The New Adventures of Schweik
What to watch about Nuremberg? Which films best capture the essence of the Nuremberg Trials? Film critic Lydia Maslova has compiled a unique list especially for the “Nuremberg: Casus Pacis” project. Twice a week we will publish her recommendations - the best films of all time on the subject, from the famous and award-winning to the unremarkable, but important and meaningful.
People's Referendum in Poland
We Tried to Understand, But We Could Not
The Nuremberg Tribunal was also known by its nickname "The Trial of Six Million Words" because of the sheer number of column inches that were published about it. By now, of course, a good deal more than six million words have been written about the event, what with all the histories that have been written. But at the time, between November 1945 and October 1946, there were 315 journalists and writers from 31 countries covering the moment when a whole cast of murdering fascist criminals were brought to justice, filing thousands of articles and essays while the army of photographers who were present at the tribunal took at least 25,000 pictures and made several dozen films.
Mass Arrests of Jews in Palestine
Serial Production of the Soviet Car “Pobeda” Begins
On 28 June 1946, the first mass-produced model of the famous Soviet car “Pobeda” (victory), which became a symbol of the county’s revival after the war, was assembled.
Canada Adopts Citizenship Act
On 27 June 1946, the nation’s parliament approved the Canadian Citizenship Act by a majority vote, making Canada independent of being a British subject. The act came into force on 1 January 1947. Canada was the first country of the Commonwealth of Nations to have its own citizenship laws.
Chinese Pilot Hijacks a B-24 Liberator for the Communist Army
World Bank Starts to Operate
"Stalin’s War": Agitation and Propaganda Turned Inside Out
Every year on 9 May and 22 June numerous disputes about the Second World War erupt. This year’s book, "Stalin’s War" by Sean McMeekin has sparked off new controversies. The 47-year-old American revisionist historian who has in the past written about the First World War, said that by entering into an alliance with the USSR rather than with Nazi Germany the West made a big mistake.
Not surprisingly this finding - scandalous even by modern western propaganda standards - has provoked great controversy. In Russia, there was talk of a "new phase of revising the history of the Second World War", and The Sunday Times noted that the idea of a coalition with Hitler "looks more like a computer game scenario than a serious historical assumption". At the request of the "Nuremberg. Casus Pacis" project, Alexey Isaev, a candidate of historical sciences specialising in military history, highlighted the facts which were distorted by McMeekin in his book and deserve attention, explaining why his ideas cannot be taken seriously.
Victory Parade in Miniature
Today is the anniversary of the Victory Parade of 1945 on Red Square in Moscow. Why was the road in front of Marshal Zhukov marked with white paint? How could sappers be distinguished from miners and infantrymen by the sound of their footsteps? What did the sailors do to keep their berets from being blown away by the wind? Russian artist and engraver Vladimir Nuzhdin, who created the unique “Victory Parade” diorama, told the “Nuremberg: Casus Pacis” project about all of the above and the difficulty of portraying the largest parade in Russian history.
Mao Zedong Protests American Aid to Chiang Kai-shek
Georges Bidault Becomes Head of the French Government
US Senator Bilbo Calls for Lynching of African-American Voters
On 22 June 1946, US Senator Theodore Bilbo, running for re-election from the Democratic Party, stated on the radio: ”I call on every red-blooded white man to use any means to keep the niggers away from the polls; If you don’t understand what that means you are just plain dumb”.
Albert Speer Talks About the Nazi Atomic Project
Agreement on the Withdrawal of Allied Troops From Italy
Andrei Gromyko Proposes Banning Nuclear Weapons on Behalf of the USSR
On 19 June, Andrei Gromyko, the Soviet Union's representative to the UN, on behalf of the USSR proposed a general reduction and regulation of armaments and a ban on the military use of atomic energy. He also proposed a draft convention on the prohibition and destruction of all finished and unfinished atomic weapons within three months.
Three Lives of Franz von Papen
Associate of Gandhi & Nehru Calls on Goa to Fight For Independence
On 18 June 1946, Dr Ram Manohar Lohia, Indian socialist, associate of Mahatma Gandhi and Jawaharlal Nehru, announced the beginning of a campaign of passive resistance against the Portuguese administration in Goa and the surrounding area. At the same time, he campaigned for a Direct Action Day in the colony. In 1940, Mahatma Gandhi described Lohia as follows: “I do not know a person braver than him. He never used violence. No matter what he did, it was always imbued with dignity and honour”.
'Hans Fritzsche Speaks!'
The Voice of Nazi propaganda