I have watched numerous documentaries on the European Theaters (you could just as easily call it Hitler’s war). I’m in no way biased. I wonder why they often passingly mention the Nazi viewpoint on the Slavs and other non Aryans peoples and focus on the ~ 6 million Jewish people who were murdered. The Jewish people were single out like no other group for death. But without taking way from the Jewish suffering, incredible amounts of Slavs were killed. In the USSR the real figure may never be known. It certainly was at least 15 million, likely considerable higher. Nearly 2000 towns and villages were but to the torch usually with all the people locked inside of large barns or other large building. The SS waited outside with machine guns in case someone got out. They filled pits and it wasn’t always Jews who were marched into the pits and shot. Millions had all their food appropriated for the Reich, leaving them to stave in the Russian winter. It’s estimated as many as 11 - 12 million Soviet citizens were murdered outsight. In Poland at least 3 million non-Jewish people were killed used as slaves murdered, starved, etc. In many countries such as Greece hundreds of thousands died simple because the Nazis appropriated their food leaving them to starve. Nearly every occupied country in Europe was forced to supply slaves to work in the Greater Reich. The survival rate for the forced labor force was very low. Even the western occupied nations i.e. Italy and France suffered atrocities, mass executions, etc. In total of those killed “directly or indirectly” may never be known, but it may easily approach 25 million. This does not include those killed in deliberately by shelling and bombing.
Your thought? I’m a red blooded American ex veteran. But is it because the majority of the non Jewish atrocities occurred in central and particularly eastern Europe the makers of American documentaries tend to overlook this. In other words they don’t relate to the experience the GI’s in WW2?
Your thought? I’m a red blooded American ex veteran. But is it because the majority of the non Jewish atrocities occurred in central and particularly eastern Europe the makers of American documentaries tend to overlook this. In other words they don’t relate to the experience the GI’s in WW2?