Skip to playerSkip to main content
  • 1 day ago
Adolf Hitler - Mein Kampf Part 2
Transcript
00:19Was ist unser heutiges Deutschland?
00:23Nicht wieder schön und herrlich,
00:26indem ich euch überblicke,
00:28weiß ich,
00:30mein Lebenskampf ist nicht umsonst gekämpft.
00:35Ihr werdet treu sein,
00:37wie jemals nur Deutsche treu sein konnten.
00:40Immer wieder wird eine neue Jugend antreten
00:45in diese Stadt hier.
00:48Ich sehe das von mir in Jahrhunderten
00:51immer wieder antreten
00:53und wird immer schöner sein,
00:56immer kraftvoller sein
00:57und wird immer gesünder sein
00:59und wird immer mehr Hoffnung bieten
01:02den lebenden Geschlechtern auf die Zukunft.
01:06Ich bin nicht der Klagende,
01:09ich bin nur der Warner.
01:12Ich bin nicht der Fürchtende,
01:14sondern ich bin nur der Vorbereitende.
01:17Ich zittere nicht vor der Stunde irgendeine Entscheidung,
01:23aber ich will sie sehen
01:26und ich will stark sein.
01:28Ich will die Füße fest in unserer Erde stemmen,
01:34um den Ansturm nicht zu erliegen.
01:37Und ihr werdet neben mir stehen,
01:41wenn diese Stunde jemals kommen sollte.
01:43Ihr werdet vor mir,
01:45neben uns seiten und hinter mir stehen.
01:48Und wir werden in unserem Zeichen wieder singen.
01:53Ich bin nicht der Grund,
02:28On September 1st, 1939, the German armed forces crossed the Polish frontier.
02:52Hitler informs the world that a state of war exists after the attack on Poland has started.
03:19Great Britain and France do their duty as Poland's allies and declare war on Germany.
03:24For the first time, Hitler is faced by a united front.
03:38To what purpose the blessing of the church and Poland's flaming martial spirit against a superior enemy?
04:01The German Air Force bombs trains on the way to the front and destroys aircraft on the ground.
04:14Polish cavalry attacked German tanks.
04:24Hitler's Stukas bomb a station.
04:28The German Air Force
04:28death
04:28celebratory
04:28death
04:28death
04:37THE END
05:13Hitler's army advances through a desolated country, burning, ruined cities, either deserted or inhabited by a vanquished but undaunted populace.
05:27Partisans are captured, but their execution does not quell the resistance.
05:47The devastation spreads far and wide. Bridges are blown up, Polish forces encircled.
06:04Hitler thanks his soldiers for work well done. His shadow is Himmler, who organizes the terror in the occupied areas.
06:18After a few weeks, only the capture of Warsaw remains.
06:22The tenacious defense of the city enrages Hitler. With obvious satisfaction, he watches the reduction of Warsaw to a smoking
06:30ruin.
06:50For the first time, the world realizes the fate of civilian populations in total war.
06:55Gundotron?
06:56的散布
06:57?
07:19Yes, sir.
07:24I've never said anything!
07:25I've never said anything!
08:16German soldiers marched through the dead streets of Warsaw, surrounded by ruined buildings.
08:25The vanquished Poles began the long march to the prison cages.
08:52A victory parade is organized for Hitler.
09:07Hans Frank is appointed governor general of Poland, and the country disappears from the headlines of the world press.
09:14Quietly, the systematic pillaging of the occupied country has begun.
09:19Hitler's henchmen carry out his new order and themselves photograph their brutal work.
09:31Market day in a small Polish town.
09:42Vegetables and meat are on sale as usual.
09:46A sudden unrest spreads quickly.
09:49German police, a raid.
10:18Jews must wear the Star of David on their arms.
10:21Not carry it in their pockets.
10:33Hostages are taken.
10:53The police car which carries them away is already part of the daily scene.
11:13In Warsaw, there is a streetcar exclusively for Jews.
11:23In October 1940, a district a mile and a half square is transformed into a ghetto.
11:31240,000 Jews and 80,000 non-Jews live there.
11:36They must now move to make room for hundreds of thousands of fresh Jews dragged here from all over the
11:42Reich.
11:43To begin with, there are six people to a room, but the number soon rises to 13.
11:51Goebbels' own cameramen have taken these pictures, which show how an ordinary quarter of a town is transformed into a
11:58living hell.
12:01It was his intention to use them as propaganda, but he gave up the idea for fear that people would
12:06feel sympathy for the victims.
