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Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

A Dutch warship survived the Battle of java in 1942, and the soldiers decorated it with rainforest vegetation as a moving island to escape the Japanese attack, and for safety they only sailed at night, floating on the sea during the day, and it took a total of 8 days to slowly escape back to the safe port of Australia.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

In 1943, U.S. Air Force Second Lieutenant Owen J. Bagett was shot down by Japanese warplanes while on a bombing mission in Burma and forced to parachute. However, during the descent, a Japanese fighter passed by, and Owen took out the M1911 pistol and fired four shots in a row, killing the Japanese fighter pilot incredibly.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

Polish Catholic midwife Stanis awa Leszczyńska delivered babies at oslo concentration camps, delivering more than 3,000 babies in total, two-thirds of whom were drowned in bathtubs by the Nazis.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

In 1941, after the Japanese pilot Maude Nishikaichi had a plane crash on the island of Nyho near Hawaii, he obtained weapons with the help of three Japanese and assassinated many local residents. In the end, he was caught by local residents and beaten to death.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

By 1945, 80 percent of Soviet males born in 1923 had died of war, famine, disease, and other causes.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

Adolf Hitler liked to steal art rather than create, and even the Nazi march song was copied from the Harvard football team's song "Fight Harvard!" struggle! struggle! Spelled! ”

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

Hitler's nephew, William Hitler, who was born in England, fled to the United States during the war to join the U.S. Navy and was awarded the Purple Heart for his war performance.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

Nazi Germany originally wanted to exile the Jews to Madagascar, but due to the British blockade, it could not be achieved, and the Nazis chose to kill.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

Calvin Leon Graham, who concealed his age when he signed up for the U.S. Navy, was actually 12 years old and had received the Purple Heart and the Bronze Star.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

Onoda Hiroro, an intelligence officer in the Imperial Japanese Army, is still stubbornly resisting in a small, remote area of the Philippines, unaware that World War II is over because of the occlusion of information. In 1974 his former commander personally approached him and he only learned that the war had ended almost 30 years later.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

Kitty Sharon is a berlin-style brothel that many diplomats in Germany love to visit. In fact, this is the SS intelligence base, and the girls inside are professional intelligence officers, specializing in all kinds of intelligence for the SS.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

These Monopoly toys, distributed by the Red Cross, saved thousands of Allied prisoners of war. They were invented by British intelligence officers, and inside the dice was a compass with local maps and currency. It was through this prop that some Allied prisoners of war escaped German control.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

What would happen to Hitler if he occupied Moscow? Franz Halder (one of the elders of Nazi Germany) made it clear in his diary that the Fuehrer was ready to dig up all of Moscow into a huge artificial lake.

Surprising facts in World War II, you can't see in textbooks

The kamikaze suicide supplies were not poison, but — methamphetamine. The Japanese invented meth during World War II in order to use it as a stimulant to improve the combat effectiveness of the army, and the members of the kamikaze team carried a large amount of methamphetamine, and in special cases, they could commit suicide by taking meth.

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