Hey! Had to reupload the video due to some small copyright restrictions, but its back! Let me also address some comments: “The title is clickbait" - Please watch to the end of the video to understand what I meant, my apologies I should've made it more clear. "its Bangladesh not East Pakistan" - in 1970, Pakistan had two parts: west and east. In 1971, Bangladesh was born. East Pakistan was in this videos time frame. Im sorry I cannot pronounce nuclear 😭😭😭😭 I will try harder to fix mistakes and do better research in future videos so if i got anything else wrong I sincerely apologize I had no intentions of misinformation.. :) I apologize for any inaccuracies in the history or geography, I will try much MUCH harder in my next video to make it all accurate.
The fear of space video was one of the best ones about the subject I have seen. I hope you keep making interesting videos like it. Keep up the good work.
Grew up in South Florida, lived through 20+ hurricanes. You never really get used to the bubble of peace in the eye of the storm. It’s the eeriest silence imaginable, knowing the second half is coming.
@@dawanggideonmatthews.5771 I experienced Ondoy when I was young. I remember chilling there in the middle of the storm while people around me were trying to fix the roof and securing the windows. They told me we're in the eye of the storm and thought that's normal. Our house is concrete and we live in an apartment. But back then I realized now it was scary and unforgettable, especially with how many died. Including that infamous video from ABS-CBN about the family being washed away in the Marikina river.
I’ve heard of Stanislov Petrov, the Soviet officer who single-handedly saved the world from nuclear war, but I did not know about the people’s resistance in Bangladesh, who not only freed themselves from a dictatorship, but also equally saved the world from nuclear war. Thanks for making their more heroism more known.
My father was caught in this when he was 12! Him, his sisters survived by climbing a tree to survive from the Tsunami ! But my grandfather & grandmother died. My father and aunts moved to other parts of Bangladesh later on. The way they described this it was scary to listen to! My father is no more now! Thanks for covering this!
This video was absolutely gut wrenching for almost the entire time. To think how the people of East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, had to suffer for simply existing. Great video, thank you for taking the time to make it.
At present day Pakistan is poor because Pakistan lost it's wealth source East Pakistan, Most of things was produced in Bangladesh (then East Pak) and Pak people took away all the profits. After independence they lost their source of wealth and became poor.
Just how disgusting some humans with power can really be. I can't even imagine the feeling of surviving the cyclone, losing your family, civil war, annihilation and threat of nuclear war all at the freaking same time. Just pure evil.
Don't be dense guys. We know people didn't cause the cyclone, but people prevented countless lives from being saved by being filled with greet and hatred. Sure, lack of preparation and miscommunication are also greatly at fault, but India could've easily warned Bangladesh and choice not to because of the greet and hatred of war. 🤦
My father is one of the survivors! His explanation of this cyclone is exactly matched with your given details. Thank you for this documentary. ❤ My father was holding the top of a coconut tree. At the end of the night when the water drained off so fast into the bay of bengal, the coconut tree broke from the middle. Later that morning my father found hanging the top of a mango tree unconscious and naked! Alhamdulillah he was alive! 🇧🇩
Okay, actually I'm from middle Assam, India . Here also our grandpa told us that a severe cyclonic storm hitted in this region in between 1970 or 1972 almost all houses , shelters were levelled left behind debris only. I'm not sure it was the same 1970's one or else but it was devastating as well. During those days very often severe cyclone 🌀 " kal baishaki " hitted this zone but now a days in 20th century intensity of these tropical cyclone get reduced may be due to the other climatic factors.
I'm a 16 year old from Bangladesh. My mother used to tell me stories about Cyclone Sidr of 2007 (she was pregnant with me that time). At that time she was pretty far from the coastal areas, yet felt the strength of this storm
Nobody talks about the terrifying sound a storm like that makes. It's like a jet engine whistle that sounds almost slow. Or it would if your eyes couldn't see nature actively trying to kill you. I'm from the Caribbean and lemme tell you, you don't get used to hurricanes ever.
