War Jewish Female Prisoners: The Helmbrechts Death March (WW2 1945) (1 Viewer)

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DeathHand

Let It All Bleed Out
May 11, 1945
Volary, Czechoslovakia


The bodies of Jewish women exhumed from a mass grave in Volary. The victims died at the end of a death march from Helmbrechts, a sub-camp of Flossenbuerg.

The Helmbrechts death march was one of hundreds of forced marches that occurred near the end of the war. As Allied troops closed in on Germany from all sides, the prisoners in concentration camps and slave labor commandos were evacuated to camps further from enemy lines. Although some were evacuated by train, many prisoners were sent on foot distances of hundreds of miles. The Helmsbrechts death march began in Gruenberg, a sub-camp of Gross Rosen in Lower Silesia. The prisoners of Gruenberg, consisting of 900 Jewish women of mixed nationality, were evacuated along with 900 other female prisoners from another Gross Rosen sub-camp known as Puerschkau (or Schlesiersee). The group was divided into two smaller groups accompanied by SS men and women, with approximately 1,100 prisoners sent in the direction of the Flossenbuerg concentration camp. The remainder of the group was sent to Bergen-Belsen. On January 29, 1945, the groups left Gruenberg, unaware of the long journey ahead of them.

Although each of the prisoners had been given a blanket before their departure, few had proper shoes, and some were even barefoot or only had cloth wrapped around their feet. They were forced to march from 9-18 miles a day, receiving only a few potatoes or a small bowl of soup once a day for nourishment. They occasionally went without food for one or two days. At night, the women slept in unheated barns or out in the open when shelter could not be procured. In these conditions, several prisoners died each day from frostbite, starvation, and fatigue.

In addition, SS guards killed many prisoners for attempting to escape or lagging behind. Amalie Reichmann (later Mary Robinson), a survivor of the march, recalled that on one occasion when several women tried to escape, the SS lined up all the women on the march and as punishment shot every tenth one. After several weeks of marching, the group reached Dresden just as it was fire-bombed by the Allied planes on February 13-14, 1945. Afterwards, many survivors remembered the fire, destruction, and death as they marched through the city. Finally, on March 6, after five weeks of marching, the first group reached Helmbrechts, a sub-camp of Flossenbuerg, 300 km. from Gruenberg.

Of the original 1,100 prisoners who set out on the death march, only 321 arrived at Helmbrechts. 230 had been left at other camps along the way; a few had escaped; and the remaining 150-250 had died.

1. I don't think that this photo was of the Helmbrechts death march, but was taken about the same time of another death march.
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2. German civilians work to exhume the bodies of the women buried here.
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3.
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4.
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6.
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Upon their arrival in Helmbrechts, the prisoners' clothing was taken away to be deloused, after which they were given temporary clothing and put into separate barracks. Because they were too weak to work, they were given only minimal food and shelter. During their five week stay at Helmbrechts, an additional 40 women died. On April 13, the remaining women were given their clothing back and were sent on a second death march, along with the rest of the 590 prisoners from Helmbrechts.

The group headed southeast, accompanied by 22 SS men and 25 SS women, who brought along a horse-drawn wagon to transport the sick, and later, the dead. On the fifth day, the march reached Zwodau, 80 km. from Helmbrechts. After a day of rest at Zwodau, another women's sub-camp of Flossenbuerg, all the non-Jewish prisoners (primarily those who had been in Helmbrechts prior to the arrival of the death march from Gruenberg) were left behind, while the Jewish prisoners, along with 50 Jewish prisoners from Zwodau, continued on the march.

The remaining 625 prisoners were marched in the direction of Prachatitz, a small town just east of the Czechoslovakian border, where they were to be abandoned. Along the way, 10-12 women died daily of fatigue and starvation, in addition to the 4-8 who were shot or beaten to death by the SS each day, often for no reason. On the 21st day the group reached Volary (Wallern), after having marched 200-300 km. since leaving Helmbrechts, with fewer than half of the prisoners still alive. After the death march reached Volary, there is confusion as to exactly what happened, where the prisoners were sent, and how many more were killed.

