Volkssturm - Hitler's Last Ditch Civilian Army

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
  • Desperate for more men to stave off inevitable defeat, Germany created a civilian militia called the Volkssturm - a last ditch army of old men and young boys.
    Dr. Mark Felton is a well-known British historian, the author of 22 non-fiction books, including bestsellers 'Zero Night' and 'Castle of the Eagles', both currently being developed into movies in Hollywood. In addition to writing, Mark also appears regularly in television documentaries around the world, including on The History Channel, Netflix, National Geographic, Quest, American Heroes Channel and RMC Decouverte. His books have formed the background to several TV and radio documentaries. More information about Mark can be found at: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Fe...
    Help support my channels:
    www.paypal.me/markfeltonprodu...
    / markfeltonproductions
    Disclaimer: All opinions and comments expressed in the 'Comments' section do not reflect the opinions of Mark Felton Productions. All opinions and comments should contribute to the dialogue. Mark Felton Productions does not condone written attacks, insults, racism, sexism, extremism, violence or otherwise questionable comments or material in the 'Comments' section, and reserves the right to delete any comment violating this rule or to block any poster from the channel.
    Credits: US National Archives; Library of Congress; Imperial War Museum; CZcams Creative Commons; Cassowary Colorizations; Skjoldbro; Swedish Army Museum; Hmag; Ian Dunster; Vasily V. Kuzmin.

Komentáře • 2,3K

  • @awesomehpt8938
    @awesomehpt8938 Před 2 lety +3216

    With men like these Steiner will be be able to launch his attack and turn things around! Right?

    • @diegotapia2830
      @diegotapia2830 Před 2 lety +160

      Of course

    • @lanfrancoadreani9212
      @lanfrancoadreani9212 Před 2 lety +275

      The day of American election I posted on /Pol/a picture of Hitler on his bunker titled,"We can still win this if Steiner, takes Virginia". One of the funniest nights on that God Forsaken website.

    • @gungnir9263
      @gungnir9263 Před 2 lety +18

      @@lanfrancoadreani9212 Based /pol/tard

    • @patrickt4
      @patrickt4 Před 2 lety +174

      "Das war ein BEFEHL!" Hitler said calmly.

    • @jaybee9269
      @jaybee9269 Před 2 lety +120

      Fegelein!

  • @Bozothcow
    @Bozothcow Před 9 měsíci +52

    It's depressing to think of a WW1 vet having survived that hell, only to join the VS and die in WW2.

    • @NeurosenkavalierEmilSinclair
      @NeurosenkavalierEmilSinclair Před 2 měsíci +13

      Even more depressing are the german jewish war heroes from ww1 which were betrayed by the country they fought for. It's so disgusting if you think about it.

  • @sillyone52062
    @sillyone52062 Před 2 lety +997

    I served in West Germany during the 1980's. One of my coworkers had been in the Hitlerjügend, the German boy scouts.
    In April, 1945, his entire troop was drafted into the Army and given rudimentary training with Panzerfausts. His unit was given a veteran of the Russian front with a missing arm and sent to defend a railroad tunnel to defend it against the advancing Americans.

    • @sillyone52062
      @sillyone52062 Před 2 lety +538

      Upon arriving at the tunnel, the grizzled NCO told the kids that he was going to turn around for two minutes, and when he turned back, he wanted to see a pile of Panzerfausts and no kids. Mike and his friends took off, and survived the war.

    • @cheems5643
      @cheems5643 Před 2 lety +88

      Thanks for sharing this bit of history

    • @wote2760
      @wote2760 Před 2 lety +318

      @@sillyone52062 that nco knew the bullshit that was flying around was not worth the kids lives. I salute him for saving the kids.

    • @nekite1
      @nekite1 Před 2 lety +184

      @@sillyone52062 The man deserved a medal for that act alone - after all, he saved the kids.

    • @PanzerBuyer
      @PanzerBuyer Před 2 lety +70

      @@sillyone52062 Love it! He did his REAL duty!

  • @thumperpaul
    @thumperpaul Před 2 lety +294

    My dad was 14 years old when he was conscripted into the Volksturm, and he was stationed along the Rhine River to man anti tank positions. Thankfully, he was able to desert and get back home , where his parents kept him hidden in a potato cellar until after hostilities ceased. He told me quite a few harrowing tales about those times….

    • @DutchGuyMike
      @DutchGuyMike Před 2 lety +4

      What kind of tales ??

    • @timgreenhoot5849
      @timgreenhoot5849 Před 2 lety +4

      i know not what kind of tales , but p robbally they resemble Maya Angelou's _i know why the caged bird sings_ experience in Stamps Arkansas or Kurt Vonnegut's _Slaughterhouse5_ CF _the_splendors_of_Dresden.

    • @gerardfrederick5504
      @gerardfrederick5504 Před 2 lety +14

      Guys wsho tell war stories are usually liars. Guys who fought, are usually silent. My father served on the Russian front from 1941 until the bitter end as a medical doctor. The only time he spoke about his service was when he once remarked how he had been captured along with his entire field hospital by Czech partisans and how they had murdered everyone most gruesomely. He was saved by a Soviet captain, who happened on the scene of the carnage. My second oldest brother served as a 14 year old Hitler Youth boy as a fireman putting out the fires in Frankfurt, where a SS man on leave saved his life. He rarely spoke about any of this. The amount of cowards and liars who desserted and subsequently spoke about it as if it were something heroic are sickening. Unfortunately, we Germans produced our fair share of bastards like that - including the protector of pedophiles, Pope Benedict, who was a cowardly deserter and bragged about it on his web site when he was Cardinal Ratzinger.

    • @DutchGuyMike
      @DutchGuyMike Před 2 lety

      @@gerardfrederick5504 That is silly, do you think everyone that has been in battles/wars are all silent about it? No, there are those that REVEL in telling about their experiences and for THOSE people it helps them cope - others it helps to be completely silent and to never think about it again. Only if true horror is involved with PTSD effects will they often remain silent but that does not mean that those that went through horrible events ALSO develop PTSD and thus choose to remain silent.. no. That is sillyto assume, what you are assuming - that most/everyone will be silent as opposed to vocal...
      What about those people that went through horrible battles and won many medals and CHOOSE to talk about their experiences? Everyone is different and how war effects anyone. Take a look at the many German veterans that won medals, who have been proven to have been in the thickest of battles - and yet they CHOOSE to talk about it, in as much detail as they can.
      Don't assume that they are liars due to talking of it because that is very silly.

    • @thumperpaul
      @thumperpaul Před 2 lety

      Pretty ballsy of you calling a 14 year old kid a coward. He should have died for the Fuhrer? Take a deep breath.

  • @waltie1able
    @waltie1able Před 2 lety +2771

    Yes, it is true. My German grandfather, I am 72 years old, was grabbed for the Volkssturm in 1945. He wore a civilian overcoat and was handed a Panzer Faust. He had the iron cross from WWI. So he was told to go out and due his duty and attempt to take out a Soviet Tank. He had no luck with that and surrendered to the Russians when the fighting ceased. He survived to 1967.
    My mother had for many years the overcoat that he wore in those days in Berlin, beaten up but serviceable.

    • @Mr_Fancypants
      @Mr_Fancypants Před 2 lety +63

      What happened to the coat?

    • @ziepex7009
      @ziepex7009 Před 2 lety +125

      grandpa was an absolute legend

    • @Dulcimertunes
      @Dulcimertunes Před 2 lety +41

      How long did the Russians keep him?

    • @sk8trryan1997
      @sk8trryan1997 Před 2 lety +141

      @@Mr_Fancypants some say richie apriel gave it to tony to wear.

    • @Mister_Kourkoutas
      @Mister_Kourkoutas Před 2 lety +43

      I’m glad to hear your grandfather survived!

  • @madhavgangavalli
    @madhavgangavalli Před 2 lety +321

    "The official uniform of the Volkssturm consisted of an armband". Says a lot without saying much.

    • @theodorkorner1497
      @theodorkorner1497 Před 2 lety +42

      Same in Ukraine today. The Territorial Defense Forces often just wear a yellow armband.

    • @user-njyzcip
      @user-njyzcip Před 2 lety +5

      @@theodorkorner1497 more like yellow tape ☹️

    • @theodorkorner1497
      @theodorkorner1497 Před 2 lety +3

      @@user-njyzcip Or even that...

    • @carbonara2144
      @carbonara2144 Před 2 lety +1

      @@theodorkorner1497 "Leading untrained men to war is to throw them away"

    • @theodorkorner1497
      @theodorkorner1497 Před 2 lety +11

      @@carbonara2144 Could be could be not. Partisan War can be very effective. Just look at Afghanistan were both the Soviets and the West failed.

  • @30secondsflat
    @30secondsflat Před 2 lety +664

    I love that Dr. Felton is trying to create connections with modern events without directly saying so. The past is never the past.

    • @edwinsalau150
      @edwinsalau150 Před 2 lety +27

      The past is merely a prelude!

    • @benthompson1341
      @benthompson1341 Před 2 lety +66

      History doesn’t repeat itself, but it always rhymes

    • @Ganglo-Saxon
      @Ganglo-Saxon Před 2 lety +16

      Are you implying that ukraine is using a volksturm?

    • @AndyJarman
      @AndyJarman Před 2 lety +9

      National service still a part of life in eastern Europe.

    • @drott150
      @drott150 Před 2 lety +24

      There aren't any significant "Volkssturm" forces in Ukraine. It's almost all photo ops and propaganda. It's not the battle of Berlin and the civilians aren't going to die for Zelenskyy's new world order.

