What Happened to German Soldiers After WW2? | Animated History

Thanks to Keeps for sponsoring this video! Head to keeps.com/ArmchairHistorian to get 50% off your first order of Keeps hair loss treatment.
Sign up for Armchair History TV today! armchairhistory.tv/
Promo code: ARMCHAIRHISTORY for 50% OFF
Merchandise available at store.armchairhistory.tv/
Check out the new Armchair History TV Mobile App too!
apps.apple.com/us/app/armchai...
play.google.com/store/apps/de...
Discord: / discord
Twitter: / armchairhist
Sources:
Allied Control Council Directive No. 38 (October 12, 1946)
Biess, Frank. Homecomings: Returning POWs and the Legacies of Defeat in Postwar Germany. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006.
“Conditions in the Warsaw Ghetto.” Center for Holocaust Education. UCL Institute for Education, n.d. www.holocausteducation.org.uk....
Davidson, Eugene. The Death and Life of Germany: An Account of the American Occupation. New York, NY: Alfred A. Knopf, 1959. archive.org/details/deathlife...
Fraser Harbutt, Yalta 1945: Europe and America at the Crossroads, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010, 110-111.
Hébert, Valerie. "From Clean Hands To Vernichtungskrieg.: How the High Command Case Shaped the Image of the Wehrmacht." In Reassessing the Nuremberg Military Tribunals: Transitional Justice, Trial Narratives, and Historiography, edited by Priemel Kim C. and Stiller Alexa, 194-220. Berghahn Books, 2014.
MacKenzie, S. P. "The Treatment of Prisoners of War in World War II." The Journal of Modern History 66, no. 3 (1994): 487-520.
McDonough, Giles. After the Reich: The Brutal History of the Allied Occupation. New York, NY: Basic Books, 2007.
Moeller, Robert G. "Germans as Victims?: Thoughts on a Post-Cold War History of World War II's Legacies." History and Memory 17, no. 1-2 (2005): 145-94. Accessed July 9, 2021. www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/....
Naimark, Norman M., Robert and Florence McDonnell. The Russians in Germany: A History of the Soviet Zone of Occupation, 1945-1949. Cambridge, MA: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1995.
Polian, Pavel. Against Their Will: The History and Geography of Forced Migrations in the USSR. Budapest: Central European University Press, 2004.
Taylor, Frederick. Exorcising Hitler: The Occupation and Denazification of Germany. Bloomsbury Press, 2011.
Music:
Armchair Historian Theme by Zach Heyde
Graveyard Shift - Martin Klem
The Architect - Bonnie Grace
Mastermind - David Celeste
Where Are The Stars - Silver Maple
Behind Bars - Wendel Scherer
Isotopes 1 - August Wilhelmsson
Purple Hearts - Zach Heyde
Dark Shadow - Etienne Roussel

Пікірлер: 9 200

  • @TheArmchairHistorian
    @TheArmchairHistorian2 жыл бұрын

    Thanks to Keeps for sponsoring this video! Head to keeps.com/ArmchairHistorian to get 50% off your first order of Keeps hair loss treatment. Sign up for Armchair History TV today! armchairhistory.tv/ Promo code: ARMCHAIRHISTORY for 50% OFF Merchandise available at store.armchairhistory.tv/ Check out the new Armchair History TV Mobile App too! apps.apple.com/us/app/armchair-history-tv/id1514643375 play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=tv.uscreen.armchairhistorytv Discord: discord.gg/zY5jzKp Twitter: twitter.com/ArmchairHist

  • @joelleandrogutierrezmamani4157

    @joelleandrogutierrezmamani4157

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hi Griffin

  • @iben_coene

    @iben_coene

    2 жыл бұрын

    i sure will

  • @liamjames5405

    @liamjames5405

    2 жыл бұрын

    Halo Griffin can u do a winter war vid please

  • @leosolorzano3472

    @leosolorzano3472

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for this Awesome videos, I specially liked the ones about American, Germán and Russian tanks.

  • @germany7846

    @germany7846

    2 жыл бұрын

    Deutschland fell to the Allies

  • @TheIronArmenianakaGIHaigs
    @TheIronArmenianakaGIHaigs2 жыл бұрын

    Current Objective, head West to surrender to the Allies

  • @bonbondonk8389

    @bonbondonk8389

    2 жыл бұрын

    what u doing here

  • @respecthanz9685

    @respecthanz9685

    2 жыл бұрын

    Good to see you here

  • @SKINWALKER

    @SKINWALKER

    2 жыл бұрын

    | Surrender to the Americans. The French will press you into slavery…

  • @ethanmcfarland8240

    @ethanmcfarland8240

    2 жыл бұрын

    Current objective: find the Americans and pray

  • @pecadodeorgullo5963

    @pecadodeorgullo5963

    2 жыл бұрын

    Find the british or Americans but if you find the soviets or French then run for your life.

  • @booqrdoit9138
    @booqrdoit91382 жыл бұрын

    US Government: "So what do you know about rockets?"

  • @Nietabs

    @Nietabs

    2 жыл бұрын

    Burger

  • @handbanana5396

    @handbanana5396

    2 жыл бұрын

    fart hole

  • @Shootyshoot-ls3xj

    @Shootyshoot-ls3xj

    2 жыл бұрын

    Toyota

  • @not_noah69

    @not_noah69

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@handbanana5396 haha funi fart word poo poo 🤣 😂

  • @mayorsosua2585

    @mayorsosua2585

    2 жыл бұрын

    🍆Wang 🍆

  • @harrybaals2549
    @harrybaals2549 Жыл бұрын

    When my dad was younger here in Canada, he learned from older farmers that german POW's used to labour on the farms. There wasn't any tension at all, and they seemed quite happy to be here. They weren't confined or monitored in any way. They would do their work, go into town etc. just like anyone else. They probably could have snuck out of the country if they really tried, but they didn't seem to want to leave anyway. After seeing the horrors of war, they might have felt like they escaped the pressure of the horrible things they might have had to end up doing otherwise. That, and it was a far better fate than being a prisoner at the hands of say, the Soviets

  • @Rexington

    @Rexington

    Жыл бұрын

    They must have found out that "THEY" were the bad guys. And wanted none of it no more if the war ended with them losing. Not wanting to be killed or worst

  • @chrisstucker1813

    @chrisstucker1813

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Rexington well the Russians definitely weren’t the good guys either.

  • @sabn9139

    @sabn9139

    8 ай бұрын

    Not only in the USSR, even in France the prisoners were taken to rebuild the country and they were treated horribly, so many died of hunger or while cleaning the mined areas.

  • @TheBaconWizard

    @TheBaconWizard

    8 ай бұрын

    @@sabn9139 Different thing in France, they were under BRUTAL occupation by the Nazis, and I doubt there was much room for mercy in the hearts of those who's entire families had been slaughtered, villages razed, people kidnapped and tortured, etc.

  • @sabn9139

    @sabn9139

    8 ай бұрын

    @@TheBaconWizard true that, but also don't forget that the French were the Nazis of Africa though, the crimes that the French committed in Algeria are brutal, they even tested nuclear weapons there.

  • @woodrew5415
    @woodrew5415 Жыл бұрын

    My Grandpa was a tailgunner for a b-17 bomber. He told stories of how, at the beginning of the war, if one of your men was badly injured and most likely wouldn't survive to base, they'd check his parachute and throw him from the plane because German POW hospitals where considered good. But during the late stages of the war that mindset changed and you would hold onto your men and pray they could survive the trip back to base.

  • @lordbeaverhistory

    @lordbeaverhistory

    Жыл бұрын

    @Spencer ???

  • @lordbeaverhistory

    @lordbeaverhistory

    Жыл бұрын

    @Spencer a wehraboo/tankie in his finest form. Name a more efficient strategical bomber of the 2nd world war

  • @lordbeaverhistory

    @lordbeaverhistory

    Жыл бұрын

    @Spencer aside from the fact that i already speak german, the b17 was easier to manufacture, had a larger range and was harder shoot down, it also also could better defend itself. Yes, the He 177 was a fine plane, but it couldnt compete with the b17 due to its low numbers and poor reliability

  • @lordbeaverhistory

    @lordbeaverhistory

    Жыл бұрын

    @Spencer deutsche Fahrzeuge im 2. Weltkrieg sind Ingenieursleistungen ohne Gleichen. Die Technik war der der Alliierten weit überlegen, aber es war oft zu kompliziert. Flugzeuge wie die Heinkel He 177 waren zu anfällig für Störungen als dass man sie in den Ausmaßen der B17 Flotten der Aliierten nutzen konnte. Ebenso das Problem mit deutschen Panzern. Zu kompliziert herzustellen und reparieren um mit den Nummern der Alliierten Panzern mitzuhalten. Die amerikanische Technik war trotzdem meist besser als die Sowjetische, sowohl in der Luft, als auch am Boden. Es gab einen Grund, warum meist ganze sowjetische Panzerkorps nach einem Einsatz ersetzt werden mussten

  • @youlocalshitposter7232

    @youlocalshitposter7232

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@lordbeaverhistory you really shutted him up lol

  • @hsnmhsnt
    @hsnmhsnt2 жыл бұрын

    never ask a woman her age, a man his salary. and an argentinian grandpa his past.

  • @scottanno8861

    @scottanno8861

    2 жыл бұрын

    Or a Chilean, or southern Brazilian, or....

  • @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623

    @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623

    2 жыл бұрын

    @hick It was a logical place to hide. Latin America had been mostly neutral, there were already large German communities and probably most importantly, it was out of the Western and Soviet sphere of influence. Don't forget all of Africa and Asia were Western colonies at the time, whereas Latin America was all independent countries. Although some Nazi's ended up in the Middle East. Those countries became independent around the same time as Israel and they LOVED having former Nazi's helping them with their armies and giving them military tech, to be used against Israel of course.

  • @samdamanforman7870

    @samdamanforman7870

    2 жыл бұрын

    Funny story…in my English class on my senior year of high school, there was a joke that one of my classmates joked with my teacher that his great grandfather was a Nazi who committed war crimes and escaped to Argentina for safety.

  • @dirckthedork-knight1201

    @dirckthedork-knight1201

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@samdamanforman7870 I would assume the teacher did not take kindly to that did he?

  • @ProxiProtogen

    @ProxiProtogen

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@dirckthedork-knight1201 *plot twist: the teacher was a neo nazi*

  • @jaredisley-oliver389
    @jaredisley-oliver3892 жыл бұрын

    I know a bunch of the German POW’s in Canada Emigrated to Canada after the war. They said they liked it and that western Canada reminded them of the Alps.

  • @rubemcorreia7988

    @rubemcorreia7988

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's cool, I heard about it on The Front channel.

  • @xXDrocenXx

    @xXDrocenXx

    2 жыл бұрын

    When I can skiing there, I would come😅😆

  • @kevinmohring7940

    @kevinmohring7940

    2 жыл бұрын

    My Grandfathers Brother did so aswel…

  • @andresvalverde5182

    @andresvalverde5182

    2 жыл бұрын

    Can understand, the Alps are remarkably beautiful and peaceful.

  • @Historylord15

    @Historylord15

    2 жыл бұрын

    Many POWs were shot by canada

  • @stephenlarson523
    @stephenlarson523 Жыл бұрын

    I had friends who had German POWs who worked on their farm in Nebraska. They said they worked well, and were well fed, but, only had one request--that the father who took them back to the POW camp on the hay cart would go through town so they could see the sights, something which he did for them.

  • @stephenlarson523

    @stephenlarson523

    Жыл бұрын

    @Overlordian And from what my friends said to me, there were no guards or anything, because the prisoners had no interest in fighting for Germany or dying for Hitler. They just wanted to go home to their families after the war.

