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@Kim-lc3fv4 ай бұрын
What a terrible you make at the end of the video. Please delete that.
@LucysMom15 ай бұрын
I’m so grateful for all the men who liberated my Polish Catholic Grandpa from Dachau. I would not exist if it wasn’t for them. Thank you from the bottom of my heart. ♥️🇺🇸
@SteveSmith-eb6ze5 ай бұрын
Bee there,that place will give you the creeps.
@Carolinel6735 ай бұрын
Yea I love the polish people. Let’s not forget 27 million Russians died .
@LucysMom15 ай бұрын
@@Carolinel673 The entire video is about the liberation of Dachau. Your comment is irrelevant. 🙄
@pattysouza29545 ай бұрын
I'm so happy your Grandfather was saved. They were truly our Greatest Generation. I am American Indian and my Father's older sister joined the Navy during WW ll and my Father had to get permission from his parents from his parents because of his young age and he joined the Navy too. Everyone wanted to help in whatever way possible. We were very lucky because both my Father and his older sister returned home safely.
@Carolinel6735 ай бұрын
@@LucysMom1 It was the Russians that liberated MOST of the camps & killed 80% of ALL NAZIS .
@jimp69846 ай бұрын
My father was in the 42nd division and was there. He was deeply affected by what he saw. He once told me, "I can't believe how human beings could treat other human beings that way."
@eatassonthefirstdate6 ай бұрын
That's the last great American generation. they were the beginning and the end of the American dream. after they saw JFK shot, right after that is when inflation and the wage gap started slowly turning the middle class into the lower class.
@joemello78886 ай бұрын
My father was there also. In General Patch’s army. He didn’t talk about it much and died in 1967. Wish I knew more. I remember him talking about one of his buddies killing the commandant. For years it was always in the back of my mind. Recent history and KZbin showed there might be a grain of truth to it.
@rebeccasjodal97696 ай бұрын
They were de-humanised! That's how the Nazis could treat them in such horrible ways
@CockadoodleDont6 ай бұрын
@@joemello7888There’s definitely some truth there with the Dachau guards being shot, so you really never know. I have 2 similar stories from my grandfather and I’ve been thinking lately that maybe it wasn’t all exaggerated. You can research and request your dads service records if you haven’t already but as you know you can’t get the stories back.
@liveinthepresent2196 ай бұрын
And it's still happening today in 2024!
@aprilshew4 ай бұрын
My Dad never mentioned what Division he was in, nor which Concentration Camp they liberated. He never talked about it unless he was drunk, and then he would always tell the same thing. (I CANNOT Begin to imagine what all these men went through 😭).He would just sit at the kitchen table staring & drinking. When he had too much to drink, he would only say that they couldn't eat for a week after picking up all the bodies because they're skin would come off when moving the bodies & the smell had to wear off their hands. I have the utmost Respect for each & every man that fought. God bless each one of them ❤🙏
@jws1948ja2 ай бұрын
I am ready to cry.
@deviritter5232Ай бұрын
My uncle would never speak of it either.
@Kathleenkelly706 ай бұрын
Very bright man - very articulate. Yes, he did start rocking while he was talking about Dachau. At age 19 my Dad was with troops that liberated Flossenberg concentration camp. He wouldn't discuss it. To think that these brave men came home and went to school, went to work, raised families, lived a pretty normal full lives is astounding to me. Greatest Generation indeed!
@LindaLee-vt9lr5 ай бұрын
God bless your Dad for being part of liberating Flossenburg. I had a distant cousin that had been there. And survived due to men like your father. BTW, my rel
@LindaLee-vt9lr5 ай бұрын
BTW my relative made it back home and became a police officer. Please tell your father that.
@janinebell4885 ай бұрын
Yes I agree, a very articulate man. Saw the worst of human behaviour, Saw the results of that I noticed also, he started to rock back and forth, also the almost entirety of the video, He folded his arms across himself. Physiological damage is extremely debilitating. The damaged parts of your brain, your psyche, will Never Ever heal. This type of mental anguish follows you until your last breath. So horribly sad 😢
@Kathleenkelly705 ай бұрын
@@LindaLee-vt9lr Thanks Linda! So good to know.
@johnshoemakerjr58404 ай бұрын
@@janinebell4888:50 9:00
@curiousviews46116 ай бұрын
My dad was there. He was just a young kid, but what he saw as a young soldier stayed with him his entire life. I remember the terrible dreams he would have where he would wake up crying. He tried to find solace in the bottle, which ended up killing him young. I wish I’d had him a lot longer.
