Today in World War II History—August 31, 1942: Australians launch offensive against the Japanese at Milne Bay, New Guinea. Canada requires unemployed men and women to take war work.
An interesting entry on Sarah Sundin's blog.
I wonder how many unemployed Canadian men there really were by this point in 1942?
The aptly named Libertas Schulze-Boyen, a German aristocrat, and her husband Harro, a Luftwaffe officer, were arrested by the authorities.
The couple had in fact gone from being Nazis or radical right winters, Harro even had a swastika carved into his leg, to being the focal point of the Red Orchestra, a resistance group that was centered on providing information to the Soviet Union.
Libertas was a French protestant by birth, but fit into that oddly European class of aristocratic families that were nearly stateless. She attended school in Switzerland and moved to Germany in 1933 where she joined the Nazi Party and was, at first, an ardent Nazi. She married Harro in 1936, after having lived with him a year, something very unusual at the time. Herman Goering gave her away at the wedding, showing how close they were to senior Nazi figures.
Harro, in contrast, had opposed the Nazis since 1933, being therefore a really early resistance figure. He had been part of the "Radical Nazi" organization Black Front, which was a Nazi splinter group formed by Otto Strasser which kept the original socialistic Nazi economic policy which the party abandoned under Adolph Hitler. He was also from an aristocratic family, and one that had ties to publishing. Both Harro and Liberas were writers. He became a pilot in 1933, and in spite of being an anti-Nazi joined the Luftwaffe.
In spite of their common opposition to the Nazis, their marriage was not a united one. Harro was a self-confessed libertine, and she had caught him in bed with an actress, which nearly led to their divorce. Only the fact that they were both involved in their resistance movement kept this from occurring.
They were both executed in December. She was 29 and he was 33.
German tanks made it through the minefields at Alam el Halfa and turned north to attack what he supposed to be the Allied rear, only to be met with anti tank guns and tanks staged there by Montgomery. Montgomery, moreover, did not deploy his tanks in the old cavalry melee style that the British had done previously, although German and British tank losses, 22 and 21 respectively, were about equal. The Afrika Korps lost one of its senior commanders, Georg von Bismarck, due to a mine.
The British small scale raid Operation Anglo attacked Rhodes.
No comments:
Post a Comment