FULL BACKSTORY OF THE SOUND HERE This is actually not an EAS signal, it was just 'the jingle' of the Polish radio in the 1930s, but the history behind it goes a little deeper than this, so read on if you're interested. The collection of notes you're hearing comes from a Polish army song titled "Pierwsza brygada" (still considered the anthem of the Polish armed forces to this day). It sounds ethereal and maybe even creepy to some, because of the poor quality of radio transmissions at the time, but is actually just played on a normal piano. It was introduced in 1935 in honour of Marshal Piłsudski, following his death, in May of that year. An important thing to keep in mind is that in the 1930s radio technology was far less advanced and instead of having a national radio station (never mind several) people would just tune in to whichever radio tower was closest to them. The most important of these towers was 'Warsaw 1' which used this sound from 1935 to 6 September 1939. This is what people heard on the morning of 1 September 1939 right before the announcement of the German invasion of Poland. on 6 September, the station was blown up by the Polish army to prevent the invading Germans from taking over the Polish airways once they would inevitably reach the radio tower. From that point on, the broadcasts were made from 'Warsaw 2' which used a different jingle (in fact it was the one used by Warsaw 1 before the switch in 1935). The old jingle was taken from Chopin's Polonaise op. 40 no.1 in A major. This is the sound most associated with Polish war time radio, as that was the jingle which preceded the final announcement Warsaw made before the Germans took control of the tower. Chopin jingle: th-cam.com/video/vWc1arLpqiU/w-d-xo.html Final announcement of defeat followed by the national anthem: th-cam.com/video/NTyiPUeF7Ms/w-d-xo.html
My great grandad served in the polish army in WW2 and this siren was the last thing he heard before being captured by Germans and being taken to a death camp luckily he escaped and when he returned to Warsaw he heard the siren still going. He was in the polish uprising and fought wit the soviets to retake Poland. He was truly a hero and so were the other poles who fought the Germans despite their countries surrendering. After the war he was awarded the virtuti militari which is the polish equivalent to the medal of honour. R.I.P big Grampy you will be missed
It's so calm but haunting at the same time. It feels like waking up hours after chaos and no one is there. You walk around an empty barren abandoned land.
Halo! halo!, czy nas słyszycie? To nasz ostatni komunikat. Dziś oddziały niemieckie wkroczyły do Warszawy. Braterskie pozdrowienie przesyłamy bohaterskim żołnierzom walczącym na Helu i wszystkim walczącym, gdziekolwiek się jeszcze znajdują! Jeszcze Polska nie zginęła! Niech żyje Polska
+ Romans 10:9-10 "That if you confess with your mouth, "Jesus is Lord," and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are saved." Amen 🙏!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The man in Luke 16:24 cries: ". . .I am tormented in this FLAME." In Matthew 13:42, Jesus says: "And shall cast them into a FURNACE OF FIRE: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth." In Matthew 25:41, Jesus says: "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting FIRE,. . ." Revelation 20:15 says, " And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the LAKE OF FIRE." And please repent of all of your sins and be baptized by the Holy Spirit before it is too late, you will never know when the time will come 🙏!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Amen 🙏!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
My great-grandma survived the whole war and survived until 2020. She lived in the same house she lived until 2020. A major city near the village was bombed. She saw bombers flying over the house. She was kind and understanding. I loved and still love her. R.I.P Great Grandma. I will never forget you. ❤🕊✝
My great grandma has survived WWI and WWII and she was around 11 when WWI started. She told me her feelings hearing this siren. She is one of the people who were saved by the Windsor trains. I miss her sm. Rip babcia Danuta
My Great Great grandmother Was Born In 1892 And Survived Both Wars But Sadly Passes Away In 1987 Even My Great Grandfather Was A Police Veteran In WWII But He Also Died In 1987 :(
@@Bt.Gang.Activity actually experiencing the act is much more different than describing it. Saying as I am going based on assumption. Also, if someone were to experience it, they would have a much different description than me.
I'm Brazilian, and Poland is my favorite country even though I've never been there, and I have ancestors from several countries, I could like any other, but Poland has my heart! In all universes! And it is very sad to see the situation that Poland was in 1939, Imagine how difficult it was for the people who lived at that time in Poland :(
On September 1, 1939, German forces under the control of Adolf Hitler bombard Poland on land and from the air. World War II had begun. This is the reason of this alarm
grief is the best way to phrase this. listening to this, it brings emotions and thoughts i couldn't put into words. depressing wasn't fitting enough nor was scary. this song is one of hollow grief, one that echos the long dead memories of those now forgotten. the realization that someone could very well hear this on their radio, hiding under beds and in basements, praying. hearing such a tune go sour with fear and trauma as its gentle hum was forcefully mixed with horror and destruction just outside. knowing that was all you're going to hear before your passing. grief is an amazing term of this feeling.
It was the last alarm that sounded in Poland in the German invasion of Poland in 1939. Together with a speech and the Polish anthem to say goodbye as the end of Poland
This is more depressing than creepy. After whatever caused that alarm to be played, millions have died in concentration camps, millions were murdered in cold blood by merciless people.
