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America's Veterans: The Serbian People Are Heroes!

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Uploaded by on Nov 29, 2008

This was the largest rescue of American lives from behind enemy lines in American history. Heroic Serbia, Our Ally http://www.byzantinesacredart.com/blog/2006/11/heroic-serbia-wwii.html http://www.dojgov.net/kosovo_watch02.htm Richard L. Felman (May 29, 1921 -- November 13, 1999) was a distinguished officer in the United States Air Force who flew combat missions during World War II and the Korean War, receiving 27 awards and decorations over the course of his military career. Felman was born in the The Bronx, New York City. He was the son of American-born David and Dora, a Jewish immigrant from Poland. He had one brother, Irwin, born six years earlier. At the age of 21, Felman enlisted in the U. S. Army Air Corps on July 24, 1942 and became a master navigator. In early 1944 he was assigned to the 415th Bombardment Squadron, 98th Bombardment Group, 15th Air Force stationed in Lecce, Italy as a Second Lieutenant flying B-24s. His "Liberator" bomber, "Never a Dull Moment", would live up to its name. In July 1944, Felman's B-24 was hit by German ME-109s and 10 of the eleven-man crew bailed out from 18,000 feet over the Yugoslav hills. Felman was later awarded the Purple Heart for his service during the plane crash. The Americans, led by Felman, landed in central Serbia. Serbia, at the time, was a Nazi Germany-occupied territory, but controlled by the Chetniks, a resistance movement led by Draža Mihailović. The Chetniks protected them from the Germans, despite the fact the Germans burned the nearby village of Pranjani in retaliation, killing around 200 women and children. Felman and his men stayed safe with the Chetniks, and were airlifted out of Serbia on August 10, 1944. Felman became friends with Mihailović and his Chetniks, as did the other Allied airmen who had been gunned down over Serbia in the same year. Over 500 downed US airmen survived because of assistance from the Chetniks. Felman was personally decorated twice by King Peter II of Yugoslavia, first with the Royal Order of Ravna Gora, Yugoslavia's highest military decoration in 1946. The Chetniks were defeated by the end of the war. Due to unrelated war crimes, Draža Mihailović was accused by the Partisans in 1946. Felman and 21 others in April 1946 petitioned Harry S. Truman and the U.S. Government to be allowed to go, at their own expense, to Belgrade and present their testimonies to the jury on Mihailović's trial. They were denied by the State Department, because the U.S. had befriended the Communist Partisans in the latter stages of the war, and did not want to disrupt their relations with the Communist Yugoslav government that was created post war. Despite Felman's insistence, he was not able to reach Belgrade. Mihailović was found guilty of high treason, executed and buried in an unmarked grave on July 17, 1946. Because of his efforts, Mihailović and his organization, on the recommendation of General Dwight D. Eisenhower, were posthumously awarded the Legion of Merit by President Truman for their contributions to the Allied victory and the rescue of American airmen from behind enemy lines. The Legion of Merit is the highest award the U.S. can give a foreign national, Felman continued arguing that Mihailović and his Chetniks should be honored for their rescue of US pilots. In 1970, he went on the Congressional Record pressing for legislation for a statue on Capitol grounds honoring General Mihailović. In 1976 and in 1977, the bill was introduced into the Senate by Strom Thurmond and Barry Goldwater. However, the legislation died in the House because of the aforementioned U.S. policy towards Yugoslavia. It was reintroduced over the next decades several times, but failed each time. Richard Felman retired from the United States Air Force in 1968. In 1995, for the 50th Anniversary of the VE Day, Major Richard Felman returned to Serbia after 50 years, accompanied by his wife Mary Anne as well as Captain Nick Lalich and Lt. Col. Charlie Davis. He was met on the mountain of Ravna Gora by 50,000 Serbian people who gave him a thunderous ovation. Felman died at the age of 78. He was survived by his wife Mary Anne and his brother Irwin. He had no children. On November 13, 1999 he was laid to rest at the "All Faiths Memorial Park" in Tucson, Arizona.

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  • @xhim1000 Serbs are not invaded anyone ever only being invaded by others in ww1 by austrohungary,in ww2 germany now by NATO only moron dont know that

  • The Serbs were fighting the War On Terror a decade before 9/11.

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  • Anyways, thanks Serbia. We do owe you more.

  • We followed the wrong policy in the policy in the Balkans and all we got for it was Bosnian and Albanian terrorism against America. Karma.

  • @alsatian9130 ahahahhahahah slaughterin people is heros ? hahahaha

  • Serbian and these Americans are free, brave, and Honorable. Thank you for the light you shine. Put tears down my face. Heaven in filled with people like you. GOD Bless you and those Serbs like you, truthful and loyal to the death.

  • As a child I would play with american airmen clothing and boots I had found in my grandparents attic on their farm. Three dosen of them were hidden from the nazis there. The same farm was burned twice in the 90's by the muslims backed by americans. What an obscenity USA has become.

  • They are truly heroes. For us, it's possible for them to survive that situation. I can't believe it!

  • Живео Дража Михајловић и Момчило Ђујић ...

    слава им и хвала што су успели сачувати Отабину !!!

  • @MrAl7s you shouldnt screw what you were....you should know that "bosians" we Serbs forced into islam by turks...God Bless you

  • Long live chetniks, dead to communism

  • @stmncc Thank you very much for your kind words and invitation. I am aware of history, and what our friends the serbs have undergone in the past, and the more recent demonization campaign. I will always do as much as possible to make others aware of the truth of the Balkans. I recently read a great book called "Two Days Till Peace" By Mile Jovicic. It gave me even further insight into the start of the war in Bosnia. Peace & best wishes to my Orthodox brothers & sisters.

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