Edward Lonsa1
Member
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2012
- Messages
- 172
<b [/IMG]The source:[/B] Wolf[/IMG]Deutsche Soldaten sehen die Sowjet-Union. Feldpostbriefe aus dem Osten[/I] (Berlin: Wilhelm Limpert-Verlag, 1941).
<center [/IMG] [/IMG] Letters from the East
</center> The book be[/IMG] <b [/IMG]Chapter 1[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG][/IMG] <b [/IMG][Full Chapter][/B] </center> The homeland hears about events at the front in an unbelievably short time. German radio often brings reports in the evening of deeds of arms that occurred only a few hours earlier, and the German newsreel includes pictures brought by air directly from the battlefields. The German people have almost direct contact with the accomplishments of their soldiers through the words, pictures, and reporting of modern news media. Past generations could not feel so closely bound to their family members.
Still, the best and most personal source of news in war is and remains the letter. That which the husband or son, the brother, or the bridegroom puts on paper during a brief rest is not only longed for and treasured news from a beloved and irreplaceable person, but also a testimony and a report from one heart to another, one that speaks the right language. During World War I, the letters from the soldiers in field gray recorded the experiences and the integrity of determined fighters who were willing to give their all. During this war, too, millions of German soldiers have reported their powerful experiences. Every family carefully preserves these letters. In party local groups, within National Socialist organizations and in factories, these letters from comrades are passed from hand to hand as eyewitness reports of upright German men.
This pamphlet is a random sample of such letters. They were sent to us by citizens of every class and region. Many of them included this note: “As I read this letter, I thought that others had to read it, too.”
Yes, that is true! There are millions of German citizens who do not have that direct contact with the front. They need to read these letters. They all deal with a theme that is particularly relevant today for the entire German people: What does the Soviet Union really look like?
Sometimes people think the Führer’s propagandists exaggerate, though actual events have proven that what they say is less than the full truth. One thinks of the role of the Jews in unleashing this war or the horrors Poland committed against ethnic Germans. Some citizens who complained then about exaggerated reports of persecution and suffering today complain about 60,000 graves, victims of Polish murderers!
But the most convincing proof of the difference between what was said and reality is clear from the revelations about Bolshevism. This unmasking is particularly important, because millions of German citizens put their faith in the lying words of Jewish-communists. They were told that within the borders of the Soviet Union there was “the workers’ paradise, the true home of the workers of the world.” When National Socialist newspapers and books spoke of the social betrayal in the Soviet Union, or of the horrible mass murders, the misery of children, the hopeless poverty of the entire population, some doubted these well-founded and carefully considered statements. Now there are millions of reliable witnesses in the middle of this “worker’s paradise.” They cannot be doubted. They are not traveling along carefully prepared streets, nor can Intourist guide them through a carefully selected factory. They must march meter by meter through the country. They fight for each village and each city, they see face-to-face the people who were for nearly 25 years the objects of Bolshevist domination.
Now these [/IMG][before 1933].[/B] They did not march into the Soviet Union expecting to find everything bad, but rather they were eager to see how things really were in the land of Lenin and Stalin. They reported what they saw, often in hastily written letters.
These letters are lined up here like a company on the front. They are not on parade, but rather ready for battle. Some soldiers and some letters are large or small, broad or narrow, intelligent or less so, sparse or enthusiastic. We see in the newsreels the faces of marching soldiers who greet us, sometimes tired and exhausted, always however with a clear, confident look and in the firm conviction that they are in the service of a good cause. These letters are the same.
They are only a small part of the enormous material available. There will certainly be some citizens who say: “We have received better and more interesting letters. That is fine. We can agree. We have chosen only letters that were clearly written with no expectation of later publication, letters that give an idea of what has impressed our soldiers.
Those Germans who read these letters, and those who wrote them, ask the question: “What would have happened to our women, mothers and children if the Bolshevist tanks and murderers had overrun our homeland?” Surely many more reports of the Führer’s great campaigns will reach the public. Even now the whole nation is waiting for the hour when the secrets can be revealed and the deeds of those made clear who today are unknown heroes.
None of those later reports will surpass the immediacy of these simple soldiers’ letters, which are being published even as the fighting army is in the midst of bloody battles on the wide plains of the East. Perhaps some of the letter writers will read this small book in the hospital. Perhaps one or two say their last words in these letters. That is why these letters move us so deeply. They demonstrate that this decisive battle did not come from the lust for power or conquest, from political vanity or excessive fanaticism. That is what our enemies say. But these letters show that the culture of Germany and of Europe hang on this battle. It will decide whether subhuman Bolshevism destroys all that which is noble and holy to Germans, or whether the German soldier and his brave allies will build the foundation of a new era of peace and freedom.
