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  • War History Online

    A Forgotten Illegal Forest in Germany Holds a Chilling WWII Secret

    By Clare Fitzgerald,

    2024-09-01

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=0lsgwK_0vHUQ2A600

    In the northeastern part of Germany, close to Zernikow in Brandenburg, lies a pine forest where it's easy for visitors to become disoriented if they aren't careful of their surroundings. The forest’s uniform appearance can make navigation difficult, but this hasn’t always been the case. At one time, a 0.89-acre grove of the forest bore a symbol tied to a somber chapter of human history.

    The exact origins of the 140 larch trees that created this symbol remain unconfirmed. Most accounts indicate these trees were planted roughly a year before World War II began. The larches were notable for their unique seasonal changes; unlike the surrounding evergreens, they changed color in both fall and spring, briefly revealing their hidden message for just a few weeks each year.

    There continues to be speculation about the reason behind why these trees were planted. One theory is that they were planted to commemorate the Führer 's birthday, but this idea lacks concrete evidence. Another possibility is that a local resident planted them as a tribute to someone who was imprisoned in Sachsenhausen for secretly listening to the BBC . And another version comes from a farmer who, as a child, claims that he was hired by a forester to plant the larches.

    The forest-themed design, visible only from above, went largely unnoticed after World War II. The Soviet Union's takeover of East Germany led to a ban on private planes, making aerial views of the area impossible. Additionally, due to its northern location, commercial flights from Berlin rarely passed over it.

    Nonetheless, it's thought that the Soviets were aware of the symbol's presence. They simply chose not to remove it.

    After the reunification of Germany , the government conducted aerial surveys of public lands, including a forest in the northeast. These revealed a disturbing symbol from above. Concerned the site might become a pilgrimage destination, officials decided in 1995 to send forestry workers with chainsaws to cut down 43 of the more than 100 larch trees.

    Despite these efforts, the World War II-era symbol remained visible from the air and attracted unwanted attention once more in 2000 after a Reuters report. Consequently, an additional 25 trees were cut down, finally erasing the image.

    While this is arguably the most famous hidden symbol, similar ones have been found in forests across Germany. There's also one in Kyrgyzstan , believed to have been planted around the same time as the one in Brandenburg.

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    Theories abound as to its origins, with the most popular being that it was either planted by prisoners of war (POW) on forestry duty, it was erected as a tribute to the non-aggression pact between the USSR and Germany, or that it was planted by laborers.

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    Liz Hoxie
    09-02
    Shame they were cut down. What was "illegal" about it?
    John citizen
    09-01
    50,000+ buried there.
    View all comments
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