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Jill Klein
Australia
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 18 ก.พ. 2012
Prof Jill Klein
Professor Jill Klein speaks at the World Business Forum and the Melbourne Business School Women and Management Dinner
มุมมอง: 405
วีดีโอ
Gene Klein, Holocaust Survivor, Sends Message of Hope to Healthcare Workers Fighting Covid-19
มุมมอง 1.8K3 ปีที่แล้ว
Gene Klein is Holocaust Survivor and speaks to audiences around the world. He shares a message of encouragement to those working in healthcare on the frontlines of the Covid-19 pandemic. You can lean more about Gene from the book written by his daughter, Jill Klein, We Got the Water: Tracing My Family's Path Through Auschwitz, available at amazon. @jillklein
Gene Klein, Holocaust Survivor Talks About Auschwitz and a Slave Labor Camp
มุมมอง 38K4 ปีที่แล้ว
Gene Klein describes his life before the Holocaust and then his family's deportation to Auschwitz. After several weeks in Auschwitz Gene was transferred to a Nazi slave labor camp. Gene describes his coping strategies to keep going under horrendous conditions.
Growth Mindset for Medical Students: Video 3 - Flexibility
มุมมอง 3675 ปีที่แล้ว
This is the third video in our series about growth mindset for medical students. This video is about the importance of flexibility in our thinking.
Professor Jill Klein on Growth Mindset: Part 3
มุมมอง 6715 ปีที่แล้ว
Our final segment on growth mindset shows the importance of flexible thinking. Jill Klein is on faculty at Melbourne Business School and Melbourne Medical School at the University of Melbourne, Australia
Professor Jill Klein on Growth Mindset: Part 2
มุมมอง 5445 ปีที่แล้ว
Our second video illustrates how focus, effort and a well-designed process can help us to develop our abilities. Jill Klein is on faculty at Melbourne Business School and Melbourne Medical School at the University of Melbourne, Australia
Professor Jill Klein and Growth Mindset: Part 1
มุมมอง 9385 ปีที่แล้ว
A short video explaining fixed versus growth mindset, focusing on how to switch from fixed to growth mindset thinking. Jill Klein is on faculty at Melbourne Business School and Melbourne Medical School at the University of Melbourne, Australia
Growth Mindset for Medical Students: Video 2 - Focus on Process
มุมมอง 1.2K5 ปีที่แล้ว
This is the second video in our series about growth mindset for medical students. This video is about how we gain skills through a focused process.
The Growth Mindset for Medical Students: Video 1 - Combatting a Fixed Mindset
มุมมอง 1.6K5 ปีที่แล้ว
This is the first of three videos about my trip to Jordan to participate in a world record soccer match. Please watch for an entertaining review of the fixed versus growth mindset.
Gene Klein Holocaust Survivor Talks About Coping with Adversity
มุมมอง 9K6 ปีที่แล้ว
Holocaust Survivor Gene Klein talks about his experiences in a Nazi concentration camp. He discusses the coping strategies he employed while struggling as a slave labourer on starvation rations.
#Talktome
มุมมอง 1.2K8 ปีที่แล้ว
#Talktome Author Jill Klein, PhD, interviews her father Gene Klein, who is a Holocaust Survivor.
Klein Resiliency Master Sequence 01 Sm 16x9
มุมมอง 5429 ปีที่แล้ว
Gene Klein (Holocaust Survivor) and Jill Klein, PhD (Management Professor) discuss their executive session on resilience. You can contact Gene and Jill at wegotthewater@gmail.com.
Jill Klein Discusses Resilient Coping Strategies
มุมมอง 2.4K10 ปีที่แล้ว
Professor Jill Klein, PhD (Social Psychology), of Melbourne Business School, Australia, discusses coping strategies for resilience when facing adversity. This is part of a presentation that she did with her father Gene Klein, who is a Holocaust survivor.
Gene Klein Coping Strategies
มุมมอง 1.4K10 ปีที่แล้ว
Gene Klein, holocaust survivor, discusses the coping strategies he employed as a 16 year-old in a Nazi concentration camp. For more, see wegotthewater.com.
Gene Klein Holocaust Survivor - A German Civilian Saved My Life
มุมมอง 1.5M10 ปีที่แล้ว
Gene Klein speaks about the civilian German engineer who stole food from the SS kitchen for him. Read more about Gene and his family's Holocaust experiences in "We Got the Water: Tracing My Family's Path through Auschwitz" by his daughter, Jill Gabrielle Klein, Ph.D. (available at amazon and kindle).