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According to Alois Doerr, the top-ranking SS officer on the death march from Helmbrechts, the prisoners were split into three groups upon arriving in Volary. His intention was to march all the prisoners to Prachatitz, yet some were too weak to continue the march. Those still able to walk were sent the following day, while the rest were to be transported by truck. There was only one truck available, in which a small group was loaded and sent after the marching group. The rest of the sick waited in a building adjacent to a factory to be sent on a second trip. The group on foot was abandoned just after Prachatitz, where locals cared for them.

The truck transport, however, was strafed by American planes, killing one SS woman and wounding two others. Some of the prisoners fled, but those not able to get away were brought to a barn nearby. The following day three SS men took those in the barn to the woods and shot 14 of them, letting three go free. The same day 12 other prisoners were shot by SS men in Volary.

It is suspected that both incidents were in retaliation for the death of the SS woman the previous day. Finally, on May 6, the 2nd Regiment of the 5th Division, U.S. 3rd Army entered Volary and liberated the women from the factory building. There they found 118-133 prisoners covered in lice lying on the floor. They had no potable water and only a wooden box in the corner as a toilet. The women were suffering from starvation, malnutrition, tuberculosis, typhus, heart trouble, blistered and gangrenous feet, festered wounds, diarrhea, and frostbite.

Upon seeing the poor condition of the women, American soldiers set up a hospital for them in Volary, where they were able to recuperate for the next few months. On May 11, the mass graves near Volary were discovered, and Germans were forced to exhume them in order to give the victims proper burial. Of the 83-89 bodies exhumed, many of them showed evidence of having been murdered.

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15. An American medic talks to German women.
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16. German civilians helping and attending the reburial of the women.
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Next: The Survirors.

May 8, 1945
Volary, Czechoslovakia


Emaciated female Jewish survivors of a death march lie in an American military field hospital in Volary, Czechoslovakia.

The Helmbrechts death march was one of hundreds of forced marches that occurred near the end of the war. As Allied troops closed in on Germany from all sides, the prisoners in concentration camps and slave labor commandos were evacuated to camps further from enemy lines.

Although some were evacuated by train, many prisoners were sent on foot distances of hundreds of miles. The Helmsbrechts death march began in Gruenberg, a sub-camp of Gross Rosen in Lower Silesia. The prisoners of Gruenberg, consisting of 900 Jewish women of mixed nationality, were evacuated along with 900 other female prisoners from another Gross Rosen sub-camp known as Puerschkau (or Schlesiersee).

1. I'm presuming that they were asked to show parts of their bodies to demonstrate how emaciated they were.
1.jpg


2.
2.jpg


3.
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4.
4.jpg


The group was divided into two smaller groups accompanied by SS men and women, with approximately 1,100 prisoners sent in the direction of the Flossenbuerg concentration camp. The remainder of the group was sent to Bergen-Belsen. On January 29, 1945, the groups left Gruenberg, unaware of the long journey ahead of them.

Although each of the prisoners had been given a blanket before their departure, few had proper shoes, and some were even barefoot or only had cloth wrapped around their feet. They were forced to march from 9-18 miles a day, receiving only a few potatoes or a small bowl of soup once a day for nourishment. They occasionally went without food for one or two days.

At night, the women slept in unheated barns or out in the open when shelter could not be procured. In these conditions, several prisoners died each day from frostbite, starvation, and fatigue. In addition, SS guards killed many prisoners for attempting to escape or lagging behind.

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Amalie Reichmann (later Mary Robinson), a survivor of the march, recalled that on one occasion when several women tried to escape, the SS lined up all the women on the march and as punishment shot every tenth one.

Of the original 1,100 prisoners who set out on the death march, only 321 arrived at Helmbrechts. 230 had been left at other camps along the way; a few had escaped; and the remaining 150-250 had died.

Source

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The End.
 
Last edited:

wiggins

Forum Veteran
May 11, 1945
Volary, Czechoslovakia


The bodies of Jewish women exhumed from a mass grave in Volary. The victims died at the end of a death march from Helmbrechts, a sub-camp of Flossenbuerg.

