Forgotten Holocaust - A Journey to Transnistria | (Documentary)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 28 ส.ค. 2024
  • Forgotten Holocaust - A Journey to Transnistria
    Original: „Vergessener Holocaust - Eine Reise nach Transnistrien“ (Documentary, DE/UA/MD 2020, 35 min., German, Russian/Ukrainian with German subtitles).
    Director: Resa Asarschahab, Screenplay: Markus Winkler, Kristina Forbat. With Felix Zuckermann, Oleksii Yakoviichuk, Mykola Kuschnir, Klara Katz et al.
    The film shows the tragic fate of Czernowitz citizen Rosa Zuckermann (1908-2002), who was deported to Transnistria in the autumn of 1941 together with her parents, her husband and her small child. Rosa was the only one from the entire family who survived. The story of this family resembles the experiences of many Jewish families from Czernowitz. That is why it is so meaningful and important to make it known. Felix Zuckermann, Rosa's son, took part in the movie. For him it was the first trip into the terrible past, searching for traces and answers to questions he had not dared to ask his mother while she was still alive. Students from Ukraine and the Republic of Moldova, who participated in making the documentary, were able to learn more about the Holocaust in Transnistria. Together with Felix Zuckermann and eyewitnesses from Jewish communities they discussed issues related to the culture of remembrance in their countries.
    The film was shot in the autumn of 2019 in the framework of a German-Ukrainian-Moldavian educational project. The project was initiated by the Institute for German Culture and History of Southeastern Europe at Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München (www.ikgs.de) and supported by the German Federal Foreign Office.
    #CivilSocietyCooperation
    Information on the project: ikgs.de/schwer...

ความคิดเห็น • 44

  • @rosah.901
    @rosah.901 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Great documentary. Rosa, her little son and all her family are remembered

  • @karinf4878
    @karinf4878 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Very moving. I appreciated the participation of the old and the youth.

  • @tango6nf477
    @tango6nf477 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +6

    "The older I get the more I want to ask my Mother", wow how I sympathize with that. I am getting old now and my parents have gone, one of my greatest regrets is that I didn't value the past and so learned nothing about it. Now I am interested its too late. I implore you all not to make this mistake, you will regret it.

  • @brendalandes1813
    @brendalandes1813 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    I knew one survivor from this camp. She painted amazing pictures which expressed her suffering.

    • @ssherrierable
      @ssherrierable ปีที่แล้ว

      No you didn’t know her but you liars are all over TH-cam comments, I can’t scroll a video without someone knowing someone or being there blah blah blah… k dude 😂😂😂

    • @aimeeredacted9439
      @aimeeredacted9439 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@ssherrierable you do know that its highly possible, right? there were many people in those camps.

  • @semsemeini7905
    @semsemeini7905 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +15

    My grandfather was from Czernowitz. He left in 1914 to Vienna when it was Austria because he was drafted in the Austrian Army. My grandmother's family were from Botosani; about 50 miles away. They were ordered to get ready to be deported to Transistria. To get walking shoes and a rumpsack. Miraculously President Antonescu cancelled the deportation order at the last minute; a day before. The reason was that he realised that Germany would lose the war; it was at the time of Stalingrad. The Chief Rabbi of Romania in Bucharest warned him that if Germany lost the war he risked being tried as a war criminal. It was his Government that was responsible. Between 1940 and 1941 the Russians occupied Czernowitz. Then the Romanians came back and accused the Jews of collaborating with the Russians. It was an excuse to kill them. 300,000 Romanian Jews were murdered by Romania and Germany. Fascinating to see where they were taken exactly.

  • @alfredroyal3473
    @alfredroyal3473 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    The happenings in Romania, the evil, the massacres, the tortures were some of the worst during the holocaust. Not well known, you should read about it, heartbreaking.

  • @madoleine769
    @madoleine769 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Thank you for this documentary

  • @oldguysdoingstuff6216
    @oldguysdoingstuff6216 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +9

    Resist tyrants. Guard your freedom and humanity. Never allow political allies or opponents to reduce your humanity. Study history.

  • @priestessthea
    @priestessthea ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Remarkable, invaluable documentary. Thank you so very much to everyone involved. 🙏

    • @itseamuscallan7004
      @itseamuscallan7004 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Canadas SHAME ..Canada facillitates the laundering of Blood Money
      Hochtief AG of Essen Germany . This Company created its start up Capital operating eleven slave labour Death Camps for the Nazis. They sucessfully safeguarded their Blood money after WW2 and subsequiently funded corporate criminality in South Africa / Greece / Australia . Notwithstanding , Hochtief AG entered Canada and took control of one of Canadas largest Construction companies ( Clark Builders ofEdmonton ) Hochtief AG is now funded by Canadian taxpayers through Federal and Provincial GVMNT Contracts

  • @ecuadorexpat8558
    @ecuadorexpat8558 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

    Just unbelievable cruelties of man against man 😢😢😢

  • @user-yz8pw9dv2n
    @user-yz8pw9dv2n 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It is long overdue that Romania truly repented over it'd horrendous bestial crimes in The Holocaust.Part of this should be a Holocaust museum in Bucharest,well visited by all of Romania,as well as others such as being in the places tourists visit.