@skwabo6 ай бұрын
Sorry for your loss 😢
@unseelie636 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry.Absolutely heartbreaking.
@claragould46546 ай бұрын
God bless you
@JoopZweetsok6 ай бұрын
😢very sad sir! May he rest in the heavens
@kimhayes38286 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry for him, for your family and the exponential number of people who were victims of this barbarism! This is why we must ALL speak out about hate and violence.
@tinalouise37835 ай бұрын
My grandfather was an army physician who helped liberate Buchenwald. Like in the comments of so many others here, he would not talk about it except to say that “reports had not been exaggerated”and he struggled with alcohol for the rest of his life.
@theforsterfamily5 ай бұрын
God bless you and thank you for your service. You liberated my grandfather, a POW of the 42nd division, captured in the battle of the Bulge and eventually sent to Dachau.
@boyanbc5 ай бұрын
Once, in Germany I visited a small family farm. It was in the mid 2000's. We had lunch. The grandfather of the owner was there, too. He was in his 90's. He was behaving very strangely. Obviously, he was having dementia. I was wondering why he was so animated and excited, but when I saw how upset and ashamed the rest of the family was, I tried to exercise my bad German and understand his shouting. Then it downed on me. He was repeating over and over in his mind how he shot someone. He was acting out how that person was begging for his life while he was killing him. This old man lived through the war into his 90's, but his late years were pure hell. He was mentally stuck in it. There were generations of such damaged people. War is pure evil.
@karengilliland24396 ай бұрын
I'm sure that experience was something that Mr. Lukens never forgot, but to have to retell that terrible story really affected him, he rocks back and forth, trying to comfort his younger self as he remembers. Bless him, and all the men who had to endure the horrors of war.
@willow_wolfe39495 ай бұрын
You can see how difficult it was for him to relive the past, but he gave this interview because he didn't want what happened to ever be forgotten. What a brave and good man.
@Ivehadenuff6 ай бұрын
Thank you, sir, for your service. My stepfather was POW in Germany and liberated by US soldiers.
@Aspett06 ай бұрын
The way this gentleman moves his body back and forth when he's telling about the horrors he saw at Dachau... you know that never left him.
@maggieanne53405 ай бұрын
I noticed that also. Not a pacing as a wild animal in a cage needing to be free... But, a rocking as to self soothe through such horrendous memories. God Bless him.
@angelasmith37505 ай бұрын
I have so much respect for all these brave men who fought for all of our freedoms! The horror they had to endure escapes me! Im sorry they had to witness the horrible things the Nazi inflicted!
@chaoticconjuring4 ай бұрын
He wraps his arms around himself in a protective way too.
@mickieswendsen13023 ай бұрын
I noticed that, too.❤
@jordanmurray4102 ай бұрын
That sounds like something that will never leave you, witnessing the Pinnacle of human depravity
@lynnwood72056 ай бұрын
My mother's brother was an infantry scout with the 45th division and so found himself one of the first GI's to encounter Dachau. He would acknowledge that he was there but refused to speak any further of it.
@kparsa15 ай бұрын
I can only imagine what he saw.
@jlo77702 ай бұрын
Your uncle? Is a mother's brother something different?
@neveralone1498Ай бұрын
@@jlo7770 Yes, his uncle. He's differentiating between his mother's brother or his father's brother to be specific.
@jlo7770Ай бұрын
@@neveralone1498 "my uncle on my mother's side" is a whole lot less convoluted and sounds way less..... banging your cousin
@LLBP.6 ай бұрын
He's sharp as a tack. Thanks for your honesty.
@oliveoil76426 ай бұрын
Definitely has Biden beat!
@rosedawson54456 ай бұрын
Why the hell bring Biden into this? Let's see how you are when you get this gentleman's age. Good grief!
@seattlewa85005 ай бұрын
@@oliveoil7642he doesn’t wear diapers like Trump.
@kaymuldoon3575Ай бұрын
@@oliveoil7642 Popeye said to shut it.
@kimberleebrackley27935 ай бұрын
Bless every veteran. Deepest, thanks for your service, we wouldn't be here without you.
@taylorsorensen42585 ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@connieverbeck11106 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing. I had an uncle who liberated a death camp, but would never talk about it. He passed in 1974.
@johnarmstrong4726 ай бұрын
Incredibly humble man. He went to Princeton, he was part of the American elite, but he was a private. That wouldn't happen today, no way!
@Kathleenkelly706 ай бұрын
So true!
@stanleybroniszewsky85386 ай бұрын
If he completed his education and received a degree, he would have been a NCO.
