The Polish people truly suffered during WW II, considered subhuman by the Germans. They are still considered unworthy enough by Germany today to receive reparations for the loss of life, devastation of infrastructure and mass theft of property that occurred, even thought the Poles defied and helped conquer German Nazism, from the beginning to the end, on all fronts, with the fourth largest army fighting the Germans outside of Poland, and the largest and largest non-Communist underground movement in occupied Poland that caused the Germans to keep hundreds of thousands of troops in occupied Poland they could not use elsewhere.
Stefan Komar
The Polish people truly suffered during WW II, considered subhuman by the Germans. They are still considered unworthy enough by Germany today to receive reparations for the loss of life, devastation of infrastructure and mass theft of property that occurred, even thought the Poles defied and helped conquer German Nazism, from the beginning to the end, on all fronts, with the fourth largest army fighting the Germans outside of Poland, and the largest and largest non-Communist underground movement in occupied Poland that caused the Germans to keep hundreds of thousands of troops in occupied Poland they could not use elsewhere.