
If people took back their power from Corporations and the political leaders who sell their souls to Corporations, including war-loving Arms.manufacturers, if they reclaimed a truthful account of History, they could build genuine democracy, end war and use world resources to build a world where everyone was safe and free, including every child.Over the past four years, cremations have surpassed burials as the most popular end-of-life option in the United States, according to the National Funeral Directors Association. Hollywood, whose studios are almost completely Jewish, has fed us endless films about the Holocaust to divert attention from the inhuman Allied destruction of Dresden, Berlin, Tokyo, Nagasaki and Hiroshima. The reputation and honour of German people have suffered from the suppression and distortion of the truth about the war. Nobody told us about the millions of Germans who lost their lives after the war through being forced out of their homes in Eastern Germany, or the USA Concentration Camps where German soldiers were starved to death after the war. Only now do we hear that Hitler was hated because he ended the corrupt privately-owned banking system ( mainly Jewish) in Germany and created a debt-free financial system to benefit the citizens, only now do we hear that Zionist leaders declared war on Germany and declared a world-wide boycott of German goods which created massive hyper-inflation, large-scale unemployment and starvation in Germany. Only now do we hear that there is no evidence that Hitler planned genocide, that there were no gas chambers. Only now is it coming to light the peace offers made by Germany and Japan and ignored by the Allies. May all mankind come to see clearly how world leaders happily send their own people to their deaths, deceive their own citizens, promote war for financial and political gain and then feed their people a distorted history which demonises the victims and presents the villains as heroes. He was a convinced pacifist afterwards and came to see how manipulated he had been by English war propaganda.

My English father suffered shell-shock all his life after experiences in Dunkirk. How many millions of people throughout the world have had to continue to live, as he must have done, with searing memories of the destruction of innocence through war. How sad to see the love and pain on this little one's face.

Cremation pyre movie#
It’s a really powerful movie and highly recommended to watch. A tragic film covering a young boy and his little sister’s struggle to survive in Japan during World War II. This story looks like the real-life “ Grave of the Fireflies“, a Japanese movie from 1988. The boy turned around and walked silently away”. The flame burned low like the sun going down. He was biting his lower lip so hard that it shone with blood. The boy stood there straight without moving, watching the flames. The men held the body by the hands and feet and placed it on the fire. That is when I saw that the baby was already dead. “The men in white masks walked over to him and quietly began to take off the rope that was holding the baby. The boy stood there for five or ten minutes”. The little head was tipped back as if the baby were fast asleep. I could see that he had come to this place for a serious reason.


In those days in Japan, we often saw children playing with their little brothers or sisters on their backs, but this boy was clearly different. “I saw a boy about ten years old walking by. Years later Joe O’Donnell spoke to a Japanese interviewer about this picture: He has epitomized the spirit of a defeated nation. Looking at the boy who carries his younger sibling on his back, keeps a stiff upper lip, tries so hard to be brave is heart-breaking. Standing at attention was an obvious military influence. In the photo, the boy stands erect, having done his duty by bringing his dead brother to a cremation ground. Images of human suffering were etched both on his negatives and his heart. Over the next seven months starting September 1945, he traveled across Western Japan chronicling the devastation, revealing the plight of the bomb victims including the dead, the wounded, the homeless, and orphaned. military to document the damage inflicted on the Japanese homeland caused by air raids of firebombs and atomic bombs. Joe O’Donnell, the man who took this photo at Nagasaki, was sent by the U.S.
