SS Division " DAS REICH ". Diary of a German Tankman. Battle of Kursk. Kharkiv. Normandy.

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This diary perfectly reveals the character of the author and his attitude to the war.
Joachim Scholl commanded a Panzer 6 " Tiger " tank numbered "232" as part of the second company of the 102nd SS tank battalion " Das Reich ". Although he is not as famous as some other tank commanders, he was able to destroy seventy-six enemy tanks.
#history #easternfront #worldwarII #technic #wehrmacht

Пікірлер: 537

  • @MilitaryClubHISTORY
    @MilitaryClubHISTORY8 ай бұрын

    Enjoy handy playlists with all the stories of the soldiers! kzread.info/dash/bejne/kZOixsRpmsXUfMo.html The War At Sea. Pacific War. The Battle Of the Atlantic. kzread.info/head/PLME26KOruKR3xPuLzIorw0d1RTk7KYoJf Waffen SS. Diaries and memories of German soldiers. kzread.info/head/PLME26KOruKR3CTzfue93twWQ7k_d4yOzc Personal Diaries and Memoirs of Soldiers.

  • @peter486

    @peter486

    6 ай бұрын

    i wonder what happend to that 20 year old that got married with the chinse woman.

  • @dynamo3590

    @dynamo3590

    6 ай бұрын

    👍👍👍👍

  • @Fakewhack-st8fl

    @Fakewhack-st8fl

    4 ай бұрын

    For the love of God, get some decent narration voice overs

  • @Apolloblue36

    @Apolloblue36

    3 ай бұрын

    ​@@peter486qqqqqq

  • @MrLeedebt

    @MrLeedebt

    2 ай бұрын

    @@Fakewhack-st8fl A guy below thought it was great..lol

  • @user-bd3gt9jt1x
    @user-bd3gt9jt1x7 ай бұрын

    Amazing that he survived WW2 as a Waffen SS tank officer, was captured and lived in Scotland after being released as a POW. Best that he was captured on the Western front than the Eastern where he probably would had been killed. Lived to even see the turn of the century!! Amazing story.

  • @1maico1

    @1maico1

    7 ай бұрын

    It's fake. There was no tank ace called Joachim Scholl and the dates given in the Normandy time frame are wrong.

  • @liampett1313

    @liampett1313

    7 ай бұрын

    @@1maico1 There was no Tigers at Normandy so this story is made up.

  • @jimhen459

    @jimhen459

    7 ай бұрын

    As SS he would have been killed by the Russians, he would not have seen dinner. If U.S soldiers had caught him in the open they'd likely of shot him. He must of being captured as part of the group.

  • @deepforestgod

    @deepforestgod

    7 ай бұрын

    There were Tigers at Normandy

  • @deepforestgod

    @deepforestgod

    7 ай бұрын

    101. and 102. SS-Panzer-Abteilungen and 503. Panzer-Abteilung

  • @grdnzrnic
    @grdnzrnic8 ай бұрын

    What a great sense of humor and an analytical mind. He’s very well disciplined, yet has a very big appetite for risk and its consequences

  • @grdnzrnic

    @grdnzrnic

    7 ай бұрын

    @@idonotwantagoddamnyoutubechann he was a good man & soldier born in a corrupt system who was ignorant of the full extent of the Nazis program

  • @mottthehoople693

    @mottthehoople693

    7 ай бұрын

    @@idonotwantagoddamnyoutubechann no he wasnt...ya plonka

  • @zigman8550

    @zigman8550

    7 ай бұрын

    @@idonotwantagoddamnyoutubechann The Russians were just as bad if not worse.

  • @CFox.7

    @CFox.7

    7 ай бұрын

    This is astounding if true. He's on the WRONG side of history and he has the gall to call the Soviets cowards for defending their invaded homeland. He has nightmares about Eastern front and cant put two and two together.. he has the audacity to have a kill count BET with another tank commander..He COMPLAINS about boredom from inaction and looks forwards to more encounters. No where does he question his ethics.

  • @mottthehoople693

    @mottthehoople693

    7 ай бұрын

    @@CFox.7 remember he was a young man when he wrote this

  • @mpsymonds1
    @mpsymonds17 ай бұрын

    The courage of all soldiers is unbelievable. Total carnage on both sides, yet they move onto the next battle, until they don`t.

  • @limoncr5205

    @limoncr5205

    7 ай бұрын

    Maybe they had to or were forced to do it?

  • @kgjekdl

    @kgjekdl

    6 ай бұрын

    @@limoncr5205 You are naive.

  • @epidrom

    @epidrom

    6 ай бұрын

    ​@@kgjekdlYes, naive like the russians who move from battle to battle right now

  • @kgjekdl

    @kgjekdl

    6 ай бұрын

    @@epidrom Thats a stupid comparison. My grandparents were there, everyone in germany wanted to fight. I wonder what you think about the fact that some of the last soldiers defending berlin were frenchmen. Saying "tHey wEre fOrCed tO fIgHt" is just pathetic. You just dont have beliefs worth fighting for. pitiful

  • @epidrom

    @epidrom

    6 ай бұрын

    @@kgjekdl if you say so. I feel sorry for you then. Time will tell who of us stands on the "right" side or if it even matters in the end. Take care

  • @Brad-pv8uc
    @Brad-pv8uc3 ай бұрын

    I'm a Kiwi one my pops was an Anzac,the other British SAS,my great uncle was SS, it really shows the insanity of war