Cinnamon did you know that it wasn’t really cold blood as the germans had to replace their “executioners” every other day, this was because the germans had hearts to so they got depressed from killing people just the same as anyone would
When i heard this alarm i rushed to my polish grandpa and showed it to him and he cryed because of the terror he saw back 1939 and he telled everything he saw and what he felt. It was horrible. And that it was in the radio and he listened to the Last massage with his family. 💔💔
The alarm says : “Hello, hello, can you hear us? Today, German troops entered Warsaw. Good luck to all of our brothers fighting in hell. Poland is not yet lost! *Polish Anthem plays*”
“Hello, hello? Can you hear us? This is our last message. Today, German troops have entered Warsaw. We send brotherly regards to all polish troops fighting in the Hel peninsula, and all those fighting wherever they are. Poland is not yet lost! Long live Poland!” national anthem plays
It actually isn't a EAS Alarm - it's a jingle, it sounded even creepier, but due to 30s technology, it doesn't sound as normal due to being warped. It was played on a piano
I had family who woke up hearing this on that fateful day... My great great grandpa told me he was stuck under his bed when he heard this. He was hiding from the bombs and explosions and, aside from the actual explosions and the sound of screaming, this was all he heard. Chilling is an understatement-
Imagine waking up at 6 am turning on your radio and hearing the alarm .you are scared because you don't know what's happening.The reporter tells that Germany bombed nearby villages and tells that polish soldiers will fight for their country until they win.You and your family are praying so that the enemy soldiers will lose
hitler did lose, but he has killed a lot of the jewish population globally and has captured most of Poland, only bodies and large cities remained directly after the war.
Not to rain on your parade but this sound is not a EAS it was a jingle used by a radio tower called Warsaw 1. However, this jingle was played right before when announcing incoming Germen soldiers.
@@thecasualcreator9396 As a costa rican person, Poland is important because the WW2, that was the last thing as the polish persons hear when URSS and German attack poland
It sounded for the first and only time when Germany invaded Poland for the start of WW2 and sounded that alarm along with a speech and the anthem of Poland as a farewell symbol.
nope, it was the radio jingle at the time, introduced in 1935. the reason people think it's creepy or eerie is because 30s radio equipment wasn't all that high quality
I’m polish and I remember my grandpas grandma telling me about the World War Two, she died when I was 3 years old. And I remember she told me this was playing for hours, 7 of her siblings died and the only one who survived was her and her sister.
I gotta say. I can imagine something from a movie or so... This is scary, it gives a really sad sense, it is sentimental, kinda tells you "there's nothing left to do, it's pointless". Sad, haunting yet so weirdly calming. I can't actually describe this with words, it is a feeling.
I showed to to my great grandmother and she was very traumatised. She told me the history of the alarm. She told me what it wasike and it was one of the most emotional things I ever heard. It breaks my heart to see people joking in the comments about this stuff.
@@Flourre Yeah well you at least have to respect the 5 MILLION polish citizens who died in WWII and not make fun of the sound, which was the last thing many people heard. I'm not trying to fight you in the comments or smthn like that, just trynna make a point
Imagine you live in Warsaw on the early hours of September 1, 1939. You're in your apartment, making breakfast and then all of a sudden, you hear this siren. You're confused because you don't know what's going but then suddenly, the radio in your house suddenly announces that the Germans are bombing your country. As you listen to the broadcast, you suddenly hear the sounds of bombs exploding and people screaming. You look out the window to see buildings now on fire and collapsing into rubble as people are running for their lives. You then look up as German bombers keep flying over the city and dropping bombs. Now you are panicking as you quickly run to your bedroom and hide under the bed as you continue to hear the sirens and the bombings going on. You begin to pray that your home country defeats the Germans and all will be well soon. However, you don't know what your country will experience in the next six years.
EXACTLY! I wish many more people could put themselves into others shoes like this. Some people just can't for different reasons, but most people can if they care enough. But people are also too scared to think too much. It's a privilege to be able to "shut" off specific thoughts and memories. My thoughts goes out to everyone who had to experience it, survivor or not. It still hits close to home for me, even though I never had any relative who got caught up in it personally. Sweden mostly took refugees and sent some soldiers here and there. I'm autistic and they did try to erase us too. Hans Asperger wanted to only keep the children he assumed were the smartest and the rest were left to die of starvation and poison injections after he was done studying. A three year old died after ten days of suffering. Am Spiegelgrund is the place where this happened and yeah.. no wonder many people don't want their condition to be called Asperger's anymore. So some old assumptions about autism, are in fact nazi propaganda if you think about it... People who otherwise hate nazism are still believing some of that shit still! I'm speechless...
Imagine at 3 at night ur just vibin watching some videos and u are about to sleep and when u get into the bed this things starts playing outside... honestly i would shit myself
The one they have today isn’t supposed to be scary it’s supposed to trigger your fight or flight response but no one would ever want to fight a tsunami
Imagine going on vacation with your family to Poland. You fly there, stay at a hotel there, but don't know that much about it. 3 A.M. You hear this, jolt awake in a cold sweat, you look around a dark room. Your family is asleep still, terrified by the noise you try and find what it it's coming from, so you leave your room to the hallway, separating yourself from your family. You open the front door to try and find where the noise is coming from. You gaze upon the Beauty of night, a scene glazed in black. You hear screams, and find people running away. You try to get their attention , but they either ignore you and run away, or yell at you "Biegnij po swoje życie! Koniec się zbliża!" Then you fall to the ground, all sound is muffled... The only thing you hear now is this video and the screams of the innocent. Then all becomes silent... as death consumes all.
