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Mystery- The Haunted Town Of St. Nazianz, WI

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Mystery- The Haunted Town Of St. Nazianz, WI St. Nazians was founded by a priest who wholeheartedly believed to helped cursed the town. Over the years, the town has been hit with natural disasters and unexplained phenomena. Father Ambrose Oschwald was fled to Wisconsin in 1854 from religious persecution. The Roman Catholic Church had suspended him from his duties due to “mystical, prophetic, and heretical works.” Already, the scary history of the town is starting to make sense! Oddly enough, the congregation followed him. Once they got to Wisconsin, a “divine white heifer” lead them to the site of his new home which would become St. Nazianz. The community actually thrived. They titled themselves “The Association” and created an entirely functional society. Tragically, Father Oschwald became sick in 1873. Anton Still, a loyal follower, stayed with Father Osc...

Hot watch The horror they did to pragenet teens in camps.

The horror they did to pragenet teens in camps. After searching the women pulling down their underwear. There's a private store room kept for the women, where they enjoyed their service, got most pragenet and killed the majority that can't satisfied them.

Separate camps and compounds were set up exclusively for female prisoners who were considered strong enough for labor projects and menial chores. The largest women’s camp was Ravensbrück (near Berlin), where nearly 120,000 women from across Europe were sent.

An estimated 50,000 women died there between 1939 and 1945. A special women’s section was also created in Auschwitz-Birkenau, where 34,000 women died between 1942 and 1943. Going further into comment details, means you're about to experience, the Concentration Camps Genocide photos showed in full. No hidden visual


Hot watch The horror they did to pragenet teens in camps.



The horror they did to pragenet teens in camps. After searching the women pulling down their underwear. There's a private store room kept for the women, where they enjoyed their service, got most pragenet and killed the majority that can't satisfied them.

The Concentration Camps:Inside the Nazi System of Incarceration and Genocide


An armed Nazi soldier searches a woman by pulling down her underwear, Poland, circa 1939-1944.

Separate camps and compounds were set up exclusively for female prisoners who were considered strong enough for labor projects and menial chores. The largest women’s camp was Ravensbrück (near Berlin), where nearly 120,000 women from across Europe were sent. An estimated 50,000 women died there between 1939 and 1945. A special women’s section was also created in Auschwitz-Birkenau, where 34,000 women died between 1942 and 1943.


Female Romani forced laborers stand at attention during an inspection of the weaving mill in the Ravensbrück concentration camp in Germany, circa 1943. Photo credit: USHMM, Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz

The Nazis established more than 500 brothels across occupied Europe, including in concentration and extermination camps. More than 34,000 girls and women were trafficked and raped at these sites, mostly by German soldiers and Nazi police. The brothels also served as a “reward” for forced laborers and prison leaders, as well as a cruel mechanism to attempt to “cure” gay men, who were forced to make compulsory visits. Such gender-based violence and dehumanization occurred at every level of the Nazi camp system, with female inmates being subjected to frequent strip searches as well as forced abortions and sterilization.



Dutch women from Ravensbrück

A Swedish count has rescued thousands of women from Ravensbrück concentration camp, including 200 from the Netherlands. White buses with a red cross on the roof brought the mostly severely weakened women straight through the front area in Germany to Sweden. The women had no idea what happened when they were selected in the camp. "I tried not to show my fear of death, but I trembled and had difficulty breathing," said 22-year-old Selma Velleman. "Would we be on our way to the gas chambers? Was my luck gone now?"
The miraculous release with the end of the war in sight is thanks to Swedish Count Folke Bernadotte, Vice President of the Swedish Red Cross. Since last month, he negotiated with the SS leader Heinrich Himmler about the release of thousands of prisoners from a number of German camps. In these concentration camps, the situation worsens even further as the Germans are losing the war. The Nazis have become even more cruel.



Many prisoners also die in Ravensbrück, where the Russians are sometimes within earshot. Through malnutrition, exhaustion, but also through executions. Die hölle der Frauen is called the camp, the hell of women. The prisoners all hope they reach the end of the war. They have been through so much misery.
Like 23-year-old Gisela Söhnlein from Amsterdam. At the beginning of the war she was still studying law and ended up in the resistance. She was arrested and taken away. Gisela was allowed to join one of the first convoys to freedom. Before the camp she saw the white buses for the first time. "We didn't know where we were going. You let it get over you. We're free, we'll see. The main thing was that we were out of the camp." In one of the buses a group deployed Françaises de Marseillaise. "I will never forget how that sounded," said Thea Boissevain (26). "So impressive."



Selma Velleman later left in a truck. "I was offered a cigarette by a Swedish man." Nicht rauchen, "shouted one of the Aufseherinnen (guards) from a window. That Swedish man said," She has nothing to say about you at all. " Only then did I know I was free. " The tour went straight through the front area. The first night they stopped in a forest. Even though they are in the middle of the war, nature touched the women. "It was so beautiful there with a beautiful moon. It was great. We hadn't seen a blade of grass in months. Anemones everywhere," says Gisela.
Selma also remembers the daffodils and crocuses well. "There were new green leaves on the trees. Everything seemed so incredibly beautiful, after all we had only seen the gray dirt and griminess of the camp for a long time. We couldn't get our luck."



Happiness did not last long. They were shot at. Not by Germans but by Allies who thought they were a group of fleeing Germans. A few women were killed. They drove via Northern Germany to Denmark and on to Sweden. In liberated Denmark, the convoy was greeted exuberantly. They wave flags and distribute food.
Taken from the NOS (Dutch National Television) webiste

This website is made out of respect for the victims, the civilians and the veterans of WWII. It generates no financial gain what so ever and it is merely a platform to educate the visitor about WWII.

The personal stories on this website are under copyright of the veterans themselves and the families or people who gave the stories to me. Pictures used on this webiste are owned by the veterans who made them or by whomever made the pictures/videos (mostly these images are in the public domain and can be freely used). Also bits of texts have been used with no harmful intent in any way.

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