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Armenians and Nazi Germany

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  • Armanen
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide

    Originally posted by KingOfYoz View Post
    Dude, over 18 million Russians died during WW2... and you gonna post this baloney? it's a bunch of garbage...

    How is it garbage if he provides a credible link? In proportion to the population of Armenians in the world, Armenia lost more people than many other nations in WWII. For you to pretend to be an Armenian, post the the sh*t that you have been and then to dishonor the memory of the many Armenians who lost their lives is truly sick. Anyway, I am sure if you do this outside of the cyber world you will get a sound beating from my fellow Armenians.

    Leave a comment:


  • levon
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide

    Originally posted by KingOfYoz View Post
    Dude, over 18 million Russians died during WW2... and you gonna post this baloney? it's a bunch of garbage...
    The only garbage here is you.

    Leave a comment:


  • KingOfYoz
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide

    Originally posted by Karabed
    Haahah coming from a turk, turks have bad reputation and are hated everywhere...fact.

    Since this topic is about Armenians in World War 2, i would like to post the following article:
    It's about the memorial to the seven Armenians killed by the German army:
    September 5, 2009 by Eildert Mulder
    Armenians get name
    MONUMENTS
    They will always be remembered.
    Dude, over 18 million Russians died during WW2... and you gonna post this baloney? it's a bunch of garbage...

    Leave a comment:


  • levon
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide

    Btw, the image you got was from this site http://users.skynet.be/bs903065/mythereal.htm I'm not sure if you can understand french, but right above the image it states the the below picture is a picture of volunteers recruited from prison camps. The Osttruppen", and the "Ostlegionen were composed of non-Russian minorities of Soviet Union: Cossacks, Georgians, Caucasians, Turkmens, Armenians, Tartars and people from Turkestan (Turkic people from Central Asia).

    Try a lil better.
    Last edited by levon; 11-17-2009, 12:57 AM.

    Leave a comment:


  • KingOfYoz
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide

    Originally posted by Carathsis
    Yeah sure, more unknown photographs, for all we know these can be Cossacks and judging by their uniforms most probably are.
    Those are Armenians part of the Ostruppen military of Calvary units..

    Armenian units during WW2





    I really wish you stopped you're ignorance..

    Leave a comment:


  • Armanen
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide

    Originally posted by KingOfYoz View Post
    Please provide evidence that General Dro was not a Nazi.. he helped guide the 20,000 strong Armenian-battalion during WW2 in the German Army...

    Believe me I'm Armenian, but please don't deny our past...

    I mean we were dumb enough to believe George Bush and Barrack Obama would have recognized our Genocide... you know why? because we believe everything we hear... but we don't use our mind.

    I think it is the azeris/turks that do not use their brains.

    Leave a comment:


  • Karabed
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide

    and then we wonder why Armenians are so hated
    Haahah coming from a turk, turks have bad reputation and are hated everywhere...fact.

    Since this topic is about Armenians in World War 2, i would like to post the following article:
    It's about the memorial to the seven Armenians killed by the German army:
    September 5, 2009 by Eildert Mulder
    Armenians get name
    MONUMENTS
    They will always be remembered.

    Leave a comment:


  • KingOfYoz
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide

    Originally posted by levon
    Don't call it "our" genocide. You are not Armenian, you have no right.
    Dro was not a Nazi. Also, try taking your own advice and grow up. Quit posting pictures that could represent anything.
    Please provide evidence that General Dro was not a Nazi.. he helped guide the 20,000 strong Armenian-battalion during WW2 in the German Army...

    Believe me I'm Armenian, but please don't deny our past...

    I mean we were dumb enough to believe George Bush and Barrack Obama would have recognized our Genocide... you know why? because we believe everything we hear... but we don't use our mind.

    Leave a comment:


  • Catharsis
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide

    Originally posted by KingOfYoz View Post


    Armenian calvary units of the German Army.
    Yeah sure, more unknown photographs, for all we know these can be Cossacks and judging by their uniforms most probably are.

    Leave a comment:


  • Catharsis
    replied
    Re: The Nazi-Armenian Genocide


    The Monument of Mother Armenia in Yerevan above the Museum of the Great Patriotic War and the Eternal Flame to the hundreds of thousands of fallen Armenians for the liberation of Europe.

    Another turning point in the history of the Armenian people and indeed all of humanity was the period of World War II [1939-1945], the period between June 22, 1941 [when Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union] and May 9, 1945 [victory of Red Army and the Allies over Nazi Germany] became known as the epoch of the Great Patriotic War. The Armenians in great numbers fought against fascism and its tyrannical goals, they themselves knowing all too well what genocide meant. Virtually all of male population from age of 16 to 50 enlisted to fight to preserve their freedom. So large was the number of recruitment of males in Armenia, that one eyewitness noted that in towns, villages and cities virtually no male under the age of 50 was to be found.. In a nation of less than one million more than half a million men and women were recruited and enlisted into Infantry, Artillery, Armored, Naval and Air Force divisions of the Red Army -- varying in their ranks from field marshals and major generals to general infantrymen soldiers and nurses.

    The Battle of Stalingrad was in fact the turning point for the Soviet Union and in fact all of the world. The German advance was checked and stopped with hundred of thousands of German soldiers [more than quarter of million encircled in the Stalingrad pocket -- 150,000 men died] of the 6th Army and 4th Panzer Army, as well as the soldiers of the Romanian, Hungarian and Italian armies, were taken prisoner -- including German field marshal Friedrich von Paulus, who surrendered the very next day he was made field marshal by his Führer, thus making him the first German field marshal to ever surrender to an opposing side. The POW list included a staff of 90 generals and more than 2,000 Wehrmacht officers. From there onward -- the German threat on Caucasus and the rest of Soviet Union was no more. The myth of impregnable German war machine was forever crushed by victorious Red Army. The turning point contributed to the successful Allied Normandy invasion -- on June 06, 1944 -- and Soviet advance to Berlin itself. Among the first divisions to victoriously enter Berlin were the Armenian divisions [including the 89th Tamanian Mechanized Infantry Division which fought its way to the Brandenburg Gates through street skirmishes with the enemy, 408th Armenian Guard division, 409th Armenian National division, 390th Infantry division and the Sasunts‛i Davit‛ Tank Column]. On May 9, 1945 Nazi Germany surrendered and the Soviet Union was victorious. The Great Patriotic War was won at a great loss to the Soviet people -- the Armenian casualties of the Great Patriotic War were into hundreds of thousands. Many Armenians were awarded the medal and honor of the Hero of the Soviet Union [many postmortem] -- the highest military medal that can be bestowed by the Soviet Union. Sixty Armenians were promoted to the high rank of field marshals, admirals and major generals.

    Leave a comment:

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