The Helmbrechts death march was one of hundreds of forced marches that occurred near the end of the war. As Allied troops closed in on Germany from all sides, the prisoners in concentration camps and slave labor commandos were evacuated to camps further from enemy lines. Although some were evacuated by train, many prisoners were sent on foot distances of hundreds of miles. The Helmsbrechts death march began in Gruenberg, a sub-camp of Gross Rosen in Lower Silesia. The prisoners of Gruenberg, consisting of 900 Jewish women of mixed nationality, were evacuated along with 900 other female prisoners from another Gross Rosen sub-camp known as Puerschkau (or Schlesiersee). The group was divided into two smaller groups accompanied by SS men and women, with approximately 1,100 prisoners sent in the direction of the Flossenbuerg concentration camp. The remainder of the group was sent to Bergen-Belsen. On January 29, 1945, the groups left Gruenberg, unaware of the long journey ahead of them.

Although each of the prisoners had been given a blanket before their departure, few had proper shoes, and some were even barefoot or only had cloth wrapped around their feet. They were forced to march from 9-18 miles a day, receiving only a few potatoes or a small bowl of soup once a day for nourishment. They occasionally went without food for one or two days. At night, the women slept in unheated barns or out in the open when shelter could not be procured. In these conditions, several prisoners died each day from frostbite, starvation, and fatigue.

In addition, SS guards killed many prisoners for attempting to escape or lagging behind. Amalie Reichmann (later Mary Robinson), a survivor of the march, recalled that on one occasion when several women tried to escape, the SS lined up all the women on the march and as punishment shot every tenth one. After several weeks of marching, the group reached Dresden just as it was fire-bombed by the Allied planes on February 13-14, 1945. Afterwards, many survivors remembered the fire, destruction, and death as they marched through the city. Finally, on March 6, after five weeks of marching, the first group reached Helmbrechts, a sub-camp of Flossenbuerg, 300 km. from Gruenberg.

Of the original 1,100 prisoners who set out on the death march, only 321 arrived at Helmbrechts. 230 had been left at other camps along the way; a few had escaped; and the remaining 150-250 had died.

1. I don't think that this photo was of the Helmbrechts death march, but was taken about the same time of another death march.
View attachment 653542

2. German civilians work to exhume the bodies of the women buried here.
View attachment 653544

3.
View attachment 653545

4.
View attachment 653546

5.
View attachment 653547

6.
View attachment 653548

Upon their arrival in Helmbrechts, the prisoners' clothing was taken away to be deloused, after which they were given temporary clothing and put into separate barracks. Because they were too weak to work, they were given only minimal food and shelter. During their five week stay at Helmbrechts, an additional 40 women died. On April 13, the remaining women were given their clothing back and were sent on a second death march, along with the rest of the 590 prisoners from Helmbrechts.

The group headed southeast, accompanied by 22 SS men and 25 SS women, who brought along a horse-drawn wagon to transport the sick, and later, the dead. On the fifth day, the march reached Zwodau, 80 km. from Helmbrechts. After a day of rest at Zwodau, another women's sub-camp of Flossenbuerg, all the non-Jewish prisoners (primarily those who had been in Helmbrechts prior to the arrival of the death march from Gruenberg) were left behind, while the Jewish prisoners, along with 50 Jewish prisoners from Zwodau, continued on the march.

The remaining 625 prisoners were marched in the direction of Prachatitz, a small town just east of the Czechoslovakian border, where they were to be abandoned. Along the way, 10-12 women died daily of fatigue and starvation, in addition to the 4-8 who were shot or beaten to death by the SS each day, often for no reason. On the 21st day the group reached Volary (Wallern), after having marched 200-300 km. since leaving Helmbrechts, with fewer than half of the prisoners still alive. After the death march reached Volary, there is confusion as to exactly what happened, where the prisoners were sent, and how many more were killed.

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View attachment 653550

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View attachment 653551

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View attachment 653552

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View attachment 653554

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View attachment 653555

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According to Alois Doerr, the top-ranking SS officer on the death march from Helmbrechts, the prisoners were split into three groups upon arriving in Volary. His intention was to march all the prisoners to Prachatitz, yet some were too weak to continue the march. Those still able to walk were sent the following day, while the rest were to be transported by truck. There was only one truck available, in which a small group was loaded and sent after the marching group. The rest of the sick waited in a building adjacent to a factory to be sent on a second trip. The group on foot was abandoned just after Prachatitz, where locals cared for them.

The truck transport, however, was strafed by American planes, killing one SS woman and wounding two others. Some of the prisoners fled, but those not able to get away were brought to a barn nearby. The following day three SS men took those in the barn to the woods and shot 14 of them, letting three go free. The same day 12 other prisoners were shot by SS men in Volary.