12:08The barbed wire around the prohibited area is soon replaced by a wall behind which the Jews are herded like
12:14defenseless animals in a cage.
12:20The streets are crowded with people who once lived normally, and are now transformed into starved bundles of rags, and
12:28are now transformed into starved bundles of rags.
12:28They are allotted 200 calories a day.
12:32Frank reduces the ration further.
12:35He realizes that this means increased mortality in the ghetto, but he explains that this war means the extermination of
12:42the Jews.
12:58He starts asking us because we're constantly looking for a understates of renter pierwsible luzes, which have been extremely sensitive
12:59in the middle.
12:59He says this was a village who was assigned by the staff, and has started working with people who were
12:59sitting there after working with the Jews and this war means the rest of the world.
12:59The normality in the ghetto is a Mettlement of the Jews.
13:04He says this is the age of 10, then the assassination of the Jews.
13:04He claims to be the Romans who are not forced to beat them through the Jews.
13:07He says it was also the hunchback.
13:07And he says he is the nature of the Jews.
13:08He is the nature of the Jews.
13:09So he says he is the nature of the Jews.
13:11Welcome to the Jews.
13:12He says this is the nature of the Jews.
13:34The inhabitants of the ghetto must live and die like rats.
13:39They are shrouded in a stench of filth, wet clothes and corpses.
13:46They sleep in rooms no better than overcrowded prison cells.
14:24Stretched out on gray cardboard and hay mattresses, they await death as a savior.
14:34In the shadow of death, the children grow up tortured by lice and disease, without laughter
14:40and toys, with old eyes accustomed to the sight of suffering and destruction.
15:03Death casts its shadow over the children's tenderness.
15:14On the streets, they beg or dance in the hope of cheating death yet another day.
15:40Famine's guards at the ghetto walls are merciless.
15:45A little girl from the ghetto said to her father,
15:49I wish I were a dog.
15:51The guards don't beat dogs.
15:53I wish I were a dog.
15:58I wish I was a lamb.
16:24People stand or lean close up to the walls to get a little warmed.
16:42The dead and dying lie in the streets, but the living no longer see them.
16:47Their sight is turned inwards.
16:52They know that tomorrow it may be their turn.
17:06Death reaps a rich harvest.
17:08The gravediggers cannot manage to collect all the corpses which lie abandoned in the gutters until they disappear forever in
17:15the lime pits of a silent mass grave.
17:30Without weeping or tears all traces of indescribable suffering are erased.
17:44An unknown mother's lullaby falls on deaf ears under a grey and empty sky.
17:51...
17:54...
18:20Oh
18:33Outside this sealed off world the terror continues against the Polish people
18:38Day by day the Poles are more convinced that the master race has collectively condemned them
18:44The resistance against the German grows in spite of the fact that it is common knowledge
18:49That whoever fashions weapons or refuses to acknowledge that he is of a lower order
18:54Is doomed to a fearful death
19:38This battle is fought in silence only much later the world hears about it
19:44The war in the West now occupies the international scene
19:59On April 9th 1940 Hitler invades Denmark and Norway
20:03Only a year before he offered these countries non-aggression pacts
20:28The war in the West
20:53The march continues over the frontiers of Holland and Belgium
21:20In June 1940 an armistice with the French was signed
21:23German troops march through Paris
21:26Hitler has erased the Versailles Treaty
21:46Britain remains
21:49Goering's aircraft take the offensive and fight bitter battles with the British
21:53Who retain the mastery of the air
22:22The ruthless raids on industrial towns such as a war in the West
22:27The British
22:27The British
22:28British towns are transformed into heaps of ruins but the will to fight only grows on the island
22:35The will to fight only grows on the island
22:36Preparations against the German invasion are made
22:38Get it
22:40Get it
23:13The British nation, it stirred and moved
23:18and it never has been at any time in its long eventful famous history.
23:25And it is no hackneyed trope of speech to say that they mean to conquer or to die.
23:35What a triumph the life of these battered cities is over the worst that fire and bomb can do.
24:03Chamberlain's successor, the leader of a fighting England, Winston Churchill, assures himself of American support
24:09at a meeting with President Roosevelt in the Atlantic even before the United States comes into the war.
24:14The Atlantic Charter proclaims the Four Freedoms, a joint declaration of war aims and human rights.
24:22But the German invasion of England never came.
24:26Five months after the collapse of France, Hitler prepares to attack the Soviet Union.