  • @flankman9385

    @flankman9385

    3 ай бұрын

    All wars are banker wars

  • @isntimportant

    @isntimportant

    2 ай бұрын

    Same situation here. Dad was infantry. His dad flew bombers. His mom was a naffy. My moms dad was a partisan. My moms moms dad was an SS officer in Das Reich. If that had of got out during the white guilt training we were forced to endure in school when I grew up I would have got even more abuse than I already did for being blonde haired and blue eyed. Every time anything about nazism was raised the entire classroom of mostly foreign children would turn and look at me and the one Polish boy who were the only white kids in the room as if we were personally responsible. It made me grow up realising false attribution was a huge issue. Taught me skepticism. The thumbnail for this video depicts an interesting image. Growing up I was shown this image. It was even on an overhead projection. And was in books passed around and shown to children. Except in it there was a naked Jewish lady hanging by her neck in the photograph. Given my curiosity I began to dig, and I found that there are tens of thousands of faked photos showing "nazi atrocities". I was actually shocked at just how many there are. From Russian soldiers with Russian rifles wearing Russian uniforms executing 'Jewish people' (no idea who they were tbh) into a pit just being relabeled as "Germans" when they clearly weren't to really bad photo manipulation jobs there's an astonishing level of dishonesty on our side. It got me to quizzing elderly family members. I no longer know what to believe, but I know I am far more mistrusting of our governments than ever before. I know that I cannot say I disbelieve them or my life will be destroyed, I will be banned everywhere, and in half of Europe I would face a prison sentence. But that in and of itself is a compelling argument to mistrust them. Any topic that researching it could lead to prison sentences is a topic I want to research.

  • @theyearoftherat

    @theyearoftherat

    2 ай бұрын

    ​@@isntimportanttruth and fact don't need to hide behind the protection of censorship and threats.

  • @tf1090c

    @tf1090c

    Ай бұрын

    Same situation here

  • @ransomhades

    @ransomhades

    Ай бұрын

    Thats insane, im a fellow Kiwi and would love to hear more about that story

  • @naughtysmurf64
    @naughtysmurf645 ай бұрын

    "Goering can hide in a bunker. If he can fit through the door." LOL!!!

  • @gorangoran6335

    @gorangoran6335

    4 ай бұрын

    It is interesting to mention that he actually was a pilot in the WWI. 🛩

  • @gattonero2915

    @gattonero2915

    3 ай бұрын

    @@gorangoran6335Goering transformed from a respectable WW1 pilot to a fat lard all thanks to the injury he got from Hidler's failed 1923 "putsch" Coup D'etat that made him addicted to Morphine, which increased his appetite by a lot :v

  • @arthurbachmann4221

    @arthurbachmann4221

    Ай бұрын

    Goering used Kransburg im Taunus as his NBC Bunker. Castle. Hall of Knights established 1200 AD. 1945 Kransburg became of Wild Bill Donovan's OSS Operation Dust Bin and associated with Oberussel. The CIA began operating in the basements of Kransburg. They conducted human experimentation using LSD and likely much more. Later Kransberg became a USAREUR US ARMY 3 AD Spearhead PNCOC academy. The surround forest is primal. It has never been logged. The hardwood leaves on the forest floor is about three feet deep.

  • @arthurbachmann4221

    @arthurbachmann4221

    Ай бұрын

    USAAC Bud Anderson, P-51 WW II and more, passed away 17 May 2024.

  • @JoeSmith-gp5dm
    @JoeSmith-gp5dm6 ай бұрын

    I can’t even begin to fathom how they survived day to day and month to month without being killed.

  • @dannysigurdson7108
    @dannysigurdson71085 ай бұрын

    6:34 WOWWWWW what a historically bone-chilling conversation in retrospect... hearing the Holocaust alluded to (to a Waffen-SS combat vet!) who couldn't even comprehend. And shrugged off the idea of such a degree of horror. Incredible material!

  • @frankhenschel4008

    @frankhenschel4008

    4 ай бұрын

    Or rather alluded to the massacres the NKVD was committing on eastern european prisoners before the Wehrmacht showed up. Like in Katyn, or in the Prison on Lacki Street in Lviv.

  • @APOLON-bm7ym
    @APOLON-bm7ym22 күн бұрын

    I think I watched this clip at least 5 times, it is THAT GOOD. Pure gold literally. Reminds me on Sven Hassels novels ("Blitzfrezze" precisely).

  • @rolandlabelle188
    @rolandlabelle1887 ай бұрын

    Three million soldier's from both sides fought that battle and 1.3 million survived,war that'll kill you😢

  • @Weshopwizard
    @Weshopwizard5 ай бұрын

    Gotta admit, when he said that the diary started at Kursk, I winced a little.

  • @Panzerbeast

    @Panzerbeast

    4 ай бұрын

    Same…. Thought he was snuffing it then

  • @tekis0
    @tekis07 ай бұрын

    That was excellent! Great job with the variety of photos and the pacing of them too. Liked and Sub-SCRIBED!

  • @m.brizzy5407
    @m.brizzy54075 ай бұрын

    Very interesting to get the perspective of Germans who fought in WWII. Normally, you only get interviews with Americans who tell everyone that they won the war by themselves.... I have 7 books from a British chap who fought in several campüaigns, in several countries and I've seen a few interviews with French people too. Sometimes these 'people' who make these documentaries forget that there were many people from many countries involved in WWII. There is a film about the siege of Sevastopol which shows the Ukrainian people

  • @itftcomputers
    @itftcomputers8 ай бұрын

    He was lucky not to be captured by the Soviets, I doubt being SS he would be able to ever return to Germany.

  • @asullivan4047

    @asullivan4047

    7 ай бұрын

    Unfortunately the Russians ( P.O.W.'s ) whom returned from German captivity. Were shot or imprisoned for cowardice ( surrendering )

  • @benyoung552

    @benyoung552

    7 ай бұрын

    Most SS were lucky to even be captured at all by any side without being executed immediately on the spot.