  • @brittakriep2938
    @brittakriep2938 Před 2 lety +532

    A small note from Germany: In time of Holy Roman Empire, Germany was split into more than 300 states. The smallest ones had often armies with lesser than 50 men. Military unuseable, only a police and ceremonial force. With exeption of this ,giant' armies, the noble or spiritual ruler had only the possibillity to mobilize the ,Landsturm', a levie of fightable, but badly trained or armed men. Those units, also called Landmiliz, Landfahnen ( rural areas) Stadtgarde,Stadtwache, Stadtmilitär, Bürgerwehr, Bürgergarde, Bürgermiliz, Bürgermilitär ( towns). Those town militias often, but not allways,had uniforms and slightly better training.

    • @jessebianchi2631
      @jessebianchi2631 Před 2 lety +28

      thanks for the history lesson. we moderns forget those beginnings.

    • @caniconcananas7687
      @caniconcananas7687 Před 2 lety +28

      There were civil militias even earlier in what now is Germany.
      Some years ago archeologists discovered the place of what perhaps was the first battle on Europe, several thousands years ago.
      There were lots of corpses in the very same place were they fell slain in the primitive fortification of a village.
      Archeologists found proofs of men and women of every age fought to defend their village. But all of them died and their foes won the battle.
      Our prehistory is also terrible.

    • @odysseus2656
      @odysseus2656 Před 2 lety +11

      Yeah, it is odd that Germany never got united. France was the eastern part of Charlemagne's empire left to one son. Germany to another son and Lothar got the land between. Lotharingia still exists as the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxembourg, Switzerland and Italy, but it was multiple languages.

    • @rob5944
      @rob5944 Před 2 lety +13

      It is interesting that Germany went so quickly from all those tiny states into the most powerful nation in Europe in just a few decades. Where as here in Britain and France it took hundreds of years. One has to go back a long way in my country to read about local chieftains and Lords with their own armies who may of fought the Danes and Romans etc. And each other lol

    • @janbo8331
      @janbo8331 Před 2 lety +5

      The USA copied the burger militia. They have training centers all over the world.

  • @jeffblacky
    @jeffblacky Před 2 lety +1470

    my great grand father was a WW1 veteran and was conscripted in the Volksstrum in late 44. He already had a iron cross 2nd from WW1 and recieved the bar to the 2nd class in 1945. He was captured and released in early 46.

    • @browngreen933
      @browngreen933 Před 2 lety +121

      Glad he survived both world wars.

    • @Ariovistvs
      @Ariovistvs Před 2 lety +108

      My great grandfather was barely too young to serve in WWI but was drafted into the Volkssturm at the end of WWII. His wife and 5 children fled East Prussia from the red army while he was in active duty. The oldest of the children was my grandmother, 7 years old. They fled across the frozen vistula lagoon for Mecklenburg, where they had relatives that would grant them shelter in a small rural village. When the soviets finally arrived they hid in a forest nearby and the local men surrendered to the russians. After that all the women were raped and the owners of the farms were shot just because they were land owners. They didn't even know whether my great grandfather would ever return. Fortunately he survived the war and captivity and found them in 46.
      Another grandfather of mine was 14 when the war ended, being the youngest of his other brothers who were all killed in the war as well. Those stories teached me to be very grateful for the peaceful life that is given to my generation.

    • @occidentadvocate.9759
      @occidentadvocate.9759 Před 2 lety +21

      You must be proud of him. 👍

    • @wifstd5568
      @wifstd5568 Před 2 lety +3

      @Ariovistvs thanks for sharing your story. Did the soviets rape the little girls? Do you know how many years the rape of the population last?

    • @williamdraken6018
      @williamdraken6018 Před 2 lety +6

      Thats awesome. What a life.

  • @magnus7857
    @magnus7857 Před 2 lety +604

    My great grandfather, a WW1 veteran originally serving with the artillery on the western front, was also part of the Volkssturm. He was send to the french border and was captured by the French for a second time in less than 30 years.
    This probably lead to his slight dementia sometimes manifesting itself in an unusual fear. My mother recalls him once going on a rampage in the kitchen, late at night, whilst shouting: "The French are coming, the French are coming!"
    He died a few weeks later.

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Před 2 lety +66

      Many British WW1 veterans suffered the same. My late father once told me about about seeing the Home Guard, many of whom suffered from PTSD, and they had flashbacks while out on patrol.
      Interestingly my grandfather was also an artilleryman with the British Army at the Somme and Passchendaele. He was with the big 60 pounders.

    • @magnus7857
      @magnus7857 Před 2 lety +58

      @@bigblue6917 If I remember correctly, he was at the Somme, too. Although I don't know which brigade exactly.
      My goodness, it could be that our ancestors shelled each other.

    • @alfnoakes392
      @alfnoakes392 Před 2 lety +66

      @@magnus7857 To paraphrase a snippet I half-remember from Spike Milligan's account of he and his ex-comrades meeting German WW2 veterans they had fought against ... "A toast to inaccurate gunnery ! "

    • @minuteman4199
      @minuteman4199 Před 2 lety +28

      @@magnus7857 My wife's family is from Augsburg Germany. My family is from England. I have visited the house my father in law grew up in and the neighbourhood bomb shelter that he sheltered in is now a museum. My dad's uncle flew pathfinder mosquitos and likely took part in raids on Augsburg. Funny how things end up. Our children's grand parents generation were trying to kill each other. We have a good relationship now.

    • @charlesrb3898
      @charlesrb3898 Před 2 lety +1

      @@magnus7857 But they were wily enough to live and reproduce. Darwinism or sheer dumb luck?

  • @Flurb_Xray
    @Flurb_Xray Před 2 lety +78

    My neighbour told me once how he could avoid to be sent to Volkssturm in the very last days. He was a teenager and due his work on family farm he had a wound at this thumb. He put some hair in it to cause a strong infection. In the medical examination for Volkssturm he was sent back home with the offical notice to recover first and to be recruited later. Lucky enough for him his calculation worked out, the "later" the war was over.

  • @bigblue6917
    @bigblue6917 Před 2 lety +369

    Something often missed with units like this was the psychological effects on such troops. Many of the British Home Guard who had fought on the Great War suffered from PTSD while out on patrol. But they felt that they had to 'get on with things' because what they were doing meant relieving regular troops from such tasks. In the early days patrols were going out with just a couple of rounds each.

    • @ijg4427
      @ijg4427 Před 2 lety +38

      My father was one of them He stood at the top of achurch tower with one bullet

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 Před 2 lety +38

      @@ijg4427 All things considered you have to admire them. Serving in two world wars many suffering from the first.

    • @carbonara2144
      @carbonara2144 Před 2 lety +8

      @@ijg4427 One bullet? If you are supposed to fight until the last bullet then what can you do when the enemy comes?

    • @cameronwixcey9692
      @cameronwixcey9692 Před 2 lety +20

      @@carbonara2144 roller skate bayonet charges. There is some footage of home guard practicing it.

    • @carbonara2144
      @carbonara2144 Před 2 lety +8

      @@cameronwixcey9692 You got to be kidding.

  • @DavidFraser007
    @DavidFraser007 Před 2 lety +220

    My old colleague and friend was in the Volkssturm. This was in my army days in Munster, West Germany in the early 80s. He was about 14 and had to join, his duty was an anti aircraft gun. He said the other man was quite old, they didn't fire at anything as they weren't good at identifying aeroplanes. He was captured and then sent home, but he was dragged back to his gun again, captured again and he asked to stay in captivity until the end of the war.

    • @mikeromney4712
      @mikeromney4712 Před 2 lety +8

      That's unusual. Normally, the minimum age to be drafted as an Flakhelfer was 16 years, or the corresponding year issues (Deadline - May 31 for each year). The same rule goes for RAD and Volkssturm.

    • @DavidFraser007
      @DavidFraser007 Před 2 lety +28

      @@mikeromney4712 I have no idea if it was unusual, but he was young enough that he was considered to be too young to be a POW and sent home.

    • @mikeromney4712
      @mikeromney4712 Před 2 lety +5

      @@DavidFraser007 What I said - unusual.
      As far as I know, also from relatives, the 16-year-old was not sent home from captivity. In this respect, the story may be true, I don't doubt it.
      We know how 14-year-olds act like that. They WANTED to help and save the fatherland. Some rules may have been circumvented. Otherwise, as I said, the practically absolute majority of school classes came from certain year issues as Flak-helpers into the Reich Air Defense, or were sometimes used for not physically hard work in the civilian sector. It was completely organized.

    • @elenano2793
      @elenano2793 Před 2 lety +6

      @@mikeromney4712 Volkssturm conscripts usually had to be 16 years old but in the final days of the war even some 8 year olds fought, 12 year olds were manning artillery

    • @mikeromney4712
      @mikeromney4712 Před 2 lety

      @@elenano2793 Right. But you can count on one hand these rare cases in which children have taken part in combat operations and these children did not belong to any military organization, but to the youth organization of the NSDAP. All cases of this personal commitment were voluntary and as you said in the last turbulent days.

  • @MatijaCG
    @MatijaCG Před 2 lety +177

    ,,The old. The young. The weak. If they stand for Germany, they die for Germany."

