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Feindsender ('Enemy radio station') was a term used in Nazi Germany to describe radio stations broadcast by enemies of the German Reich before and during World War II, such as the United Kingdom or the United States.[1] It also referred to radio stations in Germany which broadcast anti-Nazi material. The term has not been in general use since the downfall of the Third Reich.
^Sarkowicz, Hans (19 October 2016). ""Feindsender" im Dritten Reich: Radio-Propaganda gegen Adolf Hitler". Der Spiegel (in German). Retrieved 23 February 2024.
Feindsender ('Enemy radio station') was a term used in Nazi Germany to describe radio stations broadcast by enemies of the German Reich before and during...
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Austrians who heard them were those secretly listening to enemy broadcasts ("Feindsender"), which was a criminal offence and heavily prosecuted. Though the Allied...
and the Nazi Party came to call it the "enemy broadcast number one" (Feindsender Nummer Eins).[citation needed] Significant punishment was doled out for...
Deutschlandradio Kultur in West-Berlin, war für das DDR-Regime der Feindsender Nummer 1. Eine Ausstellung in Frankfurt am Main zeigt, wie gefährlich...
he was arrested by the Gestapo for listening to the BBC, a so-called Feindsender. On 25 September, shortly after his release from Nazi custody, Breisky...