
Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Hollywood Knights Celebrity Basketball
Hollywood Knights partnered up with USO for the first time to bring military communities in Germany, the Netherland and Belgium Celebrity Basketball!! Too bad I never watch television series. Check out some of the hot guys!


Summer of Jazz
Each year millions descend to the Euro continent for their magnificent outdoor jazz festivals, not to mention the crazy camp-out Rock Shows!!! I was fortunate enough to go to a few but not fortunate enough to have my own digi-cam. This is the most I could salvage...
Saturday, September 20, 2008
Breendonk Concentration Camp Belgium
The Memorial seeks to embrace others in a quest for openness. It reaches out first of all to those who, in one way or another, have fought for freedom, have stood up to oppression, have suffered, victims of racism and blind fanaticism: war veterans, Resistance fighters, prisoners of war, the concentration camp prisoners, Jewish Resistance fighters and victims of the Shoah. And well beyond, it reaches out to all those who, driven by the same ideal of democracy, find in Breendonk the justification behind their cause.
On september 20th 1940 Sturmbannführer Philip Schmitt brought his first victims to Breendonk. The Fort became officially the Auffanglager Breendonk, a transit camp; a major centre for the Sicherheitspolizei-Sicherheitsdienst. During the first year of the Occupation, the Jews made up half the total number of prisoners. From 1942 onwards and the creation of the «vezammelkamp» (reception camp) at the Dossin barracks where the Jews were assembled before their departure towards the east and the extermination camps, most of the Jews disappeared from Breendonk, which gradually became a camp for political prisoners and members of the Resistance.
On the 22nd of September 1941, a first convoy of Belgian political prisoners was transferred from Breendonk and from the citadel of Huy to the concentration camp of Neuengamme close to Hamburg. Other convoys were to follow …Prisoners stayed on average three months at the fortress before being deported towards the concentration camps in Germany, Austria or Poland. The regime set up here by the Nazis hardly differed from that of an official concentration camp. The undernourishment and the forced labour wore down the body and mind. The ever-present physical cruelty sometimes caused the death of prisoners.
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