  • @Osiris3657
    @Osiris3657 Před 2 lety +15

    My grandfather was part of the Volkssturm. He was 14 years old and sent, with other young boys, to the Netherlands if I recall correctly. When they showed up to report for duty, the senior official in charge told them all to go home instead

  • @stc3145
    @stc3145 Před 2 lety +110

    Italian Carcano rifles were re-chambered into 8mm Mauser to simplify logistics. After the Germans took over Italy they had lots of Italian rifles stored. They planned to convert over a million rifles to arm the Volkstrum. Obviously this number was totaly un-realistic, only 15 000 conversions were made.
    Ian at Forgotten Weapons did a video on this.

    • @jadunbar88
      @jadunbar88 Před 2 lety +1

      Mannlucher Carcano?

    • @alfnoakes392
      @alfnoakes392 Před 2 lety +12

      For Sale: 1 million Italian rifles. Never fired, only dropped once. (Sorry... couldn't resist a joke the Brits usually tell about the French)

    • @lanfrancoadreani9212
      @lanfrancoadreani9212 Před 2 lety +12

      @@alfnoakes392 The whole thing about Italy not fighting Is just stupid. Not only we fought, but when we had the, good, idea of surrendering in 1943 we ended up into a civil war while having to deal with the world war. There were still parts of Italy under axis control when Germany surrendered.

    • @lanfrancoadreani9212
      @lanfrancoadreani9212 Před 2 lety +2

      It Is a decision that still sounds stupid, why not try to produce Carcano ammunitions instead? Not that could have make any difference. But sending someone to fight with a single round rifle Is an horrible idea.

    • @CarlsonWDane
      @CarlsonWDane Před 2 lety +2

      @@lanfrancoadreani9212 logistics. You aren't going to tool up and make new non-standard ammo in war time. Harder to get a cartiage accepted then a rifle. They needed weapons, convert a stock pile that you weren't using to your ammo. Single shot bolt action is simple and easy to train people to use.

  • @darrenpaech1342
    @darrenpaech1342 Před 2 lety +30

    My great uncle survived WW1 on the Western Front in the German Army only to be rounded up and put into the Volksturm in Potsdam in 1945. He somehow managed to survive this too. Whenever I have a rough day I think of him and feel better about my lot in life!

  • @ShoegazingHammer74
    @ShoegazingHammer74 Před 2 lety +179

    I think I'm right in saying that the Volkssturm were consecrated on the very same day that the British counterparts, the Home Guard (best known by being immortalised in 'Dad's Army' on the BBC), were stood down and disbanded. Very poignant symbolism of the shifting of fortunes during WW2.

    • @skylongskylong1982
      @skylongskylong1982 Před 2 lety +9

      Home Guard reactivated in late forties, and stood down again in the fifties
      Look up Home Service Force 1982 to 1992.

    • @jessebianchi2631
      @jessebianchi2631 Před 2 lety +9

      i just binge watched Dad's Army. classic and drawn from life.

    • @ShoegazingHammer74
      @ShoegazingHammer74 Před 2 lety +2

      @@skylongskylong1982 Wow, thanks for the info - I'd never heard of that before! Great stuff. :-)

    • @raypurchase801
      @raypurchase801 Před 2 lety +7

      @@jessebianchi2631 Couldn't be made today.
      Too many white people.
      No gays represented.

    • @jessebianchi2631
      @jessebianchi2631 Před 2 lety +14

      @@raypurchase801 there are poc who consider themselves british to the core and gays have always been with us.
      do you have a point or are you just a s**t stirring drama queen?
      enquiring minds want to know.
      2nd thought, no. we don't care. as my brit cousins say, bugger off.

  • @The_Str4nger
    @The_Str4nger Před 2 lety +74

    there is a very good movie about this from germany, Die Brücke. It's about a group of Volksturm teenage boys, who had the senseless duty of protecting a meaningless bridge in a small village.

    • @dongately2817
      @dongately2817 Před 2 lety +11

      Saw that movie awhile ago and haven't been able to remember the name, or get it out of my head. Thank you for naming it.

    • @Rammersteined
      @Rammersteined Před 2 lety +5

      Great movie indeed, "The Bridge" .

    • @sandormccann2546
      @sandormccann2546 Před 2 lety +8

      It has a horrific scene where one of the boys illustrates perfectly how NOT to operate a panzerfaust inside a building. It is a great anti-war film.

    • @MrPanzerTanzer
      @MrPanzerTanzer Před 2 lety +3

      It was refilmed several times. All versions well done.

    • @The_Str4nger
      @The_Str4nger Před 2 lety +2

      @@MrPanzerTanzer there is actually only one remake. A TV move from the german TV Channel pro 7 and it was pretty weak

  • @bananomet4052
    @bananomet4052 Před 2 lety +101

    Brilliant video as always.
    I recently spoke with my grandma and found out my great grandpa fought in WW1 in the Kaiser army for Austria Hungary against russians in Kaukasus region and lost all his toes due to frostbite. When he returned home to south Bohemia, he then recieved a cow from the bailiff as a wedding gift. Crazy times, maybe an inspiration for a future video? Would love to hear more WW1 stories to be honest. Can't believe WW1 is over for more than 100 years and still echoes in people alive today.

    • @jefferyepstein9210
      @jefferyepstein9210 Před 2 lety +17

      My mom's grandfather fought in the American Civil War as a 17 year old boy. She recalled many stories he told her as a child. He lived to be 104 and was still of sound mind when he passed. It would have been incredible if someone would have thought to record his stories.

    • @CatnamedMittens
      @CatnamedMittens Před 2 lety +3

      Yeah I'd definitely love more WWI videos.

    • @shelbynamels973
      @shelbynamels973 Před 2 lety +6

      @@jefferyepstein9210 Calls to mind the story of the last Confederate war widow. A veteran of the war, about the age of your great=grandfather, married a young woman in the 1920s. He clinched the deal by pointing out to her that if they got married, his veteran's pension, which his home state was paying him, would continue to be paid to her after his death, which at his age would not have been too far off.
      She liked the proposal, married him, and drew his pension until her death sometime around the Fifties or so.
      Btw, great handle. Not controversial at all.

    • @wilhelmtellmemore9543
      @wilhelmtellmemore9543 Před 2 lety +3

      I did a bit of research and i couldnt find a single record of austrian troops in the caucasus in ww1. Maybe you mistook it with the carpathians?

    • @bananomet4052
      @bananomet4052 Před 2 lety

      @@wilhelmtellmemore9543 Hey, maybe. Grandma is 77yo now :)

  • @patricaristide7678
    @patricaristide7678 Před 2 lety +59

    I was always under the impression that Volkssturm units were ineffective at best and more often than not an absolute suicide mission. So my heart sank when I saw those civilians with ill fitting helmets, assault rifles and yellow armbands in Ukraine. Thanks for pointing out that motivation played a big part as did professional leadership - or lack thereof.

    • @vlad_47
      @vlad_47 Před 9 dny

      Ukraine uses Volkssturm alot. Its called Territorial Defense Brigades now.

  • @atticlight9048
    @atticlight9048 Před 2 lety +208

    It is worth noting that while the teenage lads of the Hitler Jugend and the grandads of the Volkssturm were battling against the might of the Red Army, very many Nazi bigwigs were making ready to scuttle off to safety. In effect those young lads and elderly men were helping to buy time for those 'higher-ups' fleeing the sinking ship.

    • @gregoryschmidt1233
      @gregoryschmidt1233 Před 2 lety +10

      'twas ever thus.

    • @cantbanme792
      @cantbanme792 Před 2 lety +35

      except hitler. he stayed. that's the surprising fact. that man stayed and died with his people.

    • @atticlight9048
      @atticlight9048 Před 2 lety +17

      @@cantbanme792 Well yes, that is true. That much at least was to his credit.

    • @99somerville
      @99somerville Před rokem

      S

    • @nameless1587
      @nameless1587 Před rokem +5

      @@cantbanme792 Потому что ему НЕКУДА было бежать.
      Вот он и решил обставить всё так, будто он решил умереть вместе с народом. Ну что сказать, истеричный человек, но умный

  • @HamburgerTime209
    @HamburgerTime209 Před 2 lety +204

    I’ve always wanted to know more about the volksturm, thank you Mark. Another subject I’ve been long curious about are the experiences of the men in so called “Ost Battalions”. How they were used in combat, their willingness or unwillingness to fight, and what happened to them once they were captured or the war ended.

    • @fj1659
      @fj1659 Před 2 lety +8

      As far as i know US/GB pows of the osttruppen were handed over to the Sovjets and often executed

    • @matthewwhitton5720
      @matthewwhitton5720 Před 2 lety +3

      Yes, I fully agree. I confess to having an almost fascination with them.

    • @bigvinnie3
      @bigvinnie3 Před 2 lety +1

      @@fj1659 They were, operation keelhaul. And it was a war crime. Obviously Germany committed far more war crimes than the west. But this and the bombing of civilians are the best examples of allied war crimes IMO. And it was also very sad men who joined because they either hated Stalin or just didn't want to starve to death were abandoned by the west and sent to the USSR to be murdered.

  • @geoffrey6000
    @geoffrey6000 Před 2 lety +145

    I don't know if he served in the Volkssturm, but my great grandfather fought in the German army in ww2, at one point taking a round in the side of the head (ear). He survived although he was almost completely deaf after that, and lived till 2003, dying 1 day before I was born at 99 years of age. My parents named me after him.

    • @dakotabishop8009
      @dakotabishop8009 Před 2 lety

      So your grandfather was a nazi. Got it

    • @biscuit1861
      @biscuit1861 Před 2 lety +7

      How proud you must be! May he rest in peace 🕊️

    • @rtwfreak2012
      @rtwfreak2012 Před 2 lety +5

      your Great Great father was 14 when WW1 ended. there is no way he fought in it

    • @dakotabishop8009
      @dakotabishop8009 Před 2 lety

      @@rtwfreak2012 look at his comment history, full of nazi stuff

    • @geoffrey6000
      @geoffrey6000 Před 2 lety +5

      @@dakotabishop8009 excuse me?

