memorial site of the Little Camp at Buchenwald.

    Between July 1937 and April 1945, the Nazis imprisoned a quarter of a million people in the Buchenwald concentration camp, located near the German city of Weimar. Around 56,000 of them were killed before the camp was liberated by U.S troops on April 11, 1945.

    68 years later, Reuters photographer Lisi Niesner interviewed some of the remaining survivors as they returned to Buchenwald to mark the anniversary of the liberation.

    Lisi Niesner / Reuters

    Victor Karpus, 88, from Ukraine, stood at the muster ground where inmates gathered at dawn each day for a roll call. Karpus was imprisoned in several camps including Buchenwald for a total of three years. He even once managed to escape from a camp but got captured and taken to Buchenwald, where he remained until its liberation.

    "Work or die – it was impossible to get out from Buchenwald," Karpus says.

    Lisi Niesner / Reuters

    Lisi Niesner / Reuters

    "To each his own": An inscription on Buchenwald's iron gate.

    Eva Pusztai, 88, from Hungary, sat in a wheelchair in front of a reconstructed gallows. In July 1944 she was deported to Birkenau and six weeks later to Muenchmuehle, one of 136 satellite camps of Buchenwald.

    The forced labor in the arms industry or the camp's stone quarry took the imprisoned to the brink of their physical abilities. "You got just enough food to survive. I lost a third of my weight and I was almost starving to death," she says. 

    "The employable have to be destroyed by work," she says, explaining the attitude of the Nazis to their prisoners. Her right eye filled up with a single tear that ran down her cheek, then she composed herself and smiled.

    Lisi Niesner / Reuters

    "Where is your god? Why he does not help you?" Jakob Silberstein, born in Poland in 1924, remembers the mocking of a high-level Nazi on Yom Kippur. He survived six years of captivity in Buchenwald and Auschwitz and witnessed brutal actions by the SS, being locked in a standing cubicle for a week, carrying stones and drinking rainwater for days. 

    He was standing inside the gas chamber at Birkenau when an SS man asked if any of the men were skilled laborers. "I stated I was an electrician, which luckily saved my life," he said. After the liberation he found out that none of his family or friends had survived the war. He now lives in Israel and tirelessly tells his story.

    Lisi Niesner / Reuters

    Lisi Niesner / Reuters

    Urns are displayed in a room adjacent to the crematorium at Buchenwald.

    Professor Elling Kvamme, 94, from Norway, stood at the site of Barrack Block 22. He was teaching medicine at a university in Oslo in 1943 when he was arrested for his connections with underground politics. "Students are always dangerous and the Nazis realized it very quickly," he explained.

    He was forced to take part in the Nazi program of Germanization and had to work at the pathological facility in Buchenwald. Before the dead were cremated in an incineration system developed to veil the traces of murder, specimens were taken from their corpses for anatomical collections.

    Lisi Niesner / Reuters

    Vasile Nussbaum, 83, from Romania, spent a year in Auschwitz and Buchenwald. "Buchenwald was a sanatorium in comparison to Auschwitz" he recalls without hesitation.

    Nussbaum revisits the site of the camp every year on liberation day. "You never know what’s coming, today we are 83 years old and in the next year we are no more here", he says.

    Lisi Niesner / Reuters

    Barracks behind trees at Buchenwald.

    Editor's note: Pictures taken between April 11-14, 2013 and made available to NBC News today. Read more at Reuters' Photographers Blog.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    83 comments

    I had a neighbor who was a driver for a General who checked out one of the first death camps liberated. I asked about it, he turned white and I thought he was going to throw up. May the world never forget this and the men and women who made it stop.

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  • 1
    Feb
    2013
    5:39am, EST

    Stalin gets his city back as Russians celebrate dictator's triumph over Nazis

    Keystone via Getty Images, file

    British Prime Minister Winston Churchill presents Soviet leader Joseph Stalin with the Sword of Stalingrad on Dec. 6, 1943, in acknowledgement of the Russian people's heroic stand to protect the city during the war.

