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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsShe knows a fascist when she see one
We can forgive the grammar, I questioned if this was real, it seemed like the tattoo was too big, but I googled it and and compare and contrast it looks real. And at this point when a very old lady who was a victim of the Nazi's rocks up to tell you that you are shit stain, you really are a fascist fucker.
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She knows a fascist when she see one (Original Post)
Soph0571
Jun 2020
OP
I can't speak to the authenticity of her tattoo, but as far as the size, I doubt
Arkansas Granny
Jun 2020
#1
Arkansas Granny
(31,528 posts)1. I can't speak to the authenticity of her tattoo, but as far as the size, I doubt
that those were done by professional tattoo artists. Those that I've seen look like jailhouse tattoos.
stopwastingmymoney
(2,042 posts)3. It doesn't say how old she is but
Maybe she was a child when that was done to her and thats why it seems large
sheshe2
(83,898 posts)2. There is this.
The Tattooist of Auschwitz - and his secret love
Living out his life in a suburb of Melbourne, the man who had been born Ludwig "Lale" Eisenberg to Jewish parents in Slovakia in 1916 decided to share his story.
"This man, the tattooist from the most infamous concentration camp, kept his secret safe in the mistaken belief that he had something to hide," says Heather Morris, who spent three years recording Lale's story before he died in 2006.
She has now written a book - The Tattooist of Auschwitz - based on how he tattooed a serial number on the arms of those at the camp who weren't sent to the gas chambers.
"The horrors of surviving nearly three years in a concentration camp left him with a lifetime of fear and paranoia," she says.
https://www.bbc.com/news/stories-42568390
Living out his life in a suburb of Melbourne, the man who had been born Ludwig "Lale" Eisenberg to Jewish parents in Slovakia in 1916 decided to share his story.
"This man, the tattooist from the most infamous concentration camp, kept his secret safe in the mistaken belief that he had something to hide," says Heather Morris, who spent three years recording Lale's story before he died in 2006.
She has now written a book - The Tattooist of Auschwitz - based on how he tattooed a serial number on the arms of those at the camp who weren't sent to the gas chambers.
"The horrors of surviving nearly three years in a concentration camp left him with a lifetime of fear and paranoia," she says.
https://www.bbc.com/news/stories-42568390