@terrieormonde23406 ай бұрын
@@stanleybroniszewsky8538What would you know of it!!! This was WWII, so I do not believe your old or wise enough by your comment.
@johnsecord85395 ай бұрын
A lot of the British aristocracy’s kids fought in both world wars. When the country is on the line or u need more people. Everyone has to fight
@Carolinel6735 ай бұрын
27 million Russians died . Operation Barbarossa was the most ferociously fought battle in history according to war HISTORIAN’S . Most camps in Europe liberated by the Russians . I say RIP on all sides including the enemies . Little Shultz the grandson of a top SS leader . Putin’s maternal uncles died in WW11 he had no family left . Thank god for the Russians. Hitler or Stalin what a choose.
@lotusmanb38326 ай бұрын
My God! How could anyone look upon that and not feel changed forever. I can't even imagine .
@kathyraygoza32996 ай бұрын
Just a few musings but like a string of beads they are all connected in a way. Anyone being in in war has had experiences they couldn't forget and like my Dad had nightmares sometimes. I remember reading about a British actor who gained his American citizenship either the day before or after Dec. 7th. He and a film crew were among other places at Tarawa. His marriage didn't last long when his wife said he wasn't the same man that returned home. His name was Louis Hayward. My father had purchased a book titled the Eyes Of The War and when someone would ask about the War he'd pull out the book and let them see for themselves. He wouldn't talk about it. The closest he could come to it was reminisces about old buddies. He kept up correspondences with a few. As a child I happened upon that book. Decades later Life magazine ran a photo of a poor little Vietnamese girl running down a road stark naked because napalm had burnt her clothing. I was instantly reminded of the introductory photo in the book. A Chinese baby of about 2 or 3 sitting in a war torn train station whailing for probably Mom. Also in the book were sections on the concentration camps. My Father told me the dead were people unwanted because they were different. My view of people was charged then and there. To this day I'm in wonder and awe of those men who returned home, some who were shattered for life and some who were able to pull some inner strength and went on to lead progressive lives. PS. It's a shame one of us children of these brave men didn't begin collecting family stories and publish them as a book. When the S F Chronicle had a Sunday supplement that carried a story written by a daughter about her father and what she found in a carefully hidden box. When in college don't know what brought it up but the subject of Daddy returning home brought up memories of our Dad's. At 81 there aren't to many of us left with those rememberences.
@KerryDavis-bd7cu6 ай бұрын
He starts rocking when he talked about the horror
@merylroberts11816 ай бұрын
He folds his arms and closes off his posture too, it’s very telling.
@christophedevos37606 ай бұрын
My full respect for this man and all the soldiers involved in the liberation of Europe, it was an atrocious war, may it never be forgotten or repeated. All the best.
@cherrystoltz15574 ай бұрын
Sadly, its not only been forgotten, its being derided and the Holocaust celebrated !!!
@lindamack19006 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service Mr.Lukens!🇺🇸
@angelasmith37505 ай бұрын
I want to thank all the honorable men for their bravery for defending our country! Allowing me to grow up free! I thank you all! I have much respect for u all! Again thank you all for my freedom and for the countries freedom! Again thank you
@Crusty_Camper5 ай бұрын
You can see the stress of recalling these events in the way that Mr Lukens starts to rock a little as he tells the story. That was exactly the same as my grandfather did when he remembered his part in liberating Bergen-Belsen concentration camp. Also there for the liberation of prisoners was someone whose friendship I would get many years later, who was a Canadian veteran. Both of them said they had heard of concentration camps before discovering Belsen and as my Canadian friend said, "If I knew about it, for sure the Generals knew about it".
@cherylhaugen18976 ай бұрын
The eye-witness accounts tell history so vividly! The men who saw this and experienced it are very special, and I wish they could publish their stories so people would not forget. Thank you, all WWII vets, for what did with such bravery, and also, thank you for the lives you lived when you came home. America must never forget!
@nicolepeters67196 ай бұрын
I'm blessed and extremely proud of this elderly gentleman. He is so lucid and fluent. God bless his soul! Thank you for your contribution. He reminds me so much of my great granddad. He fought in WW2 and he was a gem of a man. I remember his stories of the war. Still amazed at this gentleman's sharpness and articulation.❤❤❤❤❤❤
@beerybill6 ай бұрын
I was stationed at the NATO HQ in Naples and during 1963 visited a friend stationed in Munich with the 24th Division. He told me I should visit Dachau and since, he said, directions were poor he'd draw a map. I said why don't you come along to which he replied that he'd been there once and wouldn't go back. After I visited I understood why.