  • @gunman47
    @gunman47 Před 2 lety +208

    Ah this will be an interesting video to watch given tha parallel events that have been happening in the last few days as well. Thank you Dr Felton.

    • @owengg9157
      @owengg9157 Před 2 lety +26

      I think that’s why he made it

    • @jaredquinney204
      @jaredquinney204 Před 2 lety +3

      How true

    • @derjansan9564
      @derjansan9564 Před 2 lety +9

      The Volkssturm was, is, and always will be a stupid idea.

    • @dare-er7sw
      @dare-er7sw Před 2 lety

      It's nothing compared to ww2. The Germans killed 3-4 millions Russian pows

    • @arjenh7214
      @arjenh7214 Před 2 lety +10

      I don't like it. First he's comparing the Ukrainians to the SS by making a video about Ukrainians that only 'eventually' rose up to the Germans, and now he's comparing Ukrainian civilian defense to the Volkssturm - that did lose their war. Where are your affiliations, doctor Felton?

  • @MasonicKryptonite
    @MasonicKryptonite Před 2 lety +364

    I've told this story a few times before on youtube video comment sections and got a lot of hatred towards my grandfather because people think I'm lying, but here it goes:
    My Grandfather (he is 92 now) was born and raised in Saxony, and like everyone else, he was forced into the Hitler Jugend (Hitler Youth) at a young age. There he was "tested" for his "aryan" traits and heritage. Due to him being a straight A student, and what the NSDAP considered to be of ideal German heritage he was deemed a prime candidate for the SS.
    It was decided that he was to be conscripted into a Napola (Boarding school grooming kids/teens for becoming officers in the SS). He tells gut-wrenching stories about how they would have school
    announcements about school pupils that had previously died "a hero's death for their Führer and country", but I won't get into that now.
    Luckily (as he did) his parents despised Hitler, the NSDAP, and everything they represented. They knew that they would do everything they could to keep him from being sent to the SS boarding school.
    They succeeded.
    On Febuary 12th, 1945 his Hitler youth group was ordered to help the war effort in Dresden, and he was ordered to be at his local train station that morning. When he got there he noticed that he was the only one from his group that showed up. He saw his group leader, he went to him and asked where everyone else was, and the disillusioned group leader told him: "Go home, boy. The war is lost and there isn't anything you can do that would change that." He followed orders and went back home.
    A day later Dresden was bombed...
    He was then forced into the Volkssturm a few weeks before he turned 15 in 1945. No uniform, no relevant training, nothing. He was grouped with three old men, given one "old Russian machine gun" (according to him), merely trained how to shoot, reload, and fix weapon jamming and sent out to fight the same day.
    Long story short, his location was hit by artillery fire, the men he was with were killed/mortally wounded and he started running.
    Running away from the war, and everything it had caused for him and the people he knew.
    Scared of being shot for "being a traitor" he hid in a forest surrounding his home town for a few days until he spotted American troops entering it. He says he broke out into tears of joy and immediately ran home, grateful to see those that he stills considers his personal heroes. To this day he still tears up about that journey. Everytime he tells the story he mentions "some fanatical idiots shooting at a Sherman tank with a rifle and pistols. The last thing those poor souls saw was the Sherman aim it's barrel at them. And what did they die for? For nothing!"
    In a blink of an eye he could have been forced into the SS, and the atrocities they committed. He probably wouldn't have survived the war, but he did. He's still alive today and I couldn't be more grateful.

    • @vk2ig
      @vk2ig Před 2 lety +57

      I don't understand why your comment would attract hatred. It's quite a plausible story, and very thought-provoking: "What if ...?" Thanks for posting.

    • @m4d_al3x
      @m4d_al3x Před 2 lety +21

      in war weird stories happen.
      Im happy for you that he survived ;)

    • @MasonicKryptonite
      @MasonicKryptonite Před 2 lety +5

      @@vk2ig The one I've gotten the most is that people are outright calling him a liar, and other nonsense along those lines. Thanks for reading!

    • @christianpethukov8155
      @christianpethukov8155 Před 2 lety +12

      Well I think it's a perfectly plausible and interesting story.

    • @MixerGamesHD
      @MixerGamesHD Před 2 lety +6

      A great story. Your grandpa has quite a history!

  • @lennartforsberg1519
    @lennartforsberg1519 Před 2 lety +17

    I remember visiting some military graveyards in Northern Norway. Some Germans was only 16 years old.

  • @henrykeyter53
    @henrykeyter53 Před 2 lety +22

    The Boers managed to keep Britain fighting for three years with only a home guard. Prior to the well known war of 1899-1902, the Boers won a war against Britain with the same commando system in 1879-1881. The Boers system, as explained by Deneys Reitz, had its flaws: the Boers had huge discipline issues and a few battles were lost because men thought the situation untenable and retreated without orders. That being said, don't underestimate a civilian force fighting for their own independence.

    • @drott150
      @drott150 Před 2 lety +5

      That being said, don't underestimate a civilian force fighting for their own -independence- survival.

    • @cameronwixcey9692
      @cameronwixcey9692 Před 2 lety +2

      They were military age men, skilled horsemen and marksmen facing infantry they could out manoeuvre and outshoot. Not old men facing better equipped enemies with tanks that they couldn't outrun. H.G wells wrote a sci fi book that showed trench warfare between the Brits and Boers that 'tanks: broke.
      You are correct about civilians being a threat but missed the massive difference in quality between the 2 groups (mainly physical) and their enemies (mainly tanks, artillery) and the style of defense ( static Vs more elastic).

    • @henrykeyter53
      @henrykeyter53 Před 2 lety +3

      @@cameronwixcey9692 Mate, the initial call-ups of both the OFS and ZAR was for men between 18 and 55. Once the second British offensive began, however, it was all hands on deck, and a lot of old men - as old as 80 years - and kids as young as 7 joined the ranks.
      As for manoeuvring, you are once again correct - for the first half of the war. From the start of the winter in 1901 the Boers' horses gave out and the last part of the war - the real Guerilla phase - was fought with horses that was taken from the enemy. Many men were also on foot by then. Read D. Reitz's book, Commando! on the subject, or R.W. Schikkerling's Commando Courageous.
      The fact is, however, that the Boers had military experience - if only against native tribes. Both Reitz and Schikkerling makes a point of the motivation of the Boers, stating that the weak and unwilling fled, leaving the best and most loyal to fight until the bitter end.
      In a modern conflict, hand held weapons such as Javelins, NLAW's, Stingers etc. provides a foot soldier with enough firepower to counter tanks and aircraft. This will be especially helpful in urban warfare, or, once the insurgents can hide between the civilians - as in Afghanistan and Iraq. Point is, a well motivated civilian who survives enough contacts can become a very dangerous foe.

    • @misterpinkandyellow74
      @misterpinkandyellow74 Před 2 lety

      @@henrykeyter53 shut up

    • @Smudgeroon74
      @Smudgeroon74 Před 7 měsíci

      ​@@henrykeyter53 yup the mujahadein rebels in Afghanistan were supplied with, and trained in the use of powerful Stinger missiles. The Russian army lost hundreds of choppers from 1984 to 1988... the C.I.A supplied these to Pakistan and then Pakistan shipped the Stingers to the rebels through eastern Afghanistan...

  • @highjumpstudios2384
    @highjumpstudios2384 Před 2 lety +20

    "They have robbed the cradle and the grave equally for the force they have now."

  • @AshleySilverValentine
    @AshleySilverValentine Před 2 lety +48

    Ah the Volkssturm.
    They're more well known for their last ditch rifles than the unit themselves, least they don't have to fight anything with that.

    • @JonatasAdoM
      @JonatasAdoM Před 2 lety +1

      I read the title and the first thing that came to mind was Volkssturm Gewehr.

    • @badbotchdown9845
      @badbotchdown9845 Před 2 lety +1

      You're wrong as we have found valuable troops facing paratroopers in Bastogne

    • @pawelt4638
      @pawelt4638 Před 2 lety

      @@badbotchdown9845 do not mistake Volkssturm with Volksgrenadier units

  • @maxrudder6091
    @maxrudder6091 Před 2 lety +176

    You remind us that wars aren't just lines on a map - there are human stories and human costs. Looking at the faces of those old men and young boys gave me tremendous respect for them, as well as sorrow, and deepened my despisement for the leaders who put them there.

  • @cammobunker
    @cammobunker Před 2 lety +32

    The most common weapon of the VS was the Italian Carcano rifle. The Germans had taken many thousands from the disarming of the Italian army in 1943, and had them conveniently stashed in depots in northern Italy (they had decent amounts of ammo for them as well, but nothing like enough to sustain any kind of combat for any length of time) . Just a short distance away was Austria, and they went out from there. Also many French and Russian rifles were used. Ammunition was a problem, and many VS were given as few as five to ten cartridges. There was even a program to convert the Italian Carcanos to the standard German service cartridge, although they really did not get very many converted over.

