Tuesday, March 24, 2015

Remembering the victims of the 1999 NATO Bombing that began on March 24, 1999


Milica Rakic was a 3 year old girl killed by NATO bombs on April 17, 1999. She was one of the many victims of the NATO bombing that began on March 24, 1999, and continued for 78 consecutive days including Easter. "Codenamed 'Operation Allied Force,' it was the largest attack ever undertaken by the alliance. It was also the first time that NATO used military force without the approval of the UN Security Council and against a sovereign nation that did not pose a real threat to any member of the alliance."


In the years since the bombings, there have been many more casualties and suffered due to the approximately 10 tons of depleted uranium (DU) in a formerly hidden UN report. One example is increased cancer rates. An example is in the Vranje area detailed below. 

Threat to newborn lives
In Vranje area, which is surrounded by four known DU contaminated locations, there has been an enormous increase in cancer rates and number of newborns with genetic malformations. “In 1998, 21 children have been born with deformities. In 2008 there were 73,” says Nela Cvetkovic, a Member of the Vranje City Council, in a statement for VJM. The number of newborn didn’t change, it is about 800-1000 babies per year.

At the same time, in a six year period after the NATO bombing a number of newly registered cancer cases has more than doubled – from 185 in the year 2000 to 398 new diagnosis in 2006.

Civilians aren't the only victims of DU. "Uranium 'killing Italian troops'" in 2007 BBC report. 50 Italian peacekeepers dead and 200 more seriously ill. DU has also contributed to disabilities in children fathered by the peacekeepers.

The 1999 Bombings were NOT the first instance of people, civilian or military, getting sick from DU usage. American vets got sick from DU usage in the Iraq wars according to NBC News. The Veterans Administration (VA) lists DU usage on its website. Serbia and Kosovo are not listed but Bosnia is. On a related note, Dr. Gary Null wrote a very informative article titled "Gulf War Syndrome: A Deadly Legacy" on July 10, 2010. 

Former US Attorney General Ramsey Clark led the war crimes prosecution of the 1999 Bombings of former War Criminal in Chief Bill Clinton and others. I attended the proceedings in June 2000 at Martin Luther King High School in Manhattan. A panel of 16 judges from 11 countries at a people’s tribunalmeeting in New York June 10 before 500 people found U.S. and NATO political and military leaders guilty of war crimes against Yugoslavia in the March 24-June 10, 1999 assault onthat country.

Hundreds of thousands of Serbs, Roma, and other minorities left Kosovo after the bombings ended. The unlucky who couldn't escape ended up victims of organ harvesting according to Swiss Senator Dick Marty and former chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Tribunal, Carla del Ponte, wrote about them in her book, The Hunt. An excerpt from The Hunt follows.

"The prosecutors office received information which UNMIK officials had received from a team of trustworthy journalists that during the summer months of 1999 Kosovan Albanians had transported 300 kidnapped people from Kosovo to Albania.
"These prisoners were initially held in sheds and other structures in Kukes and Tropoje. According to the journalists’ sources, who were only identified as Kosovo Albanians, some of the younger and fitter prisoners were visited by doctors and were never hit. They were transferred to other detention camps in Burrel and the neighbouring area, one of which was a barracks behind a yellow house 20 km behind the town.
"One room inside this yellow house, the journalists said, was kitted out as a makeshift operating theatre, and it was here that surgeons transplanted the organs of prisoners. These organs, according to the sources, were then sent to Rinas airport, Tirana, to be sent to surgical clinics abroad to be transplanted to paying patients.
"One of the informers had personally carried out a shipment to the airport.
"The victims, deprived of a kidney, were then locked up again, inside the barracks, until the moment they were killed for other vital organs. In this way, the other prisoners in the barracks were aware of the fate that awaited them, and according to the source, pleaded, terrified to be killed immediately.
"Among the prisoners who were taken to these barracks were women from Kosovo, Albania, Russia and other Slavic countries. Two of the sources said that they helped to bury the corpses of the dead around the yellow house and in a neighboring cemetery.
"According to the sources, the organ smuggling was carried out with the knowledge and active involvement of middle and high ranking involvement from the KLA.

The bombing was supposedly on behalf of Albanians in Kosovo. Their mostly Kosovo Liberation Army (KLA) leaders are corrupt and have robbed Kosovo blind. As a result, many Albanians have left Kosovo. From January 1 through mid February 2015, Hungary has intercepted about 10,000 asylum seekers from Kosovo. Germany has sent 20 police officers to the Hungarian-Serbia border to stem the tide of asylum traveling to Germany.