@robertwhite37525 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your service sir. I live in the best country in the world today because of you and men like you. Freedom is not free, and this could happen again. Less we ever forget!
@happybunny87045 ай бұрын
Claiming to live in the best country in the world because of people like him ? America only joined in the latter years of the war and only because they were bought into it due to pearl harbour .
@elaineburnett52302 ай бұрын
Thank you, Mr. Lukens, for your service and for sharing history that we should never forget. 😢
@tominnis83535 ай бұрын
What a remarkable account, recounted with dignity and fortitude.
@robinshankland34996 ай бұрын
My Grandfather never,ever recovered. My great uncle returned in his little metal box in the late 1950s when roadwork was being done near the French border. He and a number of other American servicemen were identified by their dog tags and finally came home. Nothing about what happened to the Jewish people in World War 2 had ANYTHING to do with battle, with fighting, with the rigors of war. What was done to the Jewish people was an attempt at annihilation. Nothing else but evil drove the torture, degradation and murder of the MILLIONS of innocent Jews. We're seeing anti-Semitism raise it's head again in the United States... Many of us feel concerned but not afraid. I say "Hello" to the Police Officers on my way into the Synagogue and carry on.
@deborahs25936 ай бұрын
I'm a boomer, so grew up listening to some of my uncle's war stories- but not all- some were too awful to tell aloud. I am utterly shocked watching hatred for the Jewish people rise again. I believed we would never see it on a scale like this. To this day there are many who deny the Holocaust happened. I knew some who survived- the tatoos on their arms with the # assigned to them was sickening, horrible. I pray for the eyes of the ignorant to be opened.
@Carolinel6735 ай бұрын
It’s called ANTI ZIONOST don’t get them confused. 🇮🇪.
@tinamckenzie12295 ай бұрын
I agree. It's shocking to see this on the rise with all the information about the horrors of the Holocaust so available.
@yishaihalpin5 ай бұрын
Until Moshiach comes my brother, we will be persecuted. It is deeply disturbing but a reminder of the truth of the spiritual battle we are in. Theres no other explanation but that out G-d is true, and our enemies are really against Him and not us. I am a Yid and a Police Officer so I like how you said you greet the Police officers on the way to Shul. You must be in Brooklyn. I’m from Crown Heights but moved to Texas four years ago and am a cop just outside of Dallas. Always a Police presence outside of 770 I remember. I think that rubbed off on me a little bit.
@catalhuyuk75 ай бұрын
I’ve watched docs and read books about the holocaust for years and thought how horrible to starve, torture and murder innocent people. I’ve lost sympathy for the people of Israel for doing the exact same thing to the Palestinians. It’s equally disgusting!
@Michael-m2b3k6 ай бұрын
I salute you for your unwavering courage in the face of such horror that you witness, I'm so proud of you for your service and congradulate you, SIR !!! God bless you !!!!
@carolinependleton84456 ай бұрын
What a lovely,caring,unassuming,brave man,thankyou for the video.
@brianhetzel34495 ай бұрын
My grandfather was in the same division, 20th Armored, 414th field artillery, and had to have fought along side him. He never, ever talked about the war until very late in life. Even then, it wasn’t much. I just visited Dachau and saw the 20th Armored plaque - just hard to imagine what they saw.
@pgrose4226 ай бұрын
The stories they tell of first hand experience. Love to hear them. My Dad & Mum would not tell thier children.
@micoma496 ай бұрын
My Father was also in the 20th, and the experience of taking Dacha was such that he could not bring himself to again see the sight in 1980 when we made a family trip to Southern Germany. It brought back painful memories just being close by. On a side note, Mr. Luckens appears to have gotten attached to the 20th after it had switched from being a training divison for other armored outfits/individuals, to a combat div. It was the last armored division to reach Europe, as well as the last one avaliable for combat use.
@tammynorsworthy9965 ай бұрын
My mother was born in Hungary. She lived through those times. Her little brother was killed from air fire that collapsed her home. They fled in the middle of the night. 😢
@RonMeadows-ri1ec6 ай бұрын
I visited Dachau when I was in the Army...Vietnam Era. It was very "Erie" as though you could "feel" the evil that had transpired there.
