As I have fresh (three months ago, eiem) I now my analysis of the Caen Memorial.
The Caen Memorial is also a memory to ca & iacutece on different days, one with the phone and one with the camera).
The exhibition itself is HUGE. I was three and half hours and went without reading carefully a quarter of the exhibition. And there I saw the film, and projections of the interior. But it was busted. I will come back in a few months.
The beginning is the most original. You enter a tunnel that goes down in a spiral, and begins with the signing of the Treaty of Versailles. Since 1918, the tunnel begins to fallr, and through papers and panels explains the situacióny as Europe started getting into the war, while a wall is planned communist propaganda and, at the end of the tunnel is heard shouting to Hitler and members of the Nazi party. We came down when Hitler invaded Poland. From there you cross a room in black except for the images of the Nazis on the roof, and entered directly into the first moments of war.
Cries, time programs, the statements of political leaders is what is heard throughout the visit. Help to get into position, but rather anxietymust retain the original audio document, because a female voice reads it), through London Radio (Radio of resistance), and a series of authentic sound documents of a general talk on another high command on the treated accountability that have just signed with the Germans. Projections were also other victims who remember how their families were deported, and some others I can not remember the topic, but I remember seeing aircraft coming out. There was also a Hiroshima, but I do not remember if this section in the history of the twentieth century after the war (it would make sense in this, but I think it was the other) . CHTML
Once seen this part of the exhibition, after going for the win and the Nuremberg and Tokyo, there is a whole room dedicated to the Normandy invasion. Here we recall that the price paid Normandy to liberate France (literally with those words in a poster) (because the civilian casualties were numerous.) Actually give more information in the museum of American cemetery, but here are a few fun facts, such as why it landed at Omaha when he was clearly going to be a total massacre. Sadly, if notlanded there, he had left a self-important edge that could have doomed the landing. So knowing it was certain death, the two regiments in charge of Omaha had no other choice but to go. I found it quite sad. We also explain that the U.S. army aviation had a list of instructions: was the list of cities to be destroyed, ostensibly to stop the German retreat (and told how much which discusses the relevance of these bombings). Caen and Argentan (another city nearby) were not in that first list. Were included in the night of 6 not be taken at the p
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