  • @RENEBACON

    @RENEBACON

    7 ай бұрын

    @@asullivan4047 these vague states are fascinating - The USSR lost a large number of its population during the war. Therefore, there was a special interest in returning all former citizens of the USSR back to their homeland, and the government could not allow the emergence of anti-Soviet sentiments among them. For this reason, the conditions for investigating the activities of these people during the war were created as soft as possible, and persecution was approached only in cases where direct and proactive participation in combat or terror against civilians was proven. Even prisoners who were recruited by the Germans and became regular soldiers were not subjected to persecution. The Soviet government assessed this as coercion. Officers and those who participated in terror in the occupied territories were evaluated significantly worse. The Germans dragged away a total of about 6.8 million people. (This number apparently does not include the number of prisoners of war who were shot, mainly from 1941 and 1942.) About 5 million of these people were alive at the end of the war. These were all people who were citizens of the USSR before September 17, 1939. Of these, 1.5 million were captured soldiers and 3.5 million were total deployments and stolen children. In addition, a little over a million people were forcibly deployed directly into the occupied Soviet territories, mostly as virtual kulak slaves. In order to return the abductees, the government set up a whole network of camps on the territory of Germany and German-occupied countries. Investigations of these people were routinely carried out directly in them. Those who passed the screening were sent to their places of pre-war employment. There was an interesting regulation here: If these people were lynched after returning home, criminal proceedings should not automatically be initiated against the perpetrators of the lynching, but the returnees should be sent for further thorough investigation. Extreme pragmatism, allowing to simplify return procedures. People just remember… A separate group was represented by those who did not pass the background checks. They were really responsible for their activities during the war and ended up in camps or even on the gallows. Legends say that this was the fate of most of the prisoners of war.

  • @RENEBACON

    @RENEBACON

    7 ай бұрын

    @@asullivan4047 Some of the prisoners of war were handed over for further investigation. But the famous 'almost everyone' represented about 15%. Zemskov points out that this has long been a commonly known fact in professional circles. Well, as usual. At the same time, 'sending' did not yet mean 'punishment', but only a detailed investigation of their deeds during the war. This included people who worked for the Germans as police officers, mayors (burger masters), officials of the German occupation administration, officers (primarily from the ranks of the ROA), organizers of terrorist acts against the Soviet population in the German hinterland, commanders of Sonderkomand-type units and those who they were persuaded into intelligence activity. All this meant being transferred under the tutelage of the NKVD and a careful background check. In terms of punishment, it is similar. Most of the people handed over to the NKVD were sentenced to six years of special exile (similar to kulaks) after investigation and then released. At the same time, the nature of the offense corresponded to treason, which according to section 193 of the Criminal Code of the RSFSR was punishable only by death.

  • @RENEBACON

    @RENEBACON

    7 ай бұрын

    @@asullivan4047 In the summer of 1944, the British captured a number of German soldiers after invading France. But they soon discovered that some of them could not speak German, but understood Russian, so they quickly loaded them onto a ship and took them to Murmansk. They fell under the above section 'on going over to the enemy'. 9,907 prisoners arrived in Murmansk on November 6, 1944. They assumed that they would be shot immediately in the port. Instead, they were pardoned for the crime of treason, only to be sent for a detailed investigation. They were already punished with the aforementioned six years of special exile, 18 people were taken away by the SMERŠ authorities (again for investigation) and 81 went straight to the local hospital. All other cases were taken over by the NKVD. Most of them were released without a criminal record and their stay in exile was counted towards their years of service. And what was the attitude of the POWs themselves and the totally deployed? Zemskov reports that, according to the British occupation administration, there was a prevailing fear among prisoners of war of Soviet origin that the Soviet government would not allow them to return. These concerns were expressed by Russians captured by the British during the fighting, i.e. soldiers who defected to the German side. Not only that. As soon as the first prisoners of war and total deployments were freed, they immediately tried to get within the reach of Soviet power and often set off on long marches to Soviet detention camps without any security. They also collected money, which they handed over to the Homeland Defense Fund, and voluntarily underwent their own regular and tactical military training during the marches to the concentration camps, so that they could be immediately included in military service. After the end of the war (in a time of great turmoil) they even volunteered for guard duty. This is how a pair of soldiers V.I. Gubarev and I.E. Sidorov arrested Himmler and handed him over to the British occupation administration. It is also interesting to say that the repatriates complained in the Soviet camps that the Soviet command was punishing them for marauding the German population, while in the western sectors the occupation administration gave them a free hand, or even encouraged them to do so. It is true that in this book Bůh synergie by Jiří Šifrin) am not dealing with how the group of Soviet generals around Marshal G.K. Zhukov behaved, it is described in detail, for example, by Alexander Bushkov in the book Stalin. Ледяной трон (Ice Throne). I will only mention one of the pearls from Stalin's life (they are mentioned in the Goodbye and Shawl chapter). The Western Allies were simply democrats. There, the commanders allowed not only soldiers, but also former prisoners to rob...

  • @hansvonschlader8227
    @hansvonschlader82277 ай бұрын

    My grandfather was Luftwaffe mechanic in WW2. He passed in 1977 and spoke very little of the war. He told me once that blood and bone were common place inside the planes and I would have nightmares from his experiences if he told me.

  • @donaldduck830

    @donaldduck830

    7 ай бұрын

    My grandfather was a horsegroom in a logistics unit. He walked out of Stalingrad, but being captured by the French was the worst that happened to him.

  • @EroticOnion23

    @EroticOnion23

    7 ай бұрын

    @@donaldduck830 good for him it wasn't those French from Band of Brothers...😆

  • @donaldduck830

    @donaldduck830

    7 ай бұрын

    @@EroticOnion23 Or that Lieutenant from Band of Brothers: "Hey, you want a smoke?"- Boom - Dead POW - Everybody just shrugs their shoulders.

  • @ApriliaRacer14

    @ApriliaRacer14

    6 ай бұрын

    My Opa was a Wehrmacht sniper…never spoke a word of it and slapped me when I asked questions in 1981. Old hard German style…lol.