The soldiers whose letters here reach the public believe, along with all their comrades, in the necessity of the struggle and in the certainty of victory. Who can be less confident than these men who not only stared the world enemy Bolshevism in the eye, but also defeated it wherever they encountered it!
These letters touch on every aspect of l[/IMG] <b [/IMG]Chapter 2[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]The Worker’s Parad[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> The [/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]Worse than Hell[/[/IMG]Lieutenant Otto Deissenroth, Military Post Number 12 827D writes to local group leader Kemmel in Altenau (Mainfranken)[/I] In the East, 30.7.1941[cleansed from xian filth]
Dear Co[/IMG][The chapter has 23 [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Chapter 3[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Houses and Roads[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> The hous[/IMG][There are seven excerpts fro[/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Rule by B[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> The Sov[/IMG][Here are two of the four letter excerpts][/B] <center [/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Bolshev[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> [/IMG][Here are 4 of 9 accounts][/B] <center [/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]What Sold[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> [/IMG][Here are 2 of 5 excerpts][/B] <center [/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]For[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> Berl[/IMG]“[/IMG][3 of 9 Excerpts][/B] <center [/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]The Sov[/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]Earl[/IMG]Corporal Otto K[/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]Worse than we [/IMG]Corporal J. F., [/IMG][Hitler][/B] saved Germany and all of Europe from the Red Army. The battle is hard, but we know what we are fighting for, and, confident of the Führer, we will win. In the hopes of a victorious return, Heil Hitler
Corporal J. F. <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Chapter 8[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG][/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> No one has [/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Thanks to the Führer[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> So[/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]The Führer Saw the Dan[/IMG]Sold[/IMG][There are two other excerpts][/B] <b [/IMG][The pa[/IMG]Mr. Churchill, these are your Bolshevist allies for which you ask English churches to pray, and for whom English workers should forge new weapons! This is the culture of those you are protecting, Mr. Roosevelt. You want to save the world from “Nazi barbarians” with their help. With their help you are supposedly fighting for freedom and justice for smaller countries. And that, Mr. Stalin, is the judgment of millions of men on your Bolshevist policies, men whom you hoped to recruit as cannon fodder for the Bolshevist world revolution.[/B] [/QUOTE] Things in the Soviet Union are far worse and terrifying than National Socialism ever claimed. The Soviet Jews hermetically sealed off their terrorized nation from the rest of the world. Even experts and enemies of Bolshevist doctrine could not form a true picture of the real events in the area ruled by Bolshevism. Even the fantasies of the most fanatic opponents of Bolshevism could not reach the true hopeless of the situation, revealed here in letters from German citizens at the front. German soldiers saw the Soviet Union! They will never forget what they have seen. Never again will anyone in Europe dare to apologize, much less defend, Bolshevism and the results of its rule. There are few families in Germany today that do not have a relative, and therefore an eyewitness of Bolshevism. These letters already circulate within families and factories, villages, and party local groups. Now they reach millions who are working for victory, giving them a broader picture of the experiences and impressions of their brothers and sons. No one will put this pamphlet down without being deeply moved. His thoughts will then turn to the Führer, the man who in the midst of Germany’s deepest disgrace was the first to recognize and oppose the communist enemy. The few units of the SA and the SS that opposed the Bolshevist-Jewish enemy when Moscow’s terror still prevailed in the streets of our great cities, when Red revolution threatened whole states and provinces of the Reich, and Moscow’s Foreign Legion murdered German men on German soil, now have the whole German people with them. The enormous columns of German regiments and divisions are striking Bolshevism deep in Russia. At the right time and with careful forethought, the Führer, side by side with all the awakened European nations, gave the command to save the West. The decision was difficult, the scale of the struggle vast, and the results tremendous. Everyone today can see that the order given on 22 June 1941 was the greatest decision in Europe’s life. The Bolshevist armies that today are being destroyed by the blows of the German army, blows from which they will never recover, were ready to attack Europe. Despite the treaties, the Bolshevist leaders were ready to attack when the hour was right. The presumed state of workers and soldiers had secret agreements with the plutocracies and capitalism. They were preparing the way for World Jewry to take over Central Europe. If Stalin’s tanks and planes had crossed our borders, it would have been the end of everything noble and beautiful in the world. Europe would have been filled with enslaved masses like the prisoners our soldiers find today in the East. A whole part of the world would have fallen into filth and misery if Adolf Hitler had not at the last moment intervened to forever eliminate the criminal danger. We may not forget it. Moscow’s criminals are praised as heroes and defenders of culture every day by the English and American press. People in London and New York pray for these animals in human form, and thousands of Jewish e
(Message over 64 KB, truncated) [/QUOTE]
<center [/IMG] [/IMG] Letters from the East
</center> The book be[/IMG] <b [/IMG]Chapter 1[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG][/IMG] <b [/IMG][Full Chapter][/B] </center> The homeland hears about events at the front in an unbelievably short time. German radio often brings reports in the evening of deeds of arms that occurred only a few hours earlier, and the German newsreel includes pictures brought by air directly from the battlefields. The German people have almost direct contact with the accomplishments of their soldiers through the words, pictures, and reporting of modern news media. Past generations could not feel so closely bound to their family members.
