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Дата 12.10.2010 14:58:17 Найти в дереве
Рубрики 1917-1939; Версия для печати

в англовики ( в немецкой этого нет)

Another author, H. W. Koch, states that after the Bolshevik Revolution, the prisoner camps in Russia were handed over to German administration, and the title of commissar was merely functional, not political.[2] It is also said, though it is not supported by any contemporaneous documents, that after the prisoner camps were dissolved in 1918, Freisler became a convinced Communist.[3] H. W. Koch rejects this assertion: "Freisler was never a Communist, though in the early days of his NS career [...] he belonged to the NSDAP's left wing".[4] Freisler himself rejected all accusations that he had even tentatively approached the hated enemy, but he could never fully escape the stigma of being a bolshie.[5]

ссылки
1 Guido Knopp, Hitler's Hitmen, Sutton Publishing, 2000, pp. 220–221.
2 H. W. Koch, In the Name of the Volk: Political Justice in Hitler's Germany, Barnes & Noble, New York, 1997, p. 29.
3 Uwe Wesel, "Drei Todesurteile pro Tag" (Three death sentences per day), Die Zeit, February 3, 2005. Text in German Uwe Wesel is professor emeritus of Legal History in Berlin's Free University.
4 H. W. Koch, op. cit.
5 Guido Knopp, op. cit. p. 221.

'Бій відлунав. Жовто-сині знамена затріпотіли на станції знов'