  • @M-I-k-e1301

    @M-I-k-e1301

    6 ай бұрын

    @@ApriliaRacer14 May your grandfather rest in peace. My grandfather fought in the pacific against the Japanese and the little he did tell me baffles me to this day, especially his and most peoples mindsets in that time period towards death and violence and it was seen as a part of life

  • @realgrilledsushi
    @realgrilledsushi8 ай бұрын

    Thank you for sharing this!

  • @asintonic
    @asintonic8 ай бұрын

    Joachims were good tank commanders during WW2 for Germany!

  • @johnjackson2937

    @johnjackson2937

    7 ай бұрын

    MICHAEL WICKMEN WERE THE BEST ,UNTIL HE WAS WAS KILLED IN THE VILLARS BOGAGGE! JOCHEM PIPER SLAUGHTER THE COMPANY OF OBSERVATION SOILGERS AT MAMADEY! WAS STOP ON HIS WAY TRYING TO CROSS THE BRIDGE AT STAVALO, STOPED BY US ENGINEERS! TRYING TO TAKE THE FUEL DEPO! HE AND HIS TANK BATTALION WAS FORCE TO WALK BACK TO GERMANY!😮

  • @davep153
    @davep1538 ай бұрын

    Thanks for another look at these folks. Appreciate the pictures.

  • @mrlodwick
    @mrlodwick8 ай бұрын

    Thank you so much.

  • @paulbutterworthbillericay
    @paulbutterworthbillericay5 ай бұрын

    That was excellent listening, but pray for the souls of all sides, incredible to write a diary under so much stress & fatigue, I once sat with an old german soldier who said he walked from the baltics when all was lost, he gave me a german dictionary

  • @SeanApplePie
    @SeanApplePie7 ай бұрын

    What a great writer who wrote this diary. And a great narrator who speaks ( and translate I guessed) his words. A kind of Dantes hell in an other time. Thanks for taking your time and effort to makes this. Have a nice day all.

  • @user-fi2ix7mr6i
    @user-fi2ix7mr6iАй бұрын

    Going to the Eastern Front was a death sentence. Being injured then ordered back,or taking leave and returning to the Eastern Front must have been mind boggling, but they returned to certain death.

  • @niyamimbi1179
    @niyamimbi11798 ай бұрын

    you do a great reading of these, thanks!

  • @patrickpatterson3356
    @patrickpatterson33568 ай бұрын

    I love this channel that you have made and I have learned a lot from what I know Im a veteran im having some financial difficulties but when I get it straightened out I will be able to give you the money to join your channel Respectfully Patrick Patterson

  • @csgXIII
    @csgXIII7 ай бұрын

    Seems like Osha was a good friend and comrade, I wonder what happened to him?!

  • @Thingz-eye-sendtoDanny

    @Thingz-eye-sendtoDanny

    7 ай бұрын

    He went on to start a new life in America busting balls on worksites nationwide

  • @joseridaorodrigo8228
    @joseridaorodrigo82286 ай бұрын

    Felicidades por el canal. Aunque el audio es en inglés se puede leer la transcripción en español. Además la transcripción, al menos en este vídeo, aparece con signos de puntuación: es la 1ª vez que veo tal innovación en KZread.

  • @geraldlafleur7776
    @geraldlafleur77765 ай бұрын

    Amazon also has books like”Tigers in The Mud” and “D Day in The Eyes of The Germans”. They give a similar story as this one.

  • @rjosephobrien
    @rjosephobrien8 ай бұрын

    I really enjoy your channel. Thank you so much.

  • @rjosephobrien

    @rjosephobrien

    8 ай бұрын

    I got a good laugh out of the authors comment concerning Goering!

  • @darioscomicschool1111
    @darioscomicschool11117 ай бұрын

    Thank you for this one!

  • @JamesWicker-ps4gq
    @JamesWicker-ps4gq5 ай бұрын

    I like the stories from the eastern front. I would like to hear more about the western front.

  • @RomanesEuntDomus
    @RomanesEuntDomus5 ай бұрын

    Truly fascinating, and made better by excellent editing of photos to script.

  • @kapitanbumm344
    @kapitanbumm3447 ай бұрын

    my cousin was in the ss as well. i still have his diary. u can see the difference in in script the longer the war lasted. from a nice handscript to a really messed up script in the end. he got killed and all they sent back was the diary. i think the died with age 18 or 19.

  • @wirelessone2986

    @wirelessone2986

    7 ай бұрын

    What unit was he in and do you know what country he died in?

  • @kapitanbumm344

    @kapitanbumm344

    7 ай бұрын

    actually his father pressed him into the army and he was sent to the eastern front to fight off the russians. being ss was nothing special in the late days off the war, and not to compare with the early days, when only the fantatics joined the ss. i dont know what u would call the country nowadays, but i guess must have been belarus or poland. thing is, the diary is writting in a script called sütterlin, with was used back than and but is kinda hard to read. my grandfather was in the personal music band of hitler, which ment he was kinda safe, but when he smashed some officers head with a bat and was in trouble. his only chance to get not executed was to join the paratroopes because that was equal to a suicide commando. after his first mission as a paratrooper he decided to desert and make his way back to germany. the family hid him in the attic for the last 3 month of the war. luckily for him, our house was kinda nice and the family hosted generals which were on vacations and so the army police never searched the attic for him.

  • @stevenfreeman5707
    @stevenfreeman57075 ай бұрын

    Loved the 'real life' facts and brutal facts - obviously you become immune to everything in WAR

  • @AdrianaFavaro-pr7kt
    @AdrianaFavaro-pr7kt7 ай бұрын

    Fascinant story! WW2 is one those things that me fascinate.

  • @FlorinSutu
    @FlorinSutu7 ай бұрын

    Very interesting photos in the background !

