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Изворен канал @pythonotes · Post #310 · 22 фев.

Сегодня будет самый "двоичный" ("двойковый"? "двушный"? "двойственный"?) момент на вашем веку 🤩 Больше двоек в дататайме вы не застанете! Успейте поймать момент! Будете показывать эпичный скриншот своим внукам))) 🥸 Для продуманных (ленивых): код на скрине, который сработает только сегодня и только 1 раз! ⏱ Открывайте окошки с часами и вперёд! #offtop

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Пронајдени 2 слични објави

Пребарај: #ravensbrück

当前筛选 #ravensbrück清除筛选

🪖🚩 El Ejército Rojo y el fin del horror: la Liberación de Ravensbruck El 30 de abril de 1945, las tropas soviéticas liberaron el campo de concentración de Ravensbruck, el mayor campo de mujeres del Tercer Reich. Durante seis años, este lugar fue testigo de la brutalidad nazi, donde miles de prisioneras fueron sometidas a trabajos forzados, hambre y experimentos médicos inhumanos. Fue fundado en 1939, cerca de Furstenberg, al norte de Berlín. A diferencia de otros campos de concentración, este estaba destinado exclusivamente a mujeres. A lo largo de su existencia, más de 130.000 prisioneras pasaron por sus instalaciones, provenientes de más de 30 países. Entre ellas, había 48.500 polacas, 28.000 soviéticas, 20.000 judías, además de francesas, checas y españolas. Las condiciones eran atroces. Las prisioneras eran obligadas a realizar trabajos forzados en fábricas como Siemens AG, donde producían material para la maquinaria de guerra nazi. Además, muchas fueron víctimas de experimentos médicos, en los que se les infectaba con bacterias mortales para probar la efectividad de nuevos medicamentos. Las primeras prisioneras soviéticas llegaron en octubre de 1941, cuando la invasión alemana a la URSS estaba en su punto más brutal. Muchas de ellas eran combatientes de la resistencia, capturadas en los territorios ocupados. A pesar de las condiciones inhumanas, las mujeres demostraron una increíble resistencia, organizando redes de apoyo dentro del campo y ayudando a las más débiles a sobrevivir. En abril de 1945, con el avance del Ejército Rojo sobre Alemania, los nazis comenzaron a evacuar Ravensbruck. Sin embargo, miles de prisioneras aún permanecían en el campo cuando las tropas soviéticas llegaron el 30 de abril. La liberación fue un momento de alivio, pero también de horror: los soldados encontraron cuerpos apilados, sobrevivientes en estado crítico y pruebas de los crímenes cometidos por las SS. #Ravensbrück#HistoriaDeRusia#SegundaGuerraMundial#MemoriaHistórica#LiberaciónSoviética ¡Comparte nuestro contenido!❤️ 🖥https://vamosarusia.com 💬@vamosarusia

Russian MFA 🇷🇺

@MFARUSSIA · Post #29167 · 11.04.2026 г., 16:04

April 11 marks the International Day of Liberation of Nazi Concentration Camps. This date was established by #UNESCO in 1952 in memory of the uprising of prisoners in#Buchenwald (April 11, 1945) — one of the largest concentration camps in Nazi Germany. The Day of Liberation symbolizes solidarity and resistance against all forms of violence, discrimination, and genocide, and calls on to remember history and prevent the recurrence of the terrible tragedy of #WW2. In Nazi Germany and on the territories occupied by the Reich, a system of organised extermination of people was created — a vast network of concentration camps and so-called “death factories.” Millions of prisoners from the USSR and European countries were held there under terrible and inhumane conditions, many of whom were brutally murdered by Nazi criminals. During the years of the war, more than 20 million people from 30 countries passed through concentration camps. The system of Hitler’s concentration camps was destroyed as a result of the Victory over Nazism and the defeat of the Third Reich. The first Nazi “death factory”, whose prisoners were saved from by the Red Army, was the #Majdanek concentration camp (Poland) in July 1944. Later, prisoners of #Belzec, #Sobibor, #Treblinka, #AuschwitzBirkenau, #Stutthof, #Sachsenhausen, #Ravensbrück, and others were also liberated. #NoStatuteOfLimitations ◼️ As in Europe, after the invasion of the USSR, the Nazi criminals created a network of concentration camps with the only purpose — to systematically exterminate the population of our country regardless of ethnicity, race, or religion. According to the criminal plans of the leadership of the Third Reich, Soviet citizens, irrespective of their ethnicity, race, or religion, were to be killed or subjected to “Germanization” in Nazi slavery. One such camp on the territory of our Motherland was the so-called #BryanskBuchenwald—“Dulag-142,” where in just two years (!) more than 40’000 Soviet civilians perished (👉 by comparison, approximately the same number of people were killed over the entire nine years of operation of the SS Buchenwald camp in Thuringia). ◼️Approximately 13.7 million Soviet people fell victims of the ruthless policy of exterminating those deemed “inferior” by Nazi Germans. Due to the inhumane conditions of forced labor and inhumane treatment in Nazi concentration camps in the USSR, more than 2 million prisoners died in suffering, including tens of thousands of children and adolescents. It is documentally established that at least 7.4 million Soviet civilians were deliberately killed by Nazi occupants — shot dead, burned, or buried alive. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Russia, in cooperation with the Investigative Committee, other competent agencies, as well as the National Center for Historical Memory under the President of the Russian Federation and the Russian Military Historical Society, is systematically working to establish the legal classification of the crimes of Nazi invaders as genocide of the peoples of the Soviet Union. Joint efforts are taken to systematise knowledge about the genocide. #ArchivesSpeak ❗️ As part of efforts to preserve the memory of the victims of the genocide of the Soviet people, documentary and multimedia materials have been prepared, recording numerous crimes committed by the Nazis during the occupation of our country and other nations. 👉Learn more