    • @declangaming24
      @declangaming24 Před 2 lety +4

      They also used gewehr 98s and other old weapons from ww1 and below they also had some Kar98ks mp40s but in small numbers

  • @Hopeless_and_Forlorn
    @Hopeless_and_Forlorn Před 2 lety +282

    Thoughts of an elderly Volkssturmer:
    Let's see, five and a half years ago, when we started this war, we had the best armed forces in the world, bar none. That was quickly proven in Poland, in Norway, in France, everywhere our forces went, by triumph after triumph. Now, in 1945, millions of our elite fighting men have been killed, crippled, or imprisoned. We have no more divisions of trained men, no Panzer corps, no Luftwaffe, no fuel, no great leaders, no experienced comrades to help us. They give us weapons unlikely to be effective against the millions of well-equipped, battle hardened troops assaulting us. Our backs are against the burning walls of our homeland, and they expect us to save the war for them. Well, Scheisse.

    • @alm5992
      @alm5992 Před 2 lety +32

      Similar to what's happening in Ukraine right now. Civilians told to defend against a massive force with only patriotism and simple guns to win the conflict. I would have hoped the world had learned from these WW2 stories, but no.

    • @d.k8257
      @d.k8257 Před 2 lety +41

      @@alm5992 'Civilians told to defend against a massive force with only patriotism and simple guns to win the conflict.''
      *Actually trained soldiers fighting against poorly equiped under trained under supplied troops.

    • @Khabaal87
      @Khabaal87 Před 2 lety +58

      @@alm5992 At least the Ukrainians have the big advantage that their enemies are giving up left and right because they didn't want to fight in the first place. And they have a much higher morale, because they don't defend an evil dictator but instead fight against one.

    • @luisgonzagaosollo7970
      @luisgonzagaosollo7970 Před 2 lety +5

      You're right. Better to surrender and see your women raped by the hundreds of thousands and your country chopped into pieces.

    • @fullclipaudio
      @fullclipaudio Před 2 lety +8

      @@Khabaal87 I hear other people say ridiculous things like this. Did the Ghost of Kiev tell you this personally? Maybe those 13 guys on that island told you.

  • @trooperdgb9722
    @trooperdgb9722 Před 2 lety +63

    Ive read that the whole concept was a bit strange from the German perspective... With such a traditional respect for specialisation and professionals many German civilians expressed severe doubts about things like the Volksturm. If the regular army...the professionals.... couldn't handle the situation...what hope did anyone else have? In addition... regular soldiers were reportedly horrified when their fathers (or even grandfathers) were called up...so there was a definite morale effect on the Army! This philosophy reportedly applied even more strongly to the calls from the Nazi Party for "partisan" type action even after defeat... that was most definitely NOT something Germans naturally took on...

    • @revanofkorriban1505
      @revanofkorriban1505 Před 2 lety +13

      Eh. Germany, like a lot of countries, had a history of civilian militias. The Volkssturm was basically just a logical revival of what had come before.

    • @caribman10
      @caribman10 Před 2 lety +2

      The Volksturm is just the mirror image of the child warriors as seen in Africa or Iraq.

    • @msgfrmdaactionman3000
      @msgfrmdaactionman3000 Před rokem +1

      Yeah, I'm pretty sure they were not "volunteers," unless young.

  • @Jay-bf8yp
    @Jay-bf8yp Před 2 lety +8

    A motivated man in his 50s is a dangerous, yet underestimated creature.

  • @RsRj-qd2cg
    @RsRj-qd2cg Před 2 lety +116

    One of the main reasons the SS Werewolves never materialized was that all the people who could've carried the plan out were killed fighting in the Volksturm and Hitler Youth.
    The insurgents in Iraq were able to carry out a costly insurgency against the US because the Iraqi Army dissolved during the initial invasion, leaving thousands of men with basic military training alive to join various factions after the war. Additionally, there were tens of thousands of capable civilians with various reasons to join insurgent groups, ranging from dislike of the Americans to peer pressure to lack of job prospects.

    • @logoseven3365
      @logoseven3365 Před 2 lety +3

      There were werewolves. They were much more active in the east than the west and not advertised to prevent escalation.
      They were hunted and executed when caught. Mostly young boys. I read a book, yes i forgot the name, where it was described in a chapter.

    • @jb6027
      @jb6027 Před 2 lety +14

      @@logoseven3365 Another event which altered German public opinion firmly in favor of the Americans, British and French, was the Berlin Airlift. It was a true Hearts &Minds operation and very successful.

    • @lanfrancoadreani9212
      @lanfrancoadreani9212 Před 2 lety +6

      Nah, I believe the main reason why Germany didn't have much of a guerrilla post WW2 was because the German people itself got destroyed, not much on the phisical aspects but on the moral fight. They Lost the willingness to fight After being bombed raped into the Oblivion. Plus they immediately started to instigate a strong propaganda against the population making them feel Like Monsters.

    • @DUSTKILLL
      @DUSTKILLL Před 2 lety +4

      @@lanfrancoadreani9212 don't forget the rape of Berlin after the end

    • @Rammersteined
      @Rammersteined Před 2 lety +6

      They did carry out the assisanation of the newly appointed mayor of Aachen and a few sorties against the Russians in the east. But most were disorganized and lost the will to carry on with stringent curfews and checkpoints in place by occupational forces.

  • @skeletalforce9673
    @skeletalforce9673 Před 2 lety +12

    This is a hell of a conincidental time to release this video on this topic

  • @robchamberlin4900
    @robchamberlin4900 Před rokem +6

    My Grandfather served in WW2 and was in the 701st Tank Batallion attached to the 102nd Infantry Division. His unit came across Volkssterm soldiers opposing his unit. He told me they were old men or young kids. The young kids he said would have rather been chasing Girls, going to school or playing Sports. He said the old men would have rathered to have enjoyed their retirement and spending time with their families and Grandchildren rather than fighting that late in life.

  • @thomasborgsmidt9801
    @thomasborgsmidt9801 Před 2 lety +99

    The problem with Volkssturm units is generally, that they are of very uneven quality. They are specifically usefull in cities where the combat value of armour is generally modest.

    • @badmonkey2222
      @badmonkey2222 Před 2 lety +2

      Many of them didn't even have a gun they had to steal one off a dead Russian, they only gave them very little ammunition, mix-matched uniforms and vehicles that broke down every other day.

    • @Sneedmire
      @Sneedmire Před 2 lety +3

      We'll see the concept in action soon enough.
      Ukraine. Kiev. "Volunteers". Russian encirclement.

    • @brokenpotato438
      @brokenpotato438 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Sneedmire The VDV and Russian troops around kiev will meet each other in hell in the next few days, dont worry

    • @charlesmcgill2974
      @charlesmcgill2974 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Sneedmire blame what you do on the enemy -Russian government

    • @stevenschnepp576
      @stevenschnepp576 Před 2 měsíci

      @@Sneedmire So how's that going for you now, comrade?

  • @hoosierpatriot2280
    @hoosierpatriot2280 Před 2 lety +19

    My great grandpa fought in WW1 as an infantry runner. My grandpa fought in WW2 in the Army in Europe, my great uncle was in the Korean War as an Air Force pilot, my dad was in Vietnam as a Navy Corpsman, my brother was in Desert Storm and I was in Somalia... I hope I am the last one in my family to serve...

    • @djharto4917
      @djharto4917 Před 2 lety +1

      Do you have a son?

    • @Jreb1865
      @Jreb1865 Před 2 lety

      That would certainly be a worthwhile dream...

    • @wayneantoniazzi2706
      @wayneantoniazzi2706 Před 2 lety

      Thanks for your service man! This old Marine sends a "Semper Fi!" to you and your family!
      And I concur with your last. No more wars, please. Old men should stop wars, not start them.

    • @aydan0161
      @aydan0161 Před 2 lety +1

      Lieutenant Dan is that you?

    • @stevenschnepp576
      @stevenschnepp576 Před 2 měsíci

      My family's military history in this country goes back to the Civil War. (Though I think we skipped WWI... at least, on the American side.) Only the dead have seen the end of war.

  • @john9951
    @john9951 Před 2 lety +8

    Another great clip by Mark Felton! Thanks for sharing.
    Perfect topic for the events taking place these days.

  • @Bigsky1991
    @Bigsky1991 Před 2 lety +18

    Volksturm units fought bravely in Frankfurt o.d.Oder, Breslau, Königsberg. With a handful of Knights Cross winners...although the KC was handed out in 45' for actions that would barely get you the EKII in 1940...

  • @paulc6471
    @paulc6471 Před 2 lety +17

    “Silver in their hair, gold in their hearts, and lead in their bones.” Man these guys could make jingoism out of anything

  • @ralfklonowski3740
    @ralfklonowski3740 Před 2 lety +89

    Sidenote: Reminds me of the Ukrainian civiliens volunteering to defend their country against a Russian invasion as I write this, using rifles, maybe tank missiles ("Panzerfaust 4.0") and self-built Molotov cocktails.
    My thoughts as a German and former soldier on the topic itself: While I have to respect the determination, courage and sacrifice of the men, the waste of human life here is heart breaking. The last year of the war claimed about as many German lives as the 4-5 years before. In other words: Had the Nazi Germany gouvernment surrendered in May 1944 instead of organizing the Volkssturm, they would have halved the German casualties of the whole war! By then, anyone knew that the War could no longer be won.
    My late uncle and godfather was drafted - I'm not sure if into the Volkssturm or the army - at the age of 16. He was lucky and survived. The British captured his unit somwhere in Northern Germany and he could go home pretty soon.
    Thank you for remembering these men.

    • @garrysekelli6776
      @garrysekelli6776 Před 2 lety +9

      Politicians don't care about the people who they supposedly represent. Only money and power.

    • @jb6027
      @jb6027 Před 2 lety +18

      Yes, I suspect that the timing of this video is in no way a accident. Well done Dr. Felton.