  • @user-pv3mx7ur2k
    @user-pv3mx7ur2k5 ай бұрын

    as i listen to this,i close my eyes and understand that this could be any country....and this is a human just trying to survive. i enjoyed the banter amoung the crews and the bets... but what got me a little was at the end when he said that the hitler youth is great but then the same breath he said they would use them as bait...that turned me a little...but again i belive all of the worlds military are brave men and women and respect needs to be given,reguardless on what side you are on

  • @deanjericevic8912
    @deanjericevic89125 ай бұрын

    An insightful & interesting video! It obviously portrayed the Tiger tank as far superior to both the Russian T34 & US Sherman tanks which was information that I had garnered from a good number of other videos set on both the Eastern & Western fronts. The Tigers did seem to be plagued with mechanical breakdown though. I liked the put down of H. Goering, some humor never goes astray.

  • @user-vc2od1wg9o

    @user-vc2od1wg9o

    4 ай бұрын

    Российский т-34 сконструировал по американским чертежам-украинец-Кошкин...их производили в Харькове...

  • @briankrause2359
    @briankrause23595 ай бұрын

    This was an informative upload, hearing about 1 year of battle (more or less) from a Tiger Tank commander. I wonder how many times you'd soil yourself upon each of those 'clangs' off the armor until you get complacent and think those shells will never get through... Seems the author just 'shrugged off' the possible results of the hits after a while, amazing... I guess its like the stories you hear about soldiers eventually able to sleep through artillery barrages etc.. Find it hard to fathom that's possible, but of course millions of men unfortunately had to learn that very skill... As for the thumbnail of this upload, that officer leaning forward on the Tiger Tank reminds me of a certain ex-president when he gives speeches, all he needed was a running helicopter in the background and he would have been set, alas, that speech was like 10 years too early or so... Hey, good improvisation, he has some aircraft FLAK running in the background... Quick, on his feet thinking...

  • @Hoosier_Boy
    @Hoosier_BoyАй бұрын

    I loved this and how it was presented, thank you for this learning experience.

  • @MrPDoff
    @MrPDoff6 ай бұрын

    Absolutely fascinating.

  • @f0rumrr
    @f0rumrr7 ай бұрын

    Its interesting to hear an account from the other side of how horrific the fighting was in ww2. Both my grandpas would never talk about what they did or saw in ww2, even asking you could tell it hurt them. So you learned to not ask and they took what ever happened to the grave.

  • @simonthieriot5596

    @simonthieriot5596

    5 ай бұрын

    I HAD SAME SITUATION WITH GRAND PA & MY DAD REG VIETNAM.

  • @hahnsolo7241

    @hahnsolo7241

    5 ай бұрын

    My Grandpa was at the Waffen SS in WW2 also in Russia, he was the only from his unit came back home after 6 years war prison...he never tell me anything about the war too, i only know that he be wounded 2 times...he died 20 years ago he was a good grandpa and i miss him so much... God bless all men who fighted at this terrible war and died.🙏..

  • @f0rumrr

    @f0rumrr

    5 ай бұрын

    Ya one of my grandpas was like a second father, learned so much from him. On his death bed admitted he witnessed a nuclear detonation. army engineer in the late 40s. What happened before that no one knows. Literally the only info i have on their time in the service. @@hahnsolo7241

  • @terrencelynch6810
    @terrencelynch68102 ай бұрын

    He describes being a fully grown man completely ok with Nazi ideology. He'd seen the corpses. It's an astonishing diary.

  • @arthurdirindinjr1792
    @arthurdirindinjr17924 ай бұрын

    At the very beginning of Operation Barbarossa when Russian generals were panicking as what to do Stalin reportedly told them to calm down as he said to them: "I have more soldiers then the Germans have bullets" And he was proven correct Ironically a little less than 30 years later Ho Chi Minh said very similar words to LBJ that meant the same thing.

  • @GodDemonPazuzuYaldabaothYahweh

    @GodDemonPazuzuYaldabaothYahweh

    4 ай бұрын

    the defeat of the 3rd Reich is the defeat of the entire White Race!!! this is what we see today

  • @RedwihteGame
    @RedwihteGame7 ай бұрын

    WHen mentioning the KV-1, I wonder if he actually meant KV-2. Those were like a rolling mountain.

  • @nikolauz3162

    @nikolauz3162

    7 ай бұрын

    Could be, however they were very few after 1941. Smart conclusion though.

  • @APOLON-bm7ym

    @APOLON-bm7ym

    5 ай бұрын

    No, he meant KV1, trust me. As much as Warthunder and KV2 there led you to believe so, KV1 was also very high for soviet standards. Even their modern tanks also have very low profile. Dont compare it to Tigers height. They thought they are invincible in Tiger (and they were, for a while). And after seeing so many soviet tanks, KV1 appeared to them very "tall" compared to t34 or those earlier coffins like BT5 or ... Those were versions with L11 gun (very weak gun, I think 80mm or so of penetration), but they were well armored, turret was thick as Tigers turret (about 10cm) BUT soviet steel had much less quality compared to german... AND, in case those were KV2, I think Tiger crews would FEAR MUCH MUCH MORE facing its 183mm (naval) gun. Soviets built just some small numbers of KV2s.

  • @TomCro2022
    @TomCro20226 ай бұрын

    Very nice video....Greetings from Zagreb/Croatia😊😊😊😊😊

  • @moses2009100
    @moses20091008 ай бұрын

    Operation citadel is the 1943 version of the Ukrainian counter-offensive bunch of good tanks going up against strong layered defenses and getting destroyed if you read this battle is replaying the same way today with Ukrainian

  • @tmo_117

    @tmo_117

    8 ай бұрын

    Luckily the Russians aren’t as powerful this time and won’t push them back, especially when it comes to using wave tactics, only a matter of time though I bet until the Russians do

  • @cwcsquared

    @cwcsquared

    8 ай бұрын

    Russians never learned how to fight

  • @stevem2323

    @stevem2323

    7 ай бұрын

    Not even close to that, Kursk was more complexed and actually Germans did surprisingly good considering what Soviets threw in defense and that Soviets knew in advance where and how the attack is coming.