It is suspected that both incidents were in retaliation for the death of the SS woman the previous day. Finally, on May 6, the 2nd Regiment of the 5th Division, U.S. 3rd Army entered Volary and liberated the women from the factory building. There they found 118-133 prisoners covered in lice lying on the floor. They had no potable water and only a wooden box in the corner as a toilet. The women were suffering from starvation, malnutrition, tuberculosis, typhus, heart trouble, blistered and gangrenous feet, festered wounds, diarrhea, and frostbite.

Upon seeing the poor condition of the women, American soldiers set up a hospital for them in Volary, where they were able to recuperate for the next few months. On May 11, the mass graves near Volary were discovered, and Germans were forced to exhume them in order to give the victims proper burial. Of the 83-89 bodies exhumed, many of them showed evidence of having been murdered.

13.
View attachment 653557

14.
View attachment 653558

15. An American medic talks to German women.
View attachment 653559

16. German civilians helping and attending the reburial of the women.
View attachment 653560

Next: The Survirors.

May 8, 1945
Volary, Czechoslovakia


Emaciated female Jewish survivors of a death march lie in an American military field hospital in Volary, Czechoslovakia.

The Helmbrechts death march was one of hundreds of forced marches that occurred near the end of the war. As Allied troops closed in on Germany from all sides, the prisoners in concentration camps and slave labor commandos were evacuated to camps further from enemy lines.

Although some were evacuated by train, many prisoners were sent on foot distances of hundreds of miles. The Helmsbrechts death march began in Gruenberg, a sub-camp of Gross Rosen in Lower Silesia. The prisoners of Gruenberg, consisting of 900 Jewish women of mixed nationality, were evacuated along with 900 other female prisoners from another Gross Rosen sub-camp known as Puerschkau (or Schlesiersee).

1. I'm presuming that they were asked to show parts of their bodies to demonstrate how emaciated they were.
View attachment 653561

2.
View attachment 653562

3.
View attachment 653563

4.
View attachment 653564

The group was divided into two smaller groups accompanied by SS men and women, with approximately 1,100 prisoners sent in the direction of the Flossenbuerg concentration camp. The remainder of the group was sent to Bergen-Belsen. On January 29, 1945, the groups left Gruenberg, unaware of the long journey ahead of them.

Although each of the prisoners had been given a blanket before their departure, few had proper shoes, and some were even barefoot or only had cloth wrapped around their feet. They were forced to march from 9-18 miles a day, receiving only a few potatoes or a small bowl of soup once a day for nourishment. They occasionally went without food for one or two days.

At night, the women slept in unheated barns or out in the open when shelter could not be procured. In these conditions, several prisoners died each day from frostbite, starvation, and fatigue. In addition, SS guards killed many prisoners for attempting to escape or lagging behind.

5.
View attachment 653565

6.
View attachment 653566

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View attachment 653567

8.
View attachment 653568

Amalie Reichmann (later Mary Robinson), a survivor of the march, recalled that on one occasion when several women tried to escape, the SS lined up all the women on the march and as punishment shot every tenth one.

Of the original 1,100 prisoners who set out on the death march, only 321 arrived at Helmbrechts. 230 had been left at other camps along the way; a few had escaped; and the remaining 150-250 had died.

Source

9.
View attachment 653569

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View attachment 653570

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View attachment 653572


The End.
Number 9 is a hottie.

but what is this? Some kind of skinny girl porn?

I bet that 'doctor' was scoring a lot of sex for cigarettes...

I know I would. In fact I think they hire out the doctors gear to normal GI's who want sex with skinny chicks...
 

yotgguitar

"Hiro" aka: "Dolly"... the homo britfag dicksucker
May 11, 1945
Volary, Czechoslovakia


The bodies of Jewish women exhumed from a mass grave in Volary. The victims died at the end of a death march from Helmbrechts, a sub-camp of Flossenbuerg.

