Herøya / Porsgrunn Bombing July 25, 1943
In the time period 1941 to 1945 alone, the Jews Churchill and Lindemann ran a bombing war against the Norwegian people which involved the murder of at least 752 Norwegians. (bombing, alliert, Norges Lexi, Norsk Politisk Dokumentasjon på Internett, Institutt for Sammenliknende Politikk, Universitetet i Bergen, http://www.norgeslexi.com/krigslex/b/b4.html#bombing-alliert) (There were more in 1940).
That's a number that reminds one a little bit of the great King David (see Chapter 12).
One of the biggest scores was the bombing of the fish-oil factories. The "Norwegian government" living in England protested that fish-oil factories were not even legitimate military targets, but their protests were ignored (bombing, alliert)
Fredrik S. Hammer was working in the Porsgrunn area on July 24, 1943, when the bombs fell. The apparent target was the Hydro factory for aluminium and magnesium at Herøya, but that day they were painting with a broad brush. They dropped 5 bombs on the Lutheran Hospital (several kilometers away). And didn't neglect the residential neighborhood of Klevstrand either. Plenty of houses destroyed there. (Fredrik Hammer, Letter of July 25, 1943, http://www.granly.org/slekt/morfarsbrev.html) In that one day, they succeeded in killing 57 civilians, and injured more than 100. (Herøya, Norges Lexi, Norsk Politisk Dokumentasjon på Internett, Institutt for Sammenliknende Politikk, Universitetet i Bergen, http://www.norgeslexi.com/krigslex/h/h4.html) (pic: http://www4.hydro.com/productionpartner/library/images/localize/porsgrunn.jpg)
This author has spoken with a survivor of the bombing campaign against Porsgrunn. She confirmed the attacks against civilian targets, describing them as horrible.
Seeing is believing. Sure the Norwegians had heard rumors about the Jews. But after the bombings they knew.
That's a number that reminds one a little bit of the great King David (see Chapter 12).
One of the biggest scores was the bombing of the fish-oil factories. The "Norwegian government" living in England protested that fish-oil factories were not even legitimate military targets, but their protests were ignored (bombing, alliert)
Fredrik S. Hammer was working in the Porsgrunn area on July 24, 1943, when the bombs fell. The apparent target was the Hydro factory for aluminium and magnesium at Herøya, but that day they were painting with a broad brush. They dropped 5 bombs on the Lutheran Hospital (several kilometers away). And didn't neglect the residential neighborhood of Klevstrand either. Plenty of houses destroyed there. (Fredrik Hammer, Letter of July 25, 1943, http://www.granly.org/slekt/morfarsbrev.html) In that one day, they succeeded in killing 57 civilians, and injured more than 100. (Herøya, Norges Lexi, Norsk Politisk Dokumentasjon på Internett, Institutt for Sammenliknende Politikk, Universitetet i Bergen, http://www.norgeslexi.com/krigslex/h/h4.html) (pic: http://www4.hydro.com/productionpartner/library/images/localize/porsgrunn.jpg)
This author has spoken with a survivor of the bombing campaign against Porsgrunn. She confirmed the attacks against civilian targets, describing them as horrible.
Seeing is believing. Sure the Norwegians had heard rumors about the Jews. But after the bombings they knew.