@LicardoDeBousee5 ай бұрын
I agree! I studied abroad in college on a Holocaust Studies trip. It was the greatest two months of my life between my junior and senior years of college. We visited Natzweiller-Struthoff and of course Dachau during our time there. I’ll never forget when I walked into the camp through those metal gates with the emblazoned words “Marcht Arbeit Frei”. To this day I swear the temperature dropped about ten degrees when I walked in. You could feel the haunted aura of the horrors that took place there and the clammy elements seep into your veins and every fiber of your being. One of the most surreal and eerie things to ever happen to me. #NeverForget
@punishedgloyperstormtroope80984 ай бұрын
America had Japanese internment camps also
@richardstephens55704 ай бұрын
@@punishedgloyperstormtroope8098 Trying to equate the German concentration camps to the U.S. internment camps is being disingenuous. It was unfortunate that the Japanese were interned like that, but the conditions in the camps was good enough that more people came out than went in because of the birth rate. But you probably knew that already, you are trying to use a weak "whataboutism" to push your agenda.
@susannelangridge42063 ай бұрын
I agree, I visited in 1982 . It was a grey cold day. I couldn’t help thinking of the prisoners with their very thin garments. It was only autumn at the time too.
@andriamsimpsonrussell5 ай бұрын
The rector of my church, St. Stephen's Episcopal Church, was a chaplain during WW II. During a Catechism class in the very early 80s he told us about his experience walking through one of the Nazi concentration camps (I can't remember which camp, its been 40 plus years) and he had walked into one of the buildings where the ovens were (I'm using his word). He described it as horrifying because there were still cremains in the ovens and some were still on. He also described some had remains that still...well...you get it. He also described the bodies piled up either waiting for the ovens or waiting for mass burial. After that brief description you could see in his face that even after 40 some odd years the experience was still very fresh in his mind. Those service members who served overseas and saw such horrors during WW II carried so much with them from their horrifying experiences. My neighbor also served in WWII and he never spoke about his experiences on D-Day until I asked him a question in the 1970s, his daughter (who went to school with my bio parents) sat there stunned listening to his stories and she later told him that her Dad and NEVER spoken about his time on that beach. These men held in their wartime experiences for whatever reasons and its up to us to listen and share their stories so that it never happens again, just like the extermination of anyone should NEVER happen again.
@hangin-in-thereawesome42456 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service!
@becca32846 ай бұрын
Wonderful man, amazing life. Thank you for your service and sharing this piece of history with us.
@leighlabbie80286 ай бұрын
Thank you sir, for your service.
@chirpydragonfruit94645 ай бұрын
My great uncle died in the battle for france, and rests there to this day
@KeithCooper-Albuquerque2 ай бұрын
Excellent interview. Thanks, Mr. Lukens for your service.
@davidmanley94375 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing. This gentleman is very sharp still about what happened so long ago. It is very eye opening to hear about how cruel the human race can be
@Airbornefighter-hr7lt6 ай бұрын
Not to the same degree, but I have been involved in Bosnia, Kosovo, Iraq and Afghanistan. And I have seen the very worst and the very best of humanity, II could not believe what man could do do man, and this wasn’t in the heat of battle for survival, this…..this was just depravity and cruelty for the sake off I.
@SweetButDeadly1016 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service. All conflicts have their own horror stories, and all who witness them are forever impacted.
@goldenrules37635 ай бұрын
Thank you is so inadequate but thank you. ❤
@simonowen27446 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service Mr Lukens. You related your grim experiences superbly.
@jackiejermeay65686 ай бұрын
I can't imagine what these went through all I can say is thank you.
@InnocentPotato-pd7wi6 ай бұрын
German - Swiss American here! My Great - Uncle died on a beach in Anzio, Italy February 1944! He was a Staff Sgt. in the US Army! Only e2 when he died! I visited Europe on an Educators Tour / Summer 1984! We were supposed to visit that Concentration Camp but I was very glad we didn't go! It had to be a HELLISH place ! As a sensitive, I am sure I wouldn't have been able to handle that EVIL place!HELL on earth!
@InnocentPotato-pd7wi6 ай бұрын
32 years old when he died...
@barbsmart73736 ай бұрын
@@InnocentPotato-pd7wi People like your great grand uncle are my heroes. I am a Kiwi and take a lot of interest in all these events. I am a Jewish descendant as well. In depth knowledge about the Holocaust has also changed me.