  • @Mike-jw4xh
    @Mike-jw4xh 4 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Why in the world did normal neighbors turn on their fellow citizens? How twisted and ignorant they must have been to fall for this!

  • @damonmelendez856
    @damonmelendez856 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Why were they hated so much?

    • @fintonmainz7845
      @fintonmainz7845 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      Only by people like you.

    • @aimeeredacted9439
      @aimeeredacted9439 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      the nazis believed that jewish people were going to destroy the white race and also that they were responsable of everything that happened to germany. especially the loss that germany had suffered in WW1.

    • @oldguysdoingstuff6216
      @oldguysdoingstuff6216 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +4

      They were hated because they were different. Not being flippant. Someone could list reasons sited at the time I am sure. But they were different and very identifiable. Humans don't seem to need more to hate.
      Different in religion, language sometimes, dress. Not inferior, just different.

    • @damonmelendez856
      @damonmelendez856 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      @@fintonmainz7845 what’s that supposed to mean?? Very cryptic, speak your mind clearly

    • @user-yz8pw9dv2n
      @user-yz8pw9dv2n 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Damon we jews were and are still hated because read the bible God created our people Israel and we are the surviving remnant we who are from the tribe of Yehuda /Judaism.Also were and are hated due to the fanatical racist anti jewish lies spewed out for two thousand years from European main church denominations that inspired Europeans to soak the soil of Europe for two thousand years with the blood of millions of innocent jews of all ages,men women and children.And to destroy all jewish places cemeteries and Synagogues ect.This paved the way for hitler the nazis and The Holocaust.

  • @gudduukraine270
    @gudduukraine270 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Черновцы очень красивые город. Час езди начинается уже карпатский горны цеп

  • @david_W5QDF
    @david_W5QDF 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I need it in English I cannot see well enough to read text fast enough

  • @6Haunted-Days
    @6Haunted-Days 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I’m confused. How did her dad husband and kid die? Of a sickness from the constant brutal traveling? It doesn’t say….they all died close together so I assume so?

  • @6Haunted-Days
    @6Haunted-Days 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    And I thought it was about going to a actual concentration camp….so it was only a ghetto? I’m sure they didn’t have it much better than a camp…..I wasn’t expecting that tho! So she just lived there for 3yrs then went home….weird….why bring them there in the 1st place….makes no sense. I thought they led them to camps to kill them….. I have so many questions…..

    • @rosesprog1722
      @rosesprog1722 10 หลายเดือนก่อน

      I used to have many questions too, now I have doubts. What they always forget to mention is that the ghetto, is a Jewish invention, not a Nazi punishment. How else can they feel safe among themselves, practice their rituals hidden behind high walls and avoid getting thrown out... AGAIN!
      They have become experts at showing images of life of that period, nothing out of the ordinary and put the most horrific, monstrous and genocidal story line on top of it, it is so obvious and yet, no one seems to notice or care, sad to see.
      So, you want to see how it was inside a camp? Impossible, the only films available to us from inside the camps are part of the series with the famous bulldozer sequence, they all come from the same camp and the 'on location' Hollywood producer was Billy Wilder of Marylin Munroe's "Blondes Have More Fun" fame. There are rumours that Alfred Hitchcock also participated to the editing but that's unconfirmed. There are other short bits but nothing to show what life was really like and if there are such honest presentations, you and I will never even know that they exist, the fate of a nation depends on it BUT, I did get my hands on the first Soviet idea of what the liberation of Auschwitz should have looked like! This is hilarious but I only have a few minutes. When the Red Army open the door, hundreds of happy and healthy inmates come out, they all kiss each other, dance, sing and the world is a beautiful place!!! Quite unbelievable. It probably didn't take long before they were told to 'correct' their scenario...

  • @danlivni2097
    @danlivni2097 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Romania took part of the invasion of Russia with the Nazis in 1941. Big mistake.

    • @rosesprog1722
      @rosesprog1722 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      Okay, I got carried away a little writing this, I didn't want to forget anything... I failed! (3 parts)
      On 22 June 1944, the Red Army launched Operation Bagration and in the ensuing battle over the next 12 days destroyed German Army Group Center, taking out 21 divisions totaling about 300,000 men. The destruction of Army Group Center created a huge gaping hole in the German lines on the Eastern Front, and led to rapid Soviet advances. On 20 August 1944, the Red Army launched a major offensive into the Balkans and invaded Romania, marking the end of Romanian oil supplies to Germany.
      Although the German 8th and 6th Armies had lost 380,000 men in the unsuccessful attempt to save Romania, the Romania Army, whose morale had been declining for some time, finally collapsed and on 23 August 1944, King Michael dismissed his pro-German allies, signed an armistice with the Soviets and declared war on Hungary and Germany. King Michael hoped that having Romania switch sides might save her from a Soviet invasion.
      On 2 September 1944, Bulgaria renounced her alliance with the Reich and declared her neutrality. On 5 September, the Soviets declared war on Bulgaria, crossed the Danube and invaded Bulgaria, all in the same day. The Bulgarians then promptly surrendered, officially switched sides and declared war on Germany. Continued...