When i first moved to Poland (2 years ago) i rented a small flat,and on the third night i was chilling in bed when i heard this sound i was terrified bc i knew it was the alarm i immediately went into the living room to look at the news when i released the cassette player was playing it i got it out and looked at it. It said “for the one i love” in cursive writing. This sent chills up my spine then grabbed my phone and called the police i told them (in polish) that there was someone in my flat. The came and found no one. In the morning i looked into the history of the town i lived in turns out the building i live in was set on fire in the forty’s and 7 people died. They were all either children or teenagers the worst thing is that the second oldest (i forgot there name) lived in my flat. Fast forward to now this video popped up on my recommended and reminded me of what ever happened that night.just so you know i still have the cassette in a glass cabinet with old war thing i found around the area.
I'm commenting on one of the most disturbing sounds I've heard but can you possibly make a video showing the tape? I'm only curious on the sound because I've looked all through the internet and I've never found many videos showing origins of the sound. If you can't show the tape that's fine but I just want to see what it's like.
This is unsettling. And just to know that this is the last thing some people heard before their untimely death is even more frightening to think about.
I wouldn't be joking about stuff like that. This video is of serious topic and a deeper meaning behind it. People died in the war and it is most definitely not something to joke about.
This is so calm and soothing but also unsettling and disturbing. It gives off an eerie feeling and it sends shivers down my spine. The music is creepy but a weirdly calming feeling to show it will all be over soon and the end is near. This song is the perfect song for death, this is the most chilling and most disturbing thing I have ever heard. 😳
My grandma was Polish/Lithuanian and her family long ago were forced out of their homes around this time period by the USSR. Hearing this saddens me, yet comforts me in some way..
Imagine being in September 1st, 1939 Living in Poland and hearing this Your in the living room, your family hears the radio about an invasion from Germany and Russia
@@lessgo5214 it is likely the last message intro until Germany invaded Poland in 1939, the most terrifying is that has been the last thing who polish people hearded before die...
POV: You are awaken by loud aircraft and screaming and there is a tank outside your window, Your mother grabs your hand and the last thing you see of the outside world is explosions and people running frantically as the Germans invade Poland. You try to grab your radio as you are being pulled away. You manage to grasp it. This song plays as you are sitting in a small, dirt room inside your house. Stomping can be heard above you, You turn the radio down several notches. The radio says that Polish army will manage to bring Germany defeat. Outside you can hear screams and cries of people being forced into cars that go to some sort of camp. You then cuddle up with your mother, father and little brother as you pray this will all be over soon.
This is like my granmother and grandfather *on my mums side* they were only children when the ww2 happened. Both from Warsaw. They wouplve heard this alarm playing. They maneged too flee Auschwitz. This bog pits they were forced to dig out by the n*zis. And at the end of that day they dig the holes, all the captured people were lined up in front of these pits and shit dead falling into the pits. My grandparemts were friends in the war they met at Auschwitz. When the n*zis neared their pit they hid under dead bodies four other people shot falling ontop of them. They managed to sneak out of the pit after two days at night and board a ship to australia they came back to poland many years later around the 70's had my mum in the 80's.
Also my mums little sister was left in Warsaw at thier house. This radio alram was playing as my grandmothers mother cuddled my grandmothers little sister in her arms. Her little sister holding tightly to their mum. Her mum using the song to lul her to sleep. My grandmothers little sister basically got luled to sleep right before they died. As my grandmothers little sister fell asleep tears pouring down her mothers face. The mum could jear n*zi souldiers approaching in a tank. She luled my grandmothers.little sister to sleep so she could die peacefully not knowing thier house got blown up by a tank. The song is such a sweet yet horryfiyng song. It brings me mixed emotions.
This actually played at 4:45 AM on September 1st 1939... Even without the internet or most modern tech, it's a bit unsettling to hear this, even at night, this scared people back in 1939 that had a radio with them (TVs were still brand new and expensive, with not much technology going on in the 1930s and 1940s)
FULL BACKSTORY OF THE SOUND HERE
This is actually not an EAS signal, it was just 'the jingle' of the Polish radio in the 1930s, but the history behind it goes a little deeper than this, so read on if you're interested.
The collection of notes you're hearing comes from a Polish army song titled "Pierwsza brygada" (still considered the anthem of the Polish armed forces to this day). It sounds ethereal and maybe even creepy to some, because of the poor quality of radio transmissions at the time, but is actually just played on a normal piano. It was introduced in 1935 in honour of Marshal Piłsudski, following his death, in May of that year.
An important thing to keep in mind is that in the 1930s radio technology was far less advanced and instead of having a national radio station (never mind several) people would just tune in to whichever radio tower was closest to them. The most important of these towers was 'Warsaw 1' which used this sound from 1935 to 6 September 1939. This is what people heard on the morning of 1 September 1939 right before the announcement of the German invasion of Poland. on 6 September, the station was blown up by the Polish army to prevent the invading Germans from taking over the Polish airways once they would inevitably reach the radio tower. From that point on, the broadcasts were made from 'Warsaw 2' which used a different jingle (in fact it was the one used by Warsaw 1 before the switch in 1935). The old jingle was taken from Chopin's Polonaise op. 40 no.1 in A major. This is the sound most associated with Polish war time radio, as that was the jingle which preceded the final announcement Warsaw made before the Germans took control of the tower.
Chopin jingle:
th-cam.com/video/vWc1arLpqiU/w-d-xo.html
Final announcement of defeat followed by the national anthem:
th-cam.com/video/NTyiPUeF7Ms/w-d-xo.html
Thx
Thats so interesting. Thanks for telling me that. I never knew the backstory. Now i do.
