Oradour-sur-Glane (by K2)
Aug 26, 2010 18:54:57 GMT
Post by Deleted on Aug 26, 2010 18:54:57 GMT
Oradour is one of the most shocking towns that you can visit in France. It is near Limoges.
On June 10, 1944 the Waffen-SS slaughtered 642 villagers. This was just after D-Day, as you can see from the date.
All of the women and children were locked up in the church. The men were put in six barns where the machines guns had already been set up. The men were killed and the women and children perished in the church, that was set on fire along with all of the other buildings in the village.
Yes, there was a trial after the war, in 1953. 65 of the German soldiers were still alive, but only 21 were present at the trial. More than half were in East Germany, which did not accept extradition. 7 of the defendents were Alsatians who had been drafted into the German army after re-annexation.
20 persons were found guilty. The Alsatians were granted amnesty immediately after the trial. The Germans went to prison but they had all been released by 1958.
The last Oradour trial took place in 1983. An SS officer who gave the order to shoot 20 men in a barn was tracked down in East Germany. He was sentenced to life imprisonment but was released from prison in reunified Germany in 1997. He died free in 2007.
General de Gaulle decided that the village would never be rebuilt, and it has remained the same as the day it was destroyed. A new Oradour was built a few hundred meters away.
Here are 4 photos that I took of Oradour when I visited (I might find a few more to post), and it is one of the most painful visits that one can make anywhere in the world.
On June 10, 1944 the Waffen-SS slaughtered 642 villagers. This was just after D-Day, as you can see from the date.
All of the women and children were locked up in the church. The men were put in six barns where the machines guns had already been set up. The men were killed and the women and children perished in the church, that was set on fire along with all of the other buildings in the village.
Yes, there was a trial after the war, in 1953. 65 of the German soldiers were still alive, but only 21 were present at the trial. More than half were in East Germany, which did not accept extradition. 7 of the defendents were Alsatians who had been drafted into the German army after re-annexation.
20 persons were found guilty. The Alsatians were granted amnesty immediately after the trial. The Germans went to prison but they had all been released by 1958.
The last Oradour trial took place in 1983. An SS officer who gave the order to shoot 20 men in a barn was tracked down in East Germany. He was sentenced to life imprisonment but was released from prison in reunified Germany in 1997. He died free in 2007.
General de Gaulle decided that the village would never be rebuilt, and it has remained the same as the day it was destroyed. A new Oradour was built a few hundred meters away.
Here are 4 photos that I took of Oradour when I visited (I might find a few more to post), and it is one of the most painful visits that one can make anywhere in the world.