The Helmbrechts death march was one of hundreds of forced marches that occurred near the end of the war. As Allied troops closed in on Germany from all sides, the prisoners in concentration camps and slave labor commandos were evacuated to camps further from enemy lines. Although some were evacuated by train, many prisoners were sent on foot distances of hundreds of miles. The Helmsbrechts death march began in Gruenberg, a sub-camp of Gross Rosen in Lower Silesia. The prisoners of Gruenberg, consisting of 900 Jewish women of mixed nationality, were evacuated along with 900 other female prisoners from another Gross Rosen sub-camp known as Puerschkau (or Schlesiersee). The group was divided into two smaller groups accompanied by SS men and women, with approximately 1,100 prisoners sent in the direction of the Flossenbuerg concentration camp. The remainder of the group was sent to Bergen-Belsen. On January 29, 1945, the groups left Gruenberg, unaware of the long journey ahead of them.

Although each of the prisoners had been given a blanket before their departure, few had proper shoes, and some were even barefoot or only had cloth wrapped around their feet. They were forced to march from 9-18 miles a day, receiving only a few potatoes or a small bowl of soup once a day for nourishment. They occasionally went without food for one or two days. At night, the women slept in unheated barns or out in the open when shelter could not be procured. In these conditions, several prisoners died each day from frostbite, starvation, and fatigue.

In addition, SS guards killed many prisoners for attempting to escape or lagging behind. Amalie Reichmann (later Mary Robinson), a survivor of the march, recalled that on one occasion when several women tried to escape, the SS lined up all the women on the march and as punishment shot every tenth one. After several weeks of marching, the group reached Dresden just as it was fire-bombed by the Allied planes on February 13-14, 1945. Afterwards, many survivors remembered the fire, destruction, and death as they marched through the city. Finally, on March 6, after five weeks of marching, the first group reached Helmbrechts, a sub-camp of Flossenbuerg, 300 km. from Gruenberg.

Of the original 1,100 prisoners who set out on the death march, only 321 arrived at Helmbrechts. 230 had been left at other camps along the way; a few had escaped; and the remaining 150-250 had died.

1. I don't think that this photo was of the Helmbrechts death march, but was taken about the same time of another death march.
View attachment 653542

2. German civilians work to exhume the bodies of the women buried here.
View attachment 653544

3.
View attachment 653545

4.
View attachment 653546

5.
View attachment 653547

6.
View attachment 653548

Upon their arrival in Helmbrechts, the prisoners' clothing was taken away to be deloused, after which they were given temporary clothing and put into separate barracks. Because they were too weak to work, they were given only minimal food and shelter. During their five week stay at Helmbrechts, an additional 40 women died. On April 13, the remaining women were given their clothing back and were sent on a second death march, along with the rest of the 590 prisoners from Helmbrechts.

The group headed southeast, accompanied by 22 SS men and 25 SS women, who brought along a horse-drawn wagon to transport the sick, and later, the dead. On the fifth day, the march reached Zwodau, 80 km. from Helmbrechts. After a day of rest at Zwodau, another women's sub-camp of Flossenbuerg, all the non-Jewish prisoners (primarily those who had been in Helmbrechts prior to the arrival of the death march from Gruenberg) were left behind, while the Jewish prisoners, along with 50 Jewish prisoners from Zwodau, continued on the march.

The remaining 625 prisoners were marched in the direction of Prachatitz, a small town just east of the Czechoslovakian border, where they were to be abandoned. Along the way, 10-12 women died daily of fatigue and starvation, in addition to the 4-8 who were shot or beaten to death by the SS each day, often for no reason. On the 21st day the group reached Volary (Wallern), after having marched 200-300 km. since leaving Helmbrechts, with fewer than half of the prisoners still alive. After the death march reached Volary, there is confusion as to exactly what happened, where the prisoners were sent, and how many more were killed.

7.
View attachment 653550

8.
View attachment 653551

9.
View attachment 653552

10.
View attachment 653554

11.
View attachment 653555

12.
View attachment 653556


According to Alois Doerr, the top-ranking SS officer on the death march from Helmbrechts, the prisoners were split into three groups upon arriving in Volary. His intention was to march all the prisoners to Prachatitz, yet some were too weak to continue the march. Those still able to walk were sent the following day, while the rest were to be transported by truck. There was only one truck available, in which a small group was loaded and sent after the marching group. The rest of the sick waited in a building adjacent to a factory to be sent on a second trip. The group on foot was abandoned just after Prachatitz, where locals cared for them.

The truck transport, however, was strafed by American planes, killing one SS woman and wounding two others. Some of the prisoners fled, but those not able to get away were brought to a barn nearby. The following day three SS men took those in the barn to the woods and shot 14 of them, letting three go free. The same day 12 other prisoners were shot by SS men in Volary.