Wow omg, thanks for the comment!
where do you hear melody of "pierwsza brygada" here?
Isn't this copy and paste-
this alarm calmly screams "you aren't getting out of here alive :)"
yeah i hear it too
Imagine you're lost in the forest,it's very cold and snowy winter night, you barely can see infront of you and then you hear this creepy melody... 😨
@CJ Wdym
@@sknoy7792 nazi Germany invaded Poland
@CJ it’s not “polish concentration camps” it’s “german concentration camps in poland”
For me it sounds like the opening of a horror cartoon in 1939.
Yes it does-
Okay I gotta make a horror cartoon or something ASAP 😳
Germany is about to attack
Agreed
@ℕ𝔸𝕊ℂ𝔸ℝ 𝔽𝔸ℕ 2005 what?
The scariest part was the fact that this played at 4:45 AM, meaning most people were asleep. Those who were awakened must’ve felt scared
The aliens in your hallways at 4AM when you walk out of your room: 👁👄👁
🫡I don’t live in Poland…. long live… Poland. 🇵🇱
It was played at 5:40 AM.
My man got up to get water but shited his pants so hard he just got to bed again
Apart from me beacause I'm always up late
It gives me chills. Knowing the backstory makes it even scarier, sad, and utterly horrifying, knowing this is the last thing some people heard.
I'm ur 100th like
@@Axitheaxolotl9786 who cares
Just think of hearing this in the forest
backstory????
@@starryeyed30germans (commiting a war crime) made a surprise attack on poland. They took over.
Imagine hearing this and seeing a huge explosion out of your window as its pouring outside and everyone starts screaming
This scares me so much
Terrifying but oddly calming
And then more and more explosions and you look up and see German bombers bombing the heck out of that city
@@Mr.GlitchInfinity EEERIEEEE
my mind would make up a text and it would say " you're gonna die now 0_0"
This gives me chills because you know that this noise was some of the last things heard by people
Oh my gosh that's terrifying
holy fuck that gave me the shivers
JD Woods, you just made this 100 times more creepy, but nice writing on you comment!
and i am so glad my great grandma survived it
Ungol ghi hco kti ositkotkucngoltipshcicktik
My great grandad served in the polish army in WW2 and this siren was the last thing he heard before being captured by Germans and being taken to a death camp luckily he escaped and when he returned to Warsaw he heard the siren still going. He was in the polish uprising and fought wit the soviets to retake Poland. He was truly a hero and so were the other poles who fought the Germans despite their countries surrendering. After the war he was awarded the virtuti militari which is the polish equivalent to the medal of honour.
R.I.P big Grampy you will be missed
He was brave
Rip
That man was a true warrior! Long live him!
May I know his name?
@@THE_BOYS_YT7your pfp is fake
It's so calm but haunting at the same time. It feels like waking up hours after chaos and no one is there. You walk around an empty barren abandoned land.
The only thing I don’t like is how calm it is, like the world could be ending and this is all you hear
It be calming
the calmness and quietness of it scares me so much, it gets even more scary if u know the story behind it.
@@vladipeace oh heck-
It was the start of ww2
Miu? What are u doing here?
this is more sad than scary
Yeah. Most people died in German occupied Poland....
Pretty sad
very true
@@stunseedordeesnuts Indeed. It’s even more terrifying thinking of the barbarism about to come even after Poland had subjected to, next 5 years.
both sad and scary tbh
Imagine hearing this at the middle of the night while there’s a storm out there, then you hear footsteps coming closer to you.
Very disturbing
backrooms
Well this accualy was played at night since that's when the Germans attacked
Halo! halo!, czy nas słyszycie? To nasz ostatni komunikat. Dziś oddziały niemieckie wkroczyły do Warszawy. Braterskie pozdrowienie przesyłamy bohaterskim żołnierzom walczącym na Helu i wszystkim walczącym, gdziekolwiek się jeszcze znajdują! Jeszcze Polska nie zginęła! Niech żyje Polska
Girls: “does men have feelings?”
What men cries:
@@DavidDaColBoireal (I’m a girl)
Larga vida a Polonia!
POLSKA! Wielka, silna, waleczna oraz najlepsza 🇵🇱💪❤
POLSKA GUROM
I asked my great grandma if she remembers this and she was like "Oh son yes i do, i almost shit my self when the soldiers where invading".
@@ashluvsyouu789 how is that a lol bruh that's depressing as Fuck
I think he said "lol" because he said she almost shit herself
@MYSTERIOUS KIDZ youre literally gatekeeping humor lol. chill out man no one cares
I Imagine
@MYSTERIOUS KIDZ Stop gatekeeping it's cringe as fuck
The fact that this was the opening theme to a reign of terror makes it so much scarier
Yeah
Link ?
+ Romans 10:9-10 "That if you confess with your mouth, "Jesus is Lord," and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. For it is with your heart that you believe and are justified, and it is with your mouth that you confess and are saved." Amen 🙏!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The man in Luke 16:24 cries: ". . .I am tormented in this FLAME."
In Matthew 13:42, Jesus says: "And shall cast them into a FURNACE OF FIRE: there shall be wailing and gnashing of teeth."
In Matthew 25:41, Jesus says: "Depart from me, ye cursed, into everlasting FIRE,. . ."
