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-Short Attention Span Theater- |
Today in History: Julius Streicher gets his just deserts |
2008-10-16 |
![]() Streicher was hanged in the early hours of October 16, 1946, along with the nine other condemned defendants from the first Nuremberg trial (Goering, Streicher's nemesis, committed suicide only hours earlier). Streicher's was the most melodramatic of the hangings carried out that night. At the bottom of the scaffold he cried out "Heil Hitler!" When he mounted the platform, he delivered his last sneering reference to Jewish scripture, snapping "Purim-Fest 1946!" The Jewish holiday Purim celebrates the escape by the Jews from extermination at the hands of Haman, an ancient Persian government official. At the end of the Purim story, Haman is hanged. Streicher's final declaration before the hood went over his head was, "The Bolsheviks will hang you one day!" For those of you cynics who think "there ain't no justice," consider the following: The consensus among eyewitnesses was that the hanging of Julius Streicher did not proceed as planned, and that he did not receive the quick death from spinal severing typical of the other executions at Nuremberg. Cue world's smallest violin. Kingsbury Smith, who covered the executions for the International News Service, reported that Streicher "went down kicking" which may have dislodged the hangman's knot from its ideal position. Smith stated that Streicher could be heard groaning under the scaffold after he dropped through the trap-door, and that the executioner intervened under the gallows, which was screened by wood panels and a black curtain, to finish the job. . . . Serves 'im right. |
Posted by:Mike |
#8 "Or get accepted into one of our "elite" colleges, tu." To teach, CB. :-( |
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut 2008-10-16 19:52 |
#7 Or get accepted into one of our "elite" colleges, tu. |
Posted by: Cornsilk Blondie 2008-10-16 19:29 |
#6 Today he'd probably win some kinda Nobel prize... |
Posted by: tu3031 2008-10-16 15:06 |
#5 A sad day for activist media.... |
Posted by: Atomic Conspiracy 2008-10-16 15:03 |
#4 On a vaguely related note, the Nazi 'Signal' magazine, the German equivalent of the US 'Life' magazine, makes for some interesting reading. Mostly in how normal it tried to make Germany look. Some years ago, a book was published that was "The Best of Signal". It included pictures of Hitler doing ordinary politician stuff, including one of him presenting a happy middle-aged housewife with a blue ribbon for her award winning meatloaf and another of him at the grand opening of some business building, looking like a small town mayor. In other words, it was "soft" propaganda, and it points out one of the startling differences in the war. In England and America, the philosophy of "total war" was in effect, in which "everything effects the war effort, one way or another." But Hitler never adopted that idea for Germany, going to great lengths to keep consumer goods in the market and to keep up the appearance of normality. Women could still buy lipstick, perfume and silk stockings until late in the war. War rationing was pretty much limited to imported goods. |
Posted by: Anonymoose 2008-10-16 14:38 |
#3 Streicher's Der Stürmer was still more violent and antisemitic than Nazy Party's official paper "Volkisher Beobachter". As a side note in "The great Escape" one of the escaped, who is passing for a German reads the Volkisker Beobachter in the train. |
Posted by: JFM 2008-10-16 11:33 |
#2 Bad move. Just when you think things can't get no worse... |
Posted by: SteveS 2008-10-16 11:25 |
#1 He pissed off the executioner. Bad move. |
Posted by: mojo 2008-10-16 10:51 |