It is suspected that both incidents were in retaliation for the death of the SS woman the previous day. Finally, on May 6, the 2nd Regiment of the 5th Division, U.S. 3rd Army entered Volary and liberated the women from the factory building. There they found 118-133 prisoners covered in lice lying on the floor. They had no potable water and only a wooden box in the corner as a toilet. The women were suffering from starvation, malnutrition, tuberculosis, typhus, heart trouble, blistered and gangrenous feet, festered wounds, diarrhea, and frostbite.

Upon seeing the poor condition of the women, American soldiers set up a hospital for them in Volary, where they were able to recuperate for the next few months. On May 11, the mass graves near Volary were discovered, and Germans were forced to exhume them in order to give the victims proper burial. Of the 83-89 bodies exhumed, many of them showed evidence of having been murdered.

13.
View attachment 653557

14.
View attachment 653558

15. An American medic talks to German women.
View attachment 653559

16. German civilians helping and attending the reburial of the women.
View attachment 653560

Next: The Survirors.

May 8, 1945
Volary, Czechoslovakia


Emaciated female Jewish survivors of a death march lie in an American military field hospital in Volary, Czechoslovakia.

The Helmbrechts death march was one of hundreds of forced marches that occurred near the end of the war. As Allied troops closed in on Germany from all sides, the prisoners in concentration camps and slave labor commandos were evacuated to camps further from enemy lines.

Although some were evacuated by train, many prisoners were sent on foot distances of hundreds of miles. The Helmsbrechts death march began in Gruenberg, a sub-camp of Gross Rosen in Lower Silesia. The prisoners of Gruenberg, consisting of 900 Jewish women of mixed nationality, were evacuated along with 900 other female prisoners from another Gross Rosen sub-camp known as Puerschkau (or Schlesiersee).

1. I'm presuming that they were asked to show parts of their bodies to demonstrate how emaciated they were.
View attachment 653561

2.
View attachment 653562

3.
View attachment 653563

4.
View attachment 653564

The group was divided into two smaller groups accompanied by SS men and women, with approximately 1,100 prisoners sent in the direction of the Flossenbuerg concentration camp. The remainder of the group was sent to Bergen-Belsen. On January 29, 1945, the groups left Gruenberg, unaware of the long journey ahead of them.

Although each of the prisoners had been given a blanket before their departure, few had proper shoes, and some were even barefoot or only had cloth wrapped around their feet. They were forced to march from 9-18 miles a day, receiving only a few potatoes or a small bowl of soup once a day for nourishment. They occasionally went without food for one or two days.

At night, the women slept in unheated barns or out in the open when shelter could not be procured. In these conditions, several prisoners died each day from frostbite, starvation, and fatigue. In addition, SS guards killed many prisoners for attempting to escape or lagging behind.

5.
View attachment 653565

6.
View attachment 653566

7.
View attachment 653567

8.
View attachment 653568

Amalie Reichmann (later Mary Robinson), a survivor of the march, recalled that on one occasion when several women tried to escape, the SS lined up all the women on the march and as punishment shot every tenth one.

Of the original 1,100 prisoners who set out on the death march, only 321 arrived at Helmbrechts. 230 had been left at other camps along the way; a few had escaped; and the remaining 150-250 had died.

Source

9.
View attachment 653569

10.
View attachment 653570

11.
View attachment 653571

12.
View attachment 653572


The End.
War is a bitch.... bad things happen in wars.....war criminals end up dying.... give me a fuckin break with these poor persecuted "joos".....
If a race of people invade a country and then proceed to start taking advantage of that country, at the detriment of its native population, it WILL be more damaging than any conventional war..... it will have far reaching negative effects on the native peoples history and future...
NO FUCKS GIVEN TO A WHOLE RACE OF "MONEY LENDERS"....
 

