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VINSON WARNS NATION OF BITTER PACIFIC WAR; GERMANS YIELDING TO RUSSIANS; GOERING TAKEN (5/10/45)
Microfilm-New York Times archives, Monterey Public Library | 5/10/45 | Walter H. Waggoner, Warren Moscow, Lindesay Parrott, Clifton Daniel, Richard J.H. Johnston, more

Posted on 05/10/2015 4:45:14 AM PDT by Homer_J_Simpson

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TOPICS: Extended News
KEYWORDS: history; milhist; realtime; worldwarii
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/trumanpapers/maprmhst/index.php?documentid=hst-map_naid4502924-16&documentYear=1945&documentVersion=both

Telegram from President Harry S. Truman to Prime Minister Winston Churchill, May 10, 1945. Map Room File. Truman Papers

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http://www.trumanlibrary.org/whistlestop/study_collections/trumanpapers/maprmhst/index.php?documentid=hst-map_naid4502924-15&documentYear=1945&documentVersion=both

Telegram from President Harry S. Truman to Prime Minister Winston Churchill, May 10, 1945. Map Room File. Truman Papers


21 posted on 05/10/2015 9:04:06 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://www.executedtoday.com/2015/05/10/1945-sudeten-germans-known-but-to-god/

1945: Sudeten Germans, known but to God

Jirí Chmelnicek shot this footage in Prague on May 10, 1945 of Czechs celebrating the end of World War II by doling out mistreatment — including a chilling mass-execution — to Sudeten Germans. It was the presence of that population, the reader will recall, that Berlin invoked to justify its occupation of Czechoslovakia.

Chmelnicek’s video only surfaced publicly in 1945. As Der Spiegel reported.

Chmelnicek’s film shows how the Germans were rounded up in a nearby movie theater, also called the Borislavka. The camera then pans to the side of the street, where 40 men and at least one woman stand with their backs to the lens. A meadow can be seen in the background. Shots ring out and, one after another, each person in the line slumps and falls forward over a low embankment. The injured lying on the ground beg for mercy. Then a Red Army truck rolls up, its tires crushing dead and wounded alike. Later other Germans can be seen, forced to dig a mass grave in the meadow.

We do not know who these people are. Considering the indiscriminate revenge visited on Sudeten Germans after the war, it is not likely that these several dozen souls were selected for their fate with care.


22 posted on 05/10/2015 9:10:50 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
More on the film in my last post:

Massacre in Czechoslovakia: Newly Discovered Film Shows Post-War Executions

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/massacre-in-czechoslovakia-newly-discovered-film-shows-post-war-executions-a-698060.html


23 posted on 05/10/2015 9:18:12 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Photograph of a Marine Charging Japanese Machine Guns on Okinawa
5/10/1945
Records of the U.S. Marine Corps
National Archives Identifier: 532554

Original caption: A Marine dashes through Japanese machine gun fire while crossing a draw, called Death Valley by the men fighting there. Marines sustained more than 125 casualties in eight hours crossing this valley. Okinawa, May 10, 1945.

24 posted on 05/10/2015 9:23:58 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

George T. Morley

4 April 1945 to 10 August 1945
Okinawa

USS Shubrick DD639

Shipmate’s diaries
Invasion of Okinawa by George Morley

May 10, 1945 0110 Saw smoke rise from nearby DE that had been hit by Suicide Plane, 2 DES and 1DD were hit. All three except one DE were sunk. We fired 12 shots at plane but missed. “First time to Fire.”

http://www.ussshubrick.com/okinawa.htm


25 posted on 05/10/2015 9:26:54 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
http://www.uboatarchive.net/U-249.htm

U-249 (inboard) and U-1023 at Portland on or about May 10, 1945

U-249 surrendered to British forces May 9, 1945

26 posted on 05/10/2015 9:34:53 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

A Japanese family returning home (Seattle , Washington) from a relocation center camp in Hunt, Idaho on May 10, 1945.