From the Carolina’s here not nearly as bad as the Caribbean but I know the feeling. I’m in my 30s now and still remember the sounds from when every major hurricane that hit Carolina you feel like you’re gonna die every time there is no getting used to it.
@@noblinkreal Don't really understand getting used to hurricanes considering that they vary as with every other natural disaster. Like, what, you get used to a cat 1 hurricane, you think every other hurricane is going to be the same as that one?
My paternal family used to live in Patuakhali, the closest region to the the Bay of Bengal in Barisal Division. My father and my Grandpa was the only survivors of their family in this cyclone. My father lost 6 elder brothers & 2 elder sisters. All of them were gone in that cyclone. My father and Grandpa climbed up on a tree. My father said that the raindrops felt like bullets. Saddest thing is, bodies of the dead relatives were never found at all. I wish I had all relatives alive today. My life would have been different, so would for my father too. That Goddamn cyclone didn’t just change the view of landscape, it changed the lives of the living people.
I can't imagine how terrifying it would be trying to save your family following your jump and then receiving not a single word, not a single hint, glance or whatnot to simply know if they're okay. Like they just disappeared in a split second, gone.
It will happen in our lifetime… whether it be an asteroid, super volcanic eruption, earth crustal displacement, a storm of epic proportions… it will happen
@@JustarLad Well in the case of the USSR it’s actually understandable. After all the US showed that they clearly were insane enough to use nukes and not only that, but using them against civilians. The only reaction to that is to build enough nukes that even the maniacs who actually used them would be afraid of doing it again.
@@The_real_Arovorwhile using the nukes was completely insane, japan were also incredibly stupid launching an attack on pearl harbor for no real good reason, even the n@zis were pissed at japan for launching the attack in the first place knowing it would aggravate america
I live in the philipines, so i can say there many people died too during tropical storm called "yolanda" It was strong storm that completely Reached the country itself, stay safe for everyone who experienced storms
Too much exaggeration man, we didn't feel Yolanda up north. I'm not saying Yolanda isn't strong, it is very strong. What really doomed a lot of people in Visayas wasn't rain or smth. It was the storm surge. It didn't help nobody know what the heck does STORM SURGE means and didn't do any precautionary measures about it. It's just tragic when a lot of those deaths could've been prevented.
@@FrankToastyIt's not exaggeration . Data shows Haiyan's 10 minutes sustained highest winds is 230 km/hr and 1 minute sustained highest wind is 315 km/hr while cyclone bhola 3 minutes sustained highest wind is 185km/hr and 1 minute sustained highest winds is 240 km/hr. You may have a wrong conception of our country but Philippines is huge. Of all the typhoons that passed we didn't feel much of those winds here in South.
the saddest thing is that heavy rain and (most recently) a storm is happening right now in the brazilian state of rio grande do sul. people are losing everything, their homes, their families, their life. and the water doesn’t stop rising. there are so many ways to donate, please look into it! they are in dire need of help immediately. my whole family is from there. it’s an insane tragedy, the most violent natural disaster ever in the history of the state
One correction. Indian government did tell pakistan about the storm. Pakistan authority did nothing because the storm was going to hit east pakistan( bangladesh). They were having some politiCal tension among themselves
I was never taught this stuff in school because its been forgotten in the western world but I'm glad to see youtubers have taken it into their own hands to do the research!
I would hardly consider this history, let alone history that should be taught in the west. Do you think they know about hurricane Katrina or hurricane andrew? Lol Americans who try to act like their country is inferior intellectually are so cringe
I can't imagine the horrors my grandparents witnessed back then. My grandpa on my mom's side even went to fight in the war after the cyclone. I'm so grateful to my grandparents for surviving through that hellish period in time. My parents, my little sisters, and myself wouldn't have been here if not for them. I hope my people never have to suffer like that again.
What? Why would that be horrifying? The dead bodies everywhere would be horrifying but being in the eye of a storm is more horrifying to you? It's actually a good thing, it's the calmest spot during a storm
As Bangladeshi , i was trying to find information about this topic for my project but couldn't find much but this video is great and goes in detail. Thanks for covering this topic.