24:31Two years earlier, he made a non-aggression pact with Stalin.
24:54The Soviet Union is invaded on a broad front.
24:57The goal is the quick capture of Moscow.
24:59Once again, the German troops advanced rapidly over devastated and unfriendly soil.
25:26Two years later, let's go.
25:35The German victories are costly. Hitler fails to take Moscow. He is surprised by
25:42the winter which takes its toll of an insufficiently equipped army. Near Moscow,
25:47Sebastopol and in many other places the Red Army stem the German advance.
26:24Now the fortunes of war began to turn on all fronts. In October 1942 the British 8th
26:30army under General Montgomery breaks through the German lines at El Alamein.
26:36After 12 days of fighting, Germany has lost the war in Africa.
27:07yeah
27:08yeah
27:08yeah
27:11yeah
27:14and
27:15yeah
27:16yeah
27:17and
27:51The Germans attempt to capture the rich oil wells of the Caucasus
27:54in the flourishing agricultural areas of the Don and the lower Volga.
27:59Eighty divisions are thrown into the battle on the southern front.
28:03They have to pay the price for Hitler's fight for world domination.
28:08In November, three red armies attack north and south of Stalingrad,
28:12and Hitler loses the initiative.
28:14In a few months, this once-flourishing city is transformed into a scrap heap.
28:19The Red Armies recapture Stalingrad after a battle which rages from street to street and house to house.
28:26On January 30, 1943, Hitler's Reich celebrates its 10th anniversary.
28:31On the following day, Theomarshal Paulus capitulates in Stalingrad,
28:35going into captivity with 91,000 men.
28:39The Battle of Stalingrad cost Germany and her allies 142,000 lives.
29:25Zeremonars Calvel is to be organized.
29:31A few years!
29:31Aus Friesenland
29:33Und du, Kamerad
29:35Aus Bayern
29:36Und du
29:37Vom Kaiserstuhl
29:40Und du
29:41Aus Pomer
29:42Und aus Königsberg
29:45Aus Schlesien
29:46Von de Waterkant
29:48Vom Schwarzwald
29:50Aus Dresden
29:53Von der Tonau
29:54Vom Rhein
29:55Und von der Saar
29:58Ein Volk
30:00Ein Führer
30:01Das Deutschland von einst
30:03Hat um drei Viertel zwölf
30:05Gewassen wiedergelegt
30:07Ich habe grundsätzlich
30:09Immer erst fünf Minuten
30:10Nachtwürf aufgehört
30:15Ich wollte zur Wolka kommen
30:17An einer bestimmten Stelle
30:19An einer bestimmten Stadt
30:21Zufallerweise
30:22Den Namen von Stalin selber
30:24Aber denken Sie nur nicht
30:25Dass ich deswegen
30:25Dort losmachiert bin
30:27Sie könnte auch ganz anders heißen
30:29Sondern nur weil es dort
30:30Ein ganz wichtiger Punkt ist
30:31Weil ich kein zweites
30:33Wer den machen will
30:36Ausgehend ist Stalin
30:37Ja
30:37Ein kapitaler Fehler
30:39Das
30:39Ein strategischer Fehler
30:41Jetzt wollen wir mal abwarten
30:42Ob das ein strategischer Fehler war
30:45Und da kann man schon
30:46Mir glauben
30:48Was wir einmal besitzen
30:50Das halten wir dann schon
30:51Auch dafür
30:52So fest
30:52Dass in diesem Krieg
30:53Jedenfalls ein anderer
30:54Dort wo wir ständig
30:55Da kann man sich drauf verlassen
31:00The Battle of Stalingrad
31:01Is the turning point
31:02Of the war
31:02The beginning
31:04Of the great retreats
31:05And great reverses
31:07It is no longer
31:08A question of Blitzkrieg
31:10But a hope
31:11Of holding positions
31:14Many lives
31:14Are still squandered
31:15In senseless battle
31:30Slave workers
31:31From all the occupied countries
31:32Are now dragged to Germany
31:34To serve Hitler's war industries
31:35By the end of 1944
31:374,795,000 men and women
31:41Have been deported to Germany
31:43From Russia, Poland, France
31:45And Holland
31:46Yugoslavia and even Italy
31:49Arrested on the streets
31:50Or in their homes
31:51They are transported
31:51In cattle trucks
31:52And many die on the way
32:09In Eastern Europe
32:10Himmler sets up
32:11Huge concentration camps
32:15They swallow up
32:17Hundreds of thousands of people
32:18The healthy become
32:19Slave workers
32:20In branches of German factories
32:22The others are doomed
32:24People from all occupied Europe
32:26Are brought here
32:27To become numbers
32:28And a nameless mass
32:32To be a vehicle
32:33A near-death
32:52To be a lot more
33:24Work gives freedom, declared Rudolf Hirsch, the commandant of the Auschwitz concentration camp.
