Children of NS-members and their misfortune

Treatment of Norwegian Patriots after WW2

Norwegian History during WW2

Volume 3

2001

Dear Aryan Kindred

As WW2 ended and the NS-members were imprisoned the mob needed somebody whom they could pester - they found the Children of NS-members. One would expect that grown ups did not badger these children, and some of them did not - but a lot of grown ups were leading gangs of teenagers in their pestering of innocent children, young men and women - all children of NS-members. Those children who were at schools were kicked, spit at or beaten by their fellow schoolmates - even teachers took part in the prosecution of the children of NS-members. The misfortune of NS-children were worse in small towns and in communities were the Communists and Labour party had their strongholds. In the farming areas where the Farmer’s Party were strong and where the NS had been strong the pestering were less. But nowhere were the NS-children left alone.

Some of the NS-children were taken away from their parents and placed in orphanages where they were mistreated and abused. Many of them where not sent to schools or got little schooling at all. During the first five years after WW2 these children had to stand up if and when the teachers spoke of the war and the great WW2-heros of Norway.

After 1949 a large group of NS-children started schools. At this time one would expect that the hate towards their parents would have cooled off, but NO. The hate towards their parent only grew and the only one which the mob could punish were the children.

Some of the children of former NS-members had to fight their way through school, not to finish - but to be left alone by other children - children that needed to show how brave their were. I know of NS-children that had to fight almost every child in school before they were left alone. Children who were reported to the police for brutality as they defended themselves against the mob. Children who were threaten to be placed in prison for young men if they did not stop defending themselves. If these NS-children reported the pestering to the police, the police did nothing to help.
On April 10, 1940 bishop Eivind Berggrav of Oslo went on a spying trip for the Germans looking for Norwegian soldiers northwest of Oslo. The Germans drove the bishop out of Oslo and they picked him up one day later. He could tell the Germans that he had seen no Norwegian military troops in the area he had searched through. This picture of bishop Berggrav was printed in every number of the German monthly booklet published in all of Europe during the month of May 1940. The bishop was NOT imprison for his treason after WWII.

 

 

The Norwegian bishop Berggrav of Oslo had in a pamphlet, Folkedommen over NS - Peoples Sentence over NS, said that the children of NS-member might be the new revolutionists and that they most likely would start marching for a new Fuehrer Land. He even encouraged the church of Norway not to baptise those NS-children that were born after May 8, 1945, and that these children should not be allowed to go to church an seizure their belief. Berggrav was among the top freemasons of Norway, he was also a lover of Jews and everything Jewish. Being the leading person in attacking the NS-children Berggrav have been looked upon as the very best bishop Norway ever had. It has been impossible to get the Lutheran Church of Norway to officially dissociate themselves from the pamphlet Berggrav wrote. The pamphlet did lead to a lot of problems for NS-children. The pamphlet also led to a lot of NS-family leaving the Lutheran Church of Norway. Some clergymen have lately, in 1999, asked the NS-children forgiveness for what the church did, but they have not said anything bad about Berggrav - so his sayings stand as a guidelines for the church in how to treat children of patriots.

One should expect that ten years after WW2 everything had cooled down. NO! The pestering had declined, but in some communities it went on. One NS-child I know were not admitted to junior high school - his name was not on the list of those children admitted to the school, not because he did not have good marks, but simply because he was a NS-child - and such children should not be allowed to go to school. This child got into the school of his choice after a barrister had written to the school board. They said the boy had been admitted to the school, his name had by mistake been left out of the list. The barrister did not believe what he was told, but could not prove the lies. The same boy was also denied admittance to senior high school. He solved that problem by applying for admittance at school far away from his home-county, were he was admitted. As this county sent a bill for the cost of schooling to his home-county the boy was admitted to a school in his home-county. Just to prove to you that this boy was not a stupid boy I can tell you, he later studied at an university and got good degrees.

Behind the pestering and prosecution of NS-children was the freemasons and the church, the Communist Party and Labour Party and the political parties with strong bonds to the Jews. Many a top Norwegian politicians had his/her first experience in how to pester other while pestering NS-children. These politicians says when asked about their behaviour some 40 years ago: "I can not remember I ever knew who there lived any NS-families in my neighbourhood." and "Children always quarrel and mob each other. I never participated in any mobbing."

Many a child of NS-member was not able to go to school past primary school because the family lacked money or because the family did not want to fight for their rights and the rights of their children.

TEACHERS AND THE NS-CHILDREN

During the 50's and 60's teachers used to patrol the schoolyards in Norwegian schools. They should help and look after the pupils. One would expect that the teachers did help NS-children if and when the were pestered by other children, but NO. When such things happened the teachers looked the other way - they did not want to stop the prosecution of the children.

Reason for this was that 1600 teachers in February 1942 were sent to Finnmark, county in the north of Norway, because they did not follow the rules for education laid down by the political leaders of the country. By the beginning of September 1942 the teachers were allowed to go back to their schools. After WW2 the teachers looked upon their protest towards the political leaders as the most important happening during WW2. They were HEROS! As such they were right when they allowed children to pester and prosecute NS-children.

Until late in the 50's many a NS-child had to stand next to his desk when the teacher spoke about WW2, Nasjonal Samling and the Germans. This in order to let him know whom he was and what his parents had been. This was the teachers way to pester innocent children.

No wander not many NS-children left school as soon as they could.

THE CHURCH AND THE NS-CHILDREN

You would expect the church to be doing there best to protect innocent children from any kind of persecution. Not on Norway after WW2.

In Norway the church followed her spiritual leader, Bishop Berggrav. His hate for anything which had to do with NS was enormous. He showed this hate mainly because he wanted to withdraw the attention from his own wartime behaviour. Five days after Germany had landed soldiers in Oslo Berggrav went under German protection into the woods outside Oslo asking young soldiers to lay down their weapons and surrender. Before that day Berggrav had worked to get his own government together, but he did not get support enough. All spring and summer Berggrav work to set up his own government or to get into the counsel who was working with the Germans to find a solution for Norway after Norway had capitulated on June 10, 1940.

After Quisling on February 1, 1942 was appointed Ministerpresident (premier) by the Germans Berggrav started to work against the Quisling Government, finally Berggrav was arrested and about to be imprisoned, but a German officer helped him and he was taken custody and spent the rest of the war at his cottage in Asker some 20 km west of Oslo.

Through friends he managed to get some of the priests to demonstrate from the pulpits against Quisling Government.

There are many stories about how priests after the war pursued children of NS-members.

In this context it is important to notice that many Norwegian priests were freemasons and consequently under Jewish rule.

The church pursue NS-children even to-day. As saying this I feel it is right to say that bishop Wagle in the Nidaros Bishopric located in Trondheim, 500 km north of Oslo, some three years ago asked all NS-children to forgive the church for the her mistreatment of them after WW2. Bishop Wagle is the only bishop who ever admitted the church mistreated NS-children.

Heil og sael

Julius

 

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