Revelation 20:15 says, " And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the LAKE OF FIRE." And please repent of all of your sins and be baptized by the Holy Spirit before it is too late, you will never know when the time will come 🙏!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Amen 🙏!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
@@reclusiarchgrimaldus1269THIS ISNT THE PLACE TO TYPE IN A VERSE OF THE STUPID BIBLE
@@TheCountryballPlushLegend Ain't no way you said the bible is stupid.
This alarm is the definition of fear. You hear this, and you know nothing is left. This is not an emergency, this is the aftermath.
Put it better than nearly everyone else in this comments section. Bravo
My great-grandma survived the whole war and survived until 2020.
She lived in the same house she lived until 2020.
A major city near the village was bombed.
She saw bombers flying over the house.
She was kind and understanding.
I loved and still love her.
R.I.P Great Grandma. I will never forget you. ❤🕊✝
My great grandma has survived WWI and WWII and she was around 11 when WWI started. She told me her feelings hearing this siren. She is one of the people who were saved by the Windsor trains. I miss her sm. Rip babcia Danuta
Wow
rip
R.I.P she will be missed
My Great Great grandmother Was Born In 1892 And Survived Both Wars But Sadly Passes Away In 1987 Even My Great Grandfather Was A Police Veteran In WWII But He Also Died In 1987 :(
Rip
How utterly calming this is, mixed with the panic of danger. That would be an emotion that’s practically indescribable.
Well you described it
@@Bt.Gang.Activity actually experiencing the act is much more different than describing it. Saying as I am going based on assumption. Also, if someone were to experience it, they would have a much different description than me.
Cockyoin
Nope. Its just calmly saying YOUR NEXT or One more move and your dead.
Ratio
I'm Brazilian, and Poland is my favorite country even though I've never been there, and I have ancestors from several countries, I could like any other, but Poland has my heart! In all universes!
And it is very sad to see the situation that Poland was in 1939, Imagine how difficult it was for the people who lived at that time in Poland :(
Me after listening to Poland by Lil yachty once:
Brasileira escrevendo inglês e dizendo que gosta de Polônia
Meanwhile me living in Poland.
foda
World war 2 lasted until 1989 in Poland. 1939-1989 ( 50 years). 😢😢😢
My great grandmother said she heard this melody. She died from old age sadly. RIP Babcia Madzia
This is just so calm, and deppresing, yet it still sends shivers down your spine, it seems like a perfect song to end it all
Fun fact at second 36 the transcript says 'you' idk why but it creeped the hell out of me.
@Llama scared me too I got shivers for a moment lol
Poland is depresing country
Poland made
✨Ending of humanity✨
@@ThatoneLlama you
...are already *d e a d*
On September 1, 1939, German forces under the control of Adolf Hitler bombard Poland on land and from the air. World War II had begun. This is the reason of this alarm
How did you know bro??? :O
Everyone knew that since grade 6...
@@SKerala informing people that didnt know
@@tabbion Oh, alright
GERMANS ARE ATTACKING POLAND
I just feel so bad for my great grandma that she had huge terror back then, she survived this entire chaos but lost her brother during this war...
grief is the best way to phrase this. listening to this, it brings emotions and thoughts i couldn't put into words. depressing wasn't fitting enough nor was scary. this song is one of hollow grief, one that echos the long dead memories of those now forgotten. the realization that someone could very well hear this on their radio, hiding under beds and in basements, praying. hearing such a tune go sour with fear and trauma as its gentle hum was forcefully mixed with horror and destruction just outside. knowing that was all you're going to hear before your passing. grief is an amazing term of this feeling.
Kinda just sucks you out of emotions
If I heard this I wouldn't even evacuate I would just cry
My heart would just simply froze cuz of the anxiety it would give me, especially the explosions out of my window
Same
Not to mention the fact that this alarm played at 4:45 AM, so youd be woken up to this creepy ass sound from a horror movie
This is one of the most unnerving things I've heard on this site. It's really chilling.
ur verified yet no comments
@@awesomegmodvideos1 Those only count for comments on this channel
@@MickyD oh nice
Nice
ok
It was the last alarm that sounded in Poland in the German invasion of Poland in 1939. Together with a speech and the Polish anthem to say goodbye as the end of Poland
TH-cam is the closest thing we'll ever have to an actual time machine.
This is more depressing than creepy. After whatever caused that alarm to be played, millions have died in concentration camps, millions were murdered in cold blood by merciless people.
Dont forget thousands of people would die while resisting occupation in polish underground army
Imagine that alarm goes on after everyone in town was murdered and all you hear is *creepy doll music* while slowly dieing
I thought you said merchless people 💀
Cinnamon did you know that it wasn’t really cold blood as the germans had to replace their “executioners” every other day, this was because the germans had hearts to so they got depressed from killing people just the same as anyone would
Sounds like someone slowly being tortured music
When i heard this alarm i rushed to my polish grandpa and showed it to him and he cryed because of the terror he saw back 1939 and he telled everything he saw and what he felt. It was horrible. And that it was in the radio and he listened to the Last massage with his family. 💔💔
It’s not an alarm so you’re lying.
@@thecasualcreator9396so most of these comments are lying? 🤔
@@rorybear3332 Yes
It was the Polish radio jingle.
this is so calm yet it sends you shivers down your spine, imagine coming home from school, watching tv, and hearing this 😭
The alarm says : “Hello, hello, can you hear us? Today, German troops entered Warsaw. Good luck to all of our brothers fighting in hell. Poland is not yet lost! *Polish Anthem plays*”
It does sound like it!
That’s actually a real speech when Germany invaded poland
this is not hell,the name of the city is hel
Long live Poland!