  • @simpleman5688

    @simpleman5688

    Жыл бұрын

    👍🏿

  • @theoriginaltroll388

    @theoriginaltroll388

    8 ай бұрын

    ​@@stephenlarson523they had no interest because they lost just like some Iraqi soldiers turned on Sadam when they lost....doesnt take back the war crimes you committed when it was fun

  • @taliabraver

    @taliabraver

    4 ай бұрын

    I wonder if they ever showed films of what the Germans were doing to the jews?I bet they knew about it!Shame!They had full bellies while the jewish people were starving all for Hitler1Makes me sick!

  • @HysteriaCraft-fp9md

    @HysteriaCraft-fp9md

    Ай бұрын

    @@theoriginaltroll388majority of Germans did not comit war crimes.

  • @moffjerjerrod1579
    @moffjerjerrod1579 Жыл бұрын

    My grandfather was drafted later in WWII (my father was born in 1940 and his sister in 1941 so with two kids he had a high draft number) and was trained as a combat engineer. He went to Europe right at the end of the war and did not see combat. However he did tell me that since he was a mechanic he ended up in the motor-pool and spent his days driving officers around to tour German castles, but never really fixed any Army trucks or other vehicles. When l asked him about that, he told me that they had a lot of ‘American’ mechanics who fixed all the vehicles but also had really really thick German and Hungarian (if I remember correctly) accents that hung around the base and got three hots and a cot and coffee and chocolate and all the good things the American soldiers got in exchange for doing honest work. He said they were some of the funniest people, hardest working men and best mechanics he had ever seen. After the war my grandfather opened an AMOCO station in Danville VA and because his station was the only one in the area that sold the Hi-Test gas the original NASCAR racers (Junior Johnson, Lee Petty, etc used) he got to meet all the NASCAR founders and we have all these old pictures of him in his shop with them. The last part had nada to do with WWII but I always wanted to share that.

  • @iantan8881

    @iantan8881

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey man, that's a pretty neat story, thanks for sharing! Learn all kinds of new things. They got three hots? What are hots?

  • @BaconLover100

    @BaconLover100

    9 ай бұрын

    ​@@iantan8881hot meals a day

  • @juanatethejetdryer7580

    @juanatethejetdryer7580

    6 ай бұрын

    As a NASCAR fan and someone from a military family myself, your grandad sure had a story there!

  • @ScorpoYT
    @ScorpoYT2 жыл бұрын

    The red army was so scary that the Wehrmacht fought to like there is no tomorrow just to surrender to the Allies

  • @The_-_-

    @The_-_-

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Eva Braun’s New Jewish Husband why would a marry a dead lady lol

  • @BackingtrackPro

    @BackingtrackPro

    2 жыл бұрын

    That's fucked up

  • @aleksejssuharevs866

    @aleksejssuharevs866

    2 жыл бұрын

    Axis soldiers clearly remembered what they had all committed in Russia to Russian civilians and POWs, they simply expected to be treated the same way.

  • @churchillscousin5987

    @churchillscousin5987

    2 жыл бұрын

    i mean after what germans have done on the eastern front im not suprised

  • @kacpertheplaneguy5553

    @kacpertheplaneguy5553

    2 жыл бұрын

    Didn’t expect to see you here

  • @cebonvieuxjack
    @cebonvieuxjack2 жыл бұрын

    My grandma (born in 1931) sheltered a german prisoner after the war in her family's farm, in the north of Savoy. She recalled the prisoner as an old tired fellow, she mentioned how rough his hands seemed to her back then. He didn't talk much, worked a shitload amount of time in the field with her father and couldn't say much in French, but he was always polite and kind with the children. One day he came back from town and brought gifts to the family, and he gave a soft blanked to my grandma (which she still has btw). My great grandfather liked him as well, and he didn't hate the Germans, as he had been taken prisoner himself 30 years earlier during WWI, and was treated well by his german jailers. But one day, the old german dude went to town in the morning and wasn't there for supper. My grandma's father thought he was trying to escaped and try to search for him and talk him out of it, but when he found him, the old german was lying unconscious on the side of the road leading to the house. He had been beaten up by stupid boys who thought they were doing something patriotic. He left the house shortly after and never came back. My great grandma from the other side of my family, born in 1921 (and still going strong baby !!! she got her 100th birthday last june!!), also housed two Germans until 1946 ! But the story was different : my great grandpa was in the Resistance (he was taken prisoner in Dunkirk after being shot in the shoulder and got released in 1943, and immediately joined the FFI) and captured two german soldiers who were gathering weapons in his home village for the incoming fight against the Americans in Le Mans (August 44). Having no authorities to take them to at the time, he simply took him in his own house as prisoners. At the end of the war, he asked them if they'd rather be prisoners in French facilities or remain here at his farm, they chose the latter. And so for two years, they sheltered two german dudes in their home (which I find absolutely fucking insane lmao), and Idk about the great grandpa but my great grandma began liking the dudes, she said they helped her peel the potatoes and milk the cows everyday, and that one of them was, and I quote, "formidable" at making apricot marmelade. Then, in 1946 (why at this time Idk 🤷‍♂️) they got their ticket home back to Germany and my great grandparents accompanied them to the train station. I know absolutely no person sound of mind is going to read this fucking novel I wrote, but I find these stories beautiful, they're so ordinary and yet amazing, they help you understand that these were real people, with real feelings and emotions, but most of all, they show that despite our differences, sometimes all it takes to get along is just to peel the fucking potatoes or make good marmelade. And that's fucking beautful.

  • @jugg126

    @jugg126

    2 жыл бұрын

    Very interesting, thank you for sharing!

  • @cebonvieuxjack

    @cebonvieuxjack

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@jugg126 oh thanks ! I didn't actually believe anyone would read it, but I just find them too incredible to be forgotten

  • @gustavovillegas5909

    @gustavovillegas5909

    2 жыл бұрын

    I loved every minute of reading that. Thanks for it! Love to see that yep, at the end of the day we’re all human

  • @Nobuddieshome

    @Nobuddieshome

    2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you for sharing God bless you!

  • @uvw4249

    @uvw4249

    2 жыл бұрын

    I red and enjoyed it. Thank you for sharing :)

  • @rabbit251
    @rabbit251 Жыл бұрын

    My mother was a child during WW2 growing up in Southern Wisconsin. She recalled German POWs working neighboring farms. They couldn't believe their good fortune, living an area where most of the people spoke German and ate German food. They were down right giddy, missed their family but were so thankful for their good fortune. (My mother attended a Lutheran elementary school and everything was taught in German, except for English). One of the POWs even remained behind and married one of my mom's aunt. I remember him, speaking with a thick German accent at family gatherings.

  • @Kal-zo5ym

    @Kal-zo5ym

    Жыл бұрын

    German POWS worked on my grandfather's farm during the war. Two of the men stayed on as employees after the war. They continued to work for him into in the 1970s.

  • @equarg

    @equarg

    Жыл бұрын

    Apparently this happened a few times. Sometimes a German soldier legitimately fell in love with a local girl in occupied territories, was NOT an asshole to locals during occupation, turned a blind eye to minor “ violations” and non-lethal acts of sabotage, and resistance. So when the Germans retreated, the German Soldier stayed behind after a retreat, and the locals would cover him/tell Allied soldier “he’s ok”, or bail him out of POW prison/vouch for him because while an occupier……was not a jerk about it/actually a cool dude. It was rare, but happened. One town loved one German soldier because after Hitler gave the order to “destroy everything of value” when things went south for Germany, a German soldier deliberately locked himself in a secure room with all the detonation devices so none of the planted explosives strapped to historical landmarks could not be set off. The Germans could not break in in time to get the devices before the Ally’s came rolling in. Locals still remember that German fondly to this day. Apparently a super high ranking officer, at the risk of his own family getting executed back in Germany, basically refused to issue orders/stalled until the Allies rolled into Paris. He had been order to destroy all historical landmarks. Notre Dome, the Eiffel Tower, multiple historic bridges, museums, art galleries, ext had been set to blow and rigged up. But the last time he saw Hitler, he confessed he realized how insane he was (on Meth it’s thought). Despite his families long military history, and being raised to “always obey orders”, he refused that order. While initially locals wanted to rip him apart, when it was realized what he refused to do, he was awarded a medal a few years later. Basically, a thank you for not leveling everything of historic and tourist value in Paris.

  • @Tamlinearthly

    @Tamlinearthly

    Жыл бұрын

    "My great aunt married a Nazi." You can keep that to yourself--in fact, you should.

  • @Cobruh_Commander

    @Cobruh_Commander

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Tamlinearthly Not every German soldier was a Nazi. Just like how every Yankee soldier isn't an opium-guarding war criminal.

  • @Tamlinearthly

    @Tamlinearthly

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Cobruh_Commander: They all fought for the Nazis, and if they'd won millions would have died in the death camps all the same. There were not enough graves in Europe for every German soldier. But if there had been...

  • @tbled52
    @tbled52 Жыл бұрын

    My grandmother has told me about the German soldiers who Cleaned her school, in the US, during these times. She said the we happy to be in the us. They got paid something like a quarter a day. While their home was being destroyed and there was no food with certain death, these prisoners were fed, clothed and could afford chocolate. It was the best case scenario for them.

  • @jz0967
    @jz09672 жыл бұрын

    That ending was amazing. "History is not black and white, merely painted in shades of grey"

  • @MrDead00

    @MrDead00

    2 жыл бұрын

    Nothing new

  • @randomgreek5682

    @randomgreek5682

    2 жыл бұрын

    We all Heard the story why nothing is black and white a million time but this is another great example and why history is always gray as some German where following order while other german where Nazi and not just following other

  • @berlindude75

    @berlindude75

    2 жыл бұрын

    And by the victors, no less.

  • @gabmorrisucat3265

    @gabmorrisucat3265

    2 жыл бұрын

    ww2 is more like black and white than ww1 with bits of grey.

  • @canadious6933

    @canadious6933

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gabmorrisucat3265 damn, ww1 was a massive regret for every single country in Europe.

  • @funklestiltskin6140
    @funklestiltskin61402 жыл бұрын

    When I was younger a former German PoW lived across the street from me. He was an Afrika Korps soldier whose artillery line was in a hopeless situation against an incoming allied tank regiment. His commanding officer gathered them to discuss options and he explained that there were two clear options: die for the fatherland and take as many as they could with them, or surrender without a fight and be branded as traitors with their families paying the price for their "cowardice". The officer then brought up a third option, to "surrender with a fight" by intentionally unloading everything they had just out of range of the tank regiment, then destroying the artillery to ensure they could not be used to take German lives before surrendering. This would hopefully result in their lives being spared while preserving their "honor" and protecting their families by giving the appearance that there was a battle. They decided to go with the third option and it thankfully worked. After that he ended up working in an orchard in upstate New York for a few years after the war ended and then he was given an option to either repatriate to Germany or become an American citizen. He took one glance at where his hometown was on the map, saw it was in what would soon become East Germany and went NOPE before becoming an official American citizen.

  • @APersonOnYouTubeX

    @APersonOnYouTubeX

    2 жыл бұрын

    Smart man

  • @neetuchaitanya211

    @neetuchaitanya211

    2 жыл бұрын

    his commander was OP

  • @firemangan5024

    @firemangan5024

    2 жыл бұрын

    Damn, that man is lucky

  • @michaelweeks9317

    @michaelweeks9317

    2 жыл бұрын

    A story with a happy ending at last! Thank you. My German grandfather was kept in the Rhineland camps-not so happy but better than France or those poor bastards in Russia...

  • @firemangan5024

    @firemangan5024

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@michaelweeks9317 Isn’t it disrespectful to call them bastards tho?

  • @deniseeulert2503
    @deniseeulert2503 Жыл бұрын

    My maternal grandfather had brothers who were farmers in Kansas. They spoke German, as thier own father was from Germany. They had POWs working for them, as they could talk to them easily. There was little security, as the guys were well treated, and they didn't want to go back to the fighting.