27 posted on 05/10/2015 9:39:59 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

http://www.reformedreflections.ca/cultural-political/lest-we-forget.html

Reformed Reflections

Lest We Forget

Lest We Forget: May 10, 1940 - May 5, 1945. The Opposition of the Christian Reformed Churches - Gereformerde Kerken Nederland (GKN), her leaders and members to the Nazi Regime.

Vindicate me, O God, and plead my cause against an ungodly nation; rescue me from deceitful and wicked men” (Ps. 43: 1). During World War II in occupied Holland, “deceitful and wicked men,” called Nazis, feared neither God nor respected people. They exhibited pride, deceit, hatred and evil. After the German invasion on May 10, 1940, it seemed at first that the occupation forces were rather civil. But the Dutch were quickly awakened to harsh reality. Already on September 10, 1940, the exiled Queen Wilhelmina told the Dutch nation that the true character of the war was a battle between God and conscience on the one side, and on the other side the powers of darkness - a spiritual battle. The Queen declared that the Dutch know, that despite all their hypocritical talk, the Nazis hate Christ and His teachings. Indeed, the war was more than a horrendous struggle for power, land, oil and economic gain. It was above all a struggle “not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in heavenly realms” (Eph. 6:12).

Nazism was a betrayal of the Gospel. If the Nazis had won the war, they would have tried to wipe the Church off the map. Nazism was a new religion based on the supremacy of the Aryan race and the vilification of the Jews. Adolf Hitler saw himself as the new Messiah. In his address to Nazi party leaders at the 1936 Nuremberg Rally, Hitler focused on a sustained identification with Christ the Redeemer. Nazi racial ideology reverted Western culture to pagan nature religions. Civil-legal freedom and equality were abolished. A person’s legal status depended on “blood and soil “(race and nationality). Nazi racists believed that Christianity must separate itself from the Old Testament. They also divorced Jesus from His Jewish origin and made Him the ancestor of the Germanic tribes, a sort of Siegfried-Christ. Nazi leader Heinrich Himmler, known as the “Black Jesuit,” had his own catechism questions and answers for the infamous SS soldiers, as for example: “Question: Why do you obey? Answer: From inner conviction, from belief in Germany, in the Fuhrer, in the Movement and in the SS, and from loyalty.”

Dutch churches considered their calling to guard against the principles and practices of Nazism. On January 5, 1942, eight representatives of Protestant churches and one Roman Catholic met with a Nazi government official. In their Memorandum, they addressed the lawlessness of the regime, the merciless deportation of Jews, imprisonment without hearings, and the imposition of Nazi ideology on the Dutch population. They said that the Nazis made it increasingly impossible for Christians to live according to their convictions. In the same year, during an audience with Dr. Arthur Seyss - Inquart, Hitler’s Commissioner for the Netherlands, the Reformed (NHK) Prof. Dr. W. J. Aalders (1870-1945), argued that Christian faith penetrates all of life. Therefore, conflicts with the imposed Nazi world and life view were inevitable.

The Christian Reformed Churches (GKN)

Immediately after the Dutch government capitulation, some GKN leaders proclaimed already that there was no peace and no time for compromise. Various ministers clearly saw the implications of the German occupation and the danger of the Nazification of the Dutch nation. One of the first influential opponents of the Nazis was Prof. Dr. K.Schilder (1890-1952). Already, before the outbreak of the war he had warned against the poisonous, anti-Christian spirit of Nazism. His famous and deeply moving June 21, 1940, article Out of the Bomb Shelter and Into Uniform, published in The Reformation, was a clarion call to action: He declared that

The one hour of catastrophe is not the very worst of all. After that hour comes the real danger - the danger of the gradual disarming of the spirit, the gradual psychical and spiritual infection of our people, as we get used to the idea that although we can leave the bomb shelters that protected us from shrapnel, still , because of the uncertainty in the political atmosphere, we would do well to buy tickets to a spiritual bomb shelter, tickets good for an indefinite time until - who knows? - the storm has passed.