33:30But the only free people in this world of his are the dead.
33:40Cross-examined after the war, Hirsch stated that in Auschwitz alone approximately two and a half million people were liquidated.
33:48Mostly Poles, Russians, Gypsies and Jews.
33:52It was Hirsch's idea to use the cyanide compound Cyclone B for the mass extermination of humans.
33:59As he once wrote, it guarantees an absolutely certain and quick death, especially in crowded, dry and airtight chambers.
34:11The condemned were led into gas chambers which were built to look like ordinary shower baths.
34:18First came the women and children.
34:27The doors were locked and the gas introduced through ventilators.
34:30After 20 minutes at the most, all were dead.
34:35The victims' gold teeth and the women's hair were removed.
34:39The corpses were burned.
34:41Crematoria 1 and 2 in Auschwitz had a capacity of 2,000 corpses a day.
34:47Hirsch wrote, more was not possible if one did not wish to run the risk of damaging the plant.
34:54The greatest number of gassed and burned in 24 hours in the entire Auschwitz plant was reached during the summer
35:00of 1944 when in less than two months, most of a group of 400,000 Jews from Hungary were gassed
35:07to death.
35:07This action was led by SS Obersturmbandführer Adolf Eichmann.
35:13This SS hangman carefully maintained his anonymity and was among the war criminals who escaped.
35:19Fifteen years after the German capitulation, Israeli agents captured him in his hiding place.
35:23In this way, the death's head units of the SS carried out the systematic extermination of human beings as the
35:30first step towards the new order in Europe based on race.
35:37Under orders of a man who, in his youth in the slums of Vienna, discovered that what he hated most
35:43was the Jews.
35:45He became powerful enough to order the murder of millions of people and to be obeyed.
35:51Orders are orders.
35:59But those condemned to death or a life of slavery were not always content with their fate.
36:04In April 1943, Himmler orders the Warsaw Ghetto razed to the ground and the Jews transported to the death camps.
36:12During almost three weeks, the inhabitants of the ghetto resist the SS and police troops,
36:17which, under Major General Stroup, systematically burned down house after house.
36:23The inhabitants are left with the choice of either dying in the conflagration or leaping from the balconies.
36:28When the uprising has been suppressed, the victor's booty consists of nine rifles, 59 pistols, a few hundred hand grenades.
36:41For the first time, the unarmed victim has risen against his executioner.
36:46He knew he had to die, but he wanted to die on his feet.
36:50He died.
37:00I'm going to pass the man, my dear, pass the man, my dear, pass the man, my dear, pass the
37:26man.
37:27After the liquidation of the ghetto, the fight continues in Poland.
37:31In 1944, it is plain that the Germans cannot hold the country.
37:36To establish Polish authority before the entry of the Red Army, General Bohr gives the signal for an uprising on
37:43August 1, 1944.
37:46The battle between Germans and Poles lasts 63 days and claims 200,000 Polish lives.
38:20In October, the surviving Poles are forced to leave the city and live in the woods.
38:24The city is systematically destroyed.
38:29This picture has no documents about the reasons why the Soviet Army, already operating near Warsaw, did not attempt to
38:36help the Polish insurgents.
38:39No!
38:41No!
38:44No!
38:46No!
38:47No!
38:48No!
38:50No!
38:54No!
38:55No!
38:57No!
39:02No!
39:08No!
39:10No!
39:58The increased terror cannot save Hitler's regime.
40:02The situation becomes acute in 1944.
40:05On June 6th, the Western Allies land in Normandy under the command of General Eisenhower.
40:11The decisive battle for Europe has begun.
41:02In this situation, a number of officers and politicians attempt to remove Hitler.
41:08On July 20th, Colonel Klaus von Stauffenberg hides a bomb under Hitler's table in the headquarters in East Prussia.
41:16As Hitler's usual concrete bunker is under repair, the meeting is held in a wooden barrack, and this saves his
41:22life.
41:23The bomb blows out the roof and thin walls.
41:26Hitler suffers minor burns, and his right arm is paralyzed.