@shadowballcontact I was gonna say that :/
Imagine being a German soldier an as you’re walking through a field towards Warsaw you hear this.
Why did the Hitler kill himself by that sound
@@hijk762 it was to scare the Germans away
I would turn the heck around
imagine you're a german soldier and you see a bunch of dead polish soldiers, elders, children, women, etc
@@carlsacel7222 you go into one of the homes and their standing is a dead man with its eyes carved out an hanged on the ceiling as the tv plays this
Imagine that this creepy sound Is the last thing what you'll hear...
“Hello, hello? Can you hear us? This is our last message. Today, German troops have entered Warsaw. We send brotherly regards to all polish troops fighting in the Hel peninsula, and all those fighting wherever they are. Poland is not yet lost! Long live Poland!” national anthem plays
This reminds me of everywhere at the end of time, that's mainly what makes this terrifying for me
Oh shit your right
I think this is 100 times scarier
This could be a end-of stage 2 music
when ⟟ first heard this, that was the first thing ⟟ thought of
Exactly
100/10
BY FAR THE SCARIEST ALARM I’VE EVER HEARD AND YOU CAN’T CHANGE MY MIND
It actually isn't a EAS Alarm - it's a jingle, it sounded even creepier, but due to 30s technology, it doesn't sound as normal due to being warped. It was played on a piano
9999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999999/10*
norway
I can change your mind.Watch the ethiopian eas alarm 1943 and 1991.
hear indonesia EAS alarm from 1950
I had family who woke up hearing this on that fateful day...
My great great grandpa told me he was stuck under his bed when he heard this. He was hiding from the bombs and explosions and, aside from the actual explosions and the sound of screaming, this was all he heard.
Chilling is an understatement-
30th November 2022 - 1 million views! Congratulations!!!
Imagine waking up at 6 am turning on your radio and hearing the alarm .you are scared because you don't know what's happening.The reporter tells that Germany bombed nearby villages and tells that polish soldiers will fight for their country until they win.You and your family are praying so that the enemy soldiers will lose
YOU ACCIDENTLY PRMOTED A FAKE WEBSITE
@a random channel thing Yes
@@CrudeBattler2914 i didn't even notice
hitler did lose, but he has killed a lot of the jewish population globally and has captured most of Poland, only bodies and large cities remained directly after the war.
Not to rain on your parade but this sound is not a EAS it was a jingle used by a radio tower called Warsaw 1. However, this jingle was played right before when announcing incoming Germen soldiers.
imagine hearing this and then looking outside and seeing a german tank roll through your street
:(
Yes screams the perfect sound to announce the end of your days
There’s something oddly comforting about this sound..
this feels so calming but also sad/melancholic
As a polish person, I think this is the Scariest alarm ever.
I agree
As a Swedish person, I don’t get why your nationality matters
@@thecasualcreator9396 As a costa rican person, Poland is important because the WW2, that was the last thing as the polish persons hear when URSS and German attack poland
As an American I agree
At this point if I heard that I would scream and just not want to live. This gives me the chills
It sounded for the first and only time when Germany invaded Poland for the start of WW2 and sounded that alarm along with a speech and the anthem of Poland as a farewell symbol.
nope, it was the radio jingle at the time, introduced in 1935. the reason people think it's creepy or eerie is because 30s radio equipment wasn't all that high quality
If I hear this in the middle if the night ,I would immediately think that the dead has awaken and that I should expect hearing screams.
Yeah me too I will get scared.
I’m polish and I remember my grandpas grandma telling me about the World War Two, she died when I was 3 years old. And I remember she told me this was playing for hours, 7 of her siblings died and the only one who survived was her and her sister.
yea same
@@TON-mr6qk HOL UP
Was she your great-great grandmother?
@@TON-mr6qk AYYO??
@@TON-mr6qk stop the cap
I would fall asleep to this, it’s comforting.
I gotta say. I can imagine something from a movie or so...
This is scary, it gives a really sad sense, it is sentimental, kinda tells you "there's nothing left to do, it's pointless". Sad, haunting yet so weirdly calming. I can't actually describe this with words, it is a feeling.
I showed to to my great grandmother and she was very traumatised. She told me the history of the alarm. She told me what it wasike and it was one of the most emotional things I ever heard. It breaks my heart to see people joking in the comments about this stuff.
Your right! People shouldn’t joke around dark topics like this.
Do you know where I can hear the rest of this?
@@hithere980 you know what dark humor is?
@@Flourre Yeah well you at least have to respect the 5 MILLION polish citizens who died in WWII and not make fun of the sound, which was the last thing many people heard. I'm not trying to fight you in the comments or smthn like that, just trynna make a point
@James But this alarm was used to alert the people of poland that the germans were invading.
This isn't just creepy, it's sad, it's grief
this gives me chills down my spine.
Just imagine starting to hear this sound while seeing a large army, greyish colored tanks and a good number of planes on the horizon...
Imagine having a Nightmare about Nazi zombies accompanied with that sound 😰😰😭😭
Imagine you live in Warsaw on the early hours of September 1, 1939. You're in your apartment, making breakfast and then all of a sudden, you hear this siren. You're confused because you don't know what's going but then suddenly, the radio in your house suddenly announces that the Germans are bombing your country. As you listen to the broadcast, you suddenly hear the sounds of bombs exploding and people screaming. You look out the window to see buildings now on fire and collapsing into rubble as people are running for their lives. You then look up as German bombers keep flying over the city and dropping bombs.
