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  New evidence on WWII mystery of Raoul Wallenberg
Posted by: Walt's Daughter - 04-02-2010, 08:45 AM - Forum: ANYTHING WWII - No Replies


New evidence on WWII mystery of Raoul Wallenberg

 

(AP) – 20 hours ago

 

STOCKHOLM, Sweden — Researchers say new evidence from Russian archives suggests that a Swedish diplomat credited with rescuing thousands of Hungarian Jews from the Holocaust was alive after the Soviets reported his death in prison.

 

The fate of Raoul Wallenberg, whom the Soviet army arrested in Budapest in January 1945, has remained one of the great mysteries of World War II.

 

The Soviets claimed he was executed in 1947 but never produced a reliable death certificate or his remains. Witnesses claim he was seen in Soviet prisons or labor camps many years later.

 

The archives of the Russian Security Services now say a man identified only as Prisoner No. 7, who was interrogated six days after the diplomat's reported death, was "with great likelihood" Wallenberg.

 

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

 

==============

 

Group uncovers new details about Swedish diplomat who saved Jews

By SANANDA SAHOO

McClatchy Newspapers

 

 

Raoul Wallenberg, a Swedish diplomat who helped save thousands of Hungarian Jews during World War II then was captured by the Red Army, lived at least six days longer than the Russian government had previously claimed, an international research team said Thursday.

 

Wallenberg's disappearance at the end of the war has never been explained, and his last days have become one of the war's great mysteries. The Soviet and Russian governments have given different versions of Wallenberg's death over the past 65 years.

 

From 1945 until 1956, the Soviet government maintained that Wallenberg was never on its territory. Later, it said the Swedish diplomat died of heart attack while in Soviet custody. In 2001, the Russian government said Wallenberg was most probably executed - but it didn't provide any documentation.

 

Researchers from the Swedish-Russian Working Group on Wallenberg said documents provided by the Russian FSB, the successor to the Soviet KGB, reveal that "Prisoner No. 7" underwent a lengthy interrogation six days after what the Soviets long claimed was the date of Wallenberg's death.

 

Former Soviet interrogators had previously told the research team that Wallenberg was known as Prisoner No. 7, and the new information marked a shift from earlier claims of Wallenberg's death on July 17, 1947, said Susanne Berger, an American researcher who worked as an independent consultant to the group.

 

"If Wallenberg lived beyond that date, all questions about his further fate in Soviet captivity remain open," Berger said, "because the official Soviet era claim of his death . . . would be rendered obsolete."

 

Wallenberg is thought to have become Prisoner No. 7 after he arrived from Budapest at the Lubyanka prison in Moscow on Feb. 6, 1945, the researchers said.

 

The FSB statement left open several questions about Wallenberg's fate. "Was the Prisoner No. 7 sentenced and transferred to another prison as a numbered prisoner?" Berger asked. "Did he remain in Lubyanka, a numbered prisoner under investigation? Or was he killed?"

 

According to the FSB statement, Prisoner No. 7 was interrogated for 16 hours by the head of Soviet counterintelligence, on July 23, 1947.

 

Also questioned along with Prisoner 7: Wallenberg's driver in Budapest and his presumed cellmate, the FSB told the researchers. A few hours earlier, the officials interrogated a Wallenberg's cellmate.

 

Sweden's ambassador to Moscow, Tomas Bertelman, wrote Yuri Trambitsky, head of FSB's Central Archive, asking for a clarification of the information, the researchers said.

 

The U.S. War Refugee Board recruited Wallenberg in 1944 to travel to Hungary and use his status as a diplomat of Sweden, which was neutral in the war, to help save Hungarian Jews. He is credited with saving at least 20,000 Jews by giving them Swedish identification papers and with preventing another 50,000 from being taken to concentration camps.

 

Marvin Makinen, a former prisoner in Moscow during the Cold War and a consultant to the research team, was encouraged by the new information.

 

"We have been asking for this one document for 19 years," said Makinen, a professor of biochemistry and molecular biophysics at the University of Chicago.

 

"It is perhaps the most sensational piece of information of Wallenberg from Russia in 56 years," he said. "We wait to see how the Russians are going to respond to this."

 

Posted on Thu, Apr. 01, 2010 07:49 PM

 

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  The Column of Liberation 2010
Posted by: angatti - 04-02-2010, 06:20 AM - Forum: News and Events - Replies (10)


The Column of Liberation 2010

April 23-25 2010 - Florence and Pisa - Italy

 

What the Column of Liberation is; some information for foreign fellow collectors.

 

During the last few years Gotica Toscana Onlus (not for profit Association) has managed relevant commemorative events in Italy as well as has participated in the most important European events like Tanks in Town (2008-2009), Normandy and Bastogne celebrations (2009). We had the chance to talk to many of you during the above mentioned European events and now we would like to invite you in Italy! Many of you have never seen Italy before, while others have tried to get in touch with other Club in order to visit Italy without receiving response or have come to Italy for holidays only. Anyway, none of you has ever join a WW2 commemorative event in Italy.

