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Heartbreaking photos of child soldiers from the First and Second World Wars _de

 

The military use of children can take place in three different ways: children can participate directly in conflicts as child soldiers, they can be used in support roles, such as porters, spies, messengers and guards, or they can be abused for political and propaganda purposes.

Children have always been easy targets for indoctrination for military purposes, as they are easily influenced. In the past, children were also captured and forcibly recruited, or they volunteered to escape the prevailing circumstances.

Throughout history, children have repeatedly been involved in military operations, even when this violated cultural norms. In the First World War, 250,000 boys under the age of 18 were able to join the army in Great Britain. In the Second World War, child soldiers fought across Europe, in the Warsaw Uprising, in the Jewish resistance, for the Nazi army, and for the Soviet Red Army.

Following the First World War, the League of Nations adopted the Geneva Declaration of the Rights of the Child in 1924. Despite this effort, millions of children remained unprotected from indoctrination, war, and murder during the Second World War. The lack of legal protection for children in wartime, which facilitated their exploitation, can be linked to the absence of a universally accepted definition of the term “child” during the Second World War.

The youngest known soldier of the First World War was Momčilo Gavrić, who joined the 6th Artillery Division of the Serbian Army at the age of 8, after Austro-Hungarian troops killed his entire family in August 1916.

The youngest member of the US Army in World War II was 12-year-old Calvin Grahm, who lied about his age when he was drafted into the US Navy. His true age only came to light after he was wounded.

The Hitler Youth was founded in Nazi Germany as an organization that provided children with physical training and indoctrinated them with Nazi ideology. At the beginning of the war, the Hitler Youth had a total of 8.8 million members. Hitler Youth members first experienced conflict after the British air raids on Berlin in 1940. In early 1945, numerous Hitler Youth soldiers were taken from school and sent to fight in the war.

Many child soldiers served in the Soviet armed forces during World War II. Orphans often joined the Red Army voluntarily and unofficially. Children were often affectionately called “sons of the regiment.”

The training of the Imperial Japanese Army began in schools. Military exercises were an integral part of physical education. Children aged 14 to 17 were drafted to fight in the Battle of Okinawa.

Currently, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) defines a child soldier as “any child – boy or girl – under the age of 18 who is in any capacity part of a regular or irregular armed force or group.” The age limit of 18 was introduced in 2002 as part of the Optional Protocol to the Convention on the Rights of the Child. Prior to 2002, the 1949 Geneva Convention set the minimum age for participation in armed conflict at 15.

Two young German soldiers, armed with Panzerfausts (anti-tank weapons) and Mauser rifles, march along Bankowa Street in Lubań (Lauban), Lower Silesia. This area saw fierce fighting and was the site of what was probably the last successful German operation of the war.
March 20, 1945: Adolf Hitler awards his last group of child soldiers for their fight to the bitter end. Behind Hitler stands Artur Axmann, a leader of the Hitler Youth; in the background, on the left, Otto Günsche, in the middle Hermann Fegelein, and on the right Heinz Linge.
1944 – A ten-year-old German soldier poses with his major after their capture in Antwerp, Belgium. Hundreds of other prisoners march past in the background. Since Antwerp was in Allied hands in October 1944, this is evidence that child soldiers were in use long before the final days of the Reich.
13-year-old soldier, captured by the US Army in Martinszell-Waltenhofen, 1945. warhistoryonline
15-year-old soldier of the French Legion of Volunteers Against Bolshevism, 1941. German Federal Archives
15-year-old Mischa Petrov with a captured German MP-38 and a Soviet RGD-33 grenade in his trunk. warhistoryonline
A 10-year-old nationalist soldier, a member of a Chinese X-Force division, boards a plane to China in Burma in May 1944. warhistoryonline
A soldier of the 94th Infantry Division searches two young anti-aircraft gunners who surrendered in Frankenthal, March 23, 1945. worldwartwo
Admiral Giulio Graziani and the X Flottiglia MAS. The boy in the picture is Franco Grechi. Italy, 1943. War history online
Seaman First Class Calvin Graham was the youngest US soldier to serve and fight in World War II in 1942, at the age of 12. Wikipedia
B. Mussolini at a parade of a youth organization, Rome, 1940. warhistoryonline
Young Hitler Youth soldier, aged 16, Berlin, Germany, 1945. Shortly after this picture was taken, the Soviets marched into the city. German Federal Archives
A Chinese boy recruited to support troops of the Chinese 39th Division during the Salween Offensive in Yunnan Province, China, 1944. U.S. Army Signal Corps
German boy after his capture, Italy, 1944. warhistoryonline
Hitler Youth receiving medals, 1943. World War II.
Japanese youths during military training, 1916. warhistoryonline
Lviv Eaglets, young defenders of the Polish-Ukrainian War and the Polish-Soviet War, 1918–1920. warhistoryonline
Momčilo Gavrić joined the Serbian army in 1914 at the age of 8. He was the youngest soldier in the First World War. (warhistoryonline)
Momčilo Gavrić, Corfu, 1916. War history online
Momčilo Gavrić and another soldier under Major Stevan Tucović, 1916. Wikipedia
Onni Kokko, a young Finnish soldier, died in 1918 after the Battle of Tampere. (warhistoryonline)
Serbian young partisans, Yugoslavia, 1945. warhistoryonline
US Marine 1st Lt. Hart H. Spiegel attempts to communicate with two Japanese child soldiers captured during the Battle of Okinawa. June 17, 1945. worldwartwo
Unknown young German anti-aircraft gunner “Flakhelfer” at his position with a 8.8 cm FlaK 18:41 anti-aircraft gun projectile in the German city of Hagen. World War II
Volodya Tarnovsky autographs a column of the Reichstag in Berlin, 1945. warhistoryonline
Volodya Tarnovsky with comrades in Berlin, 1945. War history online
Young Polish resistance fighters in Warsaw during the uprising, Poland, 1944. warhistoryonline
German youths in uniform surrender to Allied troops in Snamont, Belgium. New Year’s Day 1945. World War II.
Child soldiers captured during the Battle of Berlin in April and May 1945. Most were ordered to remove their uniforms and go home. Behind them appears to be a column of older children heading towards a processing center. These boys were pulled out. World War II
A teenage German soldier serving in the Hitler Youth Division is captured by US troops near Forbach (Alsace) in March 1945.
A child soldier in the Red Army serves in a front-line unit in 1942. The presence of children as young as 12 in Soviet army units was routine. They all received the same weapons and equipment as adult soldiers, only slightly adapted to their size. This boy is carrying the standard PpsH submachine gun and anti-personnel grenades.
Sixteen-year-old Wilhelm Hübner proudly accepts the Iron Cross Second Class from Joseph Goebbels.
A 13-year-old prisoner of war from a Hitler Youth unit, captured by the US Army in Martinszell-Waltenhofen in May 1945. worldwartwo
A child soldier in 1930s China. worldwartwo
During the First World War, up to 250,000 boys under the age of 18 served in the British Army. BBC

 

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