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“Already during the first medical examination, Paul Urey was diagnosed with a number of chronic diseases, including insulin-dependent diabetes, damage to the respiratory system, kidneys and a number of diseases of the cardiovascular system,” Morozova added.
In 1917?
originally posted by: Kurokage
a reply to: RussianTroll
And like I explained, you obviously don't understand English very well.
Polish concentration camps are soley called that because they were built on Polish soil. Poland didn't suddenly become a Nazi country and bang up a load of death camps, German Nazis built them.
Educate yourself. German Nazi built death camps in Poland.
In 1939, following a nonaggression agreement between the Germany and the Soviet Union known as the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, Poland was again divided.
Now the Poles prefer not to remember this, as well as the concentration camps of death on their territory.
Thank you.
In the first years of Soviet power, when the Decree of the Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR on January 15, 1918 "On the Workers 'and Peasants' Red Army" gave access to the ranks of the Workers' and Peasants' Red Army to all citizens of the Russian Republic at least 18 years old. During the Civil War, 66,000 women served in the Red Army, including 10,000 nurses. They accounted for 2% of all military personnel and selflessly worked in hospitals, sanitary trains, medical and nutritious stations, bath and laundry units.
www.themoscowtimes.com...
The official delegation was en route to Smolensk for a ceremony to mark the murder of thousands of Poles by Soviet secret police at Katyn, in 1940.