 

Often the Italian Campaign is associated with the idea of a secondary front; instead it has been a real war in the war since the Allies have fought step by step along the Peninsula from Sicily to the Alps, suffering heavy losses as well as the Axis forces. The Italian Campaign ended in April 1945, although Italy is no more in the limelight since the Liberation of Rome (June 4th 1944) which little anticipate D-Day in Normandy (June 6th 1944) despite during the second half of 1944 and for the whole winter of 1945 thousand soldiers from both parts have been deployed by/against the last German fortified defense line built up in the Apennines Mountains: the Gothic Line.

Bunkers, emplacements, trenches, battlefield are still visible nowadays on the Apennines Mountains between Toscana and Emila-Romagna regions where everything has remained the same since then on; it is not difficult to find older people in the Mountains still using military equipment like tools, shovels, belts and it is not impossible to find helmets and other WW2 military equipment also. The Gothic Line impressed in the population the permanent and indelible memory of a difficult but overcome period of life. The most frequent images of those days depict columns of liberators marching northbound or the population familiarizing with soldiers during winter lull. Many US soldiers, especially, had Italian origins

 

The Column of Liberation is inspired by this collective Memory with the aim to preserve history and memories of those days which is fading away together with older people, living witnesses of those events; it is right because Italy has not a wide net of WW2 Museums, like Great Britain, France or Belgium, that event such as the Column of Liberation grow in importance in order to keep the Memory alive. Every kind of vehicle German, Italian ,English and American finds room within the Column of Liberation, because being an historic apolitical event it should depict every army involved with the only exception of those unit and formation which committed crimes against the population (right not to harm them again!).

 

Not only: the Column in fact will raise charity funds also, through the city where it will stop, to fund the activity of the Association Giuseppe e Margherita Coletta which is involved in the realization of an orphanage in Burkina Faso already in construction even thanks to the funds raised during the Column of Liberation 2008.

 

Detailed program is available on the Gotica Toscana web site.

 

Andrea Gatti

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  Howdy from the UK
Posted by: Ddowdle - 04-01-2010, 12:50 PM - Forum: Introduce Yourself! - Replies (5)


Hi my names Ade :pdt12: I live near Bristol in the S.W. of England.

 

I have an avid interest in all things U.S. ETO.

 

I've been collecting and conducting research on Engineering Regt based in Gloucestershire, England prior to D-Day. In particular those situated in and around the town of Stroud.

 

I don't know whether any or all of the following units fell under VI Corps command (perhaps a learned member could point me straight) but these units are some on which i have found information (and some photos) and would be keen to share any info with forum members;

 

1278th ECB (5th Eng Regt)

158th Eng

164th Eng

38th Eng (Gen Serv)

505th Light Pontoon Co.

28th Cav Recon Sqd (Mech)

41st & 67th Evac Hosp

 

I hope someone is able to help, perhaps i may be able to return the favour. :pdt34:

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  Action at Murfreesboro/Stones River 31 Dec 1862
Posted by: Dean - 04-01-2010, 01:16 AM - Forum: The US Civil War - Replies (1)


Cpt Thomas Quincy Stanford, Co G, 39th Alabama Infantry, was the great-grandfather of 2nd Lt Stanford Lee Arnold, Co E, 345th Infantry, 87th Division. Quincy, as he was called, was one of three brothers who enlisted in Co G in May 1862. He was elected captain of the company while his younger brother Will was promoted to Assistant Regimental Surgeon since he was a recent (1859) graduate of the medical school at the University of Nashville (now Vanderbilt Univ). The older brother, Monroe, enlisted as a private and was shipped home ill a month later.

 

Will soon left the regiment to tend to his older brother, after some disagreement with the top brass in the medical field. It is possible the disagreement was the failure to promote him to Surgeon, perhaps because he lacked the full 4 years of practice required in spite of the fact that he was one of very few doctors at the time with a university medical degree. Most doctors were trained as apprentices to practicing physicians. Or it could have been a disagreement over medical practices. Letters between Will and Quincy indicate that several of the men held many of the surgeons in low esteem after Will left.

 

The company reached Shiloh, Mississippi, a month or so after the Battle of Shiloh. While nearly half of the company became ill in the first few months, Quincy was diligent in his training of the able bodied soldiers. Their first and Quincy's last action came at the Battle of Murfreesboro or Stones River at the end of December seven months after they enlisted. That action is described in the attached article. Also attached is a photo of Capt Stanford wearing a sash marking him as Officer of the Day.

 

Cpt_TQ_at_Murfreesboro_5_16_05_c.pdf

TQUniform.pdf



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  2nd Lt Stanford Lee Arnold
Posted by: Dean - 04-01-2010, 12:15 AM - Forum: OTHER WWII UNIT STORIES AND INFO - Replies (2)


The attached article describes the actions of 2nd Lt Stanford L Arnold and his squad, Jim Hennessey, J J Moore, Ryan O'Shields, annd Sgt Jim Howe at Olzheim, Germany on 8 Feb 1945.

 

Stanford_L_Arnold_Olzheim_Germany_Feb_1945.pdf



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