    By Timothy Heritage, Reuters

    VOLGOGRAD, Russia — Josef Stalin and the city of Stalingrad are making a comeback, if only for a short time.

    The Russian city of Volgograd has approved the use of its wartime name at events on Saturday commemorating the 70th anniversary of the 200-day Battle of Stalingrad that turned the tide of World War II.

    In a move not sanctioned by the city authorities, admirers also plan to display portraits of the late Soviet dictator in minibuses to honor his role in the defeat of Nazi Germany.


    The city council's decision is designed to please war veterans but is unlikely to have been taken without the approval of President Vladimir Putin, who is expected to attend the events in the industrial hub of 1 million on the River Volga.

    There are also plenty of other signs of nostalgia for Stalin and the Soviet era in Volgograd, despite the millions of deaths from collectivization and the murder of political opponents.

    Josef Stalin's daughter Svetlana Alliluyeva, who died this week, famously denounced her father on "Meet The Press" in 1969. Expressing her disillusion with Stalin and communism, she told the MTP panel of her tumultuous trip from Russia to the United States, which had ended two years earlier.

    "I categorically do not justify Stalin's repressions, but you have to recognize the positive things he did, whether you want to or not," said Gamlet Dallatyan, a 92-year-old veteran of the battle which Russian historians say killed nearly 2 million. "It would be good to go back to the name of Stalingrad, though not so much because of Stalin himself but because that is how the city was known during the war."

    A businessman in Volgograd has opened a Stalin museum and many streets still honor Soviet leaders such as Vladimir Lenin or hark back to communist ideology.

    On the corner of Worker-Peasant Street and Trade Union Street, the USSR restaurant -- next to a branch of the U.S. fast-food company McDonald's -- welcomes diners with a sign declaring: “Eaters of the world unite.”

    Named after Stalin in 1925, the city was renamed Volgograd in 1961, during Nikita Khrushchev's "de-Stalinization" campaign.

    History's bloodiest battle?
    That outraged veterans of the battle for Stalingrad, which was flattened during fighting from July 17, 1942, until the German surrender on Feb. 2, 1943.

    Mikhail Mordasov / AFP - Getty Images

    Honor guards march past the giant Mother Motherland statue on Mamayev Hill in Volgograd on Thursday. The monument was built to honor those who died in the Battle of Stalingrad during World War II.

    In what is said by some historians to have been the bloodiest battle in history, soldiers fought in trenches, streets and buildings, sometimes room to room. Some succumbed to the cold and hunger.

    About 920 Stalingrad war veterans still live in the region. They not only praise Stalin for firm wartime leadership, but have urged Putin to restore the name of Stalingrad in memory of the battle.

    "It was awful but I never doubted we would win. We were all patriots," said Dallatyan, who was responsible for communications. "I am full of pride. I never thought of it as just our victory but as the victory of the Soviet people."

    The decision by the city government this week will allow the name Stalingrad to be used officially at public events on five days every year including May 9, when Russia marks the Allied victory over Nazi Germany.

    Local communists have collected 35,000 signatures for a petition calling for Volgograd to be renamed and plan to take their demands to court.

    "People admire Stalin, with all his pluses and minuses," said Nikolai Parshin, the regional Communist Party leader in his office.

    Popular but no 'saint'
    A poll in 2008 ranked Stalin, who died in 1953, the third most popular figure in Russia's history.

    Stephen F. Cohen, author of "The Victims Return," joins the Morning Joe gang to discuss the long-term impact of Joseph Stalin's reign.

    A local group of Stalin admirers will on Saturday put up posters of Stalin in five "marshrutka" minibuses used for public transport.

    "You should not make a saint of him," said Dmitry Pikalov, who coordinates the group's actions. "But facts are facts and he was the leader during the war that defeated fascism."

    Little is being made of the deaths of Soviet soldiers shot for cowardice because of Stalin's order that no one should take a step back or of the deaths of tens of thousands of Germans soldiers in captivity after the war.

    Putin has criticized Stalin but also praised some of his achievements, including urging Russia to take a "leap forward" to rejuvenate its defense industry, harking back to the 1930s industrialization led by Stalin that cost of many lives.