41:34Hitler takes a fearful revenge.
41:364,980 people are executed during the following months, and thousands sent to the concentration camp.
41:56A so-called People's Court under the presidency of Freisler pronounces death sentences en masse.
42:16At the first trial, a field marshal von Witzleben is forced to appear without braces or belt.
42:32The general commander is en masse.
42:38Resulting the military crannet.
42:42The general commander, Mr. Klaus von Stauffenberg, and the general commander,
43:08The Nazi veteran and chief of police in Berlin, Count Helldorf, is one of the conspirators.
43:15Sie haben ferner bekundet, dass Ihnen die Einstellung der Partei zum Adel nicht zugesagt hat.
43:26Das ist mir nun völlig unverständlich. Sie war Polizeipräsident der Rechtshauptstadt.
43:36Oder ich könnte ihn, wie Sie wissen, Gruppenführer und Obergruppenführer nennen.
43:47Aller Widerungen seines DRP, die auch adlig waren, ich muss auch bekennen, dass ich nicht, wie viele meiner Parteigenossen, nämlich
44:03wie alle Parteigenossen, bedingungslos dem Führer ergeben bin.
44:13Count Schwerin von Schwanenfeldt, states that he has thought of the many murders.
44:27Morde?
44:30Sie sind ja ein schwäbiger Lumpen!
44:35Brechen Sie unter der Gemeinheit!
44:41Ja oder nein, zerbrechen Sie darunter?
44:45Herr Präsident, Frau Kahn...
45:05Im Namen des deutschen Volkes!
45:10Ehrgeiz zerfressene, ehrlose, feige Verräter sind Karl Gördler, Wilhelm Leuschner, Josef Wirmer und Ulrich von Hassel.
45:23Sie verschworen sich, Gördler sogar als politischer Grund für unsere Feinde, mit einer Gruppe eidbrüchiger Offiziere, die unseren Führer ermorden
45:35wollte.
45:35Als Minister einer feindhörigen Verräterregierung, unser Volk in dunkler Reaktion zu knechten und unseren Feinden auf Gnade und Ungnade auszuliefern.
45:49Statt mannhaft wie das ganze deutsche Volk, dem Führer folgend, unseren Sieg zu erkämpfen, verrieten Sie das Opfer unserer Krieger,
46:00Volk, Führer und Reich. Sie werden mit dem Tode bestraft. Ihr Vermögen verfällt dem Reich.
46:08After the abortive assassination, the army is completely humiliated.
46:13The Nazi salute is introduced as the sign of its unbreakable loyalty to the Führer and its ties with the
46:20party.
46:21The SS troops become of equal rank. Himmler is given command of the reservists.
46:36War draws ever nearer Germany. Now it is German troops which are retreating.
46:47Wollt ihr den totalen Krieg?
46:55Wollt ihr ihn, wenn nötig, totaler und radikaler, als wir ihn uns heute überhaupt erst vorstellen können?
47:15Those who did not applaud then suffer just as much now.
47:21The last reserves are thrown into an already hopeless battle.
47:52The end is already near when Goebbels visits the city hall.
47:55the city of Goerlitz in March 1945.
48:01Together with Field Marshal Schoener.
48:18That our soldiers, if they are now at this or at that part of Ostbrunn,
48:26they will not pay attention and no pardon more pay attention and no pardon more pay attention.
48:37All of the divisions, which are now to small and offensively,
48:43and in the next weeks and months to big offensively,
48:48they will be.
48:54So, the soldiers who are at this moment,
48:57will be.
48:57They will be.
48:59They will be.
49:01They will be.
49:03They will be.
49:05They will be.
49:08They will come in.
49:10Nur ihre erschlagenen Kinder und geschändeten Frauen vor Augen und ein Schreinerrasse wird aus ihren Kehlen entbruch steigen, vor dem
49:22der Feinde blassen wirft.
49:30So wie der Führer die Krisen der Vergangenheit bewältigt hat, so wird er diese bewältigen.
49:37Er ist fest davon überzeugt.
49:40Noch vorgestern sagte er mir, ich glaube so fest daran, dass wir diese Krise bewältigen werden.
49:47Und ich glaube so fest daran, dass wenn wir unsere neuen Offensive Armeen hineinwerfen, dass wir den Feind schlagen und
49:54zurückjagen werden.
49:55Und ich glaube so fest, dass wir eines Tages den Sieg an unserer Fahnen heften werden, wie ich je in
50:02meinem Leben an etwas fest geglaubt habe.