@InnocentPotato-pd7wi5 ай бұрын
@barbsmart7373 Thank you for your reply! I was raised Catholic! "RECOVERING CATHOLIC " now! I respect all religions! It is so sad that people continue to fight over religion! All 3 religions Christian / Jewish and Muslim believe in St. Michael the Archangel . There us a huge statue of St. MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL in Kiev/ Ukraine! Too bad they cannot learn to "Give Peace a Chance"!New Zealand is a beautiful country! 🤗🥰🤗
@TylerG-g2mАй бұрын
I'm confused. You say he was a SSG but then you say he was e2. Did you mean to say he was 22? I'm guessing that's what you meant
@lovethosebudgies665 ай бұрын
What an incredibly sharp mind! As difficult as it was to recount his experiences, this is so important to have history preserved. I tried to get my dad on tape for his experiences but I think he thought it was macabre like we thought he was going to die. As a naval officer he had wonderful information about ships etc. too. Now his story is lost.
@samiquartuccio9754Күн бұрын
my great grandfather helped liberate dachau. he was a photographer and we still have his photos. it baffles me that there are people who deny this tragedy
@elainemoreland39086 ай бұрын
Thank you Sir for your service. Never again.
@etcomehome392 ай бұрын
Thank you Sir for sharing your experience. We must never forget!
@sandrarogers12002 ай бұрын
My dad served in the army in the 103rd. He was there when Lansberg concentration camp had been liberated. He never talked about the war until he was in his mid 60s. I'm glad he finally did because I'd always wanted to know about his time in the service. He did talk about the liberated prisoners and how horrible there physical condition was. He said they looked like skeletons with skin. At Landsberg, the prisoners were basically starved to death, as they weren't subject to the gas chamber. The arm
@moonbaby17235 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for preserving these stories!
@yishaihalpin5 ай бұрын
Thank you for the service of these incredible men, most of whom have passed on, but they will never be forgotten. Thank you for all our men and women who have served and to those who gave the ultimate sacrifice for this great country.
@Charro766 ай бұрын
Forever enjoy hearing the old Military Veterans relating their experiences. Especially 2nd World War Vets. Across the 'Pond', in Europe, they are much Honoured and held in high esteem, at War Remembrance Ceremonies. Thank You Pt.Lukens Sir. May You Rest in Peace 🙏🏽🤲👏🏻 ❤🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸
@WesleyBrutcher-xc4tl2 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service and the memories you can’t forget. God bless
@benmiz97425 ай бұрын
What a gentleman, you really could listen to these guys all day. His story at the start regarding his schooling and university and ski club was brilliant. Rest in peace Mr Lukens and thank you for your service. You really are the greatest generation.
@redrocks1983Ай бұрын
Well said ... Amen
@AkronKid3306 ай бұрын
I love hearing these stories from ww2! Thank you. ❤
@dennismetzger92875 ай бұрын
It's one thing watching the movies and reading the stories but to hear and see the real thing always feels surreal. I love youtube for this reason
@LaurieValdez-zk3dy6 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service 🏥❤️❤️❤️
@nolanfoutz34726 ай бұрын
Omg to hear my home town university UNL get called a lark is hilarious i would think that too especially coming from the mountains. This guy is amazing and the liberation of the camps will never be forgotten the names of everyone will at some point but what they did will be know for the rest of history
@APhilCollinsFan5 ай бұрын
My father had bad flashback for years after what he saw in theses camps,...." there is absolutely no limit to human stupidity he said"... he lost many many good friends that lay forever over there in fields.
@pmc69255 ай бұрын
God bless you and your father. I'm so sorry he had to deal with the horrors that he experienced while over there. But your father was part of the greatest generation of our time. They didn't just save this country but the entire world. They didn't only give back so many their countries that were occupied by evil but saved many lives. Unfortunately war leaves scars that aren't so obvious to the naked eye. I've served in US Special Operations for 22yrs now. I too have experienced the horrors of war, but not to the magnitude of WW2. God bless your father and you and yours and God bless America. 🇺🇲
@APhilCollinsFan5 ай бұрын
@@pmc6925 Thank you for your kind words,.. l was myself in the army as medic attach to a airbourne regiment for 30 years,....l can tell you that my father was right,.. after many deployments over sea in war theater and regardless was Ex-Yugosslavia, Rwanda, Cyprus, Afghanistan, West Timor,. just to name few ".. there is no limit to humain stupidity,".. .. people have not learn from the past,.. so they were doom to repeat the same mistake,...nothing has change,.. except the size and power of destruction..... take good care my brother in arms.
@Mr29roses6 ай бұрын
"The area was liberated by the Canadians." Yaay Canada! This is an excellent interview.
@michaelweeks93176 ай бұрын
That is absolutely heartbreaking.We should make every American child.Listen to this and watch the hamas video of October.The seventh the enemy's face becomes so much clearer when you see that!
