I fully understand Pete and that is the general reaction, but remember not all German soldiers volunteered for the good of the motherland. They had conscription just like we did or they were simply scared into service by the power of nazism. I'm not saying this was always the case but it played a big part. The thing is tho that once on the battlefield they had one thing in common with our guys in that they simply had to rely on each other, they kept each other alive fighting the enemy that they knew as bad. remember there was no live sky coverage of this war, they were fuelled by Nazi propaganda.
Lucky, I 100% agree there would have been some German soldiers who were not agreeance with Nazi policies or doctrines but that is not the point.
You, nor anybody else could possibly draw the line that separates them from Nazi sympathisers/activists from within the German army.
You suggest they be proud of themselves, with the proviso being they were brave and that alone constituting reason enough.
Some of them may well have been brave but I'm afraid the cause they were fighting, completely and utterly negates any room for allowing pride to creep into their mentality or how we should regard them.
As soon as you start accommodating people just because they were 'brave' undermines any integrity when people condemn the Nazi movement and what they set out to do.
It seems ironic to me that the Germans themselves seem to be adopting the correct attitude in getting on with their lives and trying to forget what happened whereas you're endeavouring to excuse some of them on the basis they were brave.
Don't be confused Lucky, it's quite simple mate, we shouldn't ignore their recollections but you aligned that need for historical reference with an associated need for respect.Just because these guys were on the wrong team, should we erase them and the recollections from our social history?
We cannot allow ourselves to start degrading the horror we should all feel for what the Nazis did and more importantly tried to do.
It's the thin end of a wedge when you begin 'accommodating' .
You are not seriously equating the Nazi policy of Jewish annihilation with modern history's filtering of the Nazi's actions are you?Oh hang on i think that was tried once before.....1939 i believe
If so, then it's a completely inappropriate parallel ... insultingly so.
It does make sense when you think about the project as a whole concept
Not to me mate, not to me, thus starts the process of a whitewash ........