  • @itftcomputers

    @itftcomputers

    7 ай бұрын

    @@tmo_117 Wait for another 1-2 years, then feel free to reply to my comment.

  • @clausbohm9807
    @clausbohm98077 ай бұрын

    This is a priceless account on the eastern front, very revealing! My ww2 games will be played with a little better appreciation.

  • @maximusmiles8435
    @maximusmiles84354 ай бұрын

    @22:50 Apparently in November of 43. He was the only german to know where the allied invasion was going to take place. Unless this was written after the war. Hitler was convinced that the invasion would take place near Calais, and Dunkirk. Which isn't part of the Normandy region.

  • @piperp9535

    @piperp9535

    3 ай бұрын

    No, you just haven't learned to distinguish between the narration of the diary itself, and the narrated notes

  • @M-I-k-e1301
    @M-I-k-e13016 ай бұрын

    There’s some interesting details like how one of the tank crew men married a Chinese women in nazi germany or when he talk about the police men mistreating people

  • @tanksouth
    @tanksouth3 ай бұрын

    A tremendous story. Thank you

  • @karlputz8067
    @karlputz80674 ай бұрын

    Endlich mal ein Beitrag ohne jede Hetze, schön anzusehen und zu lesen !🤗

  • @Angry-Lynx
    @Angry-Lynx7 ай бұрын

    Also highly recommend book Tigers in the mud by Carius who lived through wwii

  • @nickafanasyev6550
    @nickafanasyev65502 ай бұрын

    God I love the Tiger tank. The original one. Not that over sizes T-34 looking Tiger 2

  • @user-bh6un9cz5f
    @user-bh6un9cz5f6 ай бұрын

    These stories like this from real soldiers are very interesting....and the pucs of the Tigers are nice....

  • @andrewsamson9603
    @andrewsamson96034 ай бұрын

    This was absolutely amazing to listen too it’s amazing really how he was describing how the Russians were fight back the how they kept sending wave after wave and not being worried about losses which is pretty much how there fight at the moment in Ukraine.

  • @nigel900
    @nigel9003 ай бұрын

    Fascinating. 👍🏻

  • @jp-um2fr
    @jp-um2fr6 ай бұрын

    As a young apprentice in the 60s, I cycled 8 miles to work along footpaths around fields. Most mornings I met ex Italian and German prisoners of war who worked on the farms and had their families with them. They used to save every monstrous spud they found for me. As a thank-you, I saved up a few shillings and bought them 4 Christmas Puddings. In that late December, I was asked into their homes one by one on a Saturday. I am glad we left the EU, not because of the people, but the absolute idiots running the show. By now they are no longer with us, but they were good days.

  • @FallNorth

    @FallNorth

    6 ай бұрын

    :) I'm fed up of fking remoaners saying "brexiteers are racist" etc. They just use that slur as a deliberate "tool". "Agree with us or you are a fascist". That's it.

  • @LaurenceLDN

    @LaurenceLDN

    5 ай бұрын

    You're glad to have left the EU? Can you please explain any material benefits that you have experienced from that decision?...

  • @kimmckenzie4798
    @kimmckenzie47984 ай бұрын

    Didn't know how interesting this was going to be from the other side thanks for sharing

  • @oceanhome2023
    @oceanhome20238 ай бұрын

    The first picture you see is an officer standing directly next to the main gun indicating the size of his manhood ! Anyone else see that ? It has to be intentional LOL !

  • @rosscampbell1173

    @rosscampbell1173

    8 ай бұрын

    That’s ALL I see!

  • @robertomeneghetti6215

    @robertomeneghetti6215

    8 ай бұрын

    He likely thought he'll be immortal! Maybe he had to change his mind...

  • @asullivan4047

    @asullivan4047

    7 ай бұрын

    Best not bend over in Front of him. If you're a Russian tank commander.

  • @gabrielmurcia
    @gabrielmurcia6 ай бұрын

    Las mejores fuerzas armadas de la historia.

  • @metalguerra
    @metalguerra6 ай бұрын

    Very good video! Do you have this text in German, too?

  • @nathanbrown8883
    @nathanbrown88834 ай бұрын

    My friend that was an Officer in 5th SS "Wiking" division, he had told me his brother was in Das Reich.

  • @aburakadabura2
    @aburakadabura27 ай бұрын

    At the time, the Germans possessed powerful armored armaments in the form of Tiger tanks. At the Battle of Kursk, German losses were 250 tanks and other armored fighting vehicles and 55,000 men, while Soviet losses were 2,000 armored fighting vehicles and 320,000 men. In terms of numbers, the Germans were superior. However, the Soviets were able to win the local battles despite suffering approximately six times the enemy's human casualties and eight times the losses in armored fighting vehicles. The quantitative superiority of the Soviet forces over the Germans was the deciding factor in the victory or defeat of the Battle of Kursk.

  • @wirelessone2986

    @wirelessone2986

    7 ай бұрын

    That and the spy "LUCY" that reported all the German battle plans for Kursk so that the Russians could build the entire area into a fort that was undefeatable.Without Lucy I believe the Germans probably would have won that battle and WW2 would have went on for longer.They even had all the plans and positions for the Luftwaffes air operations

  • @charlesc.9012

    @charlesc.9012

    5 ай бұрын

    Soviet losses are covered up to be 1/3 of the actual number, (the tradition was picked up by modern russia). German tank losses are usually inflated by 20% to prevent superiors from diverting assets, (and there are no special comments on the infantry ones.) Source: Bundesarchiv, translated and presented by Military History Visualised, my own knowledge is bracketed, but we all know how soviet accounting works by now

  • @wirelessone2986

    @wirelessone2986

    5 ай бұрын

    @charlesc.9012 let me make shure I understand correctly...German tank losses were over estimated so AVF'S weren't taken away from the unit of origin...and Soviet numbers were under-reported so the German high command would think the pressure from the Russians was greater than it was so the German unit would get more supplies,equipment and men...if this is what your saying that's really smart of the actual fighting units of Germany