@andrewmarkland42315 ай бұрын
Those kids are already seeing piles of dead kids in Gaza everyday on social media. In fact, for years, they have seen images of them being brutalised.
@Carolinel6735 ай бұрын
A child in Palestine 🇵🇸 is just as important as one in Israel. Over 70% of the victims in the Gaza women & children. 37.000 & counting now a deliberate famine . Ireland 🇮🇪. Now we have Spain 🇪🇸 & Norway 🇳🇴 on board .
@bobthebaptist45415 ай бұрын
We have no idea how many “women and children” have been killed, as all these numbers come from Hamas (a brutal terrorist organization). If they didn’t use them as human shields, whatever the actual number is would be gar less than the actual value. As it has been said, Hamas uses people to protect themselves while Israel uses the military to protect the people.
@francisconsole38925 ай бұрын
My uncle Vinnie was with the Army and went in to Dachau. Never forgot his description of the freed prisoners, one of whom died in the arms of an allied soldier.
@phyllisgiaconia585218 күн бұрын
When i watch the veterans recall their experiences, i'm always amazed at all the details in their reflections. Thank you guys for your services.
@mikeveis36165 ай бұрын
My Uncle was in a regiment that help liberate Dachau. Right up to the day that he died, he did not like talk about what he saw there. He would get very annoyed if anybody brought it up or talked about it.
@richardstall43516 ай бұрын
Must have been very awful 😞 to see Thanks to Everyone who served ❤
@timothylarsen28856 ай бұрын
When i was stationed in Germany we saw Dachow that was in 1989 and it was an experience in horror
@noelmacdougall63356 ай бұрын
I could listen to this gentleman all day.
@ardiffley-zipkin95395 ай бұрын
Thank you, sir for your service. May God bless you always😇
@GeorgiaYoung-r8l6 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service and God bless you and ease your mind after witnessing that.
@carolwilliams82815 ай бұрын
I cannot imagine and don't want to. God bless and keep you safe & well. Thank you for all youve done for US. 🙏🇺🇸❤️🙏🇺🇸❤️🙏🇺🇸❤️
@richardgreen78112 ай бұрын
My Uncle was in wave 2 on Omaha Beach, June 6th, 1944. In a very private conversation he shared some of the things he experienced. Fast forward to 1957, and he was reporting to the key Nazi (Wernher Von Braun) scientist who developed the V1 and V2 Rockets. Uncle Frank was a Technical Engineer developing the fuel control valves for the five engines on the Atlas Booster. My Brother, Sister, and I toured the NASA Facility in Huntsville, AL three separate times and actually met Von Braun in one of the plants. I've heard stories of irony before but this one is the most dramatic. Von Braun was part of Operation Paperclip where the Americans "volunteered" Nazi personnel to come to America. Thing is ... the American rocket program could not have made progress without Von Braun. He was utterly and completely fixated on space travel.
@fiorenzaattanasio47965 ай бұрын
Thank you Sir for doing this video. God Bless you.. God Bless All our Veterans past present and future ❤
@lewisnerАй бұрын
There are a series of early 1990s interviews with the Liberators of the death camps and they are well worth watching. Each one could be a movie.
@taylorsorensen42585 ай бұрын
I love the comments! So much care and respect for this man, so much patriotism ❤
@claregolec-gs7vm5 ай бұрын
My father John Golec served with the CIC and produced an official report on Dachau for Eisenhower and his staff. Also have a 9 page letter to my mother describing what he saw and experienced. He spoke several languages so he interviewed those interned at the camp. He never really spoke about his experience there.
@bobbynesbitt18635 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service. 🙏❤️
@richardmartinez60576 ай бұрын
Bless all of you 😢🙏☝️
@rach211115 күн бұрын
The generation that literally saved the world. God Bless every last one of them.
@madmanmechanic88476 ай бұрын
Wow I cant even imagine what they went through the stench had to horrible and smelled for miles away . He never said how they did away with the sniper rotten bastards put up the white flag and pick off soldiers ! They truly are the greatest generation
@rodneymoore72705 ай бұрын
THANK YOU SIR!!!!
@sherriroe48065 ай бұрын
You are a treasure sir, thank you for your service.❤🇺🇸
@davejones676 ай бұрын
God bless you sir
@dominiclane85386 ай бұрын
I really listening too veterens , what happened should never be forgot
@davidlegge15445 ай бұрын
Thank you sir. Thank you.
@j1st6336 ай бұрын
Dachau. A Must see if you visit Munich. A short public Transportation Ride to camp.
@SteveSmith-eb6ze6 ай бұрын
I visited Dachau while stationed in Schweinfurt. It gives one the creeps.