    He has described the Battle of Stalingrad as the turning point of World War II and in 2004 ordered Stalingrad to replace Volgograd among the names of "hero cities" on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Moscow.

    Related:

    Russia's leaders criticized at Stalin commemorations

    Documents: US, UK hushed up Soviet massacre of 22,000 Poles in WWII

    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    85 comments

    $hit, Stalin killed more of his own people than the germans did!!!

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    Explore related topics: germany, russia, city, nazi, world-war-ii, soviet-union, communist, featured, volgograd, stalingrad
  • 29
    Dec
    2012
    5:43pm, EST

    Statue of Hitler praying is displayed in former Warsaw ghetto to controversy

    Tomasz Gzell / EPA

    The statue of Hitler as a schoolboy kneeling in prayer is visible through this viewing hole as part of an exhibit in Warsaw, Poland.

    By Isolde Raftery, NBC News

    A statue of Adolph Hitler kneeling in prayer in a courtyard in the former Warsaw Ghetto – where hundreds of thousands of Jews were forced by Nazis to live in inhumane conditions during World War II – has upset those who say the statue's placement is offensive.


    Follow @NBCNewsWorld

    The Simon Wiesenthal Center, a Jewish Advocacy group, described the decision to place the statue in the former ghetto as “a senseless provocation which insults the memory of the Nazi’s Jewish victims,” according to the Guardian of London.

    Before World War II, Warsaw had the largest Jewish community in Poland and Europe; worldwide it was second only to New York City, according to the Holocaust Encyclopedia. During World War II, about 300,000 Jews in the ghetto died – most of hunger and disease and after being sent to concentration camps where they were killed.


    Tomasz Gzell / EPA

    Through the hole in a wooden gate, viewers can see a kneeling figure with his back turned. Viewed from the front, that figure is Adolph Hitler, the leader of the Nazi party who sought to exterminate Jews.

    Organizers argue that the statue is intended to be thought-provoking, according to The Associated Press. The exhibition’s catalogue says art “can force us to face the evil of the world.”

    The statue, made by Italian artist Maurizio Cattelan in 2001, is titled, “HIM” and has drawn thousands of viewers since it was installed in Warsaw last month.  

    The body of the statue is of a schoolboy kneeling in prayer, and the head is made to resemble Hitler’s. Before being installed in Poland, the statue was shown in galleries, usually at the end of a long hallway with its back to viewers. Only when viewers approached could they see Hitler’s face. Reviewing an exhibit at the Guggenheim Museum in 2011, The New York Times described the statue as “Hitler as a kneeling schoolboy possibly asking forgiveness.”

    Cattelan created a similar effect in the former ghetto, where the statue is visible only through a hole in a wooden gate. Cattelan, who is based in New York, has been described as a satirical artist who produced another piece that generated controversy in Warsaw -- an effigy of Pope John Paul II being crushed by a meteorite. Titled “La Nona Ora,” or “Ninth Hour,” the work was also displayed in Poland, a deeply Catholic country.

    Zofia Jablonska, 30, told The Associated Press that she thought the best spot for the statue was in “the place where he would kill people.”

    Poland’s chief rabbi, Michael Schudrich, was consulted about the installation, according to the Guardian, and said he believes it has educational value. Rather than support Hitler, Schudrich told the Guardian it shows that even evil lurks in the shape of a “sweet praying child.”

    More world stories from NBC News:

    • India gang-rape victim dies in hospital; case focused attention on sexual violence
    • Putin signs law banning American adoptions
    • Video: Elephants play soccer at Nepal festival
    • US sailors sue Japan's TEPCO for post-quake radiation exposure

    Follow World News from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

    483 comments

    What gang of idiots thought that anything to do with Hitler could be "thought provoking.,..?? Destroy it...

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  • 17
    Dec
    2012
    11:12am, EST

    Unbreakable WWII carrier pigeon code cracked, says Canadian enthusiast

    Courtesy Bletchley Park Trust

    This coded message from World War II was found in November enclosed in a canister attached to the leg bone of a dead carrier pigeon.

