Saturday, September 12, 2015

TRAVEL SPECIAL - WORLD WAR II SITES IN EUROPE

 TRAVEL - WORLD WAR II
 SITES IN EUROPE


The 76th anniversary of the beginning of World War II is the perfect 
time for a historical tour of the cities that bore the brunt of Nazi invasion

September 1, 1939, is generally considered to be the start of World War II in
 Europe; it began with the German in vasion of Poland; Britain and France
declared war on Germany two days later. With an estimated 50-85 million
 fatalities, World War II is often described as the deadliest conflict in human
history. This year is the 76th anniversary of the beginning of World War II.
Here's a walk through six World War II sites in Europe.

KRAKOW-AUSCHWITZ
At Auschwitz concentration camp, the atrocities against deported Jews changed
 the definition of human monstrosity forever. Millions of Jews were gassed to
death. The railway tracks, barbed wires, personal belongings of the victims
(there's fabric made of human hair!) all narrate horrifying tales of Nazi cruelty.
 In Krakow, synagogues were destroyed, Jews rounded up. But one man
rekindled faith in humanity ­ Oskar Schindler. He saved nearly 1,200 Jews by
 providing them employment in his factory (remember, Steven Spielberg's
 Schindler's List?).
Must see: Take a guided tour of the Auschwitz-Birkenau Nazi concentration
 camp (check with the hotel concierge in Krakow; they plan day tours).
Go to Oskar Schindler's factory in Krakow.

AMSTERDAM, THE NETHERLANDS
Initially, The Netherlands stayed neutral in the war but it was invaded by
Germany on May 10, 1940. Five days later, it surrendered to the Germans.
 During the four-day campaign, about 2,300 Dutch soldiers were killed and
 7,000 wounded. Anne Frank was born in Amsterdam. During World War II,
 she hid from the Nazis with her family in a secret annexe in a canal house
 which is now a museum. Frank did not survive the war but her diary is one
of the most poignant accounts of the war.
Must see: Anne Frank's house; Auschwitz Memorial; De Dokwerker
(in honour of Amsterdammers who stood up against the violence on Jews);
Monument of Jewish Resistance; Monument to the Women of Ravensbrück
 (to commemorate the women in the Ravensbrück Nazi concentration camp);
 Verzets Museum (about the resistance against the German occupation
 during World War II).

WARSAW, POLAND
Warsaw was completely bombed and destroyed during World War II.
On Black Monday (September 25, 1939), 500 tons of high explosive bombs
 and 72 tons of incendiary bombs were dropped, and there was heavy artillery
shelling. Jews were rounded up and forced into a ghetto.Overall, Warsaw
suffered approximately 25,800 civilian deaths. The Warsaw of today is an
exact restoration of what it was before the War.
Must see: Warsaw Uprising Museum; Gestapo Museum; Fragments of
Ghetto Wall (look for a wall in 55 Siena Street and 62 Zlota Street);
Little Insurgent Monument (a child wearing an oversized helmet,
 representing heroic children who fought against the occupiers in the 1944
 Warsaw Uprising).

BERLIN, GERMANY
Berlin was the capital of Nazi Germany and was air-raided 363 times during
World War II. The Americans dropped 23,000 tons of bombs, and the British,
 45,517 tons. Bombings continued relentlessly. By May 1945, nearly
14 per cent of Berliners had fled the city. Must see: Anti-War Museum
(has an original air raid shelter from World War II); Anne Frank Center;
Book Burning Memo rial; Marianfelde Refugees Centre Museum;
 Sachsenhausen (one of the largest concentration camps of the Reich
between 1936 and 1945); Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe.

NORMANDY, FRANCE
On June 6, 1944 (called D-Day), more than 156,000 Ameri can, Canadian and
 British forces and 20,000 vehicles mustered their might, landed on a 50-mile
stretch of beaches to push the Nazis out of Western Europe. Codenamed
 Operation Over lord, the Battle of Normandy was one of the largest
amphibi ous attacks in history and is often called the beginning of the end
of World War II.
Must see: Caen Memorial (history of the 20th century with video footage);
Centre Juno Beach (only museum along the land ing beaches dedicated to
 Canadian forces); Arromanches 360 (built to commemorate 50 years of
D-Day landings); Montormel Memorial; Merville Battery Museum;
Airborne Museum; American Cemetery.

LONDON, ENGLAND
London was in the eye of the war storm and history will never forget the Blitz.
German bombers appeared in London's skies on Sep tember 7, 1940, and for
57 consecutive days London was bombed. During the Blitz, 18,000 tons of
 high explosives were dropped on England killing a to tal of 18,629 men,
16,201 women, and 5,028 children.
Must see: The Imperial War Museum; Merchant Seamen's Memorial Garden;
Kindertransport (bears 16 milestones, each in the name of a city from
where some 10,000 Jewish children fled Nazi persecution for refuge in
Britain from 1938 to 1940); Monument to the Women of Word War II;
Cabinet War Rooms (where Winston Churchill and his government operated
 during the War); War Museum in Southwark (depicts what it was like to live
 in Britain during the War).
Preeti Verma Lal

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