Alf Razzel:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SAwjvL3NJs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=af4v_N1TA9Q
(kousky z textu - volně)
"... když jsem je otáčel, mohl jsem vidět proč umřel, co ho zabilo, všechen ten horror,
... byly tam lebky s vystřeleným mozkem, muži bez půlky tváře... tváře bez rtů, ...
... včera se určitě usmívali a smáli, dnes leží tady..."
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SAwjvL3NJs
Celý dokument:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EviSiRh-_74
Alf v 1:34, 4:47, 11:42, 13:19, 21:16, 25:11
Alf z AtD: 28:15 - 32:16 - CELÁ verze i s kousky, kt. Roger vynechal.
35:45 (volně, pokud jsem to správně pochopil)
- "Na konci každé války si lidi sednou k stolu a dojdou k nějaké dohodě.
Proč to neudělají předtím, než válka začne?"
...
"... Byl jsem v Německu, mluvil s lidmi, jsou stejní jako my. A pak se mne ptali, kolik vojáků jsem zabil? Kolik vdov jsem udělal? Kolik synů jsem zabil? A to je celkem depresivní...)
Z komentářů:
"Not to detract from Alf Razzell's powerful description of the slaughter of his 8th battalion Royal Fusilier comrades at Ovillers, leaving him as almost the sole survivor. The battalion's roll of honour lists approx 150 men killed on 7th & 8th July 1916 (or dying of wounds shortly thereafter). Of course, many others would've been knocked over/wounded. Regardless, he undoubtedly experienced something indelibly traumatic and was very lucky to have survived!"
Roger: "Most of them dead, some of them dying."
Fotka? -
https://www.iwm.org.uk/collections/item ... /205301628
8th Battalion Fusillers -
https://www.wartimememoriesproject.com/ ... p?pid=6895
(Ale Bill tam napsán není...)
https://second.wiki/wiki/alf_razzell#To ... ll_Hubbard
Death of Bill Hubbard
In May 1917, during the Battle of Arras, Razzell became a German prisoner of war when he was looking for documents from dead British soldiers. He found the soldier William "Bill" Hubbard, known to him from his training, seriously injured in a trench. He tried to take him from the battlefield, but the fatally injured Hubbard could not bear the pain of the transport, so that Razzell finally left him dying at his request. The German soldiers who had captured Razzell looked exhausted and disoriented and made no move to assist in the recovery of Hubbard.
Commonwealth War Graves: William Hubbard
https://www.cwgc.org/find-records/find- ... ,-william/