  • @anthonytroisi6682

    @anthonytroisi6682

    8 ай бұрын

    In the beginning, German prisoners of war were generally men who had been captured during the North African campaign. Compared to German soldiers in general, such soldiers tended to have close ties to the Nazi party and deep trust in Germany's inevitable victory. They were critical of anyone who they considered too "American". After fanatic Nazi soldiers tormented other prisoners of war who were actually grateful that their war was over. Eventually, the fanatical German soldiers had to be separated and sent to various different POW camps. Many German prisoners of war worked as farm laborers on Allied farms.

  • @TheUndulyNoted
    @TheUndulyNoted Жыл бұрын

    I’d just like to say your content is absolutely fantastic, sometimes I can hardly believe stuff of this quality is free to watch.

  • @ShortHax
    @ShortHax2 жыл бұрын

    At least we hope the art schools learnt to accept every applicant

  • @user-wv9kf2nb2x

    @user-wv9kf2nb2x

    2 жыл бұрын

    Very funny.

  • @Werthesiu

    @Werthesiu

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sovinr8658 yes

  • @aguy7095

    @aguy7095

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sovinr8658 yes

  • @chairsilver2

    @chairsilver2

    2 жыл бұрын

    Xd

  • @drkclshr

    @drkclshr

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@sovinr8658 baked beans

  • @jacopoabbruscato9271
    @jacopoabbruscato92712 жыл бұрын

    In the german miniseries "Generation War" (Unsere mutter, unsere Vater) SPOILERS . . . in the last episode a hardline Gestapo officer is seen as he's seamlessly integrated in a high ranking position in the west german police. One of the characters tries to expose him and talks to an american officer but he's already perfectly aware of the situation and does not intend to do anything about it. It's pretty historically accurate.

  • @Wolf-wc1js

    @Wolf-wc1js

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah he was the one who used Greta as his mistress in exchange for giving Viktor an exit visa when in actuality he had Viktor sent off to one of the camps in Poland being that he was a Jew and had Greta arrested and shot right before the Battle of Berlin for spreading defeatism. Then when the American officer entered the room he remembered Viktor and claimed he had helped him.

  • @leventeszathmari4045

    @leventeszathmari4045

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Wolf-wc1js yea he was that guy but delete that comment because it spoils a lot

  • @kevinbourke1847

    @kevinbourke1847

    2 жыл бұрын

    I seen on rte tv it very good

  • @Joze1090

    @Joze1090

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@leventeszathmari4045 yeah lol he just spoiled one of the huge plot lines

  • @CatBack94

    @CatBack94

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Wolf-wc1js honestly made me frustrated to see his lack of empathy for his actions and even acted like he saved viktor 🤬

  • @user-ei7bk1tq1w
    @user-ei7bk1tq1w Жыл бұрын

    I live in Kemerovo, Central Siberia, I was born and raised here. The "southern" district of the city is divided into parts: the old one, built by captured Germans in the 40s, and the new one, built in the 00s. There was a prisoner of war camp. For a very long time I did not know that I went to the hospital built by captured Germans, walked next to the orphanage built by the Germans. The Germans built houses here, where they lived all the 40s, and then ordinary citizens settled there and still live there. In addition, the prisoners built entire streets that today are the center of city life. On the one hand, I should be grateful to them, because they have made a huge contribution to the development of my hometown, which I love very much. On the other hand, the Germans, in aggregate, are to blame for the suffering of my family: my grandmother's family, 11 people, almost all died during the occupation at the hands of the Germans and hunger. Another part of my family fled the war and was forced to work hard, build a life from scratch in Siberia. Some lived literally in caves, as there was nowhere else to live. Many never returned from the front. I don’t know if it’s fair what they did with the prisoners, but this definitely needs to be remembered.

  • @ChrisOBrien666
    @ChrisOBrien666 Жыл бұрын

    Very interesting and informative video. This is what happened with my wife's father; he served under Rommel, was captured and eventually sent to one of the southern US POW camps where he was treated very well, especially considering how American POWs were treated in the Axis countries. Apparently, even though the work was challenging, he lived a far more comfortable life as a POW than his wife and family did in Germany during the war. When the war ended, he and his wife were able to get Visas to emigrate to the US. Prior to serving in the German military he was an Olympic class cyclist so he opened up his own bicycle repair shop in CT where he made his own bikes and became quite well known. Sadly, he passed away prior to me meeting my wife so I never had the opportunity to discuss the war with him.

  • @user-vu9mx3tx3q

    @user-vu9mx3tx3q

    Жыл бұрын

    Your father was a fascist… how many people has he killed ?

  • @user-vu9mx3tx3q

    @user-vu9mx3tx3q

    Жыл бұрын

    Your wife’s father … ok

  • @seandalton1709
    @seandalton17092 жыл бұрын

    In Hearne, Texas, there was a massive POW camp. It was so lightly guarded that POWs would regularly escape just to go into Hearne or Bryan to get a nice meal at a diner or a cup of coffee. The Sherriff would show up and escort them back, often after they finished

  • @masonsmiley9251

    @masonsmiley9251

    2 жыл бұрын

    People rarely seem to realize there are many German towns around the Austin/ San Antonio area that happened to see a boom in the 1940s

  • @yourdadsotherfamily3530

    @yourdadsotherfamily3530

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@masonsmiley9251 Astroville be liek’

  • @DYNoMITE7

    @DYNoMITE7

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wow I wouldn’t expect there to be one so close to Bryan! Imma have to go to heavens and check it out

  • @seandalton1709

    @seandalton1709

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@DYNoMITE7 if I recall correctly, it was where the airport is now

  • @sthornton78

    @sthornton78

    2 жыл бұрын

    The dam in Denison was built by them too.

  • @wescoleman6240
    @wescoleman62402 жыл бұрын

    I remember a story my old high school wrestling coach told me about German POWs where he grew up, he said that during the war they were allowed to gather some scrap metal and build a tree for Christmas. He said that for a few decades a handful of them would return and admire it for Christmas.

  • @holy_crusaderoftheholyland4713

    @holy_crusaderoftheholyland4713

    2 жыл бұрын

    This is a underrated commitment this should get more likes

  • @thischannelisabandoneditwa8994

    @thischannelisabandoneditwa8994

    2 жыл бұрын

    Waaa waaa feel bad for the nazis

  • @azmanabdula

    @azmanabdula

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thischannelisabandoneditwa8994 As you act exactly like Nazis People forced to do something and punished for it Yeah you are the new age Nazis

  • @thischannelisabandoneditwa8994

    @thischannelisabandoneditwa8994

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@azmanabdula Nazism is when nazis get punished for having a direct part in the death of 6 million innocents

  • @thischannelisabandoneditwa8994

    @thischannelisabandoneditwa8994

    2 жыл бұрын

    apparently

  • @gunsandcommissions
    @gunsandcommissions Жыл бұрын

    Fascinating. I'm glad that KZread suggested your channel.

  • @leroy1006
    @leroy1006 Жыл бұрын

    My great-grandfather was a pow in the US from 1944-1945. He was treated very poorly and died a few months after he was released from organ failures at the age of 35. He had also sustained many injuries from being stoned and beaten.

  • @bendover2160

    @bendover2160

    Жыл бұрын

    For the best

  • @WalterStahlhelm

    @WalterStahlhelm

    Жыл бұрын

    @@bendover2160 As a reward, now we have you and your sodomite pals.

  • @kyle4563
    @kyle45632 жыл бұрын

    Americans: “Once you’re done helpin’ with the farm, how ‘bout y’all come in to watch a movie.” British: “Thank you for helping out Jerry, here’s an apple and some money for your troubles.” French: “Look at me and I’ll beat you up.” USSR: 😈

  • @selfdo

    @selfdo

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ah, but the Germans didn't occupy any of the USA and only the Channel Islands of the UK. I can well imagine had they done so, our post-war views of them wouldn't be so "charitable".

  • @warlordofbritannia

    @warlordofbritannia

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s probably to be expected - the Nazis caused a French Civil War (among other atrocities and crimes in France) and exterminated swaths of Eastern Europe They never touched American soil and even Britain got off relatively easy in comparison

  • @nilsdahlin8744

    @nilsdahlin8744

    2 жыл бұрын

    Based USSR, US treatment of Nazis shows the inherent problems in our country.

  • @bv5998

    @bv5998

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nilsdahlin8744 cry more

  • @warlordofbritannia

    @warlordofbritannia

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@nilsdahlin8744 Lol ok tankie

  • @Taylor-mn9fv
    @Taylor-mn9fv2 жыл бұрын

    My dad told me stories about when he was stationed in German in the early 90s. He met a few old German veterans who spoke flawless English. Turned out they'd been sent to POW camps in the USA, and enjoyed it so much they stayed there for much of the Cold War and had only recently gone back to Germany. According to them, they were better fed and better treated in the camps than they were in their own army.

  • @211q1

    @211q1

    2 жыл бұрын

    I wonder what make it so interesting as ot might help me

  • @hansactually7064

    @hansactually7064

    2 жыл бұрын

    my great grandfather fought in the war and when he was captured by the Americans he was not necessarily treated well. Where he was stationed they made them work in a place that manufactured cookies. He was malnourished and if he would eat any of the cookies he was manufacturing he would have been continuously fed water and cookie dough until he threw up. I mean its definitly better than some shitshow in the east but still in some places it was not exactly fun

  • @rookmaster7502

    @rookmaster7502

    2 жыл бұрын

    The POW camps set up in the U.S. were quite good. The POW camps the Allied Forces set up in Italy was absolutely horrendous. I lot of the German inmates either starved to death or died from disease.

  • @jed-henrywitkowski6470

    @jed-henrywitkowski6470

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hansactually7064 Perhaps, he was a fellow Catholic, anyhow a German soldier had gone into a church by himself. That is where he saw my grandmother's sister praying. he advised her to leave, before the rest of the unit got there, thus likely saving her life. I heard a story from a US Army veteran whose father was a German tanker. He said while deployed to Ukraine he met and fell in love with a Ukrainian girl. like white men of the past generation, his father was not one for crying. However, when his wife died, he cried. Much like with the English and the Irish, the Swedes and the Russians, our people have a long and contentious history with one another, and perhaps the most sordid with a history of atrocities committed against one another. May more Europeans and European-Americans unashamedly share knowledge that is not in line with the propaganda we hear and see since our childhood. On a positive note: A Pax-Europa group strives on a volunteer basis to locate and bring to rest the remains of the fallen, regardless of the Nation they fought for less than 95 years ago. May Europe be free. May She know peace among her children.

  • @gfx2943

    @gfx2943

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hansactually7064 Maybe he shouldn't have been Nazi scum and been a part of an army that murdered 100's of 1000's. Making cookies without a meal in between, awwwww poor Fritz!!! Maybe the people running the factory should have Schindlered him and shot him in the head for sneaking a snack off the conveyor belt? Or is that too harsh?

  • @broccolinyu911
    @broccolinyu91122 күн бұрын

    The fact that they never go over this in schools (or just briefly gloss over it) just reinforces the idea that history is written by the winners. Good on you, Armchair Historian.

  • @81396xman
    @81396xman Жыл бұрын

    As a child in the 70s our military family was stationed in Germany. My mom worked as a house keeper at a German hospital. While working there she made friends one's name was Elsbeth her father was a German soldier during WW2 a prisoner of the Soviets. I never met him but he gave my Dad a Soviet coin he obtained while a prisoner.

  • @loshadow9796
    @loshadow97962 жыл бұрын

    As far as my Grandmother knew, her father was imprisoned in America until the war ended. He came back after it with some jewlery from america for his wife, he sadly die not to long after he came back but still to this day my Grandmother posseses the jewlery her father brought from America, it was passed on to her by her mother (the jewlery only has almost no monitary worth, its a memory of her father)

  • @georgemartin2529

    @georgemartin2529

    2 жыл бұрын

    Hello

  • @ashtonkamien8542

    @ashtonkamien8542

    2 жыл бұрын

    I like your logo

  • @notably5233

    @notably5233

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s a really cool story, I hope you guys keep it safe for ever

  • @MASTEROFEVIL

    @MASTEROFEVIL

    2 жыл бұрын

    So it's a fake?

