00:00...President of the Polish Church, Piotr Komorowski, was arrested for the violent assault of his wife.
00:06In June 1942, they were arrested for the first three months of their time in prison.
00:13And, in the country of the city's culture, are arrested one by one.
00:19Each woman is locked and she is freed.
00:22And a lot of people believe that they were locked, because they would work for Germany and France.
00:31Of course, at the time, half of the prisoners needed to gather iron in conscription,
00:35because, as you believe me, the plan of answer was to destroy prisoners,
00:40through war, through system of punishment, and very small food ratios.
00:52Yes, some people say that it was, yes, it was the idea of prisoners who created conscription
00:58to put you, the worker, upside down.
01:02But if you can say that no, the man who created this conscription, he didn't work for you.
01:15We were informed that there was, you know, they had to watch the construction of the house.
01:22So, a few weeks later, as you see here, the first groups of Soviet soldiers.
01:30And on the left side, you can see the barracks designed for the first groups of homicides,
01:35officers, soldiers deported here in 1941.
01:41And this is the author of the first emulation of all golden and silver bibles,
01:48that he used in the borders, so much, as well.
01:53And you can come up with your number, too.
01:55There was a special, very big hole, where prisoners had to prepare the gold,
02:00so that gold and bars were transferred on the part of the National Bank of the Third Reich.
02:06This is the apartment.
02:08You can see sometimes individuals of this.
02:11One of them was discovered in Sharf's shoe.
02:15Here, on a piece of leather, there was first and last name of the bomb.
02:21Amos Steinberg, incarcerated at first in Theresienstadt ghetto, nearby Prague,
02:29and then deported to Auschwitz.
02:36Thanks to these inscriptions, we can say when he was deported to the ghetto.
02:41You can hear it.
02:43Yeah, you can.
02:45And then survive the war.
02:55Here, we can see many children's belongings, because over 230,000 kids were deported to Auschwitz.
03:06That was the assumption.
03:37But, of course, you can see that some of these names are missing.
03:41Yeah.
03:43So, people had the chance to pay in Auschwitz.
03:49Thank you very much.
03:53It was only later on that other members of Theresienstadt also became a part of the story.
04:00So, because it was full of stories, time depends.
04:07That's why we know that, for example, the father of the body of Amos,
04:13he passed through Auschwitz.
04:15Then he got out.
04:17He was in the medical hospital.
04:19So, very little information.
06:21Get down.
06:23Get down.
06:43Get down.
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