@samtatge82996 ай бұрын
I expected something like a Hogans Hero’s type set up. It wasn’t. It was built to last 100 years. The huge poured concrete fence posts were perfectly and skillfully crafted. The edges were sharp and crisp. They intended that place to operate for decades. That realization shook me up.
@sassycat64876 ай бұрын
I read a book written by a Catholic priest who was there with a bunch of other Catholic priests as well. It was a really chilling read about the punishments the priests received (the nazi's hated Catholics with a passion). One of the punishments was having to kiss broken glass and every time you kissed it the SS would hold the priest down until his face was pouring blood. One priest died from this. What really amazed me was towards the end of the book when the Americans arrived the priest described some order finally arriving and everyone seemed to be at peace. Then suddenly the Russian POWs who had been imprisoned there as well started flipping out and decided they were going to get revenge on the SS who were still there (many had fled) and that's actually what got the American soldiers riled up and then they started helping with killing the SS.
@InglésconRobert20256 ай бұрын
@@SteveSmith-eb6ze Birkenau would really give you the creeps. Read up before going. Just looking at the place is only half of it. The real horror comes when you know what happened in each area.
@SteveSmith-eb6ze6 ай бұрын
@@InglésconRobert2025 Visiting one concentration camp was enough for me. I don’t like the feeling you get when walking through the gate. I am not bs’ing,I could feel the hatred,suffering and misery,it felt like thousands of eyes were watching me,can’t explain it. I took our German Shepherd with us and she was very tense and hyper. She tried to dig where they threw the ashes of the dead.
@ronald47005 ай бұрын
My uncle help liberate some of those camps ,after everything he has seen he said that affected him most.
@everettplummer97252 ай бұрын
Dad went there with the 191st Service Company a tank battalion. Two miles of bodies made into fences, heading into camp. Not just Jews, they didn't discriminate. They had room for gypsies and foreigners too.
@HRM.H6 ай бұрын
Mustve been a horric sight.
@unseelie636 ай бұрын
Just seeing photos of the dead is horrible.I can't begin to imagine how much worse it had to be to see it first hand.
@rhonda82315 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service
@virginia2476 ай бұрын
The bravest women served in so many areas of the war also.some never came home and are buried in other lands, never forget them, 😢
@JoopZweetsok6 ай бұрын
rip sir
@pennytrupiano26896 ай бұрын
My goodness! I go back and forth...how did they not know this was going on? For five years before the war? I can't fathom the disgusting depths of this evil.......and we're supposed to let it happen again? Put up a fight for God's name and righteousness sake!
@shakyleg59295 ай бұрын
Dachau is still open to tourism. I visited and it showed how brutal it was. There were pictures of piles of golden teeth they extracted from prisoners. There were cells that were tighter than shoulder width where one would be forced to stand and then eventually sink as far as the body could contort between the 4 walls. It was a huge facility. Several football fields could fit in there
@LLBP.6 ай бұрын
How did they not know about the camps? That's what gets me. How did no one know? Doesn't seem possible but guess it was. 🤔🤔
@reneeb.27026 ай бұрын
No cellphones, no security cameras on every corner, not many tvs yet. Radio & newspapers mostly. So easier to hide things. My friend’s dad did not even see her till she was 18 months old. No zoom calls or video either.
@briancurran29886 ай бұрын
The smell must have been horrendous, the Germans knew, but fear can change people's attitudes. Germans were watching each other and reporting each other, they feared being reported, as it meant going into a camp, or if in the military, the Eastern front. I've visited Bergan Belson 3 times, Buckenwald and Dachau, makes you think, how did the Germans think up some of the atrocities they committed. As an aside we visited Colditz castle, which was a pow camp, very interesting, we had a former pow with us Kenneth lockwood, who was interned there during ww2.
@djquinn116 ай бұрын
@@reneeb.2702: Of course they knew.
@SteveSmith-eb6ze6 ай бұрын
The German public knew of the camps but had no idea what went on inside them. There were of course rumors but one did not ask questions in Nazi Germany.
@corneliabard58946 ай бұрын
People knew they knew...... Germans knew and when trains went past they closed their ears and eyes.. they knew but preferred to be deaf and blind just like today....it will happen again
@cookla30506 ай бұрын
Thank you for your service. Evil times God Bless You
@miapdx5035 ай бұрын
Genocide is always a great evil. Why do people want to destroy the lives of others? Hate is a powerful force. Those who harbor hate in their hearts are truly sick. Sick to their souls.