  • @yellowcactusproductions

    @yellowcactusproductions

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@MASTEROFEVIL That it isn’t worth alot does not mean it’s fake

  • @John.McMillan
    @John.McMillan2 жыл бұрын

    When you look more into it, its a bit shocking when you realise the sheer volume of soldiers that lost the war and joined the US army or became Mercenaries for the next few decades. The Congo war in the early 60's had alot of ex Waffen SS mercenaries fighting in it. Edit- Actually that's kind of what kicked off the modern gold age of mercenaries from the late 40's to early 80's. ALOT of soldiers from Eroupe and Asia were suddenly either without country or just wanted to keep fighting, so millions went into the cold war as mercenaires still fighting their old enemies.

  • @Wolf-wc1js

    @Wolf-wc1js

    2 жыл бұрын

    That was the case with Lauri Thorni aka Larry Thorne. After Finland surrendered to the Soviets at the end of the continuation war, he joined a Waffen SS unit of Finnish volunteers to keep fighting the communists then he later joined the US Green Berets and saw some service in Vietnam before his helicopter got shot down

  • @ruzzsverion2728

    @ruzzsverion2728

    2 жыл бұрын

    Many German soldiers ironically joined the French foreign legion.

  • @John.McMillan

    @John.McMillan

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Wolf-wc1js Hes certainly one of the most notable and interesting example. Guy didnt like communists.

  • @John.McMillan

    @John.McMillan

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@ruzzsverion2728 Most ironic of all, As mentioned with the mercenaires in the Congo, there were atleast a few situations where ex-SS, ex-Soviet, ex-US and ex-French soldiers from WW2 all fought together for profit. Or a few where they all fought eachother again, but this tine for money instead of ideology.

  • @Wolf-wc1js

    @Wolf-wc1js

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@John.McMillan yeah and I don’t blame him. The communists attempted to invade his homeland just like the rest of Eastern Europe and turn them communists but the Winter War stopped them from achieving that goal. Wouldn’t be surprised if a lot of men like him who suffered under various other communist controlled nations became mercs willing to fight against communism in any army willing to take their services. And on the flip side, there were communists who aided other nations to keep their country red. Cubans fought with the MPLA during the Angolan civil war.

  • @cdnsk12
    @cdnsk12 Жыл бұрын

    Many German soldiers volunteered for the French Foreign Legion after WW2 & soon found themselves fighting at Dien Bien Phu in Northern Vietnam. They ended up in the Vietnamese prison Camps & most died of disease or starvation. They must've thot we've jumped out of the frying pan into the fire.

  • @noliebowtie1315
    @noliebowtie1315 Жыл бұрын

    Absolutely amazing video! I love the balanced look at history.

  • @NukeFinity
    @NukeFinity2 жыл бұрын

    Everybody is talking about their grandparents so I will give it a go too. My Grandad was a North German farmer. He got called up against his will for military service in 1935 and in 1938 he could leave the Wehrmacht. Only to get called again in 1939 when the war started. Later after France surrenderd he was stationed on a watchtower near Cherbourg, France. One day an English downed pilot came to the watchtower to surrender, but instead of arresting him, my grandfather and his comrades played cards with the pilot. After this incident, my grandfather was punitively transferred to the Eastern Front.There he later escaped the Stalingrad cauldron, but was sent back into it by an officer. He became a POW and was sent to a Soviet Gulag near Baku. There he escaped from the camp in about 1950, but stayed behind when a comrade broke his leg, and was arrested again. He was one of the last German POWs to return from Russia in 1955. Once home, everything was different, for example, horses were no longer needed in agriculture and his children did not see him for over a decade. He died of a heart attack in a cow barn in 1963.

  • @nihadnsirov2290

    @nihadnsirov2290

    2 жыл бұрын

    Oh wow, I'm from Baku, I wouldn't guess someone would be stationed in Azerbaijan SSR, back in the day.

  • @gamergaming5786

    @gamergaming5786

    2 жыл бұрын

    R.I.P.

  • @Mr.RichardLittle

    @Mr.RichardLittle

    2 жыл бұрын

    Twenty years of hell, and for what? Hopefully he made some good friends along the way and they made the best of a bad one, he sounds like a man of honor and integrity for going back for his wounded comrade. R.I.P

  • @zepter00

    @zepter00

    2 жыл бұрын

    So sad..I almost cried...but when I think that germanSS kiled 6 milion of people ..mostly civilians including women and children also destroyed and robbed property worth more than 900 bilion $ making my countrycthe most destroyed contry in WW2. My grandpa also died on heart attavk..but in 1948 even he was in the same age as your ..he was forced labour in germany. German bauer threatened him death very often aiming his Mauser at him. Amd was forced to sleep after heavy work in cold places.

  • @KetamineUser69

    @KetamineUser69

    2 жыл бұрын

    My Grandfather was a farmer and jew in ww2. My grandparents had to hide their identity so they wouldnt get killed from stalins order. World is terrible..

  • @robertwestby8698
    @robertwestby86982 жыл бұрын

    My grandfather (mothers side) was drafted into the Luftwaffe in 1940. He was in an engineering unit that worked on airfields, and was stationed in Norway maintaining bases in far northern Norway from which they flew missions to sink allied aid convoys sailing to Murmansk. In 1944 his unit was moved to France where he worked on V1 and V2 sites, but after the Normandy invasion he was part of the retreat to Germany, and was finally captured by American forces. after this he was sent to France to work as a laborer on a farm. He was a devout catholic and endeared himself to the catholic owners and went from sleeping in the barn to sleeping in the house. He also saved the families young son from drowning. After nearly 2 years (1947) he was released back to Germany where my grandmother had no idea of his fate. My mother, born in 1940, had only seen her father once while he was home on leave, so when he knocked on the door, she had no idea it was her father standing in front of her. The French family and my grandfather remained friends until his death in 1977 and would travel to Germany to visit him. Human connections and faith are capable of overcoming incredible obstacles.

  • @FrostyyMcToasty

    @FrostyyMcToasty

    2 жыл бұрын

    What a great story, very heartwarming.

  • @machia0705

    @machia0705

    2 жыл бұрын

    My great Uncle was in Jagerschwader 77. Hope I spelled that right. He was an ace, and he hated the Nazis. I never met him, but my family told me he was ashamed of what Germany did after he got home as he learned more about the war.

  • @americantopteam135s-t7

    @americantopteam135s-t7

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wonderful tale. Thank you for sharing. =)

  • @americantopteam135s-t7

    @americantopteam135s-t7

    2 жыл бұрын

    @Derrick Bridges what are you talking about, you spastic? Give this guy respect and do one

  • @robertsutton3001

    @robertsutton3001

    2 жыл бұрын

    Wow that’s interesting

  • @ferdonandebull
    @ferdonandebull Жыл бұрын

    My mom was a girl and picked cotton close to a detention center .. She said that the men were very nice and most of them spoke reasonable English.. she said that she always thought they were going to be Americans … She came from Missouri and there was a heavy German population. She was English and Irish blood line but cooked a lot of German food..

  • @fanofcodd
    @fanofcodd Жыл бұрын

    One of these soldiers was sent as a POW in my grand parents farm in the south west of France. He was working in the farm and was treated well , so well that he became friend with my grand grand father and went back several times latter in his life with his wife and his kids for hollidays. But not all soldiers sent to France as POW were treated well , generaly at the end of a war you don't see good human qualities being displayed

  • @capncake8837
    @capncake88372 жыл бұрын

    I wasn't expecting this, but I'm glad. It's an overlooked part of history.

  • @compatriot852

    @compatriot852

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, the Soviet Union in particular is often overlooked in the West for its brutality especially after the war.

  • @tomasa-m5643

    @tomasa-m5643

    2 жыл бұрын

    reminder for ppl in comment sections; don't click random links xo

  • @cristianvandenbosse8989

    @cristianvandenbosse8989

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@compatriot852 the German officer who saved wladislaw szpilman also unfortunatly died in a gulag

  • @tomasa-m5643

    @tomasa-m5643

    2 жыл бұрын

    and yeah, it's an overlooked part of history. The mention of France's actions, intentional and negligent, resulted in thousands more killed, the video said, through using POWs to clear minefields.

  • @drasticallyfantastic7164

    @drasticallyfantastic7164

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah male pattern baldness has done untold damage throughout human history

  • @a.p.3556
    @a.p.35562 жыл бұрын

    America: Easy mode Britain: Medium mode France: *Hard mode* USSR: Ü̿҉̼͚̯̠̠͔l̵̮̪͈̞̠͊ͬͩt̵͕̜̬͈̤̮̘͙͛̾͑͋r̤͎̲̼̝ͩ͢a̜̝͍͐̑̕ ̶̩͈̘͉͈ͪN̨͍̹͙̮̠͔͉ͣ̔̈î̵̳̺̼̙͎̲̚g̜͓̘̞̃ͬ̀ͣ́ḫ̤̅̓͞t̵̝͉̪̪̤̦̪͉ͧͭ̍͊ṃ̡̠̘͆à̮̯̼͙̪̙͚ͬ͘ͅr͔̘̗͌͜e̸̥̼̗͍͔̩ͣ͂ͧ

  • @lieutenant8968

    @lieutenant8968

    2 жыл бұрын

    170 likes and no comments

  • @oceanmanefibc1743

    @oceanmanefibc1743

    2 жыл бұрын

    Pretty much

  • @torehaaland6921

    @torehaaland6921

    Жыл бұрын

    If americans had experienced nazi soldiers the way France and in particular USSR did, there would not be easy mode om the part of USA.

  • @Milo19970

    @Milo19970

    Жыл бұрын

    Japan was even worse. Some Japanese platoons literally ate the POWS. and not even a little bit but entirely. They would choose the ones that had the most meat left on their bones and randomly kill and eat them.

  • @nope1528

    @nope1528

    Жыл бұрын

    Canada: pacific mode

  • @thefirstpilot589
    @thefirstpilot5897 ай бұрын

    My great uncle was captured immediately in 1939 and sent over to England before going back home to East Germany. He said everyone treated him very well and he would frequently visit England and Ireland

  • @JudahMaccabee_
    @JudahMaccabee_ Жыл бұрын

    The animated video displays historically - accurate detailed weapons and attire. Absolutely epic production.

  • @jbZahl
    @jbZahl2 жыл бұрын

    My late grandfather was drafted at the end of the war at the age of 17. He was captured but later successfully escaped from a Sovjet prison camp. He never talked much about what happened during the war. All we know is that when he showed up at his parents house in Germany, after his successful flight, his own sister didn't recognize him. He was very malnourished and had parasites all over his skin. I don't now if he personally did or was made to do something bad. He didn't talk about a "clean Wehrmacht" nor did he complain about his treatment by the Russians, like some of his generation did. I think he was just happy for having survived and wanted nothing more than live the rest of his days in peace, which he did.

  • @biggamer7876

    @biggamer7876

    2 жыл бұрын

    My great grandfather was in the latvian SS(not because he was a nazi but because he hated the soviets)after the war he was captured and sent to a gulag he then got released because one of his friends was in the communist party and convinced some people to release him my great grandfather died later due to tubercolosis he contracted in the gulag

  • @emie9858

    @emie9858

    2 жыл бұрын

    Great-grandfather*

  • @theknightwiththen-wordpass7084

    @theknightwiththen-wordpass7084

    2 жыл бұрын

    He seems like a nice man.Wish him peace

  • @catraaufaa_9_viiif323

    @catraaufaa_9_viiif323

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@emie9858 *grandfather, you know right the dude commenting this could be older than you thought?