    By Rachel Elbaum, NBC News

    LONDON — A note written in code that was found on the skeleton of a carrier pigeon dating from World War II has been cracked, according to a Canadian history enthusiast.

    Originally discovered in November, the message was enclosed in a red canister attached to the leg bone of the carrier pigeon. David Martin found the pigeon in the chimney of his home in Surrey, England.


    The U.K. Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ), one of Britain’s three national intelligence agencies, said at the time that the handwritten message “cannot be decoded without access to the original cryptographic material.”

    A World War II code delivered by carrier pigeon is stumping today's cypher specialists. Can you break it? NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    But Gordon Young, from Peterborough, Ontario, set his mind to deciphering the message using his great-uncle’s World War I code book.

    "It follows same sort of code they used in the first war," Young told NBC News. "I’m not saying my note is perfect, but I am saying the code is crackable and this one is pretty close."

    Experts: Unbreakable code message found on WWII carrier pigeon


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    It took Young, the editor of a local volunteer history group, 17 minutes to understand the message, which consists of 25 five-letter code groups.

    He believes that the message was sent one afternoon in 1944, not long after the Allied landing at Normandy. It was written by an officer who was dropped behind enemy lines, confirming an earlier lunch-time note he sent giving the map coordinates of the Germans’ guns and tanks. It also confirmed that several units of American and British troops had finally met up.

    In addition to using his uncle’s code book, Young double checked with infantry maps online to confirm his hypotheses.

    Retirement home bands together to bring WWII stories to life

    "To really understand the exact circumstances of the note, we would need access to British and American war diaries from the time," he said.

    'Impossible to verify'
    Despite Young’s translation, the GCHQ still maintains that without the original codebooks the note is indecipherable.

    “We stand by our press notice of 22 November 2012 in that without access to the relevant codebooks and details of any additional encryption used, the message will remain impossible to decrypt,” a spokesman for the GCHQ told NBC News in an emailed statement. “Similarly it is also impossible to verify any proposed solutions, but those put forward without reference to the original cryptographic material are unlikely to be correct.”

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    The pigeon is thought to have been part of a flock of 250,000 that were used to carry messages between the European front and Britain during World War II.

    "I am hoping that this will stir up some interest in the bravery of the men who were dropped on the battlefield," said Young.

    "Imagine a guy dropping down behind enemy lines with crates of pigeons and a couple of bags of feed. How they didn’t get caught is amazing. It wasn't like today where there are unmanned drones. These guys were risking their lives," he added.

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    62 comments

    The message was a recipe for squab..

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  • 26
    Nov
    2012
    11:18am, EST

    Norway's police apologize for deporting Jews to Auschwitz

    By Reuters

    OSLO -- Norwegian police apologized for the first time Monday for their complicity in the deportation and murder of over 700 Jews during the Nazi occupation in World War II, just months after the prime minister made a formal apology.

    "Norwegian police officers participated in the arrest and deportation of Jews," police chief Odd Reidar Humlegaard said on the 70th anniversary of Norway deporting the first group of Jews to Auschwitz.

    "It is fitting that I express my regret for the role police played in the arrest and deportation of these completely innocent victims," he said.


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    State role already acknowledged
    Vidkun Quisling, Norway's leader during the Nazi occupation whose name has become a synonym for traitor, ordered the registration of Jews in 1942 and the state apparatus played a complicit role in their eventual deportation.

    Norway acknowledged the state's role in 1998 and paid some $60 million to Norwegian Jews and Jewish organizations in compensation for property seized.

    Germany's Merkel opens Roma Holocaust memorial in Berlin

    But the move fell short of a full apology, causing further national debate and the establishment of a Holocaust research center. Current prime minister Jens Stoltenberg only made a formal apology earlier this year.

    Norway's Jewish population rose to around 2,100 by 1942 from 1,700 before the war as refugees from Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia fled the continent.

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    Authorities eventually deported 772, of whom only 34 survived. Others either stayed in hiding or fled to neighboring Sweden, which protected its Jewish population and also accepted around 8,000 Danish Jews.