DeathHand

Let It All Bleed Out
War is a bitch.... bad things happen in wars.....war criminals end up dying.... give me a fuckin break with these poor persecuted "joos".....
If a race of people invade a country and then proceed to start taking advantage of that country, at the detriment of its native population, it WILL be more damaging than any conventional war..... it will have far reaching negative effects on the native peoples history and future...
NO FUCKS GIVEN TO A WHOLE RACE OF "MONEY LENDERS"....
Thanks, but I figured out how war works a long time ago. No painting them as "poor persecuted joos": it's simply a set of gore images with a factual story to go along with them for folks to get some background info, which most appreciate. Your response is probably of the type that eventually lead to this site being DOS/Ping attacked over the UA/RU war and what was being posted here; all of which has now been deleted. Your type of response is also absolutely unnecessary: no one gives a fuck about your opinions which do nothing to reflect an intelligent comment on the subject matter. Forums are a bith - suck it up. Don't like a thread, move along.
 

Smooby

Retard Extraordinaire
Thanks, but I figured out how war works a long time ago. No painting them as "poor persecuted joos": it's simply a set of gore images with a factual story to go along with them for folks to get some background info, which most appreciate. Your response is probably of the type that eventually lead to this site being DOS/Ping attacked over the UA/RU war and what was being posted here; all of which has now been deleted. Your type of response is also absolutely unnecessary: no one gives a fuck about your opinions which do nothing to reflect an intelligent comment on the subject matter. Forums are a bith - suck it up. Don't like a thread, move along.
I liked his opinion. In fact that's the main reason I come here, because you can speak freely, a rare thing these days.
 

wiggins

Forum Veteran
Thanks, but I figured out how war works a long time ago. No painting them as "poor persecuted joos": it's simply a set of gore images with a factual story to go along with them for folks to get some background info, which most appreciate. Your response is probably of the type that eventually lead to this site being DOS/Ping attacked over the UA/RU war and what was being posted here; all of which has now been deleted. Your type of response is also absolutely unnecessary: no one gives a fuck about your opinions which do nothing to reflect an intelligent comment on the subject matter. Forums are a bith - suck it up. Don't like a thread, move along.
Well, my comment was kind of up in his league so I'm guilty too...

but on a serious note, I've been reading ww2 history for most of my life and am highly aware of the nature of war as are you.

To say the Jews were guilty by referencing their immigration to other countries is to say the Sudaten Germans should have been put through the ovens too.

Which is to say the US citizens of New Mexico, Texas and a bit of California deserve the same.

I've been reading the collective works of Primo Levi and highly recommend him. very eloquent writer.

And thanks for your post. did you hear that Russia has been banned from the services at Auschwitz ?
 

DeathHand

Let It All Bleed Out
I liked his opinion. In fact that's the main reason I come here, because you can speak freely, a rare thing these days.
That you can, but when you put a lot of work into posting a thread, without making any political statements for either side, and then someone basically ignores the thread just to have there strong political say once they read the subject matter as though the entire thread is bullshit then it makes the post senseless. Free speech doesn't mean that one has to say it - just because they feel so justified in doing it like a mighty right.

Quote from the Admin's message at the top of every page: "Debate is encouraged in the comments from all sides but trolls derailing topics or members starting shit with each other will be removed. Take the bullshit to FLH."

Folks who respond like that do not debate: they are right, you are wrong and yada yada power trip. But, even though I've been working Gore sites since 2004 when Ogrish was still in it's infancy (or teen years) and I've seen it all - subtle trolls tend to wreck otherwise good threads with their opinions, which are like assholes - everyone had one.

Thread's getting derailed already...and is making me regret that work I did to put it together. Maybe we can get back to the subject of the thread at face value, without the rhetoric? It's gore, not a political statement :).
 
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yotgguitar

"Hiro" aka: "Dolly"... the homo britfag dicksucker
Thanks, but I figured out how war works a long time ago. No painting them as "poor persecuted joos": it's simply a set of gore images with a factual story to go along with them for folks to get some background info, which most appreciate. Your response is probably of the type that eventually lead to this site being DOS/Ping attacked over the UA/RU war and what was being posted here; all of which has now been deleted. Your type of response is also absolutely unnecessary: no one gives a fuck about your opinions which do nothing to reflect an intelligent comment on the subject matter. Forums are a bith - suck it up. Don't like a thread, move along.
I wasn't necessarily replying to you individually, but if you wanna start something with me, that's fine....
I'll continue to give my opinion whether you like it or not....fool
 

wiggins

Forum Veteran
That you can, but when you put a lot of work into posting a thread, without making any political statements for either side, and then someone basically ignores the thread just to have there strong political say once they read the subject matter as though the entire thread is bullshit then it makes the post senseless. Free speech doesn't mean that one has to say it - just because they feel so justified in doing it like a mighty right.