Gene Klein, Holocaust Survivor - Discusses Life Lessons
มุมมอง 2.8K10 ปีที่แล้ว
Gene Klein, Holocaust Survivor - Discusses Life Lessons
And people still believe this is fake? Idiots
Read " a thousand shall fall" a true account of a family who kept their faith under Hitler who quietly resisted. The Dad was conscripted into the army and when they went into new territory he went around warning the citizens that the SS was a day behind him & if there were any Jews to hide in the forest until they moved on
My God - this breaks my heart. It gives me hope that even in that hellish place, human goodness still existed.
These stories give us hope for humanity. After the war many Germans lied about helping Jews but there were clearly true accounts.
Angels come in all forms.
Never forget.
The Labor camps were full of Communist, whores, pornographers, unemployed drunkards and idiots and various criminals involved in Vice like narcotics trafficking and extortion. My friends Emma and Rosemary Lingenfelter were at Auschwitz from 1943-45 and saw Schindler's List in 1993. They told me at a picnic party on the fourth of July that year Steven Spielberg was the biggest liar god ever made to walk on two feet and nothing in Schindler's List was true. Corey Ten Boom was in their barracks and was a burlesque dancer in Berlin arrested for Prostitution. The Rabbis ran the camp and were alcoholic pimps.
I wonder if, in these types of stories, these people meet in Heaven.
All Nazis were germans, but not all germans were Nazis.
Let us always remember these horrors. Thank you for your remarkable strength in sharing your experiences with us.
This man also has human compassion to be aware of such humanity from the enemy.
❤️❤️
He so lovely x ❤❤
God bless this beautiful MAN 💚💜💚💌
And 'this' is exactly where our global society was headed in 2016. Don't ever doubt it.
It’s a beautiful story
Herr So and So. I wish we could know who this engineer was.
Was the Holocost real though? Some people saying it was fake so Im just asking 💯💯🔥🔥
Never do hear we hear about or taught about in this racist white supremist educational system or this racist white supremist media about the genocide of 10 million African men, women, children, and babies who were slaughtered, massacred, tortured and murdered in the belgium congo by king leopold and his henchmen. We only hear about or taught about those who suffered in nazi germany or WWll Europe.
rightfully so, given you aint willing to create and support political alternatives to these outdated corrupt parties of white rich elderly. Hell, there are still black people voting and supporting Republicans ... you might wanna stop crying about white people acting in there own interest, rather learn from them and start to actually do something more productive then rioting whenever the system fs you!
I studied that topic for my last exams in school last year. If the people didn't get enough valuables they would cut off their hands too. It is taught
I am so deeply sorry for the unspeakable horror the people of my country during NAZI-Germany caused to so many innocent people. Thankfully I was born decades after the war ended. But my father told me about the war. He was 12 years old when it ended. He told me how my grandfather as a sincere Catholic refused to join the NAZI-Party NSDAP, and the repercussions that meant. And I am thankful my son went to see Auschwitz with his school. He was 17, and when he came back he said: Mom, I will never ever complain about anything again. I am ashamed that so many today forget about the third reich . It will remain our responsibility forever anything like this will ever happen again.
Brought to you by, Soros. These holocaust survivors keep getting younger and younger lol.
When I first learned of the consentration camps watching a documentary I knew evil existed. That day I grew up. Life was never the same.
"holocaust"
powerful testimony.
Dear Dr. Klein, thank you for sharing your father's horrific story. I will be going to research more. I am a born-again Christian, left the roman catholic religion when I was 16, I'm in my 60s now, and I want to share that four of my WW2 dad's (Army, Pacific) five catholic Croatian cousins north of Zagreb were executed by the nazis in front of their parents, so my 2nd cousins and great aunt and uncle, for refusing to drive the Jewish people to the camps. God bless you for sharing your wonderful father's story.
God bless the man. He truly was placed there for a reason. God love him.