  • @charlesc.9012

    @charlesc.9012

    5 ай бұрын

    ​@@wirelessone2986 We don't know exactly how much deliberate accounting was in German estimates of enemy losses, just that they were normal for their time, because everyone wants more assets. Except the soviets. The soviets are 100% covering up their losses, because they can save face, and can cheat families out of their compensation, and this glorious tradition was picked up by modern russia. The difference is that back then, the USA was sending huge amounts of resources and finished Shermans, Studebaker trucks and food. That might be a communication error, but German armour losses really are inflated on a regular basis

  • @Fongolitus
    @Fongolitus7 ай бұрын

    to trade for the uniforms i can see, but to buy this tank you gotta be crazy! what? it's a beautiful tank! It's a piece of Junk! The fuel system leaks all over the place!

  • @melangellatc1718

    @melangellatc1718

    7 ай бұрын

    Kelly's Heroes!!!! Greatest movie ever!

  • @ponyboy481

    @ponyboy481

    7 ай бұрын

    😆😆

  • @nanba25
    @nanba256 ай бұрын

    il y a de nombreuses erreurs de traduction dans les sous-titres, dommage! Par exemple, "chenilles" est souvent traduit comme "piste". Mais c'est un document riche de commentaires, et montrant bien l'évolution d'un tout jeune homme au milieu de nouveaux soldats, encore plus jeunes que lui…

  • @piperp9535
    @piperp95353 ай бұрын

    At 18:56 "At night, the temperature fell below twenty degrees celsius ..." I think this was not translated properly, 0 C is freezing, -20C would be far more likely as 20 degrees C is 68 degrees Fahrenheit.

  • @svsund
    @svsund6 ай бұрын

    An interesting and strong story !!

  • @QuovadisDomine317
    @QuovadisDomine3178 ай бұрын

    It was a very humorous not like German, honest, and plain diary.He feels like he's contemplating the war.He doesn't have to be angry or desperate about the war, he seems to think it's his destiny.

  • @1maico1

    @1maico1

    7 ай бұрын

    It's a fake diary, there was no Joachim Scholl in the 102nd SS tank battalion

  • @StabyMcStabsFace

    @StabyMcStabsFace

    7 ай бұрын

    Not like a German? They were all that way, no idea what you mean.

  • @QuovadisDomine317

    @QuovadisDomine317

    7 ай бұрын

    @@StabyMcStabsFace I modified it. It means only the humor part. I think Germans are the most honest people in the world.

  • @MrHendonMan

    @MrHendonMan

    6 ай бұрын

    Having worked in Germany, I can assure you that they are very humorous, including the full range of humour from sarcastic, to ironic, to slapstick. The humour is in the German language, once you pick up some of the phraseology it becomes apparent. Unfortunately a lot of WW2 films give the impression that Germans are humourless, but if you live there for a while, you'll find the opposite is true, imho.

  • @michaelhansen1681

    @michaelhansen1681

    5 ай бұрын

    Yes we can (Humor)...

  • @claytonmundy7451
    @claytonmundy74516 ай бұрын

    My grate grandpa was a German soldier in the WW2 before her came to America he was in the war for 5 bloody he was an officer in the infantry

  • @xfiremaniac
    @xfiremaniacАй бұрын

    "In his words, the Russians are completely ignoring their losses..." that sounds recently familiar

  • @robertkeller7699
    @robertkeller76994 ай бұрын

    They kept swimming to avoid drowning

  • @CharlesStettler-kp4ot
    @CharlesStettler-kp4ot3 ай бұрын

    la classe absolue...DEUTSCHLAND UBER ALLES....❤❤

  • @jannepiirainen8799
    @jannepiirainen879923 күн бұрын

    The conversation with the police is interesting. The police commented "I have seen worse things". At the moment the tank commander didn't understand what the police was talking about. The police didn't dare to elaborate but was hinting at the holocaust. He had probably been an executioner.

  • @Vincentdixon4060
    @Vincentdixon40607 ай бұрын

    History needs the narratives of what we call the enemy. Are they any different in their dialogue from the allies fighting a cause and realizing the death of their actions upon humans and for what cause? Our youth are faced with this inherent problem of pacifism versus war and profit.

  • @user-qr6eb4jg9n

    @user-qr6eb4jg9n

    4 ай бұрын

    The world is a vampire. And you are either strong and you kill, or you are the next sacrifice

  • @LetsAllDrinkToTheDeathOfAClown
    @LetsAllDrinkToTheDeathOfAClown7 ай бұрын

    Helden!!!

  • @taboovsknowledge1603
    @taboovsknowledge1603Ай бұрын

    As German in a Pantzer, feeling safe is a lot higher than 99.7% of the men on the ground.

  • @user-vc2od1wg9o
    @user-vc2od1wg9o4 ай бұрын

    В 2006 папа лежал в госпитоле с танкистом Мертвой головы...эсесовец...папа родом из харькова .о многом поговорили...нормальный интеллигентный собеседник...ни малейшей агрессии и негатива....даже когда папа сообщил-что он-еврей...

  • @ajr3553
    @ajr35536 ай бұрын

    unfortunately das Reich's is mainly remembered for certain non military events like oradour sur Glane

  • @richardwyse7817

    @richardwyse7817

    5 ай бұрын

    it certainly was part of the war-a sad one.

  • @David-th2ug

    @David-th2ug

    5 ай бұрын

    I commented on this yesterday. Unfortunately, my comments have not been put on here. I didn't realise You tube censor comments.

  • @jackjones9460
    @jackjones94603 ай бұрын

    First story I’ve heard where the person survived!

  • @stephenhargreaves9324
    @stephenhargreaves93248 ай бұрын

    The German scout car at 30.00 is a British Dingo, the Germans were always low on material.

