Workingman wrote:It follows that my earlier list, all happening in 1933, would have gone unreported, as would Germany's rearming.
Germany's rearming, yes. The other pieces? I did some fairly deep searches and I can't dig up any hint, anywhere, that the western press were aware of the level to which the Nazi's were ostracising the Jews or to which they were blaming them.
As I said before, had those laws which were passed, especially the sterilisation laws, been widely known; then the German Olympics of that time would not have been attended as it was.
Whilst it may have been known at very high levels, it was certainly not common knowledge. I know for a fact that the horrors being put on the Jews was not common knowledge because I talked to my father in law about it, who was in Germany immediately after the war, having fought his way up through Italy. He told me the soldiers had no clue at all. Those who found the Jews were literally shattered by the experience.
Something else he told me which almost never makes the historical press was what it did to our soldiers when they realised they couldn't save all the people they liberated from the camps. Thousands more died in their custody because there were so many of them and it was impossible to get them enough medical care for those who were at the very end of their lives. Having fought this war for so long to save as many people as they could, they simply could not cope with so many more dying before their eyes and they were powerless to stop it.
People, the public generally, had no idea what had gone on in Germany and had those laws been public knowledge they would not have been so surprised at the end.
I'm convinced this was part of the outpouring of rage at the trials.