    • @lape2002
      @lape2002 Před 2 lety +12

      @@jb6027 precisely. The events in Ukraine join similar lines to the end of the Third Reich, namely the call to arms of a citizen militia by irresponsible leaders enhanced by massive amounts of propaganda. Oh and foreign legions too ;)

    • @AFGuidesHD
      @AFGuidesHD Před 2 lety +13

      “Nations that went down fighting rose again, but those who surrendered tamely were finished.” - Winston Churchill

    • @lape2002
      @lape2002 Před 2 lety +8

      @@AFGuidesHD you can tell this to the Paraguayan people who sent their children at one point, losing over 70% of male population, simply because president Solano Lopez didn't believe in giving up. Nice Churchill quote though.

  • @shauny2285
    @shauny2285 Před 2 lety +17

    I had worked with a Scotsman 40 years ago, who said he was in the UK home guard in 1940. He claimed that he was first issued a pike because rifles were in short supply.

    • @IrishCarney
      @IrishCarney Před 2 lety +2

      Yikes. I remember reports of drilling with brooms, but not actually being issued mêlée weapons! Shades of the Japanese preparations for the Allied invasion, such as handing out bamboo spears

  • @avnrulz8587
    @avnrulz8587 Před 2 lety +3

    I have a Luftschutz helmet my brother found on a Manhattan street several years ago. Original leather liner is completely dried out and falling apart.

  • @m2hmghb
    @m2hmghb Před 2 lety +28

    There were other VG weapons including the VG2 and VG5. I'm not sure how many VG3 and 4 were made, but the 2 and 5 were each over 10,000. Ian McCollum has videos on Forgotten weapons of them. That's not including simplifying production of existing weapons. It's an interesting time frame from a firearms perspective.

    • @jessebianchi2631
      @jessebianchi2631 Před 2 lety +3

      those "last ditch" weapons are extremely interesting.

    • @declangaming24
      @declangaming24 Před 2 lety

      Also mp3008 captured weapons from Eastern front like converted PPSH 41 to 9mm small numbers of kar 98ks also used G71 G98 Italian weapons captured stens Volkstumgewehr.

    • @timontide6404
      @timontide6404 Před 2 lety

      There's a guy/small company in Germany making reproductions, last I checked.

  • @clydecessna737
    @clydecessna737 Před 2 lety +15

    The British were also short of men by 1944. The Army in NE Europe got smaller and smaller after D Day. I have read that no less than 100,000 Royal Navy personnel were transferred to the Army at this time. (seems a lot).

    • @johnfisk811
      @johnfisk811 Před 2 lety +1

      retooled aircrew in training etc. too.

  • @mikedx2706
    @mikedx2706 Před 2 lety +51

    The VS was probably best used in urban house to house combat where the panzerfaust was an effective tank killer.

    • @657449
      @657449 Před 2 lety +6

      It made a great close range artillery/recoilless rifle weapon. You could take out a machine gun in a building, etc.

    • @LadyFairChildVideo
      @LadyFairChildVideo Před 2 lety +2

      yes, if by "best" you mean giving free meat to the Russian Meat Grinder...

    • @wvmann9320
      @wvmann9320 Před 2 lety +2

      Like the Javelins of today.

    • @theoneandonlyhooda
      @theoneandonlyhooda Před rokem

      @@LadyFairChildVideo what's your point?

    • @LadyFairChildVideo
      @LadyFairChildVideo Před rokem

      @@theoneandonlyhooda what is your point?

  • @loafer1989
    @loafer1989 Před 2 lety +17

    My grandfather was in the Volkssturm in the battle for Remagen. He was already 50 years old at that point with a limp from serving in the first world War.
    He was captured by the American Army and imprisoned in Reims.

    • @TRHARTAmericanArtist
      @TRHARTAmericanArtist Před 2 lety +3

      He was lucky to be captured by the Americans. My client, a german pilot, flew his ME 262 to Greece to be captured by the British. He became an American citizen. He told me lots of stories like using the Autobahn to land the first jets.

    • @loafer1989
      @loafer1989 Před 2 lety +1

      @@TRHARTAmericanArtist But he was the breadwinner in the family, leaving behind my mother, aged 10 and my uncle aged 11. They had very little to eat and starved. Fortunately my parents lived in Wiesbaden and that city was relatively undamaged by bombing unlike Frankfurt.

    • @TRHARTAmericanArtist
      @TRHARTAmericanArtist Před 2 lety

      @@loafer1989 - Thank goodness that they made it out alive.

    • @loafer1989
      @loafer1989 Před 2 lety +2

      @@TRHARTAmericanArtist Fun fact, the Americans bombed Frankfurt in December of 1944. They used aluminum chaff to confuse German radar. My mother and her parents used it as tinsel on there Christmas Tree.

    • @TRHARTAmericanArtist
      @TRHARTAmericanArtist Před 2 lety +1

      @@loafer1989 I did hear that before. Well she made a bad thing good. I love Christmas 🌲

  • @seandilallo8718
    @seandilallo8718 Před 2 lety +11

    I doubt that the eerie similarity, between these units and the armed civilians currently taking position in the old battlefields of Kiev and Kharkov, is lost on Mark Felton.

    • @seandilallo8718
      @seandilallo8718 Před 2 lety

      @Cl1nton Body count They're apparently arming children too, per the Daily Mail :(

  • @cuttlefisch
    @cuttlefisch Před 2 lety +6

    My maternal Viennese grandfather was recruited into the Volkssturm in early 1945. I don't think he ever fired a shot though. He was a World War I veteran who had served on the Russian and Italian fronts with Feldjägerbattalion 14.

  • @herrcobblermachen
    @herrcobblermachen Před 2 lety +42

    One of the amazing things to me about the VS was that there was such a squabble over who controlled this quasiformal organization. Internal power struggles all the way to the end- and not an issue of differences about how to best employee these forces, or who was most fit to lead them, just plain old fashioned greed and narcissism

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 Před 2 lety +2

      In my country the letters for the USA are VS... I read your comment thinking it was about that country..... and everything fits!

    • @thisguy2720
      @thisguy2720 Před 2 lety +3

      @@Blackadder75 no one cares

    • @drott150
      @drott150 Před 2 lety +2

      The people at the top were desperately afraid of being tried for war crimes after the war. Or for being summarily shot upon surrender. So that struggle for power at the end was in reality a struggle to control their own destiny up until the very end.

    • @Blackadder75
      @Blackadder75 Před 2 lety +3

      @@thisguy2720 cares, it seems

    • @petergray7576
      @petergray7576 Před 2 lety +1

      Power struggles were a feature of the Nazi regime, as Adolf Hitler wanted his officials to clique with each other. Competition would keep NSDAP factions from amassing too much power that would threaten Hitler, and the struggle for power and resources would weed out the shirkers. Adolf Hitler positioned himself like the sun, with Martin Bormann as his close companion, while the three main factions of government (Reichsluftminister Hermann Goering, SS chief Heinrich Himmler, and Armaments Minister Albert Speer) behaved like warring planets, with Bormann limiting their access to Hitler. The latter kept power by dint of his position as commander in chief of the Wehrmacht, which included the Waffen SS under his direct control as a de facto bodyguard force.

  • @markpaul8178
    @markpaul8178 Před 2 lety +5

    Mark,when I heard you mention that volkstrum had a lot of different weapons,it brought to mind when Gen Mark Clark expressed how hard it was to fight in Italy with so many different nationalities with so many different weapons that fought with the allies.

  • @medusagorgo5146
    @medusagorgo5146 Před 2 lety +1

    I am always excited when you produce a new video! I have bought a couple of your books (in digital form) from Amazon, they were terrific.

  • @HARK3M
    @HARK3M Před 2 lety

    Another well thought out and informative short documentary Mark!
    You have a passion and talent for this and I must say I much enjoy your channel!
    Good job and keep them coming please 😉

  • @irish3335
    @irish3335 Před 2 lety +7

    Great detail about the logistics and use of captured weapons, thanks for another interesting story Dr Felton!

  • @The105ODST
    @The105ODST Před 2 lety +4

    Thanks Mark for the upload. It is perfect to listen to while I work out.

  • @eekinelsa
    @eekinelsa Před 2 lety +3

    left out the best part, how they were grouped into battalions based on their medical issues..for example they were called "Magen" (stomach) battalions for men with digestive issues, and "ohren " (ear) battalions for the deaf and partially deaf!

  • @karlluppold240
    @karlluppold240 Před 2 lety +1

    I really like
    Your videos Mr. Felton, they’re the best on CZcams for military history

  • @Tyler-gv6zf
    @Tyler-gv6zf Před 2 lety +15

    Best channel on CZcams, without a doubt. Thanks for all that you do, Dr. Felton!

  • @MrSloika
    @MrSloika Před 2 lety +51

    The key takeaway from this is that even middle-aged men can be organized into an effective fighting force IF they had proper military training at some point in their lives. This is the main reason why eliminating universal military service was a mistake.

    • @kk-qu1zc
      @kk-qu1zc Před 2 lety +2

      but we have nukes so just threaten each other till we all die from fallout. enough of the tiny squabbles like Ukraine. just missle each other

    • @drott150
      @drott150 Před 2 lety +7

      I'm in my 50's and am in great shape. I can out hike the vast majority of men half my age and regularly do so. Don't know if I would hold up to the fear that comes in actual combat, no one does until it happens. But I also fear death less than a younger man because I've already lived most of my life. If it was in defense of my homeland and the invaders were a hated enemy, I wouldn't feel so bad dying for that cause. So when he spoke of the brave and very accomplished Volkssturm group of factory workers in their 50s, it makes sense to me.

