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.
Hi Pete, I'm afraid i was suffering a little bit with what i call "Cooks Syndrome", when i know what i mean and feel in my head yet my lack of attention in my english classes has deprived me of the correct words to explain what i mean.
I am not at all suggesting that there should be any sympathy for the Nazi cause and there actions and yes the whole of Germany was guilty on mass. My use of the term "brave" is where i fall down in this discussion but i cannot find a better terminology?
Everyone that attended that gig way back then had a certain courage/honour/disposition/resilience/whatever? Which ever team they were playing for these men of battle a certain something?
Don't be confused Lucky, it's quite simple mate, we shouldn't ignore their recollections but you aligned that need for historical reference with an associated need for respect.
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' .
Again my words, did not get across correctly what i was trying to imply and still won't. But I do feel there should be a certain level of "respect" (replace with correct word)for these soldiers, but that must not be confused with "accomodating" or "sympathy".
No matter which side you were on, to go and do what they did, just defies belief to me, so if you cannot "respect" a soldier for that what can you do?
You state that we cannot allow ourselves to start degrading the horror, but that is exactly what we are doing by not teaching our children of this atrocity, and hopefully if we do teach them then they will learn by our mistakes and never start another war again. Mike's efforts to archive the recollections of these soldiers, takes on two points. 1: He gets the recollections of their actions back then, and 2: he gets their views on the matter now? So surely this archiving/education must be a good thing?
You are not seriously equating the Nazi policy of Jewish annihilation with modern history's filtering of the Nazi's actions are you?
If so, then it's a completely inappropriate parallel ... insultingly so.
On this point i appologies whole heartedly and humbly. I was making a joke on the point of erasing all trace of their recollections from our social history and parrelling it to the erasing of the jews from world history.
It was wrong, not funny and i am a bad man....Sorry