Pictured: ‘Ruins of the administrative building of Szpital Dzieciątka Jezus (Hospital of the Christ the child) at Lindleya 4 street in Warsaw during [Fascist] occupation.’ (Source.)

Quoting Janusz Gumkowkski and Kazimierz Leszczynski’s Poland Under Nazi Occupation:

In its first raids on Polish towns, the Luftwaffe had bombed residential areas without any delusion that they were military objectives. Any idea that perhaps these were mistakes was dispelled by the dropping of fragmentation and incendiary bombs on small suburban settlements and on hospitals and hospital trains clearly marked with red crosses on their roofs.

Halik Kochanski’s The Eagle Unbowed: Poland and the Poles in the Second World War, page 62:

Wieluń, a farming town 60 miles east of Breslau, had the dubious honour of becoming the first town in Poland to be flattened by [Fascist] bombs. The hospital, school, churches and shops were all bombed and over 1,600 people, 10 per cent of the town’s population, were killed on the first day of the war. […] Ryszard Zolski, working in an ambulance unit, witnessed hospitals, ambulances and ambulance trains being bombed despite being marked prominently with a red cross.

Richard C. Lukas’s Did the Children Cry?: Hitler’s War Against Jewish and Polish Children, 1939–1945, page 208:

Only a fraction of the sick and injured Polish children could receive medical care because there were no more than 6,000 physicians in the entire country. For the 90,000 children in Warsaw after the war, there was only one hospital with 50 beds; the [Fascists] had destroyed all the other children’s hospitals.

Many Soviet hospitals likewise went unspared. Jonathan Trigg’s The Defeat of the Luftwaffe: The Eastern Front 1941–45, A Strategy for Disaster:

At a field hospital near Smolensk, the medical orderly Very Yukina described the horrific scenes: ‘The enemy’s planes were bombing our military formations at will […] more and more wounded began arriving at the hospital […] We tried to evacuate some of them to hospitals further from the front, but although the trains were marked with the Red Cross the [Axis] methodically bombed them.61

(Emphasis added in all cases. Of course, the Axis had other ways of destroying medical facilities.)

Christopher Hale’s Hitler’s Foreign Executioners:

Hospitals too offered Himmler’s SS warriors special opportunities to wreak havoc. At Wolski Hospital, [Fascist] troops fanned out through the wards, shooting some of the sick and injured where they lay. Anyone who could walk or run they drove onto a nearby railway viaduct where a machine gun had been set up. The Wolksi was burnt to the ground. Many other hospitals suffered the same dreadful fate. Just one escaped destruction. This was where Dr. Dirlewanger set up a temporary headquarters.

[…]

In the neighbouring western suburb of Ochota, Bach‐Zelewski unleashed the RONA or Kaminsky Brigade. Commanded by SS‐Brigadeführer Bronislav Kaminsky, these wild‐eyed, habitually intoxicated young Russian [traitors] attacked city hospitals with as much relish as Dirlewanger’s thugs. […] When the RONA men tired of this sport, they corralled any surviving patients and staff in the hospital garden. As the RONA men raced through the hospital setting it ablaze, SS men began firing wildly into the defenceless crowd of hospital workers and patients.

(Emphasis added.)


There were other examples of the Luftwaffe destroying hospitals in, for example, Britain, but Poland was the first subject that came to mind, followed by the Soviet Union.

Short post today, but to tell you the truth I don’t feel up to discussing something more complicated.


Events that happened today (October 19):

1935: The League of Nations placed some ineffectual economic sanctions on Fascist Italy for its invasion of Ethiopia.
1937: Fascist Italy raised taxes significantly in an effort to meet the cost of increased arms production and maintaining its colonies.
1939: Hermann Göring created the Haupttreuhandstelle Ost to co‐ordinate the confiscation of Jewish and Polish assets in Fascist‐occupied Poland.
1943: Allied aircraft assaulted and sunk cargo vessel Sinfra at Crete, and two thousand and ninety‐eight Italian prisoners of war drowned with it.

  • @WhatWouldKarlDo
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    107 months ago

    Short post today, but to tell you the truth I don’t feel up to discussing something more complicated.

    Right here with you. This week/month has been particularly exhausting. I appreciate your work though.

  • @Buchenstr
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    27 months ago

    Amazing work you’ve done on this community, I’ve been particularly startled just how much information I was lacking on this subject. The discussion of capitalism in decay will never stop being interesting to me thanks to you.