  • @emie9858

    @emie9858

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@catraaufaa_9_viiif323 I wrote a comment telling BigGamer that their great-grandfather was a monster who deserved worse. In my original comment I accidentally said grandfather and was thus correcting it. Obviously some cuck removed my comment at some point

  • @rickdavis1030
    @rickdavis10302 жыл бұрын

    A friend of mine's father was a German soldier during the war and was shot and captured by US troops in Italy in 1943 and spent the rest of the war in a POW camp in Arizona. He had fought in Poland, Russia and France, and had in fact been seriously wounded in Russia and sent to a military hospital in France to recuperate, and when he was well enough he was sent to Italy, where he was eventually captured. He said the thing that had astounded him the most was that when he was captured---he was on a machine gun crew--the American sergeant who had shot him, and killed the other members of his crew, had immediately begun to treat his wounds rather than just leave him there to die or kill him outright, as the Russians would have done. He was taken to an aid station, then sent back to a larger facility in the rear, where he said he got the same treatment and level of care as wounded American soldiers, which also astounded him. When he was determined to have sufficiently recovered, he was sent back to the US by ship along with a few thousand other POWs, and when they landed in New York they were put on a train to be taken to the POW camp in Arizona. He said he got better food and treatment there than he did while he was in the German army--he used to joke that getting shot was the best thing that ever happened to him--and that when the camp authorities found out he had been a baker before the war they put him to work in the camp bakery. After the war ended he was repatriated back to Germany, but in the early '50s he applied for permission to emigrate to the US; it was granted, and he took his wife and 2 kids to New York and eventually became American citizens.

  • @tonys92178

    @tonys92178

    2 жыл бұрын

    more than 20 million Russians died liberating Europe in WW2, american losses were not even 1/40th the amount of this, cut them some slack resources were quite thin.

  • @beng6480

    @beng6480

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tonys92178 I don't blame the russians for how they treated german soldiers. The eastern front was one of the most savage and barbaric places in history. What I do blame them for is how they treated the civilian populations of eastern europe. Russia actually helped Germany early on and then terrorized the people they conquered and when they later came back as they pushed the germans back after hitler decided to attack russia they did unspeakable things to the civilians in eastern europe. It's one thing to treat your enemy horribly it's quite another to treat civilians in such a horrific way. Yes the western nations often did horrible things to civilians but it was not as widespread and even encouraged like it was in the soviet army.

  • @user-xe3ng6sj9o

    @user-xe3ng6sj9o

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@beng6480 are you talking about poles? comparing to german actions, Soviet treatment in poland and liberated territories of western belarussia and ukraine was far better. if Soviet army really did encourage the mass genocide of civilians in captured areas then why only 600k German civilians died? why rokosovskyi and zhukov gave orders to treat civilians well and prohibited any rape and robbery in their armies?

  • @arthurskok5899

    @arthurskok5899

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@user-xe3ng6sj9o hear of Katyn or no?

  • @tomfrazier1103

    @tomfrazier1103

    2 жыл бұрын

    A few Italian p/w s were working in my town, and later emigrated to the area, as it has a famed "Mediterranean climate" among other things, a Swiss-Italian and Portuguese community...

  • @paynectygardener2033
    @paynectygardener2033 Жыл бұрын

    In 1970s I became acquainted in Oklahoma City with a German who came to USA as a p.o.w. as there were many german soldiers kept in camps in Oklahoma, Kansas, Nebraska I am aware of. He wished to remain here after VE Day and went on to become a successful home builder in OKC. He was a good man to know and an asset to his community here.

  • @chuckfinn
    @chuckfinn Жыл бұрын

    Just came across these videos now… This channel is so up my alley I can’t even tell you ….thank you

  • @ts45wF3
    @ts45wF32 жыл бұрын

    Corparal Zuko: If the Allies discover us, they'll have us killed. General Iroh: But if the Soviet discovers us, we'll be turned over to Stalin. Both: Allies it is.

  • @juliannasreddin5226

    @juliannasreddin5226

    2 жыл бұрын

    Is this an ATLA reference?

  • @christiangaming-fy6rv

    @christiangaming-fy6rv

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@juliannasreddin5226 no, its a WW2 reference

  • @mill2712

    @mill2712

    2 жыл бұрын

    I think Zuko's rank should be higher than corporal. In fact, I think he shouldn't even have an enlisted rank. So maybe, lieutenant or captain (army version).

  • @miketrujillo3677

    @miketrujillo3677

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mill2712 exile zuko

  • @gamaactive8278

    @gamaactive8278

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@juliannasreddin5226 no this is Patrick! lol

  • @counter-terrordoge3335
    @counter-terrordoge33352 жыл бұрын

    "One day son, if you work hard you can become a massive hypocrite." - Oversimplified

  • @dscrappygolani7981

    @dscrappygolani7981

    2 жыл бұрын

    An astute observation.

  • @chaosXP3RT

    @chaosXP3RT

    2 жыл бұрын

    I guess, the lesson here is that the Allies were just as evil as the N*zis. So WWII didn't really matter

  • @dscrappygolani7981

    @dscrappygolani7981

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@chaosXP3RT well, you're not wrong , but it did matter a lot. The seismic shift in the balance of power marked the beginning of a new geopolitical epoch ...

  • @sid2112

    @sid2112

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@chaosXP3RT Yeah liberty and free markets are just like totalitarian oligarchies..... /s if you didn't catch it.

  • @lesdodoclips3915

    @lesdodoclips3915

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@chaosXP3RT if you seriously believe that you are in trouble.

  • @nickybower5274
    @nickybower5274 Жыл бұрын

    Love these videos mate.i end up watching hours of content.

  • @RichyRichToo
    @RichyRichToo Жыл бұрын

    Well done, and well narrated!

  • @VonBek2009
    @VonBek20092 жыл бұрын

    I know one, Dad, that come to back to Europe from the US (Fort Meade) after being a POW, being interviewed by a British and German Officer and being told he couldn't go home because the Russians were taking reprisals on returning German soldiers. Then being told France, Holland and Belgium weren't safe either because the resistance was taking German soldiers and shooting them. So he came to England and was put in an interment camp in the New Forest. He was treated well and helped rebuild Bomb damage. He was welcomed and married my Mum, even though Granddad was in the British Artillery during the war...when ask why he let his Daughter marry a German, he said " He's a nice guy, and rather a German, than an Italian or an American!"

  • @winchesterchua7600

    @winchesterchua7600

    2 жыл бұрын

    You are in your 60s, aren't ya?

  • @averagejoe8358

    @averagejoe8358

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sure

  • @sahar1531

    @sahar1531

    2 жыл бұрын

    So heartwarming!

  • @VonBek2009

    @VonBek2009

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@winchesterchua7600 I'm in my mid 50's my Dad is 98

  • @therealunclevanya

    @therealunclevanya

    2 жыл бұрын

    Several of the lads I went to school with had German or Italian fathers who had been POWs.

  • @youtousim
    @youtousim Жыл бұрын

    My grandfather fought during and as a Wehrwolf beyond the end of the war. He was lucky enough to end up in a US prison camp after ignoring an order to head east and instead clung to a truck traveling west. The things I remember from his tales where the anti-flea powder they were covered in when they arrived, which was very effective. A story of a tree falling on the set of metal dishes he brought with him, while working in the woods. Machine gun shots in the nights, overhead the holes they slept in, and an old jew with a whip and a grunge overseeing them peeling potatoes in the kitchens. He was a kind and respected man beyond the borders of his community and lived a fulfilled live loved by his wive, my grandmother, until the very end. He never talked much about the war itself. I do know though that in his last years, he wanted my father and us younger ones to understand that the adolescent man he once was actually believed they were doing the right thing, being brainwashed from earliest youth. I believe him. Only at the very end of the war he realized the madness he's been following and decided to leave it all behind. He got out of the camp by writing a letter to himself, affirming he'd have a potential place to work outside. Even at oldest age, he still enjoyed peeling potatoes for dinner for some reason, keeping somwhat fond memories of the prison camp. Maybe he was just happy the fighting was over, and that he came to his senses just in time. RIP grandpa. We miss you.

  • @renfgr77
    @renfgr77 Жыл бұрын

    I’m from Mexico in the town I live in there is a well known doctor who’s father was a former German POW that managed to escape from the US, he was very popular he ran a business selling imported liquor from Europe, American products and Cuban cigars in Mexico

  • @GummyBearWA
    @GummyBearWA Жыл бұрын

    My dad was in the European theatre for it final 16 months stationed in France. He was part of the American force processing POWs to be sent to American camps. He met Fred a 24yo German plumber who was conscripted to fight at the very end of the war. He wanted nothing to do with the war and was disgusted by it. They became friends and when it was time for Fred to be sent back to Germany, he wanted to stay and my dad sponsored him and after a year Fred invented and patented a machine to pull pipe underground. He created a machine that made a huge impact on US infrastructure growth. I knew him as Uncle Fred and was the kindest man I've ever known.

  • @Arc84923

    @Arc84923

    Жыл бұрын

    Im not sure wether this is true or not

  • @ericpilger2217

    @ericpilger2217

    Жыл бұрын

    How many Jews did he kill??

  • @connordrysdale5333

    @connordrysdale5333

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ericpilger2217 i’m assuming none seen as it was the final 16 months. what kinda question even is that bruh

  • @broidontlikeu9970

    @broidontlikeu9970

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@connordrysdale5333 how is it weird?? all these stories about german pows staying in America and being treated nicely. when the ppl in these comments reminisce and giggle abt it as if the majority of them weren't fucking nazis who, if Germany had won the war, been in the place of American guards, enslaving us. killing us. treating americans much worse than we treated them, anyways. US should've deported them all back to where they came from immediately after the war ended. the fact that literal fucking nazis were treated better than black soldiers is just fucking insane. it also doesn't help much considering the treatment German-Americans (with ancestry in the US BEFORE WW2 or WW1) were treated. but haha!! nazis liked it better here. disgraceful

  • @Tamlinearthly

    @Tamlinearthly

    Жыл бұрын

    If Fred "wanted nothing to do with the war" then he shouldn't have fought it. Yes I know what "conscripted" means, but all that means is he was more scared of breaking the law than of fighting the war. If your "Uncle Fred" had won that war, millions more people would have gone to the death camps, he went out and fought for that because he was too afraid of the alternative. I'm glad he went on to pull up some pipes or whatever though, real fucking charming story about your Nazi fake uncle.

  • @MuddieRain
    @MuddieRain2 жыл бұрын

    Surviving WWI, surviving the Spanish flu, surviving the Great Depression, surviving WW2, but only to die in a death camp in Siberia.

  • @drunkzilla3522

    @drunkzilla3522

    2 жыл бұрын

    Well that's death camp not alive camp

  • @EmbeddedWithin

    @EmbeddedWithin

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@drunkzilla3522 XD

  • @mysteryjunkie9808

    @mysteryjunkie9808

    2 жыл бұрын

    Being born in Germans around turn of the century had a rough life

  • @ecks738

    @ecks738

    2 жыл бұрын

    @پیاده نظام خان have you ever considered what the Germans did the Russian people in the war? What a pathetic comment you wrote.

  • @LichsuhoathinhDrabattle
    @LichsuhoathinhDrabattle Жыл бұрын

    Great video, looking forward to your next videos❣❣

  • @agc812
    @agc81211 ай бұрын

    My father, now deceased, remembered playing catch with German POWs when he was a small boy. His dad, my grandfather, was stationed near Anniston, Alabama at the time.

  • @teutonalex
    @teutonalex2 жыл бұрын

    Well my granpa was in the kriegsmarine artillery and stationed in Paris briefly, Kiel Germany and Poland. He kept lucking out by being transferred away a few month before an invasion or fall of the areas he was stationed in. He ended in British captivity and was released home to eastern Germany. Coming home he learned that the Russians had carted away the stack of bricks that were on our property but left a bunch of field kitchens. A friend of his realized that these were old ww1 models made of brass. So when it became clear that the Russians had forgotten all about them, they cut them up and sold the metal on the black market. This financed construction of our house.

  • @juscoz3167

    @juscoz3167

    2 жыл бұрын

    Awww, guess you's shouldn't have started a war.

  • @roywhiteo5

    @roywhiteo5

    2 жыл бұрын

    Take bricks, leave brass.

