Skeletons Believed from Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Found

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Skeletons Believed from Warsaw Ghetto Uprising Found

Askeletons found in warsaw ghettorchaeologists in Warsaw discovered fragments of two human skeletons that likely were buried there during the Polish city’s ghetto uprising.

On Monday, archaeologists searching through the archive of the Jewish socialist party Bund in the basement of a former house on Swietojerska Street found a skull, arm bones and leg bones. Police will examine the bones.

In recent days, the archaeologists had found a sewing kit, a loaf of bread and a bowl of groats on the site of the former home, which is now a park, Krasinki Garden. The site is near the World War II-era Jewish ghetto but was not part of it.

The Bund archive had been hidden by party activist Marek Edelman in the home’s basement, which was unearthed by the archaeologists. During the uprising, the house was destroyed; the area was later included as part of the park area.

Unforgettable Photos From The Pearl Harbor Attack, 72 Years Ago Today

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Pearl Harbor 1941 -- Map of Japanese air attac...

Pearl Harbor 1941 — Map of Japanese air attack routes (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

The sunken U.S. Navy battleships USS West Virg...

The sunken U.S. Navy battleships USS West Virginia (BB-48, left) and USS Arizona (BB-39) aflame, after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor on 7 December 1941. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

View of a mock-up of U.S. Naval Base, Pearl Ha...

View of a mock-up of U.S. Naval Base, Pearl Harbor, Hawaii (USA), constructed in Japan in 1941 to help plan the attack on the installation. This image was brought from Japan to the USA at the end of World War II by U.S. Navy Rear Admiral John Shafroth. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Aerial view from Japanese plane taken during t...

Aerial view from Japanese plane taken during the early moments of the Pearl Harbor attack, circa 07:55 hrs on 7 December 1941. The view is south across the Middle Loch. Torpedoes explode against the U.S. Navy battleships USS Oklahoma (BB-37, right) and USS West Virginia (BB-48). (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Ships and NAS Ford Island during the Pearl Har...

Ships and NAS Ford Island during the Pearl Harbor attack. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Photo #: . Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December 194...

Photo #: . Pearl Harbor Attack, 7 December 1941. Japanese naval aircraft prepare to take off from an aircraft carrier (reportedly Shokaku) to attack Pearl Harbor during the morning of 7 December 1941. Plane in the foreground is a “Zero” Fighter. This is probably the launch of the second attack wave. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Aerial view of the U.S. Naval Operating Base, ...

Aerial view of the U.S. Naval Operating Base, Pearl Harbor, Oahu, Hawaii (USA), looking southwest on 30 October 1941. Ford Island Naval Air Station is in the center, with the Pearl Harbor Navy Yard just beyond it, across the channel. The airfield in the upper left-center is the U.S. Army’s Hickam Field. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

English: A navy photographer snapped this phot...

English: A navy photographer snapped this photograph of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in Hawaii on December 7, 1941, just as the USS Shaw exploded. (80-G-16871) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Unforgettable Photos From The Pearl Harbor Attack, 72 Years Ago Today

KAMELIA ANGELOVAROBERT JOHNSON AND AMANDA MACIAS DEC. 7, 2013, 12:02 AM6,084 6
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December 7, 1941 began as a perfect Sunday morning for the troops serving the U.S. fleet at Pearl Harbor.

Under a early morning South Pacific sun, softball teams were lining up on the beach. Pitchers warmed up their arms, while batting rosters were finalized and the wives and kids came over from seaside church services.

They did not know that for hours the Japanese naval fleet and air forces had been speeding across the ocean toward America’s Pacific base. There, like a string of pearls draped across the docks and waterfront, was the majority of America’s naval might.

The devastating Japanese onslaught began at 7:48 a.m., eventually killing 2,402 Americans and wounding many others, sinking four battleships and damaging many more.

The Pearl Harbor attack spurred America into World War II, leading ultimately to Allied victory over the Japanese in the East and Nazis and other Axis powers in the West. And the country promised never to forget this day of infamy.

Here are photographs from the attack and its immediate aftermath:

On the morning of Dec. 7, 1941, an attack planned by Admiral Isoroku Yamamotoa was carried out to demobilize the US Navy. This picture shows one of more than 180 planes used in the attack.

torpedo plane takes off from shokaku to attack pearl harbor

AP

At 7:00 a.m., an Army radar alert operator spotted the first wave of the Japanese attack force. The officers to whom those reports were relayed did not consider them significant enough to take action. This photo shows an aerial view of Battleship Row in the opening moments of the raid.

aerial view of battleship row in the opening moments of the japanese attack on pearl harbor

U.S. Navy

The Japanese aircrews were able to hit most of the American ships on Oahu shortly before 8:00 a.m. Here a Japanese plane flies over Pearl Harbor while black smoke rises from the area.

pearl harbor

AP

The Japanese also took the opportunity to attack military airfields while bombing the fleet anchored in Pearl Harbor. The purpose of these simultaneous attacks was to destroy American planes before they could defensively respond.

aerial view of the initial blows struck against american ships as seen from a japanese plane over pearl harbor

U.S. Navy

There were more than 90 ships anchored in the area that morning. The primary targets were the 8 battleships sitting at the Battleship Row port in Pearl Harbor. Here is a picture of Battleship Row during the attack.

battleships aflame on battleship row alongside ford island

U.S. Navy

The USS West Virginia (left) pictured here next to the USS Tennessee, was one of the first battleships to sink during the attack. The Japanese successfully damaged all 8 battleships.

battleships pearl harbor

U.S. Navy

At about 8:10 a.m., the USS Arizona explodes as the ship’s forward ammunition magazine is ignited by a bomb. About half of the total number of Americans killed that day were on this ship. Here is a picture of the USS Arizona battleship.

Here is another picture of the USS Arizona …

pearl harbor

The USS Shaw destroyer explodes during the 3-hour Japanese attack.

There was a short lull in the attack at about 8:30 a.m. The damaged USS Nevada tried to escape down the channel toward the open sea but became a target during a second wave of 170 Japanese planes, hoping to sink her in the channel and block the narrow entrance to Pearl Harbor. The ship was grounded with 60 killed on board.

uss nevada

National Archives and Records Administration

A Japanese plane dives into flames after it was hit by American naval antiaircraft fire. Fewer than 30 Japanese planes were lost in the attack.

pearl harbor

About 188 American planes were destroyed and another 159 were damaged. Here is a picture of some planes left on Hickman Field near Pearl Harbor.

pearl harbor damage

Sailors at the Naval Air Station in Kaneohe, Hawaii, attempt to salvage a burning PBY Catalina in the aftermath of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor.

pearl harbor attack

People in Times Square, New York buy newspapers with headlines saying, “Japs Attack US.” American entered the Second World War after the surprise attack on Pearl Harbor.

pearl habor newspapers

Salvage work begins on destroyers USS Casin and the USS Downes. The Japanese failed to damage any American aircraft carriers, which were surprisingly absent from the harbor.

pearl harbor damage

A Japanese torpedo plane is hoisted from the bottom of the sea. About 10 percent of Japanese planes were lost on December 7th.

pearl harbor damage

AP

The USS Oklahoma, seen in this photo with one of its propellers peeking out of the water, was considered too old to be worth repairing.

battleship oklahoma pearl harbor

U.S. Navy

A Marine holds a piece of shrapnel removed from his arm following the attack.

 

This photo shows sailors participating in a memorial service for the more than 2,400 killed in the attack.