The red imagery represents pain, hardship and blood in the old communist country where they had to "mock salute" to red banners, being bound to the "shackles" and was tired with "sunken eyes". ... They huddle together closely, in uncertainty as they sheltered from the damp and cold, expressed by "the silence, the cold", "upturned collars", and "children by their side". ...
Of the many influential leaders whose dictatorship soaked in blood no only their countries but the world it self, Napoleon Bonaparte, Adolph Hitler and Benito Mussolini share such ruthlessness and hideous crimes in the annals of history. ... Many of his soldiers died due to his orders to continue through such cold temperatures. ... Thus, Hitler's manipulations, criminal acts and his shed of blood (holocaust) over his country and over the world made him the most despicable dictator in history. ...
He based everything living under the one factor of blood. Either your blood was pure or impure. ... Amazingly, Hitler, the man of much hatred, felt that putting them into cold water and then slowly boiling it, would be too cruel. ... But he alone, led the largest and most grueling blood baths of all times. ...
Jews were accused of murdering Christian children and using their blood in Jewish rituals. ... He had Jewish men and women stripped naked, strapped to a stretcher, and immersed in ice-cold water to conduct hypothermia experiments. ...
"Never shall I forget that night, the first night in camp, which has turned my life into one long night, seven times cursed and seven times sealed. Never shall I forget that smoke. Never shall I forget the little faces of the children, whose bodies I saw turned into wreaths of smoke beneath a silent...
After Adolf Hitler and his Nazi Party rose to popular power in January of 1933, the Jews of Germany, and later all of mainland Europe, would be living in a deadly, deadly society. These years, later called the Holocaust Years, would see the Jewish population of Europe being exterminated, as part of Hitler's "Final Solution" in dealing with what he called the Jewish problem, in his rhetorical speeches of hate against Jews. At 1933, there had been well over nine million Jews living in Europe. Before the war began, 1939, most Jews had already begun to be sent to concentration camps, trans...
The holocaust The Holocaust was a catastrophic, cataclysmic event in history that took place over 55 years ago, but why is it still so important to us today? One of the many reasons it is still widely discussed today, is because of the many rights it violated for the Jews as human beings. The ma...
Adolf Hitler did not live a very long life, but during his time he caused such a great deal of death and destruction that his actions still have an effect on the world nearly 50 years later. People ask what could've happen to this small sickly boy during his childhood that would've led him do such h...