To: PeyersPatches
That link sent chills down my spine. I had a friend in the eighties who was a WWII Vet. He was at one of the concentration camps when the prisoners were freed. He took a lot of pictures of naked, piled up bodies, bodies with skin removed, and sick skinny prisoners. It was a much more horrific photo album than what most people have seen of these death camps.
Observing the way their bodies were treated, with such utter disrespect, has left a lasting impression on my heart. Those pictures spoke volumes about the risks associated with downplaying the value of every individual life.
318 posted on
10/29/2003 7:39:29 PM PST by
TaxRelief
(Ask me about the connection between Socialism, Communism, Drug Warlords and Vodka.)
To: TaxRelief
That link sent chills down my spine. I had a friend in the eighties who was a WWII Vet. He was at one of the concentration camps when the prisoners were freed. He took a lot of pictures of naked, piled up bodies, bodies with skin removed, and sick skinny prisoners. It was a much more horrific photo album than what most people have seen of these death camps.
Observing the way their bodies were treated, with such utter disrespect, has left a lasting impression on my heart. Those pictures spoke volumes about the risks associated with downplaying the value of every individual life.
My dad (now deceased) was there as well in WWII and brought pictures home. I was a little girl when I first saw them and I can still clearly see the skeletal, sad, figure looking at the camera today, as well as the bodies stacked up like cordwood on train cars with body fluids pouring over the rails. It made a permanent impression on me.
322 posted on
10/29/2003 7:45:55 PM PST by
PeyersPatches
(I have intestinal fortitude)
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