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    Copyright 2013 Thomson Reuters. Click for restrictions.

    17 comments

    These perfunctory apologies that are more than 60 years overdue are really lame. They don't serve any real purpose anymore. I would rather they put it in their history books that they were unimaginable a-holes and that they will NEVER again repeat that part of their despicable history.

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  • 23
    Nov
    2012
    8:04am, EST

    Experts: Unbreakable code message found on WWII carrier pigeon

    A World War II code delivered by carrier pigeon is stumping today's cypher specialists. Can you break it? NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    By Ian Johnston, NBC News

    LONDON — A coded message from World War II found on the leg of a dead carrier pigeon in an English chimney cannot be deciphered, according to British intelligence agents.

    The handwritten message on a small sheet of paper headed "Pigeon Service" was found earlier this month in a small red canister still attached to the pigeon's leg, the GCHQ agency said in a statement posted on its website.

    The pigeon is thought to have been one of the 250,000 used by British forces — including secret agents working behind enemy lines in German-occupied Europe — during the 1939-1945 war.


    The message was signed and appears to say "Sjt W Stot", GCHQ said, adding that nothing is known of this individual or their unit. Sjt is an abbreviation of the old-fashioned "serjeant" spelling of the army rank.

    Royal Pigeon Racing Association, courtesy Bletchley Park Trust

    This coded message from World War II was found in a canister still attached to the leg of a dead carrier pigeon.

    'Tribute' to code-makers
    It was destined for a place code-named "X02," but it is also not known what this means. It contains 27 five-letter code groups, but GCHQ said it was impossible to decipher the message without the relevant code book.


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    "During the war, the methods used to encode messages naturally needed to be as secure as possible and various methods were used," the agency's statement said.

    "The senders would often have specialist code books in which each code group of four or five letters had a meaning relevant to a specific operation, allowing much information to be sent in a short message. For added security, the code groups could then themselves be encrypted," it said.

    "Although it is disappointing that we cannot yet read the message brought back by a brave carrier pigeon, it is a tribute to the skills of the wartime code-makers that, despite working under severe pressure, they devised a code that was undecipherable both then and now," it added.

    Courtesy Bletchley Park Trust

    This coded message from World War II was found in a canister still attached to the leg of a dead carrier pigeon.

    It is thought a "one-time pad" may have been used to encrypt the message.

    "The advantage of this system is that, if used correctly, it is unbreakable as long as the key is kept secret. The disadvantage is that both the sending and receiving parties need to have access to the same key, which usually means producing and sharing a large keypad in advance," GCHQ said.

    The pigeons carried a wide variety of messages, "flying the gauntlet of enemy hawk patrols and soldiers taking potshots at them to bring vital information back to Britain from mainland Europe," GCHQ added.

    Each had its own identity number and the Bletchingley message contains two such numbers — NURP.40.TW.194 and NURP.37.OK.76. Either could be the dead pigeon's number.

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    54 comments

    With the discovery of such historical documents, I am always fascinated. One can only wonder what secrets the document holds. I don't know if the old code books were preserved or discarded, but it would be fun to try to trace it back.

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  • 23
    Nov
    2012
    4:48am, EST

    The ghosts of Muranow: A journalist's mission to illuminate Poland's haunted past

    Courtesy of Adam Galica

    Photos of Jews who died during World War II adorn one of the few remaining buildings on Prozna Street in this picture taken during October of 2011 in Poland's Muranow district.

    By Donald Snyder, NBC News Special Correspondent

    Marianna Sowinska

    Journalist Beata Chomatowska's new book, "Stacja Muranow," recounts the history of Muranow, a district in Warsaw where thousands of Jews were buried underneath the ruins of World War II.

    When Polish journalist Beata Chomatowska walks the streets of Muranow, she can’t stop thinking about the horrible things that happened there.

    “It’s a daily trauma,” she said.

    Present-day Muranow, a district of Warsaw, Poland, is built on rubble and the remains of Jews who perished there during World War II, but many residents are ignorant of the area’s past.

    So Chomatowska started a website to educate them called “Stacja Muranow,” which means “Muranow Stop.” And in October she published a book by the same name, chronicling the haunted past of the former Jewish ghetto.