I'm from Bangladesh (East Pakistan of that time) This stoem was so devastating, i studied about this as a student, even my dad said that it was the deadliest in our country's history.
As an american who was born after this happened. I am SO SORRY for what OUR DESPICABLE government did and stood by a genocidal tyrant. I actually started crying watching this video. My heart hurts for you all. I can only pray that Jesus blesses your home-country.
@livingwordwitness1413 it's honestly alr , but I'm completely sure that our country will be fine for over a few hundred years . No cool things happen anymore , weird ahh rain and its so damn hot . But then in winter it's so cold but NO SNOW ...... crying for snow
hey bro just wanted to let you know these recent documentary videos are fantastic and i have been binging them no matter the topic. id love to see some longer form documentaries, and your format of creating videos is fresh and very interesting. i specifically loved the K2 summit video and the video on the bhola hurricane. please keep making videos like this, and keep up the good work. i need more to binge!
Thank you so much for your kind donation! I will continue making videos, I love this style of documentary content and I don’t intend on stopping anytime soon :) glad you enjoy my videos it really makes me happy to see people binge watch them :) thanks! I’ll keep it up :)
Im Pakistani and i had no clue of this level of cyclone, we have never been taught or anything about this, this further shows me how how bad tensions were between east and west pakistan, this makes me sympathetic towards the people of Bangladesh, Peace ✌️
@@Antiwesternthug They raped your mothers and sisters, and you call them brothes now. It was India who answered your call and helped you gain independence.
@@Antiwesternthugwell I mean even the people in Central Pakistan voted to get rid of that guy... so it sounds like to me that it was more that one dictator vs both sides of the country
This is so scary. I lived through a major, largely localised storm in France in 2020. A quarter of the village was wiped out by a flood but in the higher parts of the village (incl. where I was staying), there was no damage. It's frightening how fine lines can make such a difference. I slept through the flood just thinking it was heavy rain and yet it the house I was in was located slightly lower, it would've been washed away. RIP to all those who did pass away in the French storm, the East Pakistan storm and in all storms and floods throughout history.
They are different, but he did a good job. This employs mostly emotional imagery and fear. A professional documentary just uses factual info, more breaks, and wider variety of sources.
Nah imagine how scary this was.. imagine rough waters almost as tall as coconut trees. It’s pitch dark, you don’t hear your entire family anymore and they’re most likely dead and holding on to that tree for a night.
am i tripping or did i watch this video earlier today edit: i forgot that i made this comment and im coming back to rewatch this video two months later ALSO these replies are hilarious LOL
The Bhola Cyclone makes our Galveston 1900 Storm with an estimated 12,000 fatalities look like just a little bit of rain. I despise how political tensions and differences can just get in the way of hundreds of thousands of people's lives like that and its genuinely sickening how they intentionally left the Bangladeshi people for dead
Despite the fact that people do not talk about the Bhopal disaster even in Bangladesh 🇧🇩, I am thankful for you covering it. In the early stages of Bangladesh/East Pakistan, we faced numerous bad omens from natural disasters, genocidal wars, and then a famine in 1974, which killed over 1.5 million Bangladeshis. Alhamdulillah, we come a long way Just Subscribed to your channel and Having a blast watching your videos.
@@MrSheponKazah You are. I have seen so many Bangali interviews and comments and so many desperate Bangali men ogling over beautiful Pakistani women to marry. Do you actually think Pakistanis would give daughters to you to marry? Its such a pathetic behavior I have seen in young Bangalis
@@Deira854 i mean it depends on each person, for me just off of money and allat probably would rather move to pakistsan, but there’s ups and downs to both
Are you talking about india? If yes then let me clear, india did tell Pakistan about the storm. But pakistan authority didnt care because it was going to hit east pakistan (bangladesh). They were having some political tension among themselves
Brother when you don't have knowledge of something please don't bark east pakistan and real pakistan were having political tensions at that time and you can take information about it through internet Indian government warned them but they did nothing
I'm confused about these other replies op never said who the enemy is??? They very well could have referred to central VS east Pakistan why are y'all mad?
