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In memory of World war ╬
Not compactuo with communist ideals, Nazis, capitalists or any other type of political system. Do not bring me any root-Semitic, anti-American or anti-German antiestadunidense. I appreciate the passion and the historic event, "mining" information from all sources (reliable) that can enrich the photos published here.                                                                                                                                                                 
The American system of multiple rocket launchers T34 “Calliope» (T34 Calliope) on the base of the tank M4A3 (75), “Sherman” to the name «Annabelle» from the 14th Panzer Division in the U.S. Obermoderna (Obermodern), France.
Women of the Red Army liberated the concentration camp of Ravensbrück, located 90 km north of Berlin. Concentration camp was established in May 1939 for women prisoners and was one of the largest camps in Germany.
Portrait photographer Signal Corps U.S. Army Lieutenant William Wilson (William R. Wilson).
German paratrooper, armed with submachine gun MP-40, in the trenches. The Eastern Front 1942-1943.
German Jews awaiting deportation by train to Riga. On December 12-13, 1941, the first transport of Jews from the Prussian province of Westphalia was sent to Riga. Before their departure, the Jews were assembled in Bielefeld, Germany, December 13, 1941.
German police patrol the border of the Jewish residential quarter before sealing off the Warsaw ghetto. The sign in German and Polish reads “Quarantined area. Only through traffic is permitted.” 1940.
This photograph shows German troops forcibly opening the bar at the Polish border crossing in Sopot, near Danzig on September 1, 1939.
Hitler Youth were organized into local groups that held weekly meetings that included political indoctrination. Here, a troop leader reads to his fellow Hitler Youth during a social evening. 1937.
A boy sits on a bench in a public park. The words painted on the bench say,   “For Aryans only.”  By law, German and Austrian Jews were prohibited from using many public facilities except those marked   “For Jews only.”  In some cities, Jews were not allowed in public parks, swimming pools, or movie theaters.  Jews were allowed to shop in stores only during designated hours, usually late in the day when stores had run out of fresh foods.