    “It’s a metaphor for Poland after the war, which largely erased the memory of its Jews,” said Chomatowska, 35, who is not Jewish but has long been fascinated by the history of Jews in Poland. A native of Krakow, she moved to Muranow in 2005 to start working at Rzeczpospolita (The Republic), a leading Polish newspaper, and was shocked by the silence and emptiness of her new neighborhood.


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    “How do people live in houses made of ghetto bricks?” she asked. “The houses looked artificial and so did the hills. It was scary.”

    During World War II, the Germans packed 400,000 Jews into the 1.3 square-mile area that became known as the Warsaw Ghetto, where Muranow is located.

    Some 300,000 Jews were deported to the killing center at Treblinka. The final deportation, on April 19, 1943, became the prearranged signal for an armed uprising against German forces. After the Jewish resistance was crushed on May 16, 1943, most of the remaining Jews were sent to death camps and the Germans razed the ghetto. Thousands were buried in the ruins. Many hid in cellars and were killed when the buildings were flattened.

    Poland’s post-war communist rulers, who were faced with the challenge of building housing for its many citizens left homeless by the war, found the rubble of the ghetto too extensive to clear. Buildings were constructed on the ruins using bricks from the ghetto. Built on this rubble, the street levels are uneven and often hilly.

    Handout

    The ruins of the Warsaw Ghetto right after World War II.

    Communist rulers touted Muranow as a utopia for workers and purposefully erased its Jewish history, leaving subsequent generations in the dark. In her book, Chomatowska tells the stories of some of the Jewish dead and laments the fact that most of today’s Muranow residents know little of the neighborhood’s history.

    That is starting to change. Thirty residents have joined Chomatowska’s Muranow education project, meeting in an unfurnished office with no hint of the past. She’s particularly proud of one of the murals painted by members of the group in the entry way of an apartment building. It features prominent Jews who lived in Muranow before the war, such as the creator of Esperanto, Ludwik Zamenhoff, who hoped his universal language would unite people of different cultures.

    Restoring memories of the Holocaust
    In her book, which is in Polish, Chomatowska tells the stories of former Muranow residents such as Jakub Wisnia, a Warsaw Ghetto fighter who survived the Holocaust.

    After researching Wisnia’s life, she described what he saw in August 1942 when Jews were being herded into trains destined for the Treblinka death camp.

    One passage reads: “The streets of the ghetto were hell. Women wept. Children held their mothers tightly, and the men clenched their teeth nervously, looking for a moment when they could escape. Anyone who stepped out of line was beaten unconscious, or shot.”

    Wisnia fought alongside fellow Jews during the Warsaw Ghetto uprising until the Germans arrested him and sentenced him to death. The Polish underground rescued him, and in August 1944, he joined Poles, Jews and non-Jews, in their abortive revolt against German rule. He avoided arrest by hiding in the city’s rubble for 108 days. He lived into his 80s, and was buried in Warsaw’s Jewish Cemetery in 1983.

    ‘Haunted’ by Muranow
    The area’s tragic past have led to claims of ghosts and feelings of dread. For example, Audrey Mallet, a French researcher who wrote a paper on Muranow, said some current inhabitants fear that Jews will come back and kill them.

    Holocaust historian Barbara Engelking moved out of Muranow because she said she was haunted by its past.

    “It was not like living in a graveyard,” she said during an interview with NBC News at the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw in October 2011. “It was like living with ghosts, and my research made them real.”

    Muranow residents should not be mired in the past, Chomatowska says, but it should inform their view of the present.

    Her book, centered on the oblivion surrounding Muranow, is about “how people forget,” she said. “And how the place doesn’t let them forget.”

    To learn more about the book Stacja Muranow, please visit the publisher’s website: www.czarne.com.pl

    Don Snyder, a veteran NBC News producer for more than 25 years, is a special correspondent for NBCNews.com.