I was wondering why the old video was unlisted. I didn't see any major inaccuracies from a historical standpoint. Calling East Pakistan Bangladesh whenever Bangladesh wasn't independent yet is like calling the USSR Russia during ww2. It's also, not really clickbait at all. Cause the storm indirectly caused the nuclear powerhouses to be at it at another region again. This storm was very likely a breaking point between the two sides of the conflict but still very well done.
I also want to add that I'm really glad you added the story of that boy and what he went through. So many times, for so many horrific events, the casualties--the people, are seen as statistics and just numbers, but the fact you added the story made them not just numbers but real people you can emphasize with.
I feel the same way and that’s why I added it to be honest. It’s always hard to grasp the suffering people faced until you really are shown or told what happened.
A small addition/correction. India trained and equipped the Bangladeshi resistence and also deployed about 150,000-175,000 troops to the invasion of east pakistan, blitzing straight for Dhaka by both ground and airborne operation & US basically sent its fleet in to tackle the Indian Navy and its aircraft carrier, only to be dettered by the Soviet Nuclear Submarines.
I couldnt believe that India didnt warn East Pakistan! Bro, you knew that this big storm was coming? They planned from the very start to break Pakistan......
@fleetingimmersion got more bad news pal. During kargil war between india and pakistan, the us disabled the gps trackers and fed info to pakistan army to make india surrender. US has always been on Pakistan's side. That's why in current conflict india is not on their side for ukraine. And remains neutral.
@@sohininandi5742 How annoying, and it's probably not wrong to say that most Americans have no clue about this. We've always got a 'main war' (Ukraine, Afghanistan, Iraq) and then a handful of 'secret wars' (Camaroon, Libya, Mali, etc) that we just don't see in the news on a daily basis like the others. It may or may not actually be 'hidden', but it may as well be unless you google it specifically. This conflict, I feel, is probably one of those, though tbf, maybe it's logical that the Military didn't want to brag about this one to the public.
@@fleetingimmersion well man, things are weird....I mean i have known history through documentaries, books and movies, and honestly no matter what one says, America was fighting a some what "Righteous" war, I mean fighting against the Nazis and defeating an all truely evil empire/regime, understanding the value of human life and kindness.......but man something changed as a whole after that, and i feel that change is never really understood.....US after and before the year 1950 are totally different things in my opinion. Things done even for the good became bad.
7:05 These videos are bone chilling. The rain coming down so hard that it looks like severe fog. Wind so loud that you can't hear the person filming. And waves so mighty that nothing could survive.
You must just be getting started on your geography journey then! You'll learn so many amazing things and I can confirm this as someone who has loved geography for well over a year
Not just called East Pakistan, It was part of Pakistan. In 1971 it split into a separate country through indigenous military action supported by Indian Army owing to years long suppression and repression on the east pakistani people by the dominant west Pakistan political and military structure.
That’s awesome! It’s always cool to learn something new, especially when it ties into your love for geography. 🌍 The history of Bangladesh as East Pakistan is such a fascinating and complex chapter-it’s amazing how much the world has changed in just a few decades. Glad the video could add to your knowledge! What other interesting geography facts are you into?
Pakistan split from India after the Second World War. Bangladesh, which was predominantly Muslim, remained a part of Pakistan until 1971 when the war of liberation ended Pakistani rule. Today both countries coexist rather peacefully, although neither government has really fared well after 50 years. Pakistan’s tensions with India have not gotten much better and there’s still constant dispute over who has claim to Kashmir.
This video demonstrates the further need of a universal weather advisory and category system so that all people may be aware of the weather conditions that pose a threat to property and life. Amazing video!
This video made me so sad that I almost cried with that man's story. A tragedy that happened so many decades ago might feel distant to some but in a lot of places in the world is so common and happens every year. Here in Brazil the state of Rio Grande do Sul had the worst flood in the history of our country and it literally wiped cities off the map. It's so sad and it's happening right now. This made me connect with those people who lost everything in Bangladesh.
