as late as december 1941, the largest group of victims of the german occupation were not jews or pohls or anyone else in ethnic terms, but soviet prisoners of war. in occupied poland alone where the germans starved, they brought them to camps and occupied poland and starved them, the largest victim group was not jews or pohls, but soviet prisoners of war. this was a crime on a huge scale. which the polish resistance, by the way, observed and reported on. they tried to help them. for the most part, it goes completely overlooked. for that reason among others, i pay attention to it. the other place where the germans come close is in the starvation seizure of leningrad. 100,000 people were starved to death. because they planned to kill the population of leningrad, destroy the city, and hand over the ruins to finland, it can be seen as constant with the earlier planning. i then close in three long chapters which deal with the events that defined the bloodlands more than any other. the depths of the policies more starkly than the other. that's the holocaust. i divide it up into three differe