50:11Und am Führer Adolf Hitler, Sieg, Sieg, Sieg, Sieg, Sieg, Sieg.
50:24Der Führer, dessen Leben, Tag und Nacht, in ununterbrochener Arbeit und Sorge dem Schicksalskampf der deutschen Nation geweiht ist, besucht
50:32einen Divisionsgefechtsstand im Osten.
50:35Dem Führer werden die Offiziere des Stabes vorgestellt.
50:49Auch bei den Männern hat es sich schnell herumgesprochen.
50:52Der Führer ist da.
50:53Die freudige Begrüßung der Soldaten ist wie ein treue Gelöbnis aller Kämpfenden an den Mann,
50:59der Deutschlands und Europas Schicksal in den Händen hält und Meistern wird...
51:09Die letzte Bilder, die von Hitler den letzten Schicksal in den Händen zeigen,
51:12mit einigen Jungen, die darüber sprechen, wie sie ihre Leben für ihn riskiert haben.
51:32I am first with 13 of my comrades under the request of our band force on the Stadtrand of
51:37in the west leg, we should be against a breach in the front of the panzer.
51:42As these then, in the direction of the Gleivitz, the 24th of January,
51:45fell to us in two groups and fell to the middle one against the panzer,
51:50and, of course, we gave the others to him the power of the panzer.
51:54Our panzer had three panzer shot and was then,
51:56at the end of the 4th, fell.
51:59After we had his death in front,
52:01we had to take us from the tactics on an iron band.
52:04and then I took off the street from Gleivitz to Hindenburg,
52:09which took off the Stadt building,
52:11and then I took off the street from Gleivitz to Hindenburg.
52:12When the Russe moved near to Lauban,
52:15I turned myself to the commander of Lauban
52:18as a member of the commander of Lauban.
52:21My goal was to bring,
52:24to the einzelnen Company-Style to bring.
52:28I often sent the commander of the commander of the commander
52:31to the commander of the commander.
52:32The Panzerfeuze I had in the AKL on Leiterwang
52:36or Kahn under the enemy attack.
52:40The end approaches as a logical sequence.
52:43Everything repeats itself.
52:46Berlin's fate is in the balance.
53:02The Russians enter a ruined city.
53:14Hitler avoids the consequences of his acts
53:17by committing suicide in his bunker on April 29, 1945.
53:27General Keitel signs the instrument of surrender.
53:30The war was never heard of my command.
53:40This is the capital nation.
53:43And I want to keep the whole world clear.
53:47The 28th November will you never get home
53:52I don't know.
54:27The Nazi leaders who have been put on trial in Nuremberg all declare themselves innocent
54:32of the crimes of the Hitler Reich.
54:42Rudolf Hirsch.
55:05Did Hitler do everything himself?
55:12Silent questions lie in the air when the concentration camps are opened.
55:25The inmates look out to freedom and unknown existence.
55:31THE END
55:42THE END
55:42THE END
55:52THE END
56:10The first steps toward life are uncertain and careful.
56:18THE END
56:26THE END
56:43These children escape death in the gas chambers.
56:46They are twins.
56:48The SS doctors were saving them for experiments.
56:52As if they were mice or rabbits.
57:04THE END
57:05In Sonnenburg, the fleeing SS executioners left behind the corpses of 735 German anti-fascists who might have been unpleasant
57:14witnesses.
57:25THE END
57:26Nine million human beings died in the concentration camps.
57:30THE END
57:31Of those, 5,978,000 were Jews.
57:3672% of Europe's Jewry and 85% of Poland's.
57:44THE END
57:44What have the dead left behind in the camps?
57:48Ownerless suitcases.
57:53Half a million abandoned articles of clothing.
58:02THE END
58:03Shoes which have trod the last road.
58:10THE END
58:14Spectacles which have seen the indescribable.
58:18THE END
58:24Toys no one is going to play with anymore.
58:31Women's hair which was too late to be used as raw material in the war industries.
58:37THE END
58:42Teeth.
58:43The gold fillings have already been removed and melted down.
58:56THE END
58:56At least 25 million soldiers are estimated to have fallen on the various fronts during the Second World War.
59:03The victims among the civilian population have been estimated at 24 million.
59:11Innumerable mass graves bear witness to what happened.
59:16THE END
59:17It must never happen again.
59:21Never again.
59:24THE END
59:25The END
59:25The END
59:25The END
59:35The END
Comments