free counters
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.                                                                                                                                                                 
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.
A Hitler Youth poses for a photograph in the Rhineland city of Bruehl, 1934. In 1936, membership in Nazi youth groups became mandatory for all boys and girls between the ages of ten and seventeen.
Immersed in the Hitler cult from an early age—his portrait was a standard fixture in classrooms—German children enthusiastically greeted the Führer at public events. This sepia-toned image shows young German children peaking through the legs of policemen to catch a glimpse of Adolf Hitler. The original German caption reads, “Safe and secure between the boots, our little ones wait for the passing of the Führer”.
Captured in France a young German prisoner standing with arms raised.
The group of young German anti-aircraft gunners prisoners’ flakhelferov “captured parts of the 9th U.S. Armored Division in the spring of 1945 in Germany.
Adolf Hitler in the garden of the Reich Chancellery awards the young members of the Hitler Youth. This is one of the last pictures of Hitler. In the center, awarded the Iron Cross 2 class, the young natives of Silesia: second from right - 12-year-old Alfred Czech (Alfred Czech), third from right - 16-year-old Willie Huebner (Wilhelm Hubner)
Birkenau, Poland, May 1944, Women and children on their way to gas chamber no. 4.
Bucharest, Romania, feeding babies in a shelter of the Organization for Mother and Child Protection, 1943
Bucharest, Romania, 1942-1944, Children who have received clothes from self-help organizations
Warsaw Ghetto in Early 1941