Now you are panicking as you quickly run to your bedroom and hide under the bed as you continue to hear the sirens and the bombings going on. You begin to pray that your home country defeats the Germans and all will be well soon. However, you don't know what your country will experience in the next six years.
EXACTLY! I wish many more people could put themselves into others shoes like this. Some people just can't for different reasons, but most people can if they care enough. But people are also too scared to think too much. It's a privilege to be able to "shut" off specific thoughts and memories. My thoughts goes out to everyone who had to experience it, survivor or not.
It still hits close to home for me, even though I never had any relative who got caught up in it personally. Sweden mostly took refugees and sent some soldiers here and there. I'm autistic and they did try to erase us too. Hans Asperger wanted to only keep the children he assumed were the smartest and the rest were left to die of starvation and poison injections after he was done studying. A three year old died after ten days of suffering. Am Spiegelgrund is the place where this happened and yeah.. no wonder many people don't want their condition to be called Asperger's anymore. So some old assumptions about autism, are in fact nazi propaganda if you think about it... People who otherwise hate nazism are still believing some of that shit still! I'm speechless...
1.germans didnt have jets at that time
2. This is a radio jingle and it was only played once before starting a broadcast.
Germany later: *Insert Germany EAS alarm, the one that sounds like Megalovania xD*
It was 5:00 am so
Thanks for giving me nightmares 😁🙏
Imagine being alone in a room and you hear this sound getting louder and louder in the distance
Terrifying
Nope, this is sad because you don't know how many Polish are died when Germany troops arrived at Poland
I know how many people died. You're acting like no one cares
I've been looking for this for 7 years
Imagine at 3 at night ur just vibin watching some videos and u are about to sleep and when u get into the bed this things starts playing outside... honestly i would shit myself
This calmly gives off “it’s the end, you can’t do anything about it” vibes
More scary then the one they have today
The one they have today isn’t supposed to be scary it’s supposed to trigger your fight or flight response but no one would ever want to fight a tsunami
the one today sounds like a hearing test
Can I get a link?
@@Naiobia sure
heres the new one th-cam.com/video/6ap5MeNRkw4/w-d-xo.html
This simple yet solemn jingle is made even more terrifying upon knowing the context
I hope the fallen rest well
I can imagine being in an abandoned polish city that had been bombed to hell and only hearing this in the distance on repeat for years.
i can imagine a abondend world that has been destroyed and stained blood red then hearing this in the distance
1000000/10 JEUSUS CHIRST
Agreed with you
It's not the alarm, it was like a signal when Germany started bombing poland.
Well,today this alarm ringed again....
Imagine going on vacation with your family to Poland. You fly there, stay at a hotel there, but don't know that much about it. 3 A.M. You hear this, jolt awake in a cold sweat, you look around a dark room. Your family is asleep still, terrified by the noise you try and find what it it's coming from, so you leave your room to the hallway, separating yourself from your family. You open the front door to try and find where the noise is coming from. You gaze upon the Beauty of night, a scene glazed in black. You hear screams, and find people running away. You try to get their attention , but they either ignore you and run away, or yell at you "Biegnij po swoje życie! Koniec się zbliża!" Then you fall to the ground, all sound is muffled... The only thing you hear now is this video and the screams of the innocent. Then all becomes silent... as death consumes all.
Whats the polish quote means?
@@joaopedrobender5177 Run for your life! The end is near!
When i first moved to Poland (2 years ago) i rented a small flat,and on the third night i was chilling in bed when i heard this sound i was terrified bc i knew it was the alarm i immediately went into the living room to look at the news when i released the cassette player was playing it i got it out and looked at it. It said “for the one i love” in cursive writing. This sent chills up my spine then grabbed my phone and called the police i told them (in polish) that there was someone in my flat. The came and found no one. In the morning i looked into the history of the town i lived in turns out the building i live in was set on fire in the forty’s and 7 people died. They were all either children or teenagers the worst thing is that the second oldest (i forgot there name) lived in my flat. Fast forward to now this video popped up on my recommended and reminded me of what ever happened that night.just so you know i still have the cassette in a glass cabinet with old war thing i found around the area.
What if the ghost of whoever lived in that flat put it on...
@@pastelhufflepuff8250 ghosts don't exist
when you die you're just dead
I'm commenting on one of the most disturbing sounds I've heard but can you possibly make a video showing the tape? I'm only curious on the sound because I've looked all through the internet and I've never found many videos showing origins of the sound. If you can't show the tape that's fine but I just want to see what it's like.
....
I was there too i was 4 years old back then.... i would say mommy please take me home i dont feel comfortable....
I like this- it gives of the right amount of creepyness to feel nostalgic
Very old people in poland will have great nostalgia from this song.
@@klausjack8731 yep.
@@DreDeeBee-Shorts it’s a eas for air raid how is that nostalgic 10 yearold?
@@nflhighlights3215 I'm not ten. It kind feel like something i have heard before.
@@DreDeeBee-Shorts no you didnt
I have to admit this is very calming
The worst ice cream truck I've ever heard. 8987/10
This is sad, scary, and calming all at the same time
Yes
I agree
This is unsettling.
And just to know that this is the last thing some people heard before their untimely death is even more frightening to think about.
This is terrifying but oddly calming
Imagine fricking 3 am in midnight living in an empty city or village having windows open all the lights out and then randomly hearing this😧
“Mommy, can we go to the ice cream truck?”