  • @asullivan4047

    @asullivan4047

    7 ай бұрын

    Just like scavengers plucking away at a dead carcus. Food was in short supply at times also.

  • @shaunmcclory8117
    @shaunmcclory81178 ай бұрын

    Stayed in Scotland forever wow

  • @Blakeh1911
    @Blakeh19114 ай бұрын

    It's insane to hear this guy going from a scared kid to a battle hardened soldier

  • @harrycurrie9664
    @harrycurrie9664Ай бұрын

    The thumbnail got me ..."mien gun ist big ja!"

  • @PhilippeMarchand-xw1zp
    @PhilippeMarchand-xw1zp6 ай бұрын

    "Das Reich," was notorious for its involvement in various war crimes and atrocities. On June 10, 1944 the 4th SS Panzer Grenadier Regiment of Das Reich, entered the small French village of Oradour-sur-Glane. The soldiers separated the men from the women and children, and proceeded to commit a massacre. The men were taken to various locations within the village, including barns and garages, where they were systematically shot. The women and children were gathered in the church, which was subsequently set on fire. Those who tried to escape were gunned down by German soldiers. In total, 642 men, women, and children were killed in the massacre, and only a handful of individuals managed to survive.

  • @clovergrass9439

    @clovergrass9439

    6 ай бұрын

    Perhaps. Compared to what the allies did overall to Germans and Germany, it absolutely pales in comparison

  • @haroldbishop5314

    @haroldbishop5314

    6 ай бұрын

    @@clovergrass9439 No perhaps about it. It's a well documented fact. I've visited the village which lies in ruins to this day.

  • @8thCavalry

    @8thCavalry

    6 ай бұрын

    It was a war crime, but it was also in reprisal for the torture murders of wounded German soldiers in a nearby hospital by "partisans."

  • @MacDaddyCooper

    @MacDaddyCooper

    6 ай бұрын

    The whole war was a war crime.

  • @PhilippeMarchand-xw1zp

    @PhilippeMarchand-xw1zp

    6 ай бұрын

    @@8thCavalry Where did you find information regarding murders of wounded German soldiers in a nearby hospitals? I couldn’t find anything related to this. Moreover a hospital where German soldiers were treated was either a military hospital or at least heavily defended. It seems weird that partisans were able to attack it. Actually, from what I was able to find the reason for the massacre is still debated among historians. Some says it was carried out in retaliation for the perceived support of the local resistance or for the kidnapping of one of its officers.

  • @fredwillhelmsen1161
    @fredwillhelmsen11617 ай бұрын

    Lost faith in victory, suffering from PTSD... "Shit I'm gonna lose my bet"

  • @dalerice2582
    @dalerice25822 ай бұрын

    Just like any one else who served his country. Not everyone is a murderer. Just a soldier. Not frantic.

  • @buxtehude123

    @buxtehude123

    Ай бұрын

    Not everyone is a murderer. That's true. But many in Wehrmacht were. Just like many in U.S. Army are.

  • @Aginor88
    @Aginor883 ай бұрын

    Interesting.

  • @michaelscherrer3424
    @michaelscherrer34247 ай бұрын

    Thanks!

  • @michaelbruns449
    @michaelbruns4497 ай бұрын

    "Totally frozen" "Deep snow" "Frostbite" in October, somethings wrong here.

  • @gredw6733

    @gredw6733

    7 ай бұрын

    The ignorance demonstrated in this comment is astounding.

  • @evilstorm5954
    @evilstorm59548 ай бұрын

    Carrius and Knispel were Tiger Commanders.

  • @klimismistakidis1482

    @klimismistakidis1482

    7 ай бұрын

    Yes but what is your point?

  • @cunningplan9049
    @cunningplan90497 ай бұрын

    So similar to the situation in Ukraine today. Same Russian tactics.

  • @peterwright217
    @peterwright2178 ай бұрын

    👍👍👍👍👍👍

  • @nickdaniels3466
    @nickdaniels34666 ай бұрын

    I guess he didn't have a comment about Oradour-sur-Glane 10 June 1944. It was a unit of the Das Reich division.

  • @OriginalKKB

    @OriginalKKB

    5 ай бұрын

    15k Soldiers in the Division, 120 of them did the Massacre. What are the odds he even heard about it at the time? There was still a War going on and D-Day just happened, they were kinda busy. I too would like to know what he thought about it though.

  • @AnthonyTobyEllenor-pi4jq
    @AnthonyTobyEllenor-pi4jq7 ай бұрын

    Nice to see the comments about Shermans being called,' Tommy Cookers', there were fools commentating on KZread that nobody called Shermans, 'Tommy Cookers" !!

  • @1maico1

    @1maico1

    7 ай бұрын

    The diary is fake there was no Joachim Scholl commanding Tiger 232

  • @brcledus

    @brcledus

    7 ай бұрын

    This diary and interview are a fabrication from a ww2 military site.

  • @davepritchard283
    @davepritchard2837 ай бұрын

    Tank crewmen are Tank crewmen from whatever nation in whatever year!

  • @1339LARS
    @1339LARS6 ай бұрын

    Holy makrel!!! 76 vics!!! //Lars

  • @edwardmeade9439
    @edwardmeade94396 ай бұрын

    War is hell for everyone involved, civilians, allies and "enemies".

  • @slowery43

    @slowery43

    18 күн бұрын

    thank you Cpt Obvious

  • @petermclelland278
    @petermclelland2787 ай бұрын

    Was that Ben Wallace standing on the front of the Tiger Tank ?

  • @user-og7fl1io7c
    @user-og7fl1io7c4 ай бұрын

    Témoignage intéressant , dommage que les paroles ne soit pas en Français

  • @Aaron-df6jc
    @Aaron-df6jc4 ай бұрын

    Excellent photos. My god - war is terrible. ♥️🇨🇦

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