Monday, March 23, 2015

Remembering the Bravery of Archbishop Damaskinos of Greece to formally protest the deportation of Jews from Thessaloniki, Greece, on March 23, 1943

Remembering the bravery of Archbishop Damaskinos of Greece to formally protest the deportation of Jews from Thessaloniki, Greece, on March 23, 1943.

After SS General Jurgen Stroop threatened to shoot him for sending such an unprecedented letter, Archbishop Damaskinos replied that “‘according to the traditions of the Greek Orthodox Church, our prelates are hung and not shot. Please respect our traditions!’”

Archbishop Damaskinos issued false baptismal certificates to Jews who requested them which in turn saved thousands of Greek Jews. He was honored by Yad Vashem in Jerusalem as “Righteous among the nations.”

Time Magazine honored Archbishop Damaskinos on its October 1, 1945, cover

For more information on this story, please visit this link.

http://www.pappaspost.com/remembering-nazi-occupied-europes-only-open-protest-of-jewish-persecution-yes-from-greece/

Remembering Nazi Occupied Europe’s Only Open Protest of Jewish Persecution– Yes, From Greece



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By Gregory Pappas on March 28, 2014 Blog

Going largely unnoticed in Greece and beyond, an important anniversary passes annually and passed again, on March 23rd. The date in 1943 marks one of the most important moments in the history of World War II and the Holocaust, when the Archbishop of Greece, Damaskinos, openly defied Adolf Hitler’s Final Solution with a letter of protest— unique in the annals of occupied Europe.

According to the International Raoul Wallenberg Foundation, “It required virtue and courage to sign such a document in those dark times.”

In contrast to many Catholic and Protestant religious leaders in Europe, who either supported the Nazi policy of extermination of the Jews or did nothing to stop it, Archbishop Damaskinos of Greece formally protested the deportation of Jews.

After learning of the deportation of the Thessaloniki Jews in March 1943, Damaskinos spearheaded a letter of protest to the Germans. This letter was composed by the famous Greek poet Angelos Sikilianos and was signed by many members of the Athens intelligentsia. Damaskinos included the biblical quote “There is neither Jew nor Greek” in his letter, emphasizing that all people are the same in the Greek Orthodox religion.

He described the long history of the Jews in Greece and how, as exemplary citizens, they presented no threat to Germany. He warned that one day the world would hold accountable those who deported the Jews.

There is no similar document of protest against Nazi occupiers during World War II that has come to light in any other European country.

In 1949, Sikelianos was a Nobel Prize for Literature candidate. In 1944, Damaskinos was featured prominently on the cover of Time Magazine.

When General Jürgen Stroop, high SS and police leader for Greece, found out who was behind the letter, he threatened to shoot Damaskinos. The archbishop bravely reminded the German that “according to the traditions of the Greek Orthodox Church, our prelates are hung and not shot. Please respect our traditions!”

The Germans proceeded with the deportations. Damaskinos called the police chief of Athens, Angelos Evert, to his office and said, “I have spoken to God and my conscience tells me what we must do. The church will issue false baptismal certificates to any Jew who asks for them and you will issue false identification cards.” Due to Damaskinos’s courageous stance, thousands of Greek Jews were spared.

In addition to this letter, Archbishop Damaskinos was pivotal in saving the lives of thousands of Jews in Athens. Together with the chief of police in Athens, Damaskinos ordered priests to give Jews Christian “baptismal certificates,” offering them Christian names and refuge from Nazi checkpoints and round ups.

For his efforts, Damaskinos was honored by Yad Vashem in Jerusalem as “Righteous among the nations,” an important designation given to non-Jews who risked their own lives to save Jews during the Holocaust. He is also recognized prominently in a permanent exhibition at the International Holocaust Museum in Washington DC.

The complete text of the letter, directed to the Nazi-imposed Greek prime minister follows:

To
The Prime Minister
Mr. K. Logothetopoulos
ATHENS

Mr. Prime Minister

The Greek people were rightfully surprised and deeply grieved to learn that the German Occupation Authorities have already started to put into effect a program of gradual deportation of the Greek Jewish community of Salonika to places beyond our national borders, and that the first groups of deportees are already on their way to Poland. The grief of the Greek people is particularly deep because of the following:

According to the terms of the armistice, all Greek citizens, without distinction of race or religion, were to be treated equally by the Occupation Authorities.