Still, the best and most personal source of news in war is and remains the letter. That which the husband or son, the brother, or the bridegroom puts on paper during a brief rest is not only longed for and treasured news from a beloved and irreplaceable person, but also a testimony and a report from one heart to another, one that speaks the right language. During World War I, the letters from the soldiers in field gray recorded the experiences and the integrity of determined fighters who were willing to give their all. During this war, too, millions of German soldiers have reported their powerful experiences. Every family carefully preserves these letters. In party local groups, within National Socialist organizations and in factories, these letters from comrades are passed from hand to hand as eyewitness reports of upright German men.
This pamphlet is a random sample of such letters. They were sent to us by citizens of every class and region. Many of them included this note: “As I read this letter, I thought that others had to read it, too.”
Yes, that is true! There are millions of German citizens who do not have that direct contact with the front. They need to read these letters. They all deal with a theme that is particularly relevant today for the entire German people: What does the Soviet Union really look like?
Sometimes people think the Führer’s propagandists exaggerate, though actual events have proven that what they say is less than the full truth. One thinks of the role of the Jews in unleashing this war or the horrors Poland committed against ethnic Germans. Some citizens who complained then about exaggerated reports of persecution and suffering today complain about 60,000 graves, victims of Polish murderers!
But the most convincing proof of the difference between what was said and reality is clear from the revelations about Bolshevism. This unmasking is particularly important, because millions of German citizens put their faith in the lying words of Jewish-communists. They were told that within the borders of the Soviet Union there was “the workers’ paradise, the true home of the workers of the world.” When National Socialist newspapers and books spoke of the social betrayal in the Soviet Union, or of the horrible mass murders, the misery of children, the hopeless poverty of the entire population, some doubted these well-founded and carefully considered statements. Now there are millions of reliable witnesses in the middle of this “worker’s paradise.” They cannot be doubted. They are not traveling along carefully prepared streets, nor can Intourist guide them through a carefully selected factory. They must march meter by meter through the country. They fight for each village and each city, they see face-to-face the people who were for nearly 25 years the objects of Bolshevist domination.
Now these [/IMG][before 1933].[/B] They did not march into the Soviet Union expecting to find everything bad, but rather they were eager to see how things really were in the land of Lenin and Stalin. They reported what they saw, often in hastily written letters.
These letters are lined up here like a company on the front. They are not on parade, but rather ready for battle. Some soldiers and some letters are large or small, broad or narrow, intelligent or less so, sparse or enthusiastic. We see in the newsreels the faces of marching soldiers who greet us, sometimes tired and exhausted, always however with a clear, confident look and in the firm conviction that they are in the service of a good cause. These letters are the same.
They are only a small part of the enormous material available. There will certainly be some citizens who say: “We have received better and more interesting letters. That is fine. We can agree. We have chosen only letters that were clearly written with no expectation of later publication, letters that give an idea of what has impressed our soldiers.
Those Germans who read these letters, and those who wrote them, ask the question: “What would have happened to our women, mothers and children if the Bolshevist tanks and murderers had overrun our homeland?” Surely many more reports of the Führer’s great campaigns will reach the public. Even now the whole nation is waiting for the hour when the secrets can be revealed and the deeds of those made clear who today are unknown heroes.
None of those later reports will surpass the immediacy of these simple soldiers’ letters, which are being published even as the fighting army is in the midst of bloody battles on the wide plains of the East. Perhaps some of the letter writers will read this small book in the hospital. Perhaps one or two say their last words in these letters. That is why these letters move us so deeply. They demonstrate that this decisive battle did not come from the lust for power or conquest, from political vanity or excessive fanaticism. That is what our enemies say. But these letters show that the culture of Germany and of Europe hang on this battle. It will decide whether subhuman Bolshevism destroys all that which is noble and holy to Germans, or whether the German soldier and his brave allies will build the foundation of a new era of peace and freedom.
The soldiers whose letters here reach the public believe, along with all their comrades, in the necessity of the struggle and in the certainty of victory. Who can be less confident than these men who not only stared the world enemy Bolshevism in the eye, but also defeated it wherever they encountered it!
