Posted on 03/23/2013 2:14:17 PM PDT by the scotsman
'They were the children of the damned Jews who had no place in the New World Order of Adolf Hitler and his stormtroopers.
Their parents were rounded up and shipped off to die as the Nazi regime which came to power 80 years ago in Germany - set about the systematic 'cleansing' of the country. But there were good people too; people who looked beyond the religion of an innocent child and risked death by guillotine to hide them from the round-up squads.
Now the heart-moving stories of 15 of these children are told for the first time in a book published this week in Berlin called 'You Don't Get Us.'. The book, by Tina Huettl and Alexander Meschnig, will be released in English later this year.'
(Excerpt) Read more at dailymail.co.uk ...
another reminder why the Noble Peace prize is a joke...
Irena Sendler v. Al Gore
http://www.merlinsilk.com/2009/09/04/irena-sendler-v-al-gore/
My beautiful father was one of those children. There must have been thousands. A lot of us would not be here today if it weren’t for loving people of all faiths who stepped up to save them.
Wow, that is amazing.
Some were psychologically damaged beyond recovery - e.g. George Soros.
I really wish I had a time machine.
Tereska, a child in a residence for disturbed children, grew up in a concentration camp. She drew a picture of "home"
What a powerful story. I put the book on my reading list. Too bad it’s not up on Amazon in advance of its English edition.
It would make for a heck of a movie.
Good Lord, that one photo and caption alone brings tears to my eyes.
Me too. Brings me to my knees.
I read a book years ago called "The Rescuers," about mostly German and Polish people who saved neighbors and even complete unknowns at the time of the Shoah. The most striking thing to me was that they did not have to struggle with their decision. Most of them said they thought about it 5 or 10 minutes before they acted, maybe they consulted their husband or wife; some simply acted instantly to do the right thing.
These were folks who were taught from earliest childhood by their parents to "be good to people," and who saw their parents "being good." It was precept; but even moreso, it was example. They grew up knowing, "This is what you do, of course. You see a need, you respond."
They were unaware that they heroes. They were amazed that everybody didn't think and do the same.
God only knows how much larger and faster built it would have been if half of the men creating it, had been replaced with females.
I guess we will find out those things in our next major war, after we learn Chinese.
LOL, scotsman, that post was intended for your Mulberry thread.
http://www.freerepublic.com/perl/post?id=3000086%2C1
I was thinking the same thing.
Wow...what a story...
Damaged as a result of...?
Correct me if I am wrong, but I understood Soros "sold out his own" during WW2.
Were Soros parents shipped off to a concentration camp?
Are you the person who wrote that blog? If you are, I’d like to know what kind of an “education” you received if you’re wondering if the Nazi atrocities were real or not.
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