Many foreigners don't understand that most of the German civilian population was just as much victim as people from other countries. Sure there were Nazis everywhere. And humans so possessed by evil you can't even imagine. And people enticed by the community, the confidence, the simplicity of rule and order. But there were also a lot of people just trying to survive a horrible war and a horrible regime. People who had to protect their children, people who didn't even know most of what was truly going on in their own country. Or for whom the truth was too painful to accept. When Germany voted for the Nazi party, most didn't know they were voting for death and destruction. And even those who fought in the war were forced to. Germany brought 14-year-olds to the front lines at the end of the war. Many ended up imprisoned in Russia or elsewhere - they were children. My grandparents on both sides have or had a bunch of stories to tell about how they encountered Nazis and almost encountered death several times. Watched a movie featuring WWII once with my grandma. She was shaken afterwards and mumbled: "That's exactly what the Nazis were like. This unbelievable arrogance, the diabolic evil..." My point: We as Germans have to live with the responsibility of remembering what happened and making sure it never will again. But we weren't an entire nation of evil Nazis. We were an entire nation of terrified or clueless civilians who were kept on a short leash by a minority of actual Nazis.
$$$
To do the right thing at risk of ridicule, suffering, or even death. This Is Manhood.
♥️
My uncle used to run errands for a Jewish couple who had escaped to England, the woman would make him nice things to eat and made a fuss of him. When the couple were in Germany the German SS interrogated the man, but he knew nothing to tell, they threw their baby from the balcony and killed it. My heart breaks hearing all these atrocities, and yet there are people who deny the holocaust, unbelievable.
Today's Germany has nothing to do with Central Germany from the past, although our ancestors weren't good on the railways and they made a lot of mistakes and we should all learn from them, but I would also like to say that we Germans keep reminding ourselves of the mistakes so that I will never repeat these things.
God bless anybody anywhere in the world who reaches out in humanity ! Why people want to divide themselves from others with hatred is beyond me.
We are all prisoners of the systems and the ideas that govern us. The heart unites us - universally. Lots of love from Australia
My grandfather died in Auschwitz. He fell out of his guard tower.
It's painful to see you so emotional. Your sorrows carry my heart. I know and feel the hate where I come from, but they will never break me. If you could overcome, you are a real inspiration and light for humanity.
❤
A dear friend was a slave laborer for the Germans. I asked her if she told her daughters about her experiences making fire hoses for the German army in a slave labor camp. She said that she did not. I asked her why. She said that she didn't want her girls to hate all Germans because it was only because of the kindness of a few Germans that she survived.
"I was hungered and you gave mefood. I was thirsty and you gave me drink. I was a stranger and you took me in, naked and you clothed me. I was sick and you visited me. I was in prison and you came to me" Then shall the righteous answer saying, Lord when have we done all this? And the LORD shall answer, "lnasmuch as you have done it unto one of the least of these my brethern, you have done it unto Me". --Yeshua, the Christ
Can anyone see this video without blurry eyes filled with tears? This touches the depth of my heart
During WW2 German POW's were put to work in field's alongside my grandmothers house. My grandmother was given the job of making black tea for the prisoners rest period. Milk and sugar forbidden. My grandmother was a very devoted church going lady, Evergreens and Mothers Union her life long passion. She used to smuggle sugar lumps to to German prisoners. They were so appreciative one of them made her a beautiful ring from an old coin. One day she was caught handing over the sugar and immediately 'detained' and put on 'charge' having to appear before a panel of magistrates and military. She was asked to explain her actions. She addressed the powers that be and told of her love for God, Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit She explained that not only were these men prisoners of war, they were also another mothers son, a childs father, someones brother. She also explained that there is very likely a German mother worrying about her son, and that's why she did what she did. Grandma was relieved of her duties but never punished. I have often wondered if these POW's made it home and did they tell their mothers about the kind English lady??Throughout the remainder of her life, she loved her church, a very kind, gentle and lovely woman. I loved my gran so much and miss her terribly, am 67 yrs now and i know that one day we will meet again.
Look how many Jews were saved by Schindler 1200.
And now you have Starbucks workers sobbing uncontrollably because they have to work a 30 hour week...
Sure
Germany is supporting armed Nazi formations in Ukraine.
Das gibt einem den Glauben an die Menschheit zurück… vor diesem himmelschreienden Unrecht was diesen Mitmenschen angetan wurde!
How come there is no authenticated forensic proof to support all those assertions???
What a heartwarming story. Sometimes all we need is a touch of humanity!
@Hello there, how are you doing this blessed day?
I have to ask. While there is no question in my mind that there were Germans who did this sort of thing, often without recognition probably, isn't it relevant that the German civilian engineer required a strong healthy laborer for his project to be performed to his standards?
He fed not only his body, but his soul. That gesture of loving-kindness was the most nourishing food there is. That he shared it with the young saved many lives. If you cannot help 100, help one. The ocean would be less missing that single drop.
My father helped liberate death camps when his unit marched from Belgium to Czechloslovakia after Bastogne. He came home a broken man and died in 1966.