  • @chrps0at0cops

    @chrps0at0cops

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@juscoz3167 I mean, it's not like his grandpa started the war lol. Just like I didn't separate migrant children from their parents but "we" did.

  • @juscoz3167

    @juscoz3167

    2 жыл бұрын

    Who's "we"?, I'm not a yank

  • @GAMER123GAMING

    @GAMER123GAMING

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@juscoz3167 Lmao. grow up

  • @cpierce3277
    @cpierce32772 жыл бұрын

    While in the US Army, during Vietnam, while stationed in Germany, I met several men who had served the German army in WW2. All had horror stories of Russian pow camps, it was many years till they were repatriated . But all became good friends of mine, none had been SS during the war. All became vital to getting Germany fully back on its feet .

  • @hudsonfe8312

    @hudsonfe8312

    2 жыл бұрын

    Mano, isso é bem complicado por que os alemães mataram uns 20-30 milhões de soviéticos e sem contar os outros países da Europa Oriental, aí depois da guerra todo mundo é prisioneiro político e não cometeu nenhum crime de guerra. Até parece que foi o alto escalão alemão que sozinho matou todas essas pessoas. Claro que não, o exército alemão pra além das SS matava vilas, cidades e etnias inteiras no oriente. Não tem como ter tido um único soldado alemão que não participou disso, seja diretamente ou por omissão.

  • @alexphotoman

    @alexphotoman

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hudsonfe8312 yeah but whats your point?

  • @hudsonfe8312

    @hudsonfe8312

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@alexphotoman Através da história do amigo acima, da a entender que houve uma injustiça para com esses bons alemães que iriam ajudar na reconstrução da Alemanha após sua repatriação, e que apesar de não serem da SS, e mesmo assim sofreram horrores nos campos de prisioneiros na URSS. Meu ponto é que infelizmente oq a Alemanha nazista fez foi uma coisa coletiva, não importando se você era só um soldado comum um um SS, todos participaram do genocídio e dos crimes de guerra, da destruição de nações inteiras. Então não tem como esperar que eles receberiam outro tratamento por parte das suas antigas vítimas. O fato de eles serem boas pessoas não retira das costas deles o fardo de terem participado, e sendo do exército provavelmente foi uma participação bem ativa, de todas as atrocidades cometidas pelos Alemães

  • @humanchannel7825

    @humanchannel7825

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@hudsonfe8312 no the SS was almost entirely dedicated to doing the crimes that you mentioned above. The Wehrmacht was focused on fighting other European countries. It’s not the same

  • @hudsonfe8312

    @hudsonfe8312

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@humanchannel7825 não mano, as SS eram as tropas do partido, uma forma de expressão de força do partido e por isso realmente eram mais politizadas e voltadas mais pra os serviços políticos como o extermínio de judeus, porém essa guerra não foi apenas política, econômica tbm, a Alemanha nazista tinha intenções coloniais na europa oriental e o seu exército, a whermacht foi amplamente empregada nesse sentido, assassinato de soldados capturados, massacre de populações cercadas, estupros como arma de terror contra a população... Da mesma maneira que o exército inglês tem um papel amplo no domínio e colonização de países da África por exemplo, o exército alemão também tem na guerra no oriente. Esse cavalheirismo e profissionalismo que se vê na whermacht é só até a página dois, da mesma maneira que na primeira guerra não havia SS e as ações das tropas alemães foram muito parecidas.

  • @ThatADHDKid
    @ThatADHDKid17 күн бұрын

    One of the coolest things about the county in which I live is that there is an old POW camp that housed German POW's were to work the fields of the farms in our county. There are only two buildings that are still standing from the camp that are in decent condition

  • @SilkBath
    @SilkBath Жыл бұрын

    respect the channel man. bravo

  • @zzzaj2016
    @zzzaj20162 жыл бұрын

    I remember learning about this in my Texas History class, most of the highways here are built on POW labor

  • @SuperDeinVadda

    @SuperDeinVadda

    2 жыл бұрын

    So even in America Hitler is responsible for the autobahn Hahaha

  • @yourfriendlyneighborhoodcl4824

    @yourfriendlyneighborhoodcl4824

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SuperDeinVadda lol

  • @Wolf-wc1js

    @Wolf-wc1js

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@SuperDeinVadda well the Interstate Highway Act was suggested by Eisenhower who got the idea from occupied Germany and wanted it to be used as a means of being able to quickly deploy and move the military around in the event of a communist invasion

  • @maxazzopardi7446

    @maxazzopardi7446

    2 жыл бұрын

    I remember going to Texas and thinking to myself, where's the chili!

  • @juice8431

    @juice8431

    2 жыл бұрын

    Obviously didnt do a good job at it xD

  • @MrRapp-yz4hu
    @MrRapp-yz4hu2 жыл бұрын

    I live in South Carolina, and the opening statements about the POW's being treated better then the black share croppers reminded me of things my grand dad told us about. Until recently some of the housing units for the POWs we're still standing. They were close to one of the rail lines. My Grand dad told us how the POWs we're transported in passenger cars while blacks had to ride in cattle cars. Nice video. A very pleasant surprise.

  • @obscureoccultist9158

    @obscureoccultist9158

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's a thing that always angered me. I understand that POWs had to be treated well but the fact that German POWs got better treatment then an entire group of American citizen is ridiculous. I remember reading the memoirs of a German POW who recounted being allowed to eat at an American diner but seeing the whites only signs. He recounted that it reminded him of the anti Jewish laws that were in place in Nazi Germany prior to the war.

  • @stanleyrogouski

    @stanleyrogouski

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@obscureoccultist9158 The local governments in the south were probably also using German POWs as conscripted labor to undercut the bargaining position of black Americans (who would have gotten paid more because of the labor shortage).

  • @someguyontheinternet7628

    @someguyontheinternet7628

    2 жыл бұрын

    Umm German soldiers were probably very polite and well behaved.

  • @JoshDaGreat16

    @JoshDaGreat16

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@obscureoccultist9158 I went to the Holocaust museum a few years ago. Very amazing experience, I highly recommend. What I found interesting was learning that Hitler actually justified his actions against the Jews by pointing to Jim Crow laws in the US. Really a shame and dark part of our past history in this country. Many people here don’t realize that Hitler justified a lot of his actions by pointing to what the US was doing to African Americans.

  • @c3aloha

    @c3aloha

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@someguyontheinternet7628 and??? Black Americans weren’t???

  • @drwn1
    @drwn1 Жыл бұрын

    My grandfather had a farm in Indiana where German soldier's worked. He said he fed them peanut butter sandwiches because the American soldier's treated them badly (especially after they found out how the American POW's were treated in Germany.) We have a Germain cuckoo clock that was sent by a German soldier to my grandfather as a sign of appreciation.

  • @matyaskotrbacek546
    @matyaskotrbacek5467 ай бұрын

    Appreciate your work. Informative and with a bit of dramatical storytelling

  • @thegamingkaiser2874
    @thegamingkaiser28742 жыл бұрын

    My grandmother told me someone she used to clean for was an old german veteran who was a POW for about 3 years. When he was sent to the states he was a sanitation worker and he used that to start up a sanitation business back in Germany. When the war ended a guard offered him a job for his family's company but he refused because in his words "Job offer or not I still have a wife back home."

  • @natashagupta4691

    @natashagupta4691

    2 жыл бұрын

    🟨SERCH ADITYA RATHORE-HE ALSO MAKES INFORMATIVE CONTENT LIKE ARMCHAIR HISTORIAN

  • @adenmitchell7633

    @adenmitchell7633

    2 жыл бұрын

    Fake

  • @thegamingkaiser2874

    @thegamingkaiser2874

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@adenmitchell7633 what's fake?

  • @geemanamatin8383

    @geemanamatin8383

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@thegamingkaiser2874 Shite talker, who thinks he a time traveler. You'll get use to em.

  • @moritzhoffmeister4824
    @moritzhoffmeister48242 жыл бұрын

    The british army sent a former german soldier to help my great grandmother with household and gardening at her home near Leipzig after the war, her husband was a POW in England and she had a couple of children. The man's name was Erich, he was a dear friend to my family and became sort of an uncle to my father, he gave him a very cool watch for his birthday once and even went partying with him (he was well into his 60s then). He opened up a furniture store and passed away some time back.

  • @adenmitchell7633

    @adenmitchell7633

    2 жыл бұрын

    Fake

  • @ein7813

    @ein7813

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@adenmitchell7633 I agree that’s all cap

  • @sphereyahya

    @sphereyahya

    Жыл бұрын

    🧢

  • @mitchellgiles6869

    @mitchellgiles6869

    Жыл бұрын

    I made the mistake of reading a bunch of wholesome comments like this before I watched the video so I was expecting something similarly wholesome but instead everyone is violating the Geneva Convention

  • @callsigndd9ls897

    @callsigndd9ls897

    Жыл бұрын

    My father was also lucky, if lucky you can call it, twice losing his home in bombing raids, but at least he survived his military service unscathed. My father experienced a completely different crazy story at the end of the war. When he completed his training as a machine fitter at the age of 18 (1944), he always had to reckon with being drafted into the army. At this late point in the war, almost all non-volunteer soldiers were sent to the Eastern Front. Because of this, he volunteered for the Navy before being drafted to infantry on eastern front. Because of his learnes job, he was drafted y the nava and trained as a diesel engeneer. He was then supposed to ride in a submarine but the sub he was supposed to ride in was damaged in a bombing raid so they transferred him to a brand new Type 43 minesweeper. That was probably his luck, because if he had got on a submarine, I might not even exist today. By now the war was almost lost, so they were no longer active in the war, just evacuating trapped refugees and soldiers from East Prussia to West Germany. After the end of the war, the minesweepers in Sonderborg (Denmark) were confiscated by the British. But the crews of the minesweepers were not taken prisoner, but were supposed to stay on the boats and clear the Baltic and North Seas of mines for the British. For this purpose, the British occupiers founded the GMSA (German Minesweeping Administration). It was a couriosum, armed German warships with German crews in British service, few days after war. These minesweepers were given the signal flag C (blue, white, red, white, blue striped) as their national flag. My father sailed on these boats until 1948 and was then transferred from the British military administration to the port police in his hometown of Kiel, where he worked as an engineer on a former torpedo catching boat that served as a police boat until 1950. During his military service between 1944 to 1950, my father was in the British service longer than the German service (lol). Unlike other victorious powers, the British were very fair. They understood better than the other allies, that they had nothing to fear from the Germans after the surrender. Even acquaintances of my father, who afte the capitulation ended up in British captivity were prisoners of war only until the infrastructure for an orderly release was in place, which usually lasted no longer than six months. In addition, they were not locked up in camps, but the British simply cordoned off a peninsula (for example, the Eiderstedt peninsula in Schleswig-Hostein) where the POWs could move freely. Day after day loudspeaker trucks came into the villages and called on professional groups. For example: please report all farm workers to the commandant's office, or all construction workers, etc. So there were fewer prisoners every day. The British made sure that the occupied country could feed itself as quickly as possible and was not dependent on British supplies, because these were also very scarce in the UK after the war.

  • @jeffmccrea9347
    @jeffmccrea9347 Жыл бұрын

    My father was stationed at McDill Field, now McDill Air Force Base, during WW II. He said that there were German POW's working there. Trustees had free roam of common areas of the base when they weren't working so long as they didn't go into the PX without escort, the officer's or enlisted man's clubs, approach the fences to avoid being shot for escape or any areas marked classified. They were also not allowed alcohol. They would clean and do manual labor on the base and training aircraft there. Some even volunteered to rebuild malfunctioning machine guns for the base airplanes. My father said that they were craftsmen. He said that they were paid a few dollars a month, supplied food, soap, shaving cream and a carton of cigarettes a month for smokers. One time, they had an SS officer sent there. As was customary, he took control of the prisoners as ranking officer. One night, he tried to escape and was brought back to their barracks by MP's. The next morning, he was found naked and dead in the shower. When asked, investigators were told by the prisoners that he "slipped on soap too many times" with a nod and a wink. When asked why, investigators were told that they were treated better as POW's than when they were on active duty. The food and living conditions at McDill were better than what they got on the job. They didn't want the SS officer to screw things up for them.

