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niedziela, 6 kwietnia 2014

         BLONDI - THE HITLER'S DOG





Blondi - the German shepherd belonging to Adolf Hitler. He got she from Martin Bormann,
probably in 1941. In the evening at the 29th April 1945, Blondi was poisoned 
by a prussic acid.

According to some relations, Hitler came to like Blondi at first sight. As of then
she was with her master in his the most difficult moments. Hitler was letting her
sleep in his room and he was spending his free time with her(he was teaching her
tricks and playing with her).

In March 1945, Blondi yeaned five puppies. One of them was named "Wolf" by
Hitler. Soviet soldiers who were looking through the surroundings of Hitler's bunker,
found one death puppy beside the Blondi's body. There is no telling what happened
wiht the rest.

The current experts of dog psychology, who watched the colourful movie from Berghof
, which Blondi and Hitler are playing on, noticed that when the dog was approaching to
 Hitler and licking his hand, she was striking a submissive pose, what could be the device
 of that Blondi was afraid of him.

The caplet whith poison was being churning out in the last months of the III Reich in the
 concentraction camp Sachsenhausen. These were containing the 1 cubic cm of the prussic
 acid whith the little sum of oxalic acid. On many grounds of(hurry, no stocks, bad storage)
 the poison was often poor quality, what was foreclosing in commiting suicide by using it.
 In the evening at 29th April 1945, since the commiting a suicide, Hitler ordered to check
 out the poison on Blondi. The Blondi's vet, Fritz Tornow, opened her snout, and dr Werner
 Haase mashed the caplet above this. Blondi got death throes at once  and in the matter of
 seconds died. The poisoning of Wolf failed and Tornow put out of its misery by shot. He
 carried both dogs out and throwed them into the nearby crater.



piątek, 4 kwietnia 2014

 HOW DID HITLER LOSE HIS TESTICLE?

Johan Jambor has been the participan of the most difficult and bloody battle of the Somme and he has cared for pulling the wounded soldiers out from trenches. And he pulled shouting, badly injured Hitler out. People were calling him "Shouter". He was shrilly loud. In any case we can't be surprised, because he got a beating in the sensitive testicle! He was always shouting "Help, help!". He asked a doctor if he will have children straight away.



NO. 303 POLISH FIGHTER SQUADRON
                    "KOŚCIUSZKO"     





It was the one of sixteen polish squadrons of the Polish Air Force in Great Britain during
 the World War II and it was the highest scoring RAF squadron there.

The first victory of squadron had place at the 30th of August 1940, since an official obtainment
 of combat readiness. During the training flight, Ludwik Paszkiewicz seceded and shot down
 the hunter Messerschmitt Bf 110. After that battle, next day the squadron was referred to front.

The 303 squadron is classed to the best hunter units of the World War II. During the battle
 of Britain in 1940 it scored 126 official classed shots down what places this in the first place
 amid all hunter squadrons which were taking a part in the battle.

Byt after the war it turned out that the sume of classed triumphs of Allied is nearly twice bigger
 than actual German losses. It was inflated, but the squadron was admittedly the one of the best
 allied squadrons.






czwartek, 3 kwietnia 2014



       SOME NEWS FROM THE TRENCH 



                                Fighting by a shovel

  Do you know why a command has forbidden soldiers to use their bayonets to hand-to-hand
  fighting during the Great War? It was caused of that when somebody got into the enemy's hands,
  they were gouging out his eyes by his bayonet! For that reason soldiers were using shovels
 - when they were thwacking the kidneys, victim was fastly dieing.







                               Illness in the trenches


As is known - soldiers had to answer the call of nature in the trench(they were digging holes),
 but when there was a lot of rain, all faeces were overflowing and the boots of soldiers were
 still wet. It was causing putrefaction of their foots and pervasion of a disgusting illness. As a
 result of this, their foots had to be amputate. So that's why the officers had to look after his 
soldiers - if their foots are dry.




I think it is without difficulty to imagine that it wasn't easy...

środa, 2 kwietnia 2014

                THE JEDWABNE POGROM




 It was a massacre of the Jewish inhabitant of Jedwabne and the neighbourhoods, 
by a group of nearly 40 inhabitants of this city (of the German inspiration). That accident 
has placed at the10th of July 1941 at the thime of the Nazi occupation of Poland. As a 
result of that crime, nearly 340 people died. Majority of the victims was burned alive 
inside a horse-barn.


 At the 10th of July, the inhabitants of neighbourhood places were coming to the city. 
They was aware of the planned massacre of the Jews, which have be placed that day. 
Some Jedwabian Jews were warned about it last evening. In the morning polish inhabitants 
were driving the Jews away on square. There they were beating them and ordering them to 
clean the square. Some of imprisoned Jews died.

There was some German soldiers at the city and they were helping in driving Jews away 
at the square, but their active action finished on this. The investigation of the IPN did'nt let to 
affix, if they was there later.

A group of enduring Jewish men was forced to crush the statue of  Lenin, which was standing 
there since taking that place by Soviets. In the afternoon a group of  Poles forced them to carry 
that statue beside the horse-barn near the city. Then Poles murdered the men and buried them 
with the statue in the ground.

In the afternoon a group of next Jews(nearly 300 people - men, women and children) was leaded
 out the square too. Poles brought them into a wooden horse-barn, closed, drenched a petroleum
 and set it on fire. Some Nazi supposedly documented that event with photographs, but it never 
was found.
              THE STATIONARY WARFARE





           The ground is the most important thing for a soldier. When he is longly and strongly
 hugging to this...
...when he is intensely squeezing his face and his limbs in this and he is feared of a fire...then 
it becomes an only friend, brother and mother. A soldier is telling it his whole fear and it is 
accepting his desperation and the groans of other dying soldiers.





           THE MIRACLE OF THE MARNE





The first battle of the Marne has placed 5th - 9th September 1914 up the river Marne 
near Paris. Althought it wasn't the bloodiest, it has surely the biggest meaning for the 
subsequent development of the war. The battle finished German's defeat. If there had 
been differently, Germans would  probably seize Paris and that would have an important 
influence on developments.





The third of August 1914 German army came to France via the neutral Belgium and began
 the offensive towards Paris. It seemed that anybody will stop Germans, but the French 
happily stopped theme up the river Marne. (So that's why that battle is called "the Miracle 
of the Marne").

So let's consider what contributed to that "miracle" ?





 Look ath the photo and what do you see?

Yup, this is the Parisian taxi. Exactly the 6 hundreds of that kind of the taxi was confiscated
 by general Joseph Gallini to transpose the half of the french army on place of the battle.

When general Joseph Joffre sawed the coming soldiers, he said "Eh bien, voilà au moins qui
 n’est pas banal!" (well, this is it original!).