The Greek Jews have proven themselves not only valuable contributors to the economic growth of the country but also law-abiding citizens who fully understand their duties as Greeks. They made sacrifices for the Greek country and were always on the front line in the struggles of the Greek nation to defend its inalienable historical rights.

The law-abiding nature of the Jewish community in Greece refutes a priori any charge that it may be involved in actions or acts that might even slightly endanger the safety of the Military Occupation Authorities.

In our national consciousness, all the children of Mother Greece are an inseparable unity: they are equal members of the national body irrespective of religion or dogmatic differences.

Our Holy Religion does not recognize superior or inferior qualities based on race or religion, as it is stated: ”There is neither Jew nor Greek” (Gal. 3:28) and thus condemns any attempt to discriminate or create racial or religious differences.

Our common fate, both in days of glory and in periods of national misfortune, forged inseparable bonds between all Greek citizens, without exemption, irrespective of race.

Certainly, we are not unaware of the deep conflict between the new Germany and the Jewish community, nor do we intend to become defenders or judges of world Jewry in the great sphere of world politics and economic affairs. Today we are interested in and deeply concerned with the fate of 60,000 of our fellow citizens, who are Jews. For a long time, we have lived together in both slavery and freedom, and we have come to appreciate their feelings, their brotherly attitude, their economic activity and, most important, their indefectible patriotism. Evidence of this patriotism is the great number of victims sacrificed by the Greek Jewish community without regret and without hesitation on the altar of duty when our country was in peril.

Mr. Prime Minister,

We are certain that the thoughts and feelings of the Government on this matter are in agreement with those of the rest of the Greek nation. We also trust that you have already taken the necessary steps and applied to the Occupation Authorities to rescind the grievous and futile measure to deport the members of the Jewish community of Greece.

We hope, indeed, that you have clarified to those in power that such harsh treatment of Jews of other nationalities in Greece makes the instituted measure even more unjustifiable and therefore morally unacceptable. If security reasons underlie it, we think it possible to suggest alternatives. Other measures can be taken, such as detaining the active male population (not including children and old people) in a specific place on Greek territory under the surveillance of the Occupation Authorities, thereby guaranteeing safety in face of any alleged danger and saving the Greek Jewish community from the impending deportation. Moreover, we would like to point out that, if asked, the rest of the Greek people will be willing to vouch for their brothers in need without hesitation.

We hope that the Occupation Authorities will realize in due time the futility of the persecution of Greek Jews, who are among the most peaceful and productive elements of the country.

If, however, they insist on this policy of deportation, we believe that the Government, as the bearer of whatever political authority is left in the country, should take a clear stance against these events and let the foreigners bear the full responsibility of committing this obvious injustice. Let no one forget that all actions done during these difficult times, even those actions that lie beyond our will and power, will be assessed some day by the nation and will be subjected to historical investigation. In that time of judgment, the responsibility of the leaders will weigh heavily upon the conscience of the nation if today the leaders fail to protest boldly in the name of the nation against such unjust measures as the deportation of the Greek Jews, which are an insult to our national unity and honor.

Respectfully,
Damaskinos
Archbishop of Athens and Greece

Following are the signatures of the heads of the major cultural institutions and organizations:

President of the Academy of Athens, Rector of the University of Athens, Rector of the Polytechnical School of Athens, Rector of the High School of Economic Studies, President of the Medical Association of Attica, President of the Roll of Barristers of Attica, President of the Union of Notaries of Athens and Aegean, President of the Journalists Union, President of the Association of Greek Authors, President of the Culture Association, President of the Piraeus Chamber of Commerce, President of the Athens Professional Chamber, President of the Greek Association of Chemists, President of the Athens Association of  Pharmacists, President of the Dentists Association, President of the Athens Craftsman Chamber, President of the Piraeus Association of Pharmacists, President of the Greeks Actors, President of the Greek Association of Pharmacists, President of the Medical Association of Piraeus, President of the Athens Association of Commercants, President of the Athens Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Vice-President of the Greek Union of Theatrical and Musical Critics, President of the Medical Association of Callithea, Secretary General of the Panhellenic Association of Dentists, President of the Greek Industrialists Union, General Director of the Refugees Organization, General Director of Social Health Organization.