  • @daveacbickford
    @daveacbickford10 ай бұрын

    Spectacular video guys! One of your best, and that's saying something!! 😊😊

  • @ottocarr3688
    @ottocarr36882 жыл бұрын

    My dad was an American officer in at a P.O.W. camp for Italian solders. Many worked on local farms and none of prisoners were interested in escaping. When they were eventually released, some chose to stay in America permanently and became successful farmers themselves.

  • @xgtwb6473

    @xgtwb6473

    8 ай бұрын

    What it was a POW camp in the USA? Lol

  • @shanecomeback8296

    @shanecomeback8296

    7 ай бұрын

    There were many pow camps in the US;@@xgtwb6473

  • @Polones12
    @Polones122 жыл бұрын

    I've found that part about man's baldness most disturbing- terrifying stories.

  • @larcm3

    @larcm3

    2 жыл бұрын

    Only a balding man like me would agree

  • @DutchGuyMike

    @DutchGuyMike

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@larcm3 I agree!

  • @michaelancona1120

    @michaelancona1120

    2 жыл бұрын

    I thought that was a hilarious sponsor plug!

  • @yt.personal.identification

    @yt.personal.identification

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@michaelancona1120 ...plug? Really?

  • @gleeart

    @gleeart

    2 жыл бұрын

    A bit rich coming from a weird guy with a smoking pipe on a stand: lecturing on male health but full marks for quirkiness

  • @mktimes70
    @mktimes706 ай бұрын

    Great representation guys 👍🏼 also the animation is amazing 👏🏼

  • @remaguire
    @remaguire Жыл бұрын

    My German wife's grandfather, a vet of WW1 AND WW2, didn't come home until 1949. I remember hearing that the last German POW didn't return home until 1955.

  • @derunbekanntesoeldner6498
    @derunbekanntesoeldner64982 жыл бұрын

    The cousin of my grandmother was a sniper at the eastern front. At the end of the war the rest of his company tried to walk back home from russia to germany - everybody by their own. So he throw away his rifle and walked more then 1500 Kilometers home. In Poland he got sick - a polish woman took care about him for 1 month. He successfully moved over the rhine until he find his way home. Close to his house he was catched up by an american patrol but could convinced them that he was a farmer. So they wanted him to show his work experience and he worked some hours at a field before he was allowed to move the last steps home. So he was lucky and never become a POW.

  • @figtree_video_archive

    @figtree_video_archive

    2 жыл бұрын

    Amazing story!

  • @WhiteAndProudRuss

    @WhiteAndProudRuss

    2 жыл бұрын

    lucky guy. My grandad lost his leg in Germany

  • @Gaphalor

    @Gaphalor

    2 жыл бұрын

    My grandgrandfather lost his life one day after the war ended. He was supposed to give up weapons to the allies with his squad. The squad never made it back, and the case never settled and its still a mysthery what happend to them. My grandpa who researched his whole life into this event suspects that they got revenge killed, but never got any closure. His body was never found, probably buried in a massgrave. Yea and my grandgrandmother then had to feed 2 children by herself in a destroyed country.. I cannot even imagine what life this must have been.

  • @user-mv6pk2gn3m

    @user-mv6pk2gn3m

    2 жыл бұрын

    Неужели люди одобряют историю про то, что нацист избежал наказания?

  • @sv_cheats1970

    @sv_cheats1970

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@Gaphalor if it makes you feel any better my grandfather also never found out what happened to his dad. He was wounded in a hospital, then the communists came and all track was lost of him.

  • @awesomehpt8938
    @awesomehpt89382 жыл бұрын

    If Steiner had attacked he would have turned things around.

  • @de7ail519

    @de7ail519

    2 жыл бұрын

    If only

  • @scottanno8861

    @scottanno8861

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's OK, he will attack any minute now

  • @noisy_trumpet2302

    @noisy_trumpet2302

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@scottanno8861 anyyyy minute now

  • @a.r.h.3518

    @a.r.h.3518

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes his 10k men will destroy all millions of Allies

  • @murkywateradminssions5219

    @murkywateradminssions5219

    2 жыл бұрын

    aanyyyyyyyyyyyyyy second now... *looks at pocket watch*

  • @Matty-kelly
    @Matty-kelly9 ай бұрын

    My great grandfather housed american troops who where in the uk at the time. One of them left behind a camera and during the war he got 2 german POWs. He took a few photos with them that i still have tucked away in a old memories box.

  • @SelfSelectionBoard
    @SelfSelectionBoard Жыл бұрын

    Can you please share how did u shoot yourself with awesome background... and Cigar on side. Please drop me a video link and Course link. Thank you so much

  • @honodle7219
    @honodle72192 жыл бұрын

    I'm reminded of what Hans Frank, the rather vicious Governer-General of occupied Poland, had to say: "A thousand years will pass and still this guilt of Germany will not have been erased." He was hanged for war crimes by the allies.

  • @zahgurim7838

    @zahgurim7838

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gotzvonberlichingen9740 Hehehehe, Bullshit.

  • @gimtomic5987

    @gimtomic5987

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gotzvonberlichingen9740 das stimmt

  • @juliosunga3530

    @juliosunga3530

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@gotzvonberlichingen9740 good

  • @alfredagain

    @alfredagain

    2 жыл бұрын

    Too bad for him it took his country's defeat to change him from a mass murderer to a philosopher.

  • @cybereus836

    @cybereus836

    2 жыл бұрын

    Sins of the father, are not the sins of the son. Anyone who truly believes the Germany of Today is responsible for the Germany of Yesterday is reprehensible.

  • @lordlucius1341
    @lordlucius13412 жыл бұрын

    America: oh we don’t need to follow the convention, I mean Germany doesn’t even exist right now! That feels like it creates a horrible precedent…

  • @NickGalaz

    @NickGalaz

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yeah, they were morons...

  • @julz3tt3

    @julz3tt3

    2 жыл бұрын

    They also treated their "enemies" better than the Black Allied soldiers. The racism of it all

  • @Lucky-nv2ph

    @Lucky-nv2ph

    2 жыл бұрын

    Ever heard of the term "enemy combatant"

  • @Alex-qq7dk

    @Alex-qq7dk

    2 жыл бұрын

    The were no longer „Enemy combatants“

  • @capncake8837

    @capncake8837

    2 жыл бұрын

    Gitmo detainees: Ya think?

  • @dejected107
    @dejected107 Жыл бұрын

    Management of victory in the aftermath of war is a interesting geopolitical topic and a real conundrum that nobody ever thinks about until they've won. There is clearly a right way and a wrong way to doing this that could either reap future rewards or cause ramifications down the line.

  • @m8x425
    @m8x425 Жыл бұрын

    15:40.... this reminds me of the annual Apple Blossom Festival in Wenatchee. A lot of out of towners swarm the Wenatchee Valley during the festival weekend. To detour some of this overflow and the unruly behavior by these out of towners, the local police departments will issue people tickets for the simplest violations. I contested a traffic violation and I had to go to court. While I waited my turn, I saw the judge dismiss almost all cases, except for the neglectful cases that put other people & children at risk.

  • @inkingmarch5671
    @inkingmarch56712 жыл бұрын

    Weird fact of post WWII: Dutch volunteers of Waffen SS were choose between death sentence or join the Dutch Army as the people of Dutch East Indies declared themselves as a independent nation of Indonesia- thus the Indonesian Revolution begin Not to mention the German Kriegsmarine members that previously stationed in Batavia (now Jakarta) decided to join the Indonesian side rather than surrendering to the incoming Allies

  • @ScootsMcDootson

    @ScootsMcDootson

    2 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if any chose death.

  • @seronymus

    @seronymus

    2 жыл бұрын

    I wonder if any Germans "went native" in the colonies and married and mixed with Indonesians etc.

  • @NickJourdan

    @NickJourdan

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@seronymus Can you provide more source, im interested in this story

  • @michaelk4896

    @michaelk4896

    2 жыл бұрын

    As a Dutch person whose grandfather served as part of the KNIL, this is very interesting and would like to know more about it. I know about remnants of the IJA stuck in Indonesia, but not about (ex) Kriegsmarine and SS. I'd appreciate if you could refer me to a source so I can learn more about this. A similar thing happened in France where ex-SS joined the FFL and were sent to Indochina, never knew this was the case in the Netherlands as well.

  • @EerieV23
    @EerieV232 жыл бұрын

    My Grandfather served in the Hungarian Army in WWII. He was captured during the battle of Budapest. Many other soldiers and officers had fled with their families before the city was surrounded. My Grandmother wanted to, but He refused to leave his men behind. Before he was captured, he sent his signet ring and a letter to my Grandmother. Spent the next 3 years in a Russian POW camp. He survived and learned an important skill, to speak English. This helped him when he fled in 1956.

  • @JohnnyDoh

    @JohnnyDoh

    Жыл бұрын

    My great-grandmother lived in Budapest🇭🇺 during the war and later moved to America

  • @yourlocaldutchball1189

    @yourlocaldutchball1189

    Жыл бұрын

    My Great Great Grandfather fought for Austria Hungary in World War One, sadly so long ago we really don’t have any of his records from when he was in service.

  • @solanjedere

    @solanjedere

    7 ай бұрын

    he learned english in a gulag? LOL

  • @TheResilient5689

    @TheResilient5689

    4 ай бұрын

    He fled the gulag or fled the Eastern Bloc as a whole?

  • @EerieV23

    @EerieV23

    3 ай бұрын

    @@TheResilient5689 he fled Hungary to Austria and then to the US with my mother and grandmother.

  • @newsjohnson
    @newsjohnson8 ай бұрын

    Wow, what a difficult issue this is to swallow. Great video as usual.

  • @gerhard6105
    @gerhard6105 Жыл бұрын

    The German father of a friend of me was in the Wehrmacht. After the war he was in the french Légion Étrangère. In France, Indochina and in Algeria. I saw the family photobook last Sunday. They had former US halftracks. He was honored with the Légion d'Honneur. The medal is in a nice glass cabinet with all his other medals, as well as his French as his German ww2 medals.

  • @ec8107
    @ec81072 жыл бұрын

    US and USSR: You're going to pay for this...unless you can design rockets.

  • @tellyboy17

    @tellyboy17

    2 жыл бұрын

    Or any weapon system really. Hugo Schmeisser ended up in the team that craeted the AK47 that looks suspiciously like the STG44...

  • @tellyboy17

    @tellyboy17

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tsarnickolai LOL so Schmeisser was on the team but did not contribute to the development. Guess he was just there to sample the coffee.

  • @tellyboy17

    @tellyboy17

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tsarnickolai That's your problem right there, you think Wikipedia is a legitimate source rather than a zoo where every Russian nationalist can edit every article to fit the Russian narrative and when it comes to AK47 the Russians will edit it to infinity to prevent it from pointing out t wasn't totally a Russian original but really a STG44 derivative with the developer of the STG44 literally on the team that developed it.

  • @tellyboy17

    @tellyboy17

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tsarnickolai You're a Russian troll? I did not know that but I guess it explains things.

  • @doctorrtd4326

    @doctorrtd4326

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@tellyboy17 the ak 47 and the stg 44 were way different

  • @sourlemon14
    @sourlemon142 жыл бұрын

    "Wow Kriez, you're very good at aiming and shooting accurately with that weapon!" "Thanks, I killed over 35 allies with this, I'm pretty good with handling this firearm. "wait a minute"

  • @Dickie72002
    @Dickie720028 ай бұрын

    I am very late to the party here. But this was so excellently done and the animation looks amazing! Keep it up ACH!

