[Below: This June 1946 document (front) from the German postal system is a classic example of the insane anti-National Socialist policies which the Allies inflicted on the German people. It regards a man who loses his job for talking to his former postal co-workers who were 'dismissed for Nazi activities'! I would laugh if this didn't involve a man who lost his career for this insanity. Original/English translation.]

[Below: Reverse. Original/English translation.] ]

[Below: Allied occupation work book from the Russian occupation of Germany, better known as the 'German Democratic Republic', about as 'democratic' as any other fake democracy, such as the United States and everywhere else you find 'democracy'. As you can see, the Allies deprived the Germans of any sort of design on nearly every occupation document issued for years after the end of the war. This was no doubt intentional, after all, they wanted to deny the people they were wishing to punish any sort of pride whatsoever. Their crime? Being German and daring to stand up against the World Tyrant and its plan to enslave and destroy the Aryan race. On each page within it boldly says 'ACHTET DIE ARBEIT' = 'RESPECT SLAVE LABOR', sorry, 'work'. Click on an image to see inside.]

[Below: 1946 identity card 'concerning registration at the Employment Office' from Nuremberg for a bank clerk. Click to see more.]

[Below: 1948 death certificate for a locksmith from Mülheim on the Ruhr. He lived to be 79 years old. Click to see more.]

[Below: This is a union dues booklet for music, stage, circus and film for a musician from Quakenbrück, Lower Saxony, dated August 1948. Click to see more.]

[Below: Union membership card for locomotive drivers and trainees from 1947/1948. Click to see more.]

[Below: British Occupation Zone 1948 employment card from Köln (Cologne). 'In order to realize the right to work, we recognize a duty to work in the service of reconstruction...' Click to see more.]

[Below: Membership card of the Sauerland Mountain Club. This booklet was issued in April of 1943, but since it has been used up until 1950, we'll put it here with the postwar stuff. Click to see more.]

[Below: Driver's license from Bergisch Gladbach, a scenic city in North Rhine-Westphalia, issued in June 1949. Click to see more.]

[Below: Insurance receipt from 1949-51. Click to see more.]

[Below: This is a membership card for a sports group from 1947-49. Click to see more.]

[Below: This is a 1946 replacement card for a work book from Oldenburg. 'Meldekarte' has been written in, which means 'report card'. Click to see more.]

[Below: Additionally, this letter from March 1946 from the Oldenburg City Administration certifies that the individual from the work book above 'registered his business as a slipper and house shoe maker here on March 8, 1946'. Click to see more.]

[Below: From the Düsseldorf Employment Office, this is a 'Certificate of Exemption from Work Assignment', from April 1946, listing the cause as 'illness'. Click to see more.]

[Below: This says 'Employment Record Book - Replacement Card' for an engineer in Berlin, from April 1949. Click to see more.]

[Below: This is a 'Work Passport' from Düsseldorf from June 1948. Click to see more.]

[Below: This booklet says 'Celebration of Catholic Men at Cologne Cathedral, Sunday, August 29, 1948.' On August 15, 1948, a massive procession of over 250,000 people and clergy marched through war-ravaged ruins to celebrate the cathedral's reopening, after extensive restoration work. It had survived 14 direct aerial Allied terror bombing hits. This reopening also marked the 700th anniversary of the laying of its original cornerstone in 1248. Click to see more.]

[Below: The Cologne Cathedral after Allied hate magic. In the center is a 1948 British Occupation Zone postage stamp celebrating its 700th anniversary. Click to see more.]

[Below: This is a pension payment card from Cologne, featuring an ink stamp with the eagle and swastika cut out. Click to see more.]

[Below: This is an identity card issued in Wesselburen, November 1945. Click to see more.]

[Below: This is an Allied occupation Certificate of Discharge from Hannover from August 1945. It notes that he has an amputation right thigh and is not fit for military service. Click to see more.]

[Below: This is an Allied occupation Certificate of Discharge from Leipzig 1945. Click to see more.]