    • @henrykeyter53
      @henrykeyter53 Před 2 lety +5

      Read about the Boer War mate. We fought Britain for three years with no training whatsoever. There is little that can motivate a man as much as the knowledge that he is really fighting for his independence. Also: old men make better soldiers because they can't run away ;-p

    • @MrSloika
      @MrSloika Před 2 lety +4

      @@drott150 Except that almost all of those factory workers HAD WWI military experience, the majority being WWI combat vets. You can't just teach someone arms handling skills and small unit tactics overnight. BTW, Hitler, Goering, Donitz, Rommel all were WWI combat vets...most the top Nazis were.

    • @drott150
      @drott150 Před 2 lety +1

      @@MrSloika I didn't hear him saying the majority were WWI combat vets, although being in their 50s I'm sure many were. Regardless, most of them engaged in purely defensive, close city fighting with enemy armor. That wasn't an experience most WWI vets had. So, although general combat experience is always helpful, much of the WWII era city fighting was not relatable. The Volkssturm were basically there to take a few shots at the enemy as they approached, quickly expending themselves in most cases to death or rapid surrender.

  • @grahamsawyer831
    @grahamsawyer831 Před 2 lety +12

    Mark, is there any chance you could do a piece on the Ukrainian Insurgent Army and the internal conflict there after 1945? this is such an important part of history, especially at the moment - and I for one always greatly appreciate the balanced and informative view you bring to all your videos. You are the man for the job!!

  • @filipohman7277
    @filipohman7277 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome Work Mark Thanks!!!👍 Greetings from Helsinki, Finland 🇫🇮

  • @kingofsnakes1000
    @kingofsnakes1000 Před 2 lety +5

    Great work as usual, sir. I still hope to see a video covering Marshal's and Grand Admiral's batons one day. lol. Have a great day, Dr.

  • @callumjoyce1712
    @callumjoyce1712 Před 2 lety +40

    It always breaks my heart to think that aging WW1 veterans were assigned to train kids how to fight. They knew the horrible brutality and pointlessness of war better than anybody but were forced to see their kids and grandkids in to oblivion

    • @kommando5562
      @kommando5562 Před rokem +1

      With the red army coming, in many cases it was better to die in battle

    • @destroyer1667
      @destroyer1667 Před rokem +3

      @@kommando5562 good, the germans didn't deserve anything better. Sowed the wind, reaped the whirlwind

    • @hannahdyson7129
      @hannahdyson7129 Před 9 měsíci

      ​@@destroyer1667You agree Russians deserve the same fate today in Ukraine yes?
      Reaped the whirlwind yes?

    • @graceneilitz7661
      @graceneilitz7661 Před 9 měsíci

      @@kommando5562Well some German veterans though that. On the grounds of that if the Russians ( really Soviets) did to the Germans what had been done to them during the German invasion of the USSR than it was indeed better to fight to the death.
      I can’t say that the Soviets were nice, I am saying that they had reasons.

    • @kommando5562
      @kommando5562 Před 8 měsíci

      @@graceneilitz7661 it was better to with western Allie’s in many cases too as they also did a lot of rape. And it wasn’t good either

  • @thumperpaul
    @thumperpaul Před 2 lety

    Well done! Thank you for posting such an informative and interesting video on a relatively unknown part of history!

  • @Dachvidful
    @Dachvidful Před 7 měsíci

    Really good job! So many details you don't get unless you read a book and expertly put together Kudos to you Mr. Felton.

  • @mr.samurai901
    @mr.samurai901 Před 8 měsíci +13

    The most disturbing thing about the Volkssturm to me was the fact most were armed with a single panzerfaust. No personal weapon, just an obvious suicide mission to try to take out one tank.

  • @VTPSTTU
    @VTPSTTU Před 2 lety +22

    The timing of this video is interesting as we see regular people in Ukraine fighting the invading Russian army.
    Militia and other irregular units can be very effective. Disparaging them is inaccurate. This video gives an example of them fighting effectively even against overwhelming odds as the Soviets invaded Berlin. The Viet Cong were militia in some ways, and they fought effectively in the Vietnam war. In the American Revolution, militia units did a great deal to turn the war in favor of the colonists with victories at King's Mountain, Cowpens, and Guilford Courthouse. At the Battle of New Orleans in the War of 1812, many of the men fighting under General Jackson were essentially militia, and they performed well. Militia rarely perform as well as real troops when used as real troops would be used, but they can be very effective in some roles.

    • @johns3544
      @johns3544 Před 2 lety +5

      If evey one listend to Genral Patton none of this would have happend and comunisum would have been truned to dust.

    • @ddpeak1
      @ddpeak1 Před 2 lety

      @@johns3544 Mr Churchill warned the allies but they would not listen.

    • @johns3544
      @johns3544 Před 2 lety

      @@ddpeak1 ya he was also wanting to go after the basterds

    • @Sneedmire
      @Sneedmire Před 2 lety +1

      My opinion on the relation of this video and the Ukrainian people taking up arms is best summed up by quoting Reznov (as played by Gary Oldman) from World at War:
      The old... the young... the weak... If they stand for Germany... they die for Germany. Building by building. Room by room. One rat at a time."

    • @robertstenn1350
      @robertstenn1350 Před rokem

      @@Sneedmire Thankfully it didn't turn out that way, here we are approaching a year of the war and Russia's military has taken a far worse beating than Ukraine's.

  • @marcioreis2648
    @marcioreis2648 Před 2 lety

    Another brilliant video Dr Felton. It will be very interesting to watch a video about the current events with the comments from you Sir.

  • @callumgordon1668
    @callumgordon1668 Před 2 lety +15

    I visited the Untenwelten in Berlin a few years back. They have a collection of equipment and weapons found in Berlin since the war: Soviet and German. In the pile was a Sten gun. Not the German version, but British horizontal magazine. At the time we wondered how it had got there. Of course they were issued to German units including Volksturm, German ammunition amongst other supplies, being compatible.

    • @fj1659
      @fj1659 Před 2 lety

      The germans copyed the Stan "Gerät Potsdam" wars its Name. It wars nearly a 1:1 Copy. Later they made a different copy called MP 3008. But it is also possible that the germans Used Real Stans. The British airdropped many Stan Guns over France to Support the Resitance, but the Wehrmacht captured most of the Stan Guns

    • @cmsxcb
      @cmsxcb Před rokem

      The problem of supply had been going on for quite some time and was not confined to the very end in Berlin. One of the little known facts about D-Day was that many of the German troops facing the landings were equipped with foreign guns and ammunition scrounged from the Eastern Front or Italy - this was a particular problem with the Russian medium guns as the available ammunition was limited. In addition, many of the Axis troops in Normandy were from countries invaded by Germany who had basically been told 'fight for us or die'. Many German officers were more worried about a bullet in the back than they were of the Allies.
      Everybody assumes the Germans were one homogenised race, all fighting for the same cause, but this was simply not the case.

    • @callumgordon1668
      @callumgordon1668 Před rokem

      @@cmsxcb absolutely. I have a good friend whose dad was wounded at Cassino and transferred to 1st Polish armoured headquarters. He had a friend who claimed he was captured by the Germans in 1939. His friend said an officer instructed all who understood German to step forward and shot those that didn’t. The German speakers were given the choice of enlisting in the Wehrmacht or joining their comrades. Polish units all recruited from Wehrmacht POWs. Famously 1PAD had trucks of kit following their columns for Polish POWs who wanted to join them. Ideal recruits often trained by the Polish Army and Wehrmacht and with something to prove.
      The SS were famously multinational, though most were from European fascists, or ethnic minorities ill treated by Stalin. Some of Das Reich who participated in the massacre Oradour were from Alsace Loraine. I know of a Ukrainian SS unit that killed its German officers and defected to the Maquis. Some Nazi war criminals were thus able to escape justice such as Anton Gecas.
      Similarly with kit. Many strongpoints on the Atlantic Wall were salvaged from French tanks. Some tanks that invaded in 1940 were Czech. Later they became the platforms for SPGs and Tank Destroyers, built in Czech factories. There was a unit in France that converted captured chassis and guns into assault guns. Only the other day I saw a picture of an assault gun built on a T34 chassis.
      Specific to the Sten, they had then in abundance and they’d been designed to use German ammo. So an ideal weapon for them to expropriate.
      All somewhat ironic given the racist nature of Nazi Germany. Given your reply, I’m sure you’re already familiar.

    • @cmsxcb
      @cmsxcb Před rokem +1

      @@callumgordon1668 Yeah. The Sten is a fascinating development originally designed to use the massive amounts of 9mm ammunition captured from the Italians in Operation Crusader. Ideal for parachuting behind enemy lines but a bloody awful weapon to use. I know many of the units in North Africa refused to turn in their Thompsons when they were supplied with Stens.
      Another weapon the Germans copied was the Bren gun - or rather, they took over the existing factory when they invaded Czechoslovakia. British Brens were made in the same Enfield factories as the Sten. In addition, Brens were also produced in Canada but, for some reason, most were sent to China to help the Nationalists.

  • @kevinhealey6540
    @kevinhealey6540 Před 2 lety +4

    I was stationed in Germany during the 70s and I talked to Germans about the war.
    One guy told me he was put in when he was15 years old, in November 1944, he was given a rifle and told to start firing on the American Troops which would arrive shortly.
    Him and a friend of his realized it this was hopeless and that they would be killed,
    so they tossed their rifles and made a run for it. The SS however caught up with them.
    Both of them were going to be hung for dessertion, but before the SS got the chance to it, the German army had to hightail it, because the American army was coming in fast.
    Then the American soldiers got a hold of him and they were ready to shoot him but declded against it.
    He said he was lucky he was not issued a uniform, but was wearing civilian clothing.
    Otherwise they would have done it.