“There is already an ice cream truck at home.”
The ice cream truck from home:
disturbing
@@geibrielm indeed
I wouldn't be joking about stuff like that. This video is of serious topic and a deeper meaning behind it. People died in the war and it is most definitely not something to joke about.
@@aesthetikmusik2295 dude,shut up,dont gatekeep humour behind a goddamn polish eas alarm because ww2,just let people make jokes
@@aesthetikmusik2295 this is actually a jingle from 1939 radio, it’s not specifically from WW2
Even though this was purely made to warn people about the war, It just sounds like a Jack-in-a-Box.
From the boiler room of hell
Jack in a box but it's Hans in a Panzer
Someone making a horror game should totally include this sound
Imagine your in an extremely horror movie and hearing this, THIS sound will predict your death in an abandoned hospital hallway
This is so calm and soothing but also unsettling and disturbing. It gives off an eerie feeling and it sends shivers down my spine. The music is creepy but a weirdly calming feeling to show it will all be over soon and the end is near. This song is the perfect song for death, this is the most chilling and most disturbing thing I have ever heard. 😳
this sounds like a creepy music box from the 1920’s that was passed on from generation to generation lol
My grandma was Polish/Lithuanian and her family long ago were forced out of their homes around this time period by the USSR. Hearing this saddens me, yet comforts me in some way..
Imagine being in September 1st, 1939
Living in Poland and hearing this
Your in the living room, your family hears the radio about an invasion from Germany and Russia
Germany and russia didnt invade at the same time
@@loader2755 yes I know
@@texasred9905 ok swag
@@texasred9905 ussr*
Мы хотя бы не устраивали такие зверства на захваченных территориях, дружище. Я рад, что мой народ победил нацистов и освободил Европу от диктатуры...
Do dziś pamiętam, kiedy mój ojciec musiał tego słuchać :(
To musiało być okropne :(( trzymaj sie
Meus sentimentos 🇧🇷🖤
Tak
Kurwa ale ci współ czuje :'(
Muj dziadek walczył o Berlin
I zabił kilku sovietuw
Czekaj co?
Congratulations for your national holiday on 11th November Poland from your friends in Germany
Ahh so nice thank you 💖
you are not responsible for your past, just know that :D
thank you!!
Wait a minute
fun fact: this is a piano
It’s not the sound itself that’s creepy, but the stories behind it that make it so.
So... What's the story?
@@lessgo5214 it is likely the last message intro until Germany invaded Poland in 1939, the most terrifying is that has been the last thing who polish people hearded before die...
Id die listening to this before the germans could even reach me
This is honestly a vibe ngl
When you’re with other people, it’s a pretty good jam, especially since it’s kinda upbeat
POV: You are awaken by loud aircraft and screaming and there is a tank outside your window, Your mother grabs your hand and the last thing you see of the outside world is explosions and people running frantically as the Germans invade Poland. You try to grab your radio as you are being pulled away. You manage to grasp it. This song plays as you are sitting in a small, dirt room inside your house. Stomping can be heard above you, You turn the radio down several notches. The radio says that Polish army will manage to bring Germany defeat. Outside you can hear screams and cries of people being forced into cars that go to some sort of camp. You then cuddle up with your mother, father and little brother as you pray this will all be over soon.
yes i edited the comment because even though nobody said anything about the old one, i was scared it would be offensive.
I...
Gosh.
This is like my granmother and grandfather *on my mums side* they were only children when the ww2 happened. Both from Warsaw. They wouplve heard this alarm playing. They maneged too flee Auschwitz. This bog pits they were forced to dig out by the n*zis. And at the end of that day they dig the holes, all the captured people were lined up in front of these pits and shit dead falling into the pits. My grandparemts were friends in the war they met at Auschwitz. When the n*zis neared their pit they hid under dead bodies four other people shot falling ontop of them. They managed to sneak out of the pit after two days at night and board a ship to australia they came back to poland many years later around the 70's had my mum in the 80's.
Also my mums little sister was left in Warsaw at thier house. This radio alram was playing as my grandmothers mother cuddled my grandmothers little sister in her arms. Her little sister holding tightly to their mum. Her mum using the song to lul her to sleep. My grandmothers little sister basically got luled to sleep right before they died. As my grandmothers little sister fell asleep tears pouring down her mothers face. The mum could jear n*zi souldiers approaching in a tank. She luled my grandmothers.little sister to sleep so she could die peacefully not knowing thier house got blown up by a tank. The song is such a sweet yet horryfiyng song. It brings me mixed emotions.
@@aesthetikmusik2295 Thats- Thats horrible. Im sorry to hear that...
Sounds more like a childhood memory than an EAS.
That's actually calming
whenever i listen to this i tear up a bit, dont know why
Imagine how much more scary the silence would be after you heard this, now that’s some nightmare fuel for the ages
This sounds too calm for comfort
This actually played at 4:45 AM on September 1st 1939...
Even without the internet or most modern tech, it's a bit unsettling to hear this, even at night, this scared people back in 1939 that had a radio with them (TVs were still brand new and expensive, with not much technology going on in the 1930s and 1940s)
“Bro come on, we don’t live in a weird core.. or does our soul does?”
God, I watched this at night and It gave me the chills.
Two things what it sounds like;
1. An ice cream truck from heck.
2. An Anti Piracy Screen.
way too scary for anti piracy.. its a war alarm
Actually, it's the WW2 alarm
Copied comment?