The Reformation was one of the first papers, which had to cease publication. Schilder was arrested and jailed in Arnhem from August to December 1940. He went into hiding in the summer of 1942 when he was threatened again with imprisonment. Another paper, the Messenger of the Messiah (de Messiasbode), was the next one to go in the Nazi’s pecking order. Its faithful, principled witness against anti-Semitism was a thorn in their flesh.

But not all pastors were courageous. Some were overly cautious in their preaching and congregational prayers. But many took great risks, boldly proclaimed the Word of God, and either gave spiritual assistance to the resistance movement or they themselves were involved in it. Many suffered for their convictions, even to the point of death. Of the 106 pastors seized by the Nazis, 24 spent a shorter or a longer period in concentration camps in Germany. Thirteen of them never made it home. A few of the arrested are well known in Canadian CRC circles. Rev. Francois Guillaume (1905-1972), who came to Canada in 1953 and served the Rehoboth CRC in Toronto and the Third CRC in Edmonton, was a minister in Sneek when he was arrested by the Germans. He was accused of anti-German preaching and stirring up his congregation against theThird Reich. He was imprisoned on May 14, 1942, sent to Dauchau on August 24, 1942, where he suffered unspeakable hardships until May 21, 1945. Rev. H.Veldkamp was imprisoned in February 1942, for preaching the Gospel.

While he was in his cell in Leeuwarden, Veldkamp learned that they intended to send him to an annihilation camp in Germany. With the aid of a prison doctor, he pretended to have a psychiatric illness. Before the Nazis realized what had happened, he was already in a Psychiatric Institute in Franeker where he stayed until December 1943. During this time period, Veldkamp wrote his exposition of Jeremiah, a paraphrase of the Psalms, and a commentary on the Heidelberg Catechism.

Education

The Nazi attack on Christian education was viewed as a total warfare against the very existence of Christian culture in the Netherlands. In 1941, the Van Loben Sels School in Arnhem became a glaring example of the insidious intentions of the Nazis. They planned to remove the principal and replace him with a Nazi indoctrinated collaborator. If the plan had succeeded, the Christian school would have been reduced to a propaganda institution for National Socialism. Most parents refused to bow their knees before the Nazi Baal. Their pastor, Rev. J, Overduin, decided that on Christian Education Sunday, February 8, 1942, he would “proclaim a concrete and unambiguous word from the pulpit.” Knowing the possible consequences of his plans, he asked his wife for her full support. She gave it him. In his sermon on Matthew 5: 11,12, he reminded the parents of their baptismal vows. “Children belong to their parents, “he said,” not to the state, and because these children have been baptized, only Christ has a right to them; no one else.” That very same Sunday Overduin was arrested. He spent time in the Arnhem prison, and the concentration camps of Amersfoort and Dachau. He was freed on October 15, 1943.

Disagreement

Out of principle a few GKN leaders resisted their church’s opposition to the Nazis. One of the best known was A. Janse, an influential author, who wrote about Christian politics, Christian education, and theological topics. In his brochure Our attitude in this time, Janse condemned listening to the “English” radio as a grave danger for the church. Although he recognized Queen Wilhelmina as his sovereign, he asked Dutch Christians to obey the Germans as they were now the ruling powers. Although Janse made some worthwhile observations, his comments about Hitler were inexcusable. The impact of Janse’s view was slight.

Printing

GKN printers had a large share in publishing “illegal” newspapers. Their work, which they did for free, was extremely dangerous. Traitors and spies were everywhere. But they laboured as soldiers on the frontline of battle. One of these brave people was S.P.J. Bakker of Amsterdam, a Christian publisher who loved his work with heart and soul, and used his talents in the service of his Lord, his Church, and his fatherland. We knew him well. As a family we owe him a debt of gratitude. He was our godly and faithful district elder of great support to my mother when my father was prisoner of war. I also remember the meals his wife provided for my brother and me during the horrible hunger winter of 1944-45. Bakker was arrested on January 29, 1945, and executed on February 9. I will never forget him.