  • @browngreen933
    @browngreen933 Před 2 lety +50

    Another timely segment would be one about Stepan Bandera, the Ukrainian hero/villian of World War 2. Timely because Putin mentioned "Banderites" in his going-to-war speech.

    • @oliveryt7168
      @oliveryt7168 Před 2 lety +6

      The Banderas are crazy right-wing extremists... They arent better than those, who are willingly attacking Ukraine.. (and I am not speaking of those poor Russian consripts that were fooled by their commanders and Putin)

    • @irongeneral7861
      @irongeneral7861 Před 2 lety +3

      @@oliveryt7168 They were fooled??? How the fuck do you fool someone into a coordinated invasion? Where did you hear this?

    • @DEVOPS_R_US
      @DEVOPS_R_US Před 2 lety

      @@oliveryt7168 depends. Some nazis infiltrated the OUN to kill Polish civilians. The majority were innocent.

    • @rafalldownthestairs
      @rafalldownthestairs Před 2 lety

      Banderites were neo-nazi war criminals. They slaughtered 250,000 polish civilians in the most barbaric ways, axes, pitchforks, sickles etc

    • @intermilan9731
      @intermilan9731 Před 2 lety +2

      @@oliveryt7168 Thats Western media lies dude. Captured RUssian POWs were forced to say that they were forced by Putin to fight. It's plain disinformation man.

  • @cmphighpower
    @cmphighpower Před 2 lety

    Love your videos always wait for new ones to watch

  • @sydhendrix4853
    @sydhendrix4853 Před 2 lety

    Ive been searching for a good volksstrum video for so long. Thank you Mark!

  • @istoppedcaring6209
    @istoppedcaring6209 Před 2 lety +31

    this shows how effective militias can be if properly motivated
    and how any man wil way his options at all times, fighting the western powers would mean death, surrendering would mean a hot meal and perhaps even a warm bed (in reallity the western powers also made them clear mines and also committed atrocities towards them though much less than the soviets)
    fighting the soviets would mean death, surrendering would likely also mean death or slavery and abuse for them
    for their families and home it would mean not much better treatment, old men would fight not just for themselves but more so for their wives and kids and in lue of them their nation.
    being feared can detere someone from taking up arms better than being loved, but it also makes men fight to the bitter end rather than surrender

    • @shelbynamels973
      @shelbynamels973 Před 2 lety +3

      Clear mines? Reminds me of that Danish movie "Land Of Mine". It's on Yt.

    • @hannahdyson7129
      @hannahdyson7129 Před 11 měsíci

      I am afraid the whole surrender and get a hot meal trope was largely false regarding the western powers . Often you where killed outright or even tortured and it wasn't a rare occurance
      German Civilians where often starved and raped by the allied militaries and otherwise mistreated
      I would imagine after the Russian / Ukraine war I honestly think the rest of Europe would go to the end rather than surrender on both miltary and civilian terms
      Trusting the other side to behave in good faith is folly

  • @monarchist1838
    @monarchist1838 Před 2 lety +31

    Reminds me of the ongoing situation in Ukraine. Guns handed out like toys to civilians, and instructed how to make and use Molotov cocktails.

    • @KB4QAA
      @KB4QAA Před 2 lety +3

      The making of M.C's is purely a 'feel good" action. They are useless against artillery, tanks or infantry with automatic weapons.

    • @lanfrancoadreani9212
      @lanfrancoadreani9212 Před 2 lety +5

      On the internet I found the result of such "brillant" policies. A group of Ukranian Kids tried to Attack a Russia column in an open area with molotovs. I let you Imagine the aftermath. St this point the responsible thing to do Is to surrender, NATO cavalry already openly said that they are not coming. I really don't see the Strategy of the Ukranian president here, what Is he hoping for?

    • @richardsamuelgustavo
      @richardsamuelgustavo Před 2 lety +2

      @@lanfrancoadreani9212 he is hoping for the survival of his country. No one is forcing the Ukrainian children to attack.

    • @00fgytduydrtu
      @00fgytduydrtu Před 2 lety +1

      @@richardsamuelgustavo He is not ukrainian.

    • @carbonara2144
      @carbonara2144 Před 2 lety +2

      Thats the best way to get their homes leveled with artillery. If they dont have any insignia, uniform, armband or anything, I believe the Geneva agreement does not provide them protection. Thats nasty btw. If the men understand what the situation is then its maybe different.

  • @KimFsharpHarp
    @KimFsharpHarp Před rokem +2

    My Granddad was part of the Home Guard outside of London during the war. Ps Wonderful biography Mark Felton. You do an excellent job and I’m so glad to hear of your success for all your hard work. Thank you

  • @jonathanbaron-crangle5093

    Fantastic work, & the mention of the 3rd 1/15th Siemensthat battalion & how it performed (as an exemplary exampmle of how the Volkssturn was intended to pan out) is just the cherry on top (especially with foootage) thank you very much good sir.

  • @marshaldillon4387
    @marshaldillon4387 Před 2 lety +8

    Sir Mark. No matter what the topic I learn something every time.
    🇺🇸🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿🇬🇧

  • @asc.445
    @asc.445 Před 2 lety +10

    My mum often wondered what happened to her dad in 1945.
    He went out on air raid duty in Leipzig and never returned.
    Was he killed during the raid and his body never recovered or was he snatched and sent to fight the Russians?

  • @derekrayment8092
    @derekrayment8092 Před 2 lety

    Mark with the ever timely video again.

  • @dentzer81ify
    @dentzer81ify Před 4 měsíci

    I don’t think theres not a day go by where I don’t watch at least one of Marks mini documentaries. They are prefect timed with the information Mark provides.

  • @deciboo189
    @deciboo189 Před 2 lety +11

    Everyone: "should we surrender?"
    Hitler: "Got you covered fam"
    *Sends in Volksstrum.*

  • @Gecko....
    @Gecko.... Před rokem +5

    My grandfather was in the volk, he was 45 years old, survived the war and died in 2022.

  • @juliuszdzierlatka5076
    @juliuszdzierlatka5076 Před 2 lety

    Very informative video, thanks for another one Mark. It must have been a grueling experience for those ww1 vets who fought the "war to end all wars" only to be thrown back into the frying pan...I'd love to see a video on Poland's "Cichociemni", as the last surviving member just passed away. Thanks again!

  • @SplashTasty
    @SplashTasty Před 2 lety

    Mark Felton. You probably get these comments everyday (I am too lazy to look) But your videos are exquisite to listen to. Thank you.

  • @Dave_L
    @Dave_L Před 2 lety +16

    Mark, do you have information about Volkssturm use in the Battle for Aachen? I've seen conflicting reports about their actual deployment there.

    • @letoubib21
      @letoubib21 Před 2 lety

      _The Volkssturm was founded on 10/18/1944, Aachen was captured on 10/21/1945 . . ._

  • @msgfrmdaactionman3000
    @msgfrmdaactionman3000 Před rokem +5

    The Hitler Youth soldiers getting Iron Crosses at the bunker are often portrayed in films as also being rewarded with sweets! Thanks for the great video, Mark! I am a fan of the show about the UK Home Guard called Dad's Army, the one where they go to arrest the German parachutist off the church steeple is really funny!

  • @dr.fistus94
    @dr.fistus94 Před 2 lety

    Great timing for another great video...we MUST learn from history

  • @TerrorRobin
    @TerrorRobin Před 2 lety +2

    My great grandfather lost his leg in WW1 and then fought in the Volkssturm in the endfight for Berlin. He was reported missing and was never seen again. I hope you are fine, whereever you are now.

  • @cowetareserve
    @cowetareserve Před 2 lety +5

    Always a good break with a Mr. Felton video!

  • @nettleleaves8224
    @nettleleaves8224 Před 2 lety +3

    Very relevant. Nice job mark.

  • @raywhitehead730
    @raywhitehead730 Před rokem +2

    I remember my Uncle talking about a small German town at the very end of the war that resisted. Apparently, A short negotiation , in terms of time yelled no surrender. He observed the obliteration of the town by the plentiful American artillery. He said it only happened once. There was no assault, Nothing was left to assault.

  • @roshantweerasinghe9866
    @roshantweerasinghe9866 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you Mark Sir. I told the lecturers of University of Keleniya History Division Sri Lanka 🇱🇰 to watch your program. They can learn a lot. Thanks Sir 😊

  • @Vagabondboysyou
    @Vagabondboysyou Před 2 lety +5

    It’s sad that there are events going on right now that will likely appear on this channel some time in the future

  • @agrameroldoctane_66
    @agrameroldoctane_66 Před 2 lety +3

    I am 56 now. 30 years ago I spend three years fighting in a war defending my country. This situation is similar to situation of 90 percent of old people mobilised to Volksturm. If a need to go to trenches again today I would be 100 percent usefull soldier in defence.

  • @radomirratkovic9014
    @radomirratkovic9014 Před 2 lety

    Thanks Mark ..great docs...as always

  • @KatGlos
    @KatGlos Před 10 měsíci +2

    What a senseless waste of life. My grandma's little brother was forced into the Volksturm, he didn't even survive the first night on the eastern front. After she died I found a letter among my grandma's things by a comrade, telling her about how he died. I cried reading it.