Quote from the Admin's message at the top of every page: "Debate is encouraged in the comments from all sides but trolls derailing topics or members starting shit with each other will be removed. Take the bullshit to FLH."

Folks who respond like that do not debate: they are right, you are wrong and yada yada power trip. But, even though I've been working Gore sites since 2004 when Ogrish was still in it's infancy (or teen years) and I've seen it all - subtle trolls tend to wreck otherwise good threads with their opinions, which are like assholes - everyone had one.

Thread's getting derailed already...and is making me regret that work I did to put it together. Maybe we can get back to the subject of the thread at face value, without the rhetoric? It's gore, not a political statement :).
Informed debate is a very difficult thing for some to master.

their little egos get all inflamed.

But I appreciate your efforts in posting the original picures which I had not seen before. I know how long it takes to make a good post and then get baby emojis showing a Red Cross or a 'gay fag' symbol. Which is the online equivalent of a grunt.

I note the pic directly above shows a plasma bottle on an IV pole. I wonder what she was being specifically treated for ?

I know typhoid was rife in the camps at liberation. I am unsure if blood plasma was needed for this. Could just be a sugar saline drip for rehydration, maybe for dysentery.

Flatustube or Zerok?
 

react.js

Lurker

hey guys! help needed here. Recently, I noticed I don't have access to WAR VIDEOS. I am getting "You do not have permission to view this page or perform this action." I am not banned, never got any warnings. How do I fix it? Thanks!​

 

DeathHand

Let It All Bleed Out

hey guys! help needed here. Recently, I noticed I don't have access to WAR VIDEOS. I am getting "You do not have permission to view this page or perform this action." I am not banned, never got any warnings. How do I fix it? Thanks!​

It's been removed because the site was getting hit by DOS/Ping attacks because of it - no more posts of the war allowed. No worries, you not banned from it.

Informed debate is a very difficult thing for some to master.

their little egos get all inflamed.

But I appreciate your efforts in posting the original picures which I had not seen before. I know how long it takes to make a good post and then get baby emojis showing a Red Cross or a 'gay fag' symbol. Which is the online equivalent of a grunt.

I note the pic directly above shows a plasma bottle on an IV pole. I wonder what she was being specifically treated for ?

I know typhoid was rife in the camps at liberation. I am unsure if blood plasma was needed for this. Could just be a sugar saline drip for rehydration, maybe for dysentery.

Flatustube or Zerok?
I'd imagine that it's a rehydration drip, but the source didn't mention which kind.
 

freebsd

Well Known Member
War is a bitch.... bad things happen in wars.....war criminals end up dying.... give me a fuckin break with these poor persecuted "joos".....
If a race of people invade a country and then proceed to start taking advantage of that country, at the detriment of its native population, it WILL be more damaging than any conventional war..... it will have far reaching negative effects on the native peoples history and future...
NO FUCKS GIVEN TO A WHOLE RACE OF "MONEY LENDERS"....
This is the result of gun grabbers every time.
For someone to claim they will never forget, Their memory seems to have some serious gaps as to what led to this.
 

Spit.it.Out.AtH

That morbid bitch
War is a bitch.... bad things happen in wars.....war criminals end up dying.... give me a fuckin break with these poor persecuted "joos".....
If a race of people invade a country and then proceed to start taking advantage of that country, at the detriment of its native population, it WILL be more damaging than any conventional war..... it will have far reaching negative effects on the native peoples history and future...
NO FUCKS GIVEN TO A WHOLE RACE OF "MONEY LENDERS"....
Kind of like Europeans did to the natives in north and South America?
 

DeathHand

Let It All Bleed Out
Kind of like Europeans did to the natives in north and South America?
The Europeans didn't invade...they landed, made treaties, bought land, and established settlements (North America, that is) and depending on who was arming the natives (the Brits, the French or the Dutch) there were good relations. My ancestors were French Acadians who settled Acadia in the 1630's - they bought their land, traded, sometimes inter-married, and had no problems with the Mik'mah. The Brits then invaded Acadia, took it over, and deported almost the entire Acadian population (about 12,000), but not a single native. South America would be the Spanish: and yes, they invaded and wiped out most who were already there. That didn't happen in North America.
 
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