Deaconate

The GKN deacons were very active during the war years. After September 1944, the situation in Western Holland had become critical. There was no fuel, no hydro and no gas. Tulip bulbs and sugar beets, if they could be obtained, were on the menu for many families. The Kinderuitzending (child outsourcing) was one of the programs from which my brother, sister, and I benefited. Thousands of children were taken to the Northern Netherlands. My sister went by bus to a little village near Franeker, Friesland, a dangerous journey. My brother and I spent three days in the cargo hold of a ship to get to the same Frisian village, where the three of us spent the last part of the war. I will never forget the fine Christian farmers, who became my foster parents, who fed and clothed me.

Obviously, this article has a narrow focus. Dutch people from various religious and political backgrounds took part in the resistance. And although the GKN got all the attention, mainly for personal reasons, I do want to pay tribute also to Christians of other persuasions who worked alongside GKN believers.

Why did the Reformed community resist the Nazis? They refused to surrender their Christian world and life view to the Nazis. They fought for freedom of worship and association, and for liberty to hear the Gospel preached without compromise. They could not serve the Lord and the gods of the Nazi at the same time. They obeyed the first commandment, “You shall have no other gods before me.”

Johan D. Tangelder
Mar 20, 2000


28 posted on 05/10/2015 9:47:23 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

83rd Infantry Division - Radio News

Germany, vol VIII #14, May 10, 1945

“Don’t Fraternize! Don’t trust a German”

http://83rdinfdivdocs.org/documents/radionews/83rd_Signal_Co_19450510_Germany_Vol_VIII_No_14.pdf


29 posted on 05/10/2015 9:56:19 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: EternalVigilance
15. In view of the high classification of the minutes of this meeting it was agreed that copies should not be sent to those present but that instead one copy should be kept on file in General Groves’ office, one copy in Dr. Oppenheimer’s office, and one copy in Captain Parson’s office.

Of course, Oppenheimer sent additional copies on to Stalin.

30 posted on 05/10/2015 10:07:01 AM PDT by iowamark (I must study politics and war that my sons may have liberty to study mathematics and philosophy)
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To: iowamark

Touche.


31 posted on 05/10/2015 10:13:57 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: EternalVigilance

The would actually be the Isle of Portland on the southern coast of England.

Via the U-boat captured lists, it appears some U-boats went to Portlsmith NH, but I don’t think any came to Porltand, Maine.


32 posted on 05/10/2015 11:16:08 AM PDT by Steven Scharf
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To: Steven Scharf

Yeah, definitely it’s the Portland in England.


33 posted on 05/10/2015 11:30:09 AM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson
http://www.stripes.com/news/us/last-surviving-nuremberg-prosecutor-recalls-ve-day-1.345272

Last surviving Nuremberg prosecutor recalls VE Day

"There was no ‘hooray for us,’ just ‘the damn thing is over, let’s get home.’

On May 8, 1945, Benjamin Ferencz was a war crimes investigator helping to liberate Nazi prisoners. He later become the chief prosecutor in the Nuremberg Trials, helping convict 22 members of the German SS on war crimes in 1947. (Mark Randall/Sun Sentinel/TNS)

34 posted on 05/10/2015 12:23:31 PM PDT by EternalVigilance
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To: Homer_J_Simpson

Did Goering really give the Nazi salute to General Stack? I can’t fathom that a man of Goering’s intelligence and military experience would purposely insult an American general by not giving a traditional military salute? He must have known that would infuriate the general.


35 posted on 05/10/2015 3:44:01 PM PDT by HenpeckedCon (What pi$$es me off the most is that POS commie will get a State Funeral!)
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To: EternalVigilance
Yes, sir! No fraternizing going on here . . .


36 posted on 05/10/2015 3:50:13 PM PDT by colorado tanker
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