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Victory Day. Colour Pictures from 1945
Posted on 05/07/2005 8:22:50 PM PDT by bgarid
Victory Parade, Moscow, Red Square, June 24, 1945
TOPICS: Foreign Affairs; Russia
KEYWORDS: 1945; veday; victoryparade; wwii
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1
posted on
05/07/2005 8:22:50 PM PDT
by
bgarid
To: bgarid
To this day, the men and women who fought in the Great Patriotic War are considered in major heroes in Russia.
2
posted on
05/07/2005 8:35:06 PM PDT
by
MindBender26
(Having my own CAR-15 meant never having to say I was sorry......)
To: bgarid
Beautiful pictures-the clarity astonishes me for such old photos.
I actually remember V-E Day and V-J Day---Lord,how the time does go by.
3
posted on
05/07/2005 8:35:58 PM PDT
by
Mears
(Keep the government out of my face!)
To: bgarid
Awesome. Thanks for posting. Color photos always make a scene appear somehow more real--black and white is too dreamy and faraway.
The people of the Soviet Union sacrificed so much for victory in the Great Patriotic War--they are in a brief state of joy in these scenes, for a moment forgetting the hell of the War and the nightmare of Stalinism.
4
posted on
05/07/2005 8:40:41 PM PDT
by
Cyclopean Squid
(History remembers only what was, not what might have been.)
Comment #5 Removed by Moderator
To: MindBender26
6
posted on
05/07/2005 8:57:35 PM PDT
by
BrooklynGOP
(www.logicandsanity.com)
To: BrooklynGOP
Especially all the officers that Stalin had executed due to the fact that they might have enough popularity to challenge him.
Comment #8 Removed by Moderator
To: Last Dakotan
My great-grandfather was "repressed" in 1939.
9
posted on
05/07/2005 9:53:21 PM PDT
by
BrooklynGOP
(www.logicandsanity.com)
To: bgarid; All
Thank you. Those are excellent sixty year old pictures.
Is anyones' Russian sufficient to translate the script next to Stalins' face?
10
posted on
05/07/2005 10:07:56 PM PDT
by
labette
To: labette
Glory to our heroic Red Army which has defended independence of our Motherland and won a victory over enemy!
11
posted on
05/07/2005 11:36:39 PM PDT
by
bgarid
To: bgarid
I love the picture of all the German regimental standards lowered to the ground with flags furled. I've never seen that before; is this kind of desecration usual after a victory? It must be a huge insult and embarrassment to the units that were defeated and lost their battle standards.
-ccm
12
posted on
05/07/2005 11:59:59 PM PDT
by
ccmay
(Question Diversity)
To: MindBender26
The russians suffered something on the order of 900,000 dead in the battle of Berlin.
Then they raped anything that moved.
I have mixed feelings about that.
13
posted on
05/08/2005 12:05:10 AM PDT
by
patton
("Fool," said my Muse to me, "look in thy heart, and write.")
Comment #14 Removed by Moderator
To: ccmay
The statehouse in MI proudly displays a VA flag, captured in battle.
We plan to take it back.
15
posted on
05/08/2005 12:08:43 AM PDT
by
patton
("Fool," said my Muse to me, "look in thy heart, and write.")
To: ccmay
General Joshua L. Chamberlain of Maine, recalls the ceremony of the South's surrender:
"Bayonets were affixed to muskets, arms stacked, and cartridge-boxes unslung and hung upon the stacks. Then, slowly and with a reluctance that was appealingly pathetic, the torn and tattered battle-flags were either leaned against the stacks or laid upon the ground. The emotion of the conquered soldiery was really sad to witness. Some of the men who had carried and followed those ragged standards through the four long years of strife rushed, regardless of all discipline, from the ranks, bent about their old flags, and pressed them to their lips.
And it can well be imagined, too, that there was no lack of emotion on our side, but the Union men were held steady in their lines, without the least show of demonstration by word or by motion. There was, though, a twitching of the muscles of their faces, and, be it said, their battle-bronzed cheeks were not altogether dry. Our men felt the import of the occasion, and realized fully how they would have been affected if defeat and surrender had been their lot after such a fearful struggle."
16
posted on
05/08/2005 12:20:01 AM PDT
by
endthematrix
(Declare 2005 as the year the battle for freedom from tax slavery!)
To: patton
I heard that the Russians were bewildered by the German toilets-they had never seen toilets before and weren't sure what they were for, so they washed potatoes in them.
17
posted on
05/08/2005 12:27:07 AM PDT
by
Jeff Chandler
(.:: "Do not be afraid of Christ! He takes nothing away, and he gives you everything." ::.)
To: Jeff Chandler
And thus was invented Vodka. ;)
18
posted on
05/08/2005 12:32:16 AM PDT
by
patton
("Fool," said my Muse to me, "look in thy heart, and write.")
To: bgarid
Thank you for posting these colour pictures - it is odd, but my entire impression of WWII is B&W.
What a wierd thing.
19
posted on
05/08/2005 12:34:20 AM PDT
by
patton
("Fool," said my Muse to me, "look in thy heart, and write.")
To: patton
Huh? My granddad was in Poland and Berlin back then, as part of 4-th armored corps... When I approached him on the "raped everything" part, he flatly stated that it was a lie, although he admitted that there were an isolated incidents of rape and plunding, and the perpertators, when caught, were swiftly executed.
20
posted on
05/08/2005 1:38:18 AM PDT
by
DYR
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