Tuesday, 5 August 2014

project QUESTION #2

What was life like during the war?

For this question we decided to interview people who lived during the war or they were born in it. In that way we got personal experiences instead of plain facts from books and internet. We were touched by the stories and memories. We cannot imagine what it would be like to live in a time with a lack of food, supplies and sometimes even warm shelter. The similarities we found are the lack of food, fear of bombardments, army attacks and emotional trauma. These stories are important to remember, not just for us, but also for you as a reader, to prevent something like this ever to happen again. So with these stories in mind the next generation and many to follow can learn the mistakes in the past with terrible consequences.

Interviews (click the country):

project QUESTION #1

In what way were Slovenia and the Netherlands involved in World War 2?


SLOVENIA
Slovenia before the World War 2 belonged to Yugoslavia which was separated on 6 different republics under the Yugoslavian leadership. Yugoslavia had outer politically and economically connected with Nazi Germany and fascist Italy. Germany promoted that kind of connections because it was beneficial to her army. Yugoslavia was a country of 6 nations and that was leading her to unsolved national issues. Beside national issues, people in Yugoslavia were suffering from bad social conditions. That is why signature of triple pact was not a surprise, it was signed on 25th March 1941 in Vienna. But that caused big demonstrations all over the Yugoslavia especially in Beograd. Army overthrow the government and the king Peter II. was declared.
German army ended the uncertainty in country with an air raid bombarding Beograd on 6th April 1941. While Germans bombarded Beograd other armies broke into Yugoslavia from Austria, Italy, Hungary, Romania and Bulgaria. Because of the uneducated and not well equipped Yugoslavian army they were not match for invaders. Yugoslavia declared on 17thh April 1941 an absolute capitulation. Then Hitler divided Slovenian territory in three parts. Ljubljanska pokrajina belonged to Italy, Gorenjska and Spodnja Štajerska was occupied by Germany and Hungary occupied Prekmurje.
After deviding Slovenian territory under 3 different occupiers, Slovenian people wanted to resist. On April 26th 1941 the OF (Osvobodilna fronta) was established and its mission was to defeat or deport occupying armies. The OF consisted of the parties that wanted to resist the occupation.  People from different associations joined the OF. The resistance movement was called Partisans. They used guerrilla way of fighting and their most important achievement was to destroy railway connections between German Reich and Italy. In year 1945 Slovenia was finally liberated and the German army was defeated.[1]




THE NETHERLANDS

The war started in Europe on 1 September 1939. The Netherlands wanted to maintain neutral in world war two just like they did in the First World War. The prime minister of the Netherlands, Pieter Cort van der Linden, wanted to stay an independent country. The Germans made a promise not to attack and maintain a friendship between Germany and the Netherlands. Even though Germany promised not to attack, the Netherlands kept mobilizing its army.[2] Germany invaded the Netherlands on 10 May 1940, without a war declaration.[3] When the Germans invaded Holland there were about 8,700,000 people in the country. The invasion of the Netherlands was part of a bigger plan called Fall Gelb (operation yellow). Fall Gelb was a plan to invade Belgium, Luxembourg, the Netherlands and a part of France (everything above the Somme).[4] The Germans were using the Blitzkrieg (lightning war) method, which they invented. The idea was based on many small, fast units, light tanks and airplanes. It was focused on speed and surprising the enemy. After that five days of intense fighting followed. Rotterdam was bombed on the fifth day and after that the Dutch surrendered.[5] The Netherlands suffered greatly during the war. The Germans took all our supplies, like food and resources, even our bicycles. When people needed things they had to smuggle them from Belgium. There was a shortage of everything, but what had the greatest effect on the people of the Netherlands was the lack of food. This got at its worst during the hunger winter of 1945 Even if you had money you could be hungry, because there was nothing in the stores. People had to go to a soup kitchen and pay with vouchers. They stood in line for hours and often the soup kitchen was out of food before they had their turn.[6] The Netherlands were liberated on September 1944 by allies, the North was liberated half a year later.

[1] - Naše stoletje: Ana Nuša Kern, Dušan Nećak, Božo Repe (založba Modrijan)

[6]- http://www.eenvandaag.nl/binnenland/32553/70_000_meer_nederlandse_doden_in_tweede_wereldoorlog (25.3.2014)
[7]-http://vergezichtengeschiedenis.blogspot.com/2012/05/nederlandse-slachtoffers-in-de-tweede.html (27.3.2014)

Wednesday, 26 March 2014

War Museum Overloon : ✓ visited

...is a museum park in Overloon, the Netherlands. It was here that the greatest tank battle in Dutch history took place in the autumn 1944. World War II is presented in a special way here, with articrafts and displays. You will also find the largest collection of military vehicles in Europe. 
summarized from museum's publication

For more information about the museum visit: http://www.oorlogsmuseum.nl/

Saturday, 30 November 2013

Intro

Hey,
We are students from Slovenia and the Netherlands. Lana is living near capital city Ljubljana and Robin is from Uden. We are on the exchange between our schools (Gimnazija Sentvid and Udens college). At the end of september Lana came to the Netherlands for one week and at the end of March Robin will come to Slovenia.
Our project theme is about second world war in Slovenia and the Netherlands. We decided for that theme because of our interest in history and we want to explore more about the influence of world war 2 on the people now days.

Main question is: 
What consequences on the population did world war two have for Slovenia and the Netherlands?


And sub-questions are:
  • In what way were Slovenia and the Netherlands involved in world war two?
  • What was life like during the war?
  • What were the consequences of world war two on the people?
  • How many people died in Slovenia and how many in the Netherlands and if there’s a big difference, why?