@@REZLZ1man, I remember OBS before TDS. Was crazy. Obama wears a helmet riding a bike? "BREAKING NEWS THE PRESIDENT IS GAY! And also black!" Obama uses Dijon mustard? "BREAKING NEWS THE GAY PRESIDENT IS GAY! And black don't forget!" Obama deports more illegal immigrants than any other president in history? "GAY MUSLIM black PRESIDENT OBAMA LOVES ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS, ESPECIALLY MEN!" Man, my parents had Fox News on every night and it was hilarious how EVERYTHING was breaking news. Anything Obama did. Don't forget Tan Suit-Gate!
This is a really interesting and important story to tell, but you genuinely need to work on your script. I found myself being pulled away from the content itself by awkward phrasing, constant repetition, and poor narrative construction. I’m not trying to be harsh - I just really think you would benefit from giving your scripts another pass.
Bro also used like 7 minutes more than was needed. The whole few first minutes were HERE IT COMES. IT’S VERY NEAR AND DEADLY. AND EAST PAKISTANIS DON’T KNOW ABOUT IT. IT COMES. SO NEAR
I was there as an infant child in the relative safety of a concrete building in Dhaka that night but still felt the horrendous power of that storm. I remember it like it was yesterday. This was long before Global Warming had even got started! Thank you very much for covering this event.
@@TheWanderingWiltsmando you ever wonder why we’ve been having RECORD BREAKING temperatures these past few years you DUMBO😭10 years ago it wasn’t this hot. And I’m from Texas on of the hottest states. The Average temp has risen at least 5-10 degrees in the past 10 years…
His content is VERY underrated. I've watched most of his videos and they're actually good (Also why is the creator and OST composer of Liquid Breakout here)
Now THERE is something I had not heard! That is amazing. When I was a wee lad, one of the things I remember learning was that Bangladesh was the poorest nation on earth. It is good to know that they recovered so well from their devastating birth. I am going to dive into Bangladesh history now...
bangladesh once had most doctor,lawyers,teachers during 1970 in the world when 1 night changed everything..i think it was Pakistan kill Bangladesh local farmers for no reason and blaming on farmers resulting mass killing of bangladeshi citizens.
Omg… anyone that lives near a hurricane prone area knows how devastating a full moon during landfall will be for the area… This is amazing. Heartbreaking and terrifying and tragic. And wonderfully done. New sub.
Basic education rarely covers specific world history because there's just not time, and priority is given to world events and events local to you because those actually have/had a large traceable effect on your country. University history class also specializes local and global but focuses largely on how history is recorded, preserved, investigated and unearthed to prepare historians for investigating and interpreting history. Then post graduate historians typically only focus on one era, location or even event because history as a field of study isn't that well-funded. Unfortunately if you want to learn specific history from all over the world you have to go find it yourself.
My father was 11 years old at that time. Although they didn't live in the islands but their home was very close the destructive zone. He told me that the disaster almost destroyed the whole house as the roof was flown away and a tree fell over. The weather was so bad my grandfather couldn't return from store. After the storm ended most places were flooded.There were fallen trees and parts of people's houses everywhere. The damage in the whole country was unimaginable. Main reason was lack of accurate forecast which led to people being unprepared for such a powerful cyclone. 1970-1971 was the most tragic years in history od this place. The cyclone caused the death of 300k+ people and insane amount of destruction in a country that's already too poor. Then the bloody liberation war of 1971 costed the lives more than 3M people.
It's not just the full moon that creates higher tides. They are also higher during a new moon. And when a full or new moon also coincides with the lunar perigee (when it is closest to the earth), tides are even a bit higher. The moon wasn't at perigee when this storm made landfall. The lunar perigee was on November 9th, and the lunar apogee was on November 21st, so the moon was still a bit closer than average on November 12th when the storm hit.