    • @rosesprog1722
      @rosesprog1722 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      Like King Michael before him, Admiral Horthy, Regent of Hungary hoped that signing an armistice now might save Hungary from a communist invasion, and he also hoped he would keep the part of Transylvania that Hungary had received under the Second Vienna Award of 1940. So on 24 September, he opened secret talks with the Soviet leader, claiming that he had been misinformed about Soviet intentions at the beginning of the war but that he now realized how wrong he had been about Stalin's peaceful commitment towards not only Europe but the world as a whole... On 6 October 1944, the Battle of Debrecen began as the Red Army broke out onto the Hungarian plain.
      Churchill realizing how Stalin was slowly but unequivacally swallowing huge sections of territorial Europe decided to propose an entente to Stalin, hoping to stop the Soviets whose advance seemed to gain strenght and momentum the closer it came to Western Europe. So, in secret meetings during the Fourth Moscow Conference of October 1944, him and Stalin divided Europe in Soviet and British zones of influence, and individual countries in shared percentages. US ambassador in Moscow, Averell Harriman, was supposed to represent Roosevelt in these meetings but was somehow kept out of the loop by Churchil who feared that Roosevelt might disagree with his plans for a British-Soviet separation of Europe, and ask for a share in all British gains. Continued...

    • @rosesprog1722
      @rosesprog1722 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      According to Churchill's account, Churchill first suggested that the Soviet Union should have 90 percent influence in Romania and 75 percent in Bulgaria; the UK should have 90 percent in Greece; and they should have 50 percent each in Hungary and Yugoslavia. Churchill wrote the details on a piece of paper which he pushed across to Stalin, who ticked it off and passed it back to Churchill who mindlessly put it in a pocket and forgot about such an insignificant piece of evidence showing how wars are really fought... WHICH makes us the luckiest bastards the world has ever seen, that vital slice of our history is now in glorious display for all to see on Wikipedia under 'Percentages agreement'. Thanks Stalin... I MEAN Sir.
      In the end, Churchill tried to convince Franklin Roosevelt that the Anglo-Soviet arrangement applied only to war conditions and was not an attempt to carve up the Balkans. Roosevelt was unimpressed, of course and on 11 June responded that the result would be "a division of the Balkan region into spheres of influence, despite the declared intention to limit the arrangement to military matters." Churchill, a bit at a loss then urged the President to consent for the arrangement to be given a three-month trial and on the 13th Roosevelt who by that time was rather weak gave way… This turned out to be a decision of unimagineable consequences for millions of people and for the Romanians, reduced the importance of their invasion of Soviet Russia, secret geopolitical considerations being the almost only factor influencing the course of all wars, and the decisions made behind very, very closed doors.

  • @oldmacdreadapexriddims1460
    @oldmacdreadapexriddims1460 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

    Putin did not lie about Ukraine's past and how complicit they were in the destruction of the Jews. This must never be forgotten amongst today's propaganda against Russia.
    I pray for Peace .

    • @burntearth85
      @burntearth85 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +3

      Ukraine were the victims then too. Their entire history has been one tragic genocide after another

    • @ashleyleonard8148
      @ashleyleonard8148 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

      ​@@burntearth85they very resentful. And are at their own fault. They massacred Russians in the donbass from 2014-2016. Also, watch the movie "Hatred/Wolyn" about the Volyhnia genocide of poles BY the Ukranian UPA/OUN militia. They killed women, children, babies. With their bare hands! Their own polish wives and mothers, even. Even killed their own half polish children. That is indefensible.

  • @vioricacoroama7494
    @vioricacoroama7494 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Sfisietor!!!

  • @generalbooger9146
    @generalbooger9146 11 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    This lost me at transgendered

    • @aimeeredacted9439
      @aimeeredacted9439 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      he isnt, tho??

    • @oldguysdoingstuff6216
      @oldguysdoingstuff6216 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      They lost me at Transnistria. Yes, I'm kidding.

    • @rosesprog1722
      @rosesprog1722 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I"m french Canadian, slightly over 60 so my father is now over 80 and he was the third of five boys. When he was born my grandma, who also wanted a girl, dressed him up like a girl and called him 'little girl' until he was three years old. When I found out about that I was horrified and angry but my mom told me to calm down, that it was very common back then and that no one saw anything wrong with it. I guess because today something like that could never happen, better forget about it than admit it, and that's how our history books are written.