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    144 comments

    I very much admire her efforts to bring the history of this place back. The Polish community in Poland was almost completely eradicated during the war and forgotten after it as if it had never existed. The hundreds of thousands who died both in the Uprising & the death camps should be remembered …

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  • 17
    Sep
    2012
    11:05pm, EDT

    World War II bomb found at construction site detonated in German town

    Jonas Guettler / EPA

    A crater caused by the detonation of a World War II bomb is seen in Viersen, Germany, Sept. 17. During a construction project, a British bomb containing acid fuses was discovered. The bomb was not diffusible and therefore had to be detonated. Parts of Viersen were evacuated.

    Jonas Guettler / EPA

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    About 8,000 people were evacuated from a town in northwestern Germany after a 550-pound bomb from World War II was found. NBCNews.com's Dara Brown reports.

     

    1 comment

    wow...65+yrs in the ground and still in working condition...scary

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  • 11
    Sep
    2012
    10:26am, EDT

    Documents: US, UK hushed up Soviet massacre of 22,000 Poles in WWII

    AP

    Two German officers, left, and a group of Allied officers who were prisoners of war look over a partly emptied mass grave in the Katyn Forest in May 1943.

    By NBC News wire services

    WARSAW, Poland -- President Franklin D. Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill hushed up evidence that the Soviet secret police had killed thousands of Polish men in the Katyn forest in 1940 for fear of alienating World War II ally Josef Stalin, newly declassified documents show.

    An estimated 22,000 Polish military officers and intellectuals were killed in the massacre at Katyn, in western Russia, many of them trucked in from prison camps, shot in the head from behind and shoved into mass graves.


    The aim of the Soviets was to eliminate a military and intellectual elite that would have put up stiff resistance to Soviet control. The men were among Poland's most accomplished -- officers and reserve officers who in their civilian lives worked as doctors, lawyers, teachers, or as other professionals. Their loss has proven an enduring wound to the Polish nation.

    The killings continue to cast a shadow over relations between Russia and Poland, but the new documents shift the focus elsewhere: to how Washington and London put fears of upsetting the Kremlin before exposing the truth.

    Instead, for years they backed the Soviet Union's version of events that Nazi Germany was behind the massacre at Katyn despite dozens of intelligence reports and witness accounts pointing to Soviet involvement.

    A telegram from U.S. military intelligence dated May 28, 1943, responding to an offer of information about Katyn, put the allied position bluntly: "If you mean Katyn affair am interested only if report shows German complicity."


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    That telegram was among 1,000 pages of newly declassified documents and photographs that were released late Monday by the U.S. National Archives in College Park, Md.

    The documents -- many of them marked secret or confidential -- included a series of exchanges between Roosevelt, Churchill and Soviet leader Stalin about reports emerging in April 1943 about the massacre.

    'Common sense'
    Their concerns focused on a demand from the Polish government, in exile in London, for a Red Cross investigation into Soviet involvement in the killings, and a threat from Stalin to break off ties with the Polish government as a result.

    Washington and London feared a dispute would harm the effort to defeat Nazi Germany and a letter from Roosevelt to Stalin said that Polish leader Gen. Wladyslaw Sikorski "has erred" in pressing for an investigation.

    J. Scott Applewhite / AP

    Col. Andrzej Kopacki, right, an assistant military attache with the Polish Embassy in Washington, attends an event on Capitol Hill to announce the release of information about the 1940 Katyn Forest massacre. At left is W.J. Milan-Kamski of Easton, Md., who is a native of Poland and World War II veteran with the Polish Army, 2nd Armored Division.

    "I am inclined to think that Prime Minister Churchill will find a way of prevailing upon the Polish government in London in the future to act with more common sense," Roosevelt wrote.

    Churchill made a similar point to Stalin, saying in a note he would "oppose vigorously" any Red Cross investigation.

    The documents showed that London and Washington had strong evidence of Soviet involvement as early as mid-1943, soon after German forces over-ran the Katyn area and found the mass graves.

    Tom Brokaw joins Morning Joe to preview a new special "Their Finest Hour – Britain in 1940-41," which looks at Britain's actions during World War II and how the country stood firm against the Nazis.