These letters touch on every aspect of l[/IMG] <b [/IMG]Chapter 2[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]The Worker’s Parad[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> The [/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]Worse than Hell[/[/IMG]Lieutenant Otto Deissenroth, Military Post Number 12 827D writes to local group leader Kemmel in Altenau (Mainfranken)[/I] In the East, 30.7.1941[cleansed from xian filth]
Dear Co[/IMG][The chapter has 23 [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Chapter 3[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Houses and Roads[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> The hous[/IMG][There are seven excerpts fro[/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Rule by B[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> The Sov[/IMG][Here are two of the four letter excerpts][/B] <center [/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Bolshev[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> [/IMG][Here are 4 of 9 accounts][/B] <center [/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]What Sold[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> [/IMG][Here are 2 of 5 excerpts][/B] <center [/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]For[/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> Berl[/IMG]“[/IMG][3 of 9 Excerpts][/B] <center [/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]The Sov[/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]Earl[/IMG]Corporal Otto K[/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]Worse than we [/IMG]Corporal J. F., [/IMG][Hitler][/B] saved Germany and all of Europe from the Red Army. The battle is hard, but we know what we are fighting for, and, confident of the Führer, we will win. In the hopes of a victorious return, Heil Hitler
Corporal J. F. <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Chapter 8[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG][/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> No one has [/IMG] <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG]Thanks to the Führer[/B] </center> <center [/IMG] <b [/IMG][Excerpts][/B] </center> So[/IMG] <h4 [/IMG]<b [/IMG]<[/IMG]The Führer Saw the Dan[/IMG]Sold[/IMG][There are two other excerpts][/B] <b [/IMG][The pa[/IMG]Mr. Churchill, these are your Bolshevist allies for which you ask English churches to pray, and for whom English workers should forge new weapons! This is the culture of those you are protecting, Mr. Roosevelt. You want to save the world from “Nazi barbarians” with their help. With their help you are supposedly fighting for freedom and justice for smaller countries. And that, Mr. Stalin, is the judgment of millions of men on your Bolshevist policies, men whom you hoped to recruit as cannon fodder for the Bolshevist world revolution.[/B] [/QUOTE] Things in the Soviet Union are far worse and terrifying than National Socialism ever claimed. The Soviet Jews hermetically sealed off their terrorized nation from the rest of the world. Even experts and enemies of Bolshevist doctrine could not form a true picture of the real events in the area ruled by Bolshevism. Even the fantasies of the most fanatic opponents of Bolshevism could not reach the true hopeless of the situation, revealed here in letters from German citizens at the front. German soldiers saw the Soviet Union! They will never forget what they have seen. Never again will anyone in Europe dare to apologize, much less defend, Bolshevism and the results of its rule. There are few families in Germany today that do not have a relative, and therefore an eyewitness of Bolshevism. These letters already circulate within families and factories, villages, and party local groups. Now they reach millions who are working for victory, giving them a broader picture of the experiences and impressions of their brothers and sons. No one will put this pamphlet down without being deeply moved. His thoughts will then turn to the Führer, the man who in the midst of Germany’s deepest disgrace was the first to recognize and oppose the communist enemy. The few units of the SA and the SS that opposed the Bolshevist-Jewish enemy when Moscow’s terror still prevailed in the streets of our great cities, when Red revolution threatened whole states and provinces of the Reich, and Moscow’s Foreign Legion murdered German men on German soil, now have the whole German people with them. The enormous columns of German regiments and divisions are striking Bolshevism deep in Russia. At the right time and with careful forethought, the Führer, side by side with all the awakened European nations, gave the command to save the West. The decision was difficult, the scale of the struggle vast, and the results tremendous. Everyone today can see that the order given on 22 June 1941 was the greatest decision in Europe’s life. The Bolshevist armies that today are being destroyed by the blows of the German army, blows from which they will never recover, were ready to attack Europe. Despite the treaties, the Bolshevist leaders were ready to attack when the hour was right. The presumed state of workers and soldiers had secret agreements with the plutocracies and capitalism. They were preparing the way for World Jewry to take over Central Europe. If Stalin’s tanks and planes had crossed our borders, it would have been the end of everything noble and beautiful in the world. Europe would have been filled with enslaved masses like the prisoners our soldiers find today in the East. A whole part of the world would have fallen into filth and misery if Adolf Hitler had not at the last moment intervened to forever eliminate the criminal danger. We may not forget it. Moscow’s criminals are praised as heroes and defenders of culture every day by the English and American press. People in London and New York pray for these animals in human form, and thousands of Jewish e
(Message over 64 KB, truncated) [/QUOTE]