The brutal EX3CUTIONS of young N4zis by the USA

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During primary school, Heinz Petry was a good student and excelled in sports activities. For this reason, he was chosen by the German authorities to enter one of the many Adolf HitIer Schools. These educational institutions had been created in 1937 and functioned as boarding schools where German children with the best qualifications went. They were supervised by the HitIer Youth and their mission was to train the future elite of the Third R3ich.

Do you want to know other brutal mass4cres committed in World War 2? I leave you here! 👇

📌These were the BLOODIEST MASS4CRES of World War 2

📌One of the LAST MASSACRES of the NAZIS | Gardelegen 1945

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#USA #GERMANSOLDIERS #WWII
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Do you want to know other brutal mass4cres committed in World War 2? I leave you here! 👇

📌These were the BLOODIEST MASS4CRES of World War 2

📌One of the LAST MASSACRES of the NAZIS | Gardelegen 1945

MilitaryHistoryOfficial
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I’m a Vietnam vet and all I can say is, I hate war and sooner or later very innocent people will die. In every war by every country, so don’t act surprised or hurt. War is hell.

ronniebishop
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When I was young I worked with a German man in Australia who was a former member of the Hitler Youth in Germany. He told me this story. Their town was occupied by American troops at the end of the war. The local group of Hitler Youth, in their uniforms but only armed with knives, were hiding in an attic not knowing what to do. The boys nominated the eldest member to go out and talk to the American soldiers and work out a way to surrender. The US troops put the boy against a wall and shot him. The other boys remained hidden, naturally terrified of going outside. They awaited nightfall before coming out and walking toward the Soviet zone, some 80 km away. They walked at night and hid during the day until they crossed the border and then surrendered to the Red Army. The Red Army troops got the boys to strip off their uniforms and then gave them civilian clothes. They then made them walk back to the US zone. This time they were met by friendlier troops and managed to surrender. When the occupation zones were settled, the boys found that they were occupied by the Red Army, in what was to become East Germany. My friend lived there for several years until he was a young adult and then crossed the border and finally immigrated to Australia where he lived for the rest of his life, passing away a few years ago. To me this story shows that bad things happen in war, and all wars are bad. People can be cruel, and some can be forgiving.

richardrichards
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My father flew B-24's in WWII. He told me stories of fliers bailing out over occupied lands and children and women would rush to the fields to stab airmen with pitch forks and butchers knives. The kids were the worst. They had no qualms murdering men. Every war is a tragedy.

charlesgale
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This is a hard one they were only children

cylqujf
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What I can’t get over is the historical pass that was given to the Japanese. We always hear about the Nazis and no one mentions the horrific atrocities that the Japanese performed on an industrial scale, against civilians and soldiers alike. Yeah, we dropped the atomic bombs on them but things like the Bataan death march, where at least 5500 allied soldiers died, the POW camps where allied soldiers died at a rate 7 times higher than those held in Nazi camps. 1 in 4 allied POWs died in Japanese camps. That’s not including the 300, 000 Chinese killed in Nanjing and 80, 000 reported rapes. How’d they get a pass?

dbohler
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This was a straight up war crime for the simple reason that it was carried out after the war had already ended. When you consider the fact that many high ranking Nazis responsible for brutal massacres ended up doing a short stint in prison then were released to live out the rest of their lives as free citizens, it is especially unfair that these teenagers with 3 weeks training who were immediately captured were sentenced to pay the ultimate price.

In fact, I would go so far as to say that these two boys displayed heroic bravery, both in serving their country and when faced with execution by firing squad. They were just kids doing what all the adults in their lives told them was the right, honorable thing to do. Meanwhile, actual brutal war criminals walked free and lived out their days without ever seeing justice. It is a very sick and unfair world we live in.

GenXstacker
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No, they definitely should not have been executed.
As one said in his letter, he thought he was doing the right thing for his country.
With no evidence of wrongful conduct proven!

jeffreycrosstwoswarms
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In the mid 80’s I worked with a German immigrant. He had been a member of the Hitler Youth. I asked him why he joined. He said well if I didn’t, the question would be why don’t you want to join, and my grandmother was Jewish, so being investigated would have been a really bag thing.

rollotomasislawyer
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YES! My Dad told me about the kids they ran into at the end of the war! He was in the battle of Northern France, the battle of the Bulge, and the battle of the Rhineland! He said those kids would kill you just as dead as an adult!

jmuraidajr
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My father during the 2nd world war was about 14 years old .He was dutch and living in zandvoort Holland .He told me about a time when a german high ranking official was killed by the underground and german soldiers rounded up a lot of dutch boys between 16 and 18 in his town --stood them up in the main square and made everyone including my dad to watch them all get shot.I miss my father whom died 2 years ago, a peaceful gentle man who never hated anyone.I shed a tear in his memory

zeb
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at the young age of 17 I was inducted into the army, I too could face such a fate and i did know this so the age of these young me was not little boys but young men and already showed what they was capable of, I shed tears for those who die in stupid wars but these things do happen and this is why we must learn to get along and love each other

jimmy
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War is war & is hell! As a Vietnam Veteran I know this is true!

ninowalker
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So many Nazi's avoided justice after the war. I had a geography teacher that worshipped Hitler and interjected his Nazi beliefs during class. His wife was even more rabid than he was.

They were both in the Hitler youth program and came to America after the war spouting their demonic Nazi crap at every opportunity in the classrooms they taught.

Very few children ever reported what they did due to a strange kind of mind control they exerted over the children along with mocking and direct threats.

I told my parents and the principle but was never believed. Now I am an old, old, man but I will never forget these two monsters that came to the US in the early 60's and hid in plain sight for decades!

davidmorris
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Most of the comments here are by people who never had to fight in a war. War, is not pretty. It's not fair, it's dirty, it stinks, It covers everything and everyone with a rotten air. When in combat, you are not thinking like a lawyer about what is legal or not. You are thinking of one thing and one thing only staying alive. As Kipling said" You can talk of gin and beer, when you're quartered safe out here, but when it comes to slaughter, you'll do your work.

honwsfw
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War is brutal, and everything that goes with it. Unfortunately, there are people on Earth who love war and the destruction that goes with it.

glentaylor
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My father was raised in a German speaking home, my mom was Irish. My father did not speak English until he was in school. After the war he hired some German refugees to work in his furniture company he spoke fluent German.They had all served in the Wehrmacht, he also had a number of American veterans from one who had served in the 101st Airborne division. During lunch break they exchanged stories they showed no animosity towards each other. I served in the Army myself and was deployed to Germany. I stayed there after my ets. I lived there 12 years. My oldest daughter married into a German family. Her father-in-law had been in the Nazi youth. We had many discussions about the War he always defended the fuhrer, would never admit that 6 million jews were murdered.

schweizer
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I'm a Army Vet who served in West Germany and though it might not be the decision that I would make, they were trained by the SS, answered to the SS who murdered hundreds of thousands of other peoples children along with entire families. Total War is a messy affair and in some ways, we all lose.

marke
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My father was there. He almost never talked about it ! And it change his life forever!!!

fxfzprx
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The lesson I learn from this is never let a dictator run you country, no one is more important then they are, even children are sacrificial lambs.

ronald