  • @uwillnevahno6837
    @uwillnevahno6837 Жыл бұрын

    This is a bit long but some might find it worth the read. It's a mix of war/post war stories I picked up from ~8 yrs of living in Germany. While stationed in Germany I heard stories from Germans about their Grandparents' lives, experiences and met at least 1 woman that participated on The Eastern Front. 1 German described his grandfather being forced to feed ammo to anti-aircraft batteries during the war as his friends died around him. A woman I dated described her grandfather as still having shrapnel in his arm from The Eastern Front, I never met him he'd already passed. He raised rabbits for food, worked for the highway department and his home had a mastodon fossil as a doorstop. The woman that was on The Eastern Front didn't really describe the war. She was retired by the time I met her. She was a funny woman, always joking and had a good outlook on life. She showed a few photos from her time in uniform. She worked radios for the Luftwaffe and did a lot of partying - I took this at face value though in hindsight I know there are photos of people having fun then went back to death camps and committed horrific crimes against humanity. Post war she married a German Finance Officer that liked to paint, I remember she kept his extensive library of artists' books. I think he sold some of his works though I'll keep the name private, I know the extended family had a lot of his paintings. She still had pictures of him in uniform, I checked there were no lightning bolts. She also had his dagger and a sabre of some sort, the latter seemed a WW1 relic but I can't say for certain.

  • @joesomebody3365
    @joesomebody33652 жыл бұрын

    There's always a lot of rhetoric about "revenge" following a war, but usually it's abandoned because it's just not practical.

  • @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623

    @chaptermasterpedrokantor1623

    2 жыл бұрын

    It's usually very practical. To the victor belong the spoils. Winners take everything, losers try to survive, that is how its always been. Rome was built on the spoils of war of conquering an empire and we still gawk and marvel at its ruins. They annihilated the Carthaginians and eradicated the culture of the Gauls. The aftermath of WW2 is unique because while a lot of German POW's were used as slave labor to rebuild the countries they destroyed, overall Germany was not punished that hard. Not like it was punished after WW1, or how it had punished France in 1871. Crushing reparations were not imposed and a hand of friendship was offered to let Germany come back in from the cold, just like what happened to France after Napoleon. We let it slide that many a warcriminal was let go unpunished, they let it slide that we used millions of POW's for forced labor. With the Germans not feeling as a vanquished and humiliated nation the cycle of defeat-> resentment -> renewed war was broken. Quite a rare feat actually. We should be thankful that it did.

  • @andresvalverde5182

    @andresvalverde5182

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@chaptermasterpedrokantor1623 You're talking about the West Germans under the Marshal plan. And what you're talking about are the unfair trials, unfair in meaning that high ranking SS and NSDAP members got off much more lightly than much lower ranking staff who barely had any weight nor remotely came close to the higher ranked's attrocities. Then you're completely forgetting how good the treaty of versailles even looked great in comparison to the Soviet occupation zone, where they literally deconstructed and transported the industry away to soviet territory as reparation. Also the soviets were far from appeasing with German population afterwards.

  • @charloteauxvalerian3875

    @charloteauxvalerian3875

    2 жыл бұрын

    Mmmmh, germans used quite many POW as slave labors in their factory during WWII and they didn't even waited that war was over. I think the german realized that they were in fact lucky to being still alive after what they did in the east or even the west. The feeling you describe, the resentment, in especially strong since the rise of nationalism and the 19th century. Before that, it's just feud between nolble family of different region raising ost of more or less professionnel soldier, but not conscript. As you said, Rome destroyed Carthage, but did the same with the social structure of the Gaul and even the jews in palestine.

  • @Novusod

    @Novusod

    2 жыл бұрын

    Should look up what happened at the Rhine Meadows (Rheinwiesenlager) PoW camp. Plenty of revenge happened there and many thousands died of mistreatment. The prisoners were corralled in an open field with no shelter or sanitation and were denied food and water. In a matter of weeks thousands were dead. When the Red Cross wanted to inspect the camp they were denied access by the Americans. The US reclassified captured German soldiers from PoW to "disarmed combatants" in order to dodge the protections of the Geneva convention. By all accounts it was a war crime but since the victors write the history books nobody really talks about it.

  • @TurbanCatMccoy

    @TurbanCatMccoy

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@chaptermasterpedrokantor1623 Revenge is not practical because it starts more wars and conflict, unless you kill a whole population. Even then, that sets a bad precedence. They didn't hang Napoleon because it would have martyred him and told the world it's okay to execute leaders. We've learnt, especially in the modern era, that punishing a whole group of people in such a way only leads to more issues down the line. In ancient and barbaric times, it might have been practical, but we're way past that. Even the Nazis feared the precedence they set. So really, it's not good for anyone.

  • @ihavetowait90daystochangem67
    @ihavetowait90daystochangem672 жыл бұрын

    Guys I think my Granpa was a WW2 electrician, he has 2 lightning bolts on his helmet

  • @nikolayperepelitsa4058

    @nikolayperepelitsa4058

    2 жыл бұрын

    Classic

  • @John.McMillan

    @John.McMillan

    2 жыл бұрын

    He must have been the guy running wires. Just dont suddenly raise your right hand, you might give him a startle.

  • @WashingtonArchive

    @WashingtonArchive

    2 жыл бұрын

    *S̶c̶h̶u̶t̶z̶s̶t̶a̶f̶f̶e̶l̶*

  • @Rickyt1204
    @Rickyt12049 ай бұрын

    My German grandparents that came from Germany to the USA after World War 2… Oma- German slang word for grandma Opa- German slang word for grandpa My family and I call them Oma and Opa - Botho Czarra (1926-1995) My Opa died 5 years before I was born (lung cancer from smoking cigarettes). He was in the Hitler Youth and then drafted into the Wehrmacht as low ranked infantry in his mid teens. My Opa barely and never wanted to talk about the war because what he witnessed was so horrendous. My Oma has told me many stories from him though… He watched his own comrades die while crying for help when getting run over by tanks. He would walk over dead bodies at the end of battles. Also one night, him and his comrade switched positions. The next morning that same comrade came out dead. Just think that my family and I wouldn’t even be here if that never happened. He’s lucky that he survived. He may have had PTSD but was never diagnosed with it. He said the things he saw made him not want to believe in God anymore. My Opa got wounded by shrapnel was out until the end of the war. He had scars on his face and body for the rest of his life. Had many strokes too and could barely talk near the end of his life. - Kathe Czarra (maiden name: Fischer). Born on March 29, 1937. My Oma grew up in Nazi Germany as well and was only 8 when the war ended in 1945. She has many memories too like the Soviet Army coming in and taking over. Sometimes Red Army soldiers sleeping in their house because they had no other place to stay. Singing with schoolmates in front of Nazi Germany’s flag to pledge allegiance to the Nazi Regime. She sometimes had to hunker down on the side of the road walking to and from school because Soviet war planes would come and bomb the road. After the war, she then lived in East Germany and moved to West Germany before the Berlin Wall and restrictions to enter/leave sectors were made. - After the war, my grandparents met and moved to the USA together.

  • @ShayPatrickCormacTHEHUNTER
    @ShayPatrickCormacTHEHUNTER Жыл бұрын

    After causing so much horror, they just get off like nothing happened. Justice is an illusion in this world.

  • @LuxiBelle
    @LuxiBelle2 жыл бұрын

    USA: "Why did you take all the war criminals." Argentina: "Hey, you took all the scientists"

  • @techpriest1852

    @techpriest1852

    2 жыл бұрын

    Stupid profile picture, opinion invalid

  • @mam0lechinookclan607

    @mam0lechinookclan607

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@techpriest1852 I think it was pretty funny

  • @Legion617

    @Legion617

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@mam0lechinookclan607 in fact it was hilarious lmao

  • @vadaszsch0360

    @vadaszsch0360

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@techpriest1852 name checks out

  • @mill2712

    @mill2712

    2 жыл бұрын

    USSR: 👀

  • @drewwadsworth3285
    @drewwadsworth32852 жыл бұрын

    The following happened during the war: My mom worked at a dairy, that was on a rail line in Syracuse NY. She used to talk about the bringing milk to the German POWs when their trains would stop at the dairy.

  • @georgearrivals

    @georgearrivals

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s insane. My moms is from DeWitt, NY, right outside of Syracuse. Her neighbor growing up was a German POW, last name Kroll, who ended up staying in the US. Small world.

  • @525Lines
    @525Lines Жыл бұрын

    My dad went to Camp Wolters in WW2 and, in a letter home from early 1944, reported that there were German POWs nearby and fellow recruits walking by their fence would level their rifles at them to try to terrify them. I hope that's as bad as it got but in the interest of full disclosure, there it is.

  • @lilahkole313
    @lilahkole3133 ай бұрын

    The ad placement gets me everytime 💀💀💀

  • @keepinitkawaii
    @keepinitkawaii2 жыл бұрын

    Everyone is talking about stories of their grandparents but my grandfather didn't say a whole lot about the war and we honestly didn't ask much about it. He told us stories about some of the friends he made and how humiliating it was when his American counterparts would treat the german pows better than their black american soldiers. He also made a friend with a german pow and had always wondered what happened to him after he was allowed to go back home. He died in 2016 just 3 days before turning 100 and now i wish i had asked him more questions about what he experienced

  • @lmupzz6864

    @lmupzz6864

    2 жыл бұрын

    That’s sad black Americans went through so much they freed the Jews but we still weren’t free the SHOULDVE refused to fight

  • @joshjonson2368

    @joshjonson2368

    2 жыл бұрын

    They would always put their European kin above what they see as little more than a 'historical mistake'.

  • @tomfrazier1103

    @tomfrazier1103

    2 жыл бұрын

    There's a whole lot of history of black America connected to the wars of the 20th Century. A few black Americans remained in France after WWI, as they felt better treatment there than in the States. The grotesqueries of the second War made the maintenance of Jim Crow untenable in the States. Still some American blood flowed in it's dissolution.

  • @WatchmyPlaylist.

    @WatchmyPlaylist.

    2 жыл бұрын

    History is a written by the Victor's.

  • @davidlarson9975

    @davidlarson9975

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lmupzz6864 Sure, a black man from the South refusing to serve in 1942. Are you serious?

  • @bookerbrickman3459
    @bookerbrickman34592 жыл бұрын

    From what I know of him, my great grandfather fought to take France, then spend some time in the east before fighting in north Africa. There he was captured by the USA and take as a POW to Texas to work on a farm. There he got to loving America, his son (sick of getting shot at by both sides, yes the allies killed civilians too) skipped the draft to Switzerland got married and found work in America in the 50s. This man went on to play a critical roll in stopping the Cuban missile crisis. Incredible man with many emotional scars.

  • @Somsal

    @Somsal

    2 жыл бұрын

    So the son being ur dad was sick of getting shot on both sides? Which implies that he was in the war? Which i thought we were talking about nazi granpa ? Im just looking for clarity here. Im vested now. Especially after this. 😂

  • @bookerbrickman3459

    @bookerbrickman3459

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Somsal great grandfather was in the war. His son was bombed while living in Berlin as a boy before moving out to a relatives farm when news of his father being missing came. There allied planes shot at there wagons for some reason. Weather target practices or thinking they were a munitions carts. My grandfather remembers the allied occupation as just the changing of guys with guns. Inperson the militaries acted the same. Except the allies gave candy. And there family was starving, they type of starving where the grandparent have to deside which kid to feed that week. Very sad time that still begins him to tears. Something nice he once said was that there was never any hate for the allies. He very much disliked some of the Moroccan soldier though because of their brutally and sick pleasure in hurting innocents. Idk what happened because he never elaborated.

  • @howardbaxter2514
    @howardbaxter2514 Жыл бұрын

    This video reminds me of Sabaton’s song Hearts of Iron. It describes how soldiers fighting in Berlin tried their damnedest to get themselves and civilians out to the west, just so they would not get captured by the Soviets. Really exemplifies the fear those soldiers must have felt when it came to Soviet internment.

  • @edwardurbanec3093
    @edwardurbanec3093 Жыл бұрын

    Well done! Throughly enjoyed!