What,this one too?
How many more? :roll:
Polish victory flag in Berlin
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Re: Polish victory flag in Berlin
Hola Landserito!Landser wrote:What,this one too?
How many more? :roll:
We all know trolling in Poland-related topics has been your primary activity since you joined this forum.
Re: Polish victory flag in Berlin
http://www.thenews.pl/1/11/Artykul/2129 ... ote]Berlin '45 flag hoister dies
PR dla Zagranicy Jo Harper 07.07.2015 16:51
The man who hoisted the Polish flag on the Victory Column in Berlin after the fall of the city in 1945 has died.
Berlin in ruins in 1945. Photo: Wikimedia
Captain Antoni Jabłoński died on 6 July in the Podlaski town of Suraż. In August he would have celebrated his 97th birthday. Jabłoński, the last surviving soldier from his platoon, hoisted the Polish flag on 2 May 1945.
Three years ago in conversation with RMF FM’s Andrzej Piedziewicz, the ex-soldier talked of the battle to take Berlin as being “exceptional hard.” "We made it there in the night, and sat until dawn on the staircase of the Column, hiding from gunfire. Then in the morning we went up to the top, saw that the Germans had put down their guns and our commander decided to hoist the flag,” he said.
After the war Jabłoński was a salesman and postman.
The Battle of Berlin was the final major offensive of the war, and lasted from 20 April until the city's defenders finally surrendered on 2 May. (jh) [/quote]
PR dla Zagranicy Jo Harper 07.07.2015 16:51
The man who hoisted the Polish flag on the Victory Column in Berlin after the fall of the city in 1945 has died.
Berlin in ruins in 1945. Photo: Wikimedia
Captain Antoni Jabłoński died on 6 July in the Podlaski town of Suraż. In August he would have celebrated his 97th birthday. Jabłoński, the last surviving soldier from his platoon, hoisted the Polish flag on 2 May 1945.
Three years ago in conversation with RMF FM’s Andrzej Piedziewicz, the ex-soldier talked of the battle to take Berlin as being “exceptional hard.” "We made it there in the night, and sat until dawn on the staircase of the Column, hiding from gunfire. Then in the morning we went up to the top, saw that the Germans had put down their guns and our commander decided to hoist the flag,” he said.
After the war Jabłoński was a salesman and postman.
The Battle of Berlin was the final major offensive of the war, and lasted from 20 April until the city's defenders finally surrendered on 2 May. (jh) [/quote]