I remember reading somebody (Can't for the life of me remember who.) say how traveling to somewhere like Auschwitz felt wrong, as you knew what you were going in to and could at least slightly prepare yourself. They had been driving through Europe and stumbled across a similar site of Nazi atrocity. Although not on the same scale as Auschwitz, the fact he hadn't planned to end up there had made it more chilling then when they visited Auschwitz a few years later.
That's my plan, as I would love to travel Central Europe, however if by the age of 50 I still haven't seen many things like it then I do plan to visit Auschwitz. Being a kid still (20 next week) I'm obviously too young to understand what it must have been like, but I can remember my Granddad talking about when he would have snowball fights with Canadian troops who never returned home etc, and I'd like to see what they were fighting for.
A couple of years ago I was on a family holiday in Northern France. We'd been at the beach a couple of hours when it dawned on me - We were in Normandy... on the beach. Soon as I realised everything changed. I'm not normally an emotional person and I'm certainly not patriotic but I was very close to shedding a tear when it dawned on me that the very stretch of sand I was on was the place where thousands of brave British/American/Candaian/Indian troops took their last breath after sacrificing themselves for our freedom, some of them no older than me. I managed to convince my family to visit the military grave sites for both American and British troops. I don't think the whole thing would have hit me like it did if it had all been planned out beforehand.
Edit: I've probably worded some of this horribly, nothing was meant in an offensive manner. Probably not the smartest post to try and construct after a few pints.
I can understand this to a degree.
Went to Paris and stumbled across a plaque about a school decimated in ww2. Really upset mood as unexpected and thought provoking.
Feel the need to visit Auschvitz, to get a sense of perspective.
Visited WW1 sites at Vimy, Thiepval etc.
My generation have had it easy, got complacent and have no idea of sacrifice.
Respect those who fought for us, those that suffered for us.
Will never forget what a teacher said to me many years ago. He was a fighter pilot that went on to work in the works dept of BL prepping Coopers. Had lost three fingers in a dogfight, his reaction, "forgive, but never forget."
I think that's right, and not anti Germanic!
If we forget the past we will never learn, instead remember, try not to repeat mistakes.