    This evidence included detailed accounts from officials in the Polish exiled government and reports from U.S. diplomats stating the Polish accounts were reliable.

    Divers find sunken German U-boat off Massachusetts coast

    Testimony also came from an American prisoner of war, Lt. Col. John H. Van Vliet, who was taken to the massacre site by his German captors and sent coded messages back home about what he saw.

    One document showed that people at the heart of the British government knew the Western allies were involved in a cover-up.

    Congress honors black World War II Marines

    "We have been obliged to ... restrain the Poles from putting their case clearly before the public, to discourage any attempts by the public and the press to probe the ugly story to the bottom," wrote Owen O'Malley, Britain's ambassador to the Polish government in exile, in a May 1943 letter.

    "We have in fact perforce used the good name of England like the murderers used the conifers to cover up a massacre."

    Poland hopes to identify remains of Auschwitz hero

    Churchill passed the diplomat's candid comments on to Roosevelt in a letter, and recommended that he read them.

    But in keeping with the desire at the time to keep the Katyn affair quiet, the British leader asked that Roosevelt return the document afterwards for safekeeping, saying "we are not circulating it officially in any way."

    Survivors of the Blitz share their feelings and historian Juliet Gardiner describes London during the strategic, sustained bombing of Britain during World War II.

    'The truth was inconvenient'
    Izabella Sariusz-Skapska, president of the Katyn Families Federation, said the new documents contained new details about how much was known at the time.

    "The Western allies new the exact truth about Katyn, but under war-time conditions, the truth was inconvenient."

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    She said she hoped the decision to declassify the U.S. documents would put pressure on the Russian government to open up its own archives about Katyn. "If there is something that we are waiting for, it is there," she said.

    Members of a retirement community documented their recollections of WWII in a new book. NBC's Brian Williams reports.

    White House maintained silence
    In the early years after the war, outrage by some American officials over the concealment inspired the creation of a special U.S. Congressional committee to investigate Katyn.

    In a final report released in 1952, the committee declared there was no doubt of Soviet guilt, and called the massacre "one of the most barbarous international crimes in world history." It found that Roosevelt's administration suppressed public knowledge of the crime, but said it was out of military necessity. It also recommended the government bring charges against the Soviets at an international tribunal -- something never acted upon.

    More Europe coverage on NBCNews.com

    Despite the committee's strong conclusions, the White House maintained its silence on Katyn for decades, showing an unwillingness to focus on an issue that would have added to political tensions with the Soviets during the Cold War.

    Of all the daring escapes of World War II, the story of Gyles Mackrell and his elephants is surely one of the most unusual. Documents hidden for the best part of 70 years tell how he rescued hundreds of refugees from the Japanese invasion of Burma... with a little help from some very large friends. ITV's Sally Biddulph.

    The declassified documents also show the United States maintaining that it could not conclusively determine guilt until a Russian admission in 1990 -- a statement that looks improbable given the huge body of evidence of Soviet guilt that had already emerged decades earlier. Historians say the new material helps to flesh out the story of what the United States knew and when.

    Complete World coverage on NBCNews.com

    It was not until the waning days of Soviet hegemony over Eastern Europe that reformist leader Mikhail Gorbachev publicly admitted to Soviet guilt at Katyn, a key step in Polish-Russian reconciliation.

    The silence by the U.S. government has been a source of deep frustration for many Polish-Americans. One is Franciszek Herzog, 81, a Connecticut man whose father and uncle died in the massacre. After Gorbachev's 1990 admission, he was hoping for more openness from the U.S. as well and made three attempts to obtain an apology from President George H.W. Bush.

    "It will not resurrect the men," he wrote to Bush. "But will give moral satisfaction to the widows and orphans of the victims."

    Read more about the records relating to the Katyn massacre at the U.S. National Archives

    Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    179 comments

    Disgusting. And this nonsense still goes on. A few years ago in Isreal, a meeting was held to commerate the Holocoust and many diplomats from the west atteneded. In one of the speeches, it was said (paraphras): "We will never let this happen again.." Yeah. Bosnia. Look next door in Syria. Dafur. C'm …

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