Thursday, May 20, 2010

Belgrade: The Cradle of Former Yugoslavia





Downtown Belgrade













Patrick caught in traffic light
















Inside a captured American HUMVEE at the Military Museum
















Fort Kalemegdan Park in Belgrade

Kalemegdan is a Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance (declared so in 1979).



The first mention of the city fortress appeared in the 3rd century BC as the Celtic fortress Singidunum. It was later conquered by the Romans and in 476 became the borderline between the Byzantine Empire and the Slav-Avar state in the North.
















Where the Danube and Sava river meet.













The tree with a special female anatomy


























































































































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!


Up front: Sam Page from "Sharks"


Left to right: Stephen Colleti, DJ D-Wreck, and Wolf

Stephen and that weirdo Eric Millegan


Super hot Geoff Stults from "October Road" and "7th Heavven"



Roll-call!

Stephen signing the sign

No, I'm not getting yelled out, just a weird pic.

Me handing out the Garrison coins



Checking out the coinage!!

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...
Starting off right with yummy Duvel!

Castle in Ghent, Belgium


Mojitos on the Ghent River


Flirting with the statue guy...yeah I know how to pick 'em!


Goofing off with the boys...this was actually 9:30 at night because the sun doesn't go down until 11ish during summer here.

Saturday, September 20, 2008

Breendonk Concentration Camp Belgium

Belgium has not been spared the horror of Nazism and its concentration camps. The fortress of Breendonk is a moving and striking example. It is one of the best conserved camps in Europe.

Breendonk is only a dot on the gruesome map of concentration camps, but one which witnessed the same desire to annihilate the individual, which shared the same objective of enslaving and negating the human person.

Between September 1940 and September 1944, around 3500 prisoners passed through. The majesty of the site and its Dantesque appearance make it a symbol that perpetuates the memory of the suffering, the torture and the death of so many victims. Breendonk, although small in comparison with others, was nevertheless a camp that saw Nazi barbarity sink to its vilest depths.


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.

The artillery consisted of seven cupolas, one 150mm gun, two 120mm howitzers, four 75mm guns and one searchlight. Two more 120mm guns and four 75mm guns on the flanks. 14 rapid firing 57mm guns were used for close defence and flank shots.

The building of the fort was undertaken in 1909. The fort is part of a defence belt of fortifications built ten miles away from the city of Antwerpen. The fort have on its West side, the Liezele Fort with the Letterheide bunker in between and, on its East side, the Waelhem fort.


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.


Initially, the camp was only guarded by a few German SS and a detachment of the Wehrmacht. In September 1941, the Wachtgruppe of the SD arrived as back up. This time, these were no longer German SS but mainly Flemings.In total, around 3500 persons, including around thirty women, were subjected to the “Hell of Breendonk”, as Franz Fischer calls it in his memoirs. Around half of these 3500 did not come back from the camps alive.
After the Liberation, on the 4th of September 1944, the Fortress served as a prison for collaborators and became known as "Breendonk II". Initially, the local resistance used it to lock up the “inciviques” or collaborationists. Certain excesses took place during this period. On the 10th of October 1944, the order of evacuation was given and the prisoners were transferred to the Dossin barracks in Malines. Subsequently, Breendonk became an official internment centre of the Belgian State, until it was designated a National Memorial by the law of 19th of August 1947.


All information provided by: http://www.breendonk.be/EN/index.html

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Gary Sinise & the LT. Dan Band

Rockin' for the Free World!!!




Gary warming up pre-show


This guy was sick on guitar



Me and K trying to sneak a pic with the star




We're such a cute family



Yea...this guy was pretty much over the top all night



Check out my buns.... :P



really unneccessary hair tossing and hard breakin...



but it was all in the name of good fun




On the grill getting hot



This is about as close to domestic housework as I get: removing pickles from a can




More Gary during warm-up




These guys rehearsed from nooon to one hour before show time!




Checkin out the pre-show and not looking forward to scooping pickles!