"Members of the Sicherheitsdienst (SD) and other SS soldiers query a Hasidic Jew during the liquidation of the Warsaw Ghetto in April 1943.
The interrogator may well have desired information about Jews in hiding.
Ghetto Judenrat members and some other Warsaw Jews had hoped during 1941 and 1942 that, by developing the ghetto as a dependable source of labor, the majority of inhabitants might be saved.
By the time of the uprising, however, Jewish assumptions of Nazi rationality had evaporated.
If the soldiers seen here were determined to pry information from the assembled captives, they were likely disappointed."
"A manhole cover from the Warsaw Ghetto offers tragic testimony to the fate of thousands of Jews.
Jews engaged in resistance used sewers to escape and as avenues of transportation during the revolt.
Sewers were also important links between Jewish Resistance fighters and the Polish underground, which operated on the Aryan side of Warsaw."
"Ukrainian SS soldiers examine the bodies of Jews at the entrance to a destroyed apartment house in the Warsaw Ghetto.
Auxiliary units from the Ukraine provided crucial manpower that was necessary to implement the Nazis' genocidal campaigns.
The Ukrainian units were renowned for their brutal efficiency."
Ezra Pound was eventually arrested by US forces in Italy. He was judged not mentally fit to stand trial and spent a dozen years in St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Washington. When released he returned to Italy where he reportedly gave the fascist salute. According to close acquaintances he never gave up his anti-Semitic views.