Thank you for covering Bangladesh's history. I was born in the uk but many of my family still is in Bangladesh its heart breaking to hear what my grandparents went through and so many millions of humans ❤
Hey man!!!! Thx for making such a knowledgeable content. As a Bangladeshi, I’m really surprised to know that a huge nuclear war was about to happen due to the political turmoil between Pakistan and Bangladesh, because we weren’t taught about this event back in school though the current educational system in my country anyways yapping about Liberation war,sheikh mujib and Awami league ( Awami league was the political party during the 1970s which the majority mass of East pakistan used to support and led the country during the war and now is the current governing political party of Bangladesh). Anyway I’ve learned something new today and good luck so that you can more this type of content in the future
I somehow knew when I started watching this would lead to two superpowers threatening nukes lol. Insane storm, crazy story.. this guys awesome for bringing this stuff to light for a bunch of people
I've seen a few people criticize your narration for the video and all i have to say is 3MILLION VIEWS . And the people who criticized are either just jealous or giving you what THEY want to hear lol 3 million people is hard to keep everyone happy , but i think i can speak for most of us and say - keep doing what your doing young buck . Great video!... and it kept me very amused when i couldn't sleep at 2am
Hey! Had to reupload the video due to some small copyright restrictions, but its back!
Let me also address some comments:
“The title is clickbait" - Please watch to the end of the video to understand what I meant, my apologies I should've made it more clear.
"its Bangladesh not East Pakistan" - in 1970, Pakistan had two parts: west and east. In 1971, Bangladesh was born. East Pakistan was in this videos time frame.
Im sorry I cannot pronounce nuclear 😭😭😭😭
I will try harder to fix mistakes and do better research in future videos so if i got anything else wrong I sincerely apologize I had no intentions of misinformation.. :) I apologize for any inaccuracies in the history or geography, I will try much MUCH harder in my next video to make it all accurate.
ohh okay
gonna rewatch it anyway😎
Love your content man i watch a video whenever I want to get a existential crisis
Nice video
The fear of space video was one of the best ones about the subject I have seen. I hope you keep making interesting videos like it. Keep up the good work.
Grew up in South Florida, lived through 20+ hurricanes. You never really get used to the bubble of peace in the eye of the storm. It’s the eeriest silence imaginable, knowing the second half is coming.
yup. cosmic horror in a nutshell.
Yeah it’s like a movie break halfway...
same here in ph
@@dawanggideonmatthews.5771 I experienced Ondoy when I was young. I remember chilling there in the middle of the storm while people around me were trying to fix the roof and securing the windows. They told me we're in the eye of the storm and thought that's normal. Our house is concrete and we live in an apartment. But back then I realized now it was scary and unforgettable, especially with how many died. Including that infamous video from ABS-CBN about the family being washed away in the Marikina river.
I live around 350 km away from bay of bengal I lived through 30+ cyclones in my 20 year life recent one being on the 26th may
just imagine holding onto a tree for that long with that rain and wind while knowing your whole family is dead.
Lol
@@Bloonhunter3000why’d you say lol 😭
@@Bloonhunter3000💀
Lol
@@Bloonhunter3000 BRO DOUBLED DOWN LMFAOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
I can only imagine the horror of holding unto a tree in the middle of a storm, surrounded by flood. In the middle of the dark. Hits hard.
And everything living that is able is crawling up the tree too, insects and animals
What!?
Everyday shit for birds and squirrels
literally
@@PeaceJourney...so true never thought of that but tbh they prob getting swept by the wind
Dude literally trying to recover from Helene and probably Isaac, but this was insane! I’m grateful Helene didn’t get this bad
Well...sorry about Milton then
@@Grace-jx3ju I’m pretty sure Milton ain’t gonna level 1,000,000 people. Plus I’m in GA so it’s gonna be an if but yeah
@@vickyshinoa1270 thankfully our government gives us ample warning, the lack of warning directly correlates to the death toll.
Bro you just got Milton are you connected reply to me if it was bad
@@anyaisabellevlogs I’m in Georgia my guy, we only getting cool winds. (Augusta btw)
I’ve heard of Stanislov Petrov, the Soviet officer who single-handedly saved the world from nuclear war, but I did not know about the people’s resistance in Bangladesh, who not only freed themselves from a dictatorship, but also equally saved the world from nuclear war. Thanks for making their more heroism more known.
@@Ungracious are you illiterate
@@Ungracious If it's anything like your writing you can barely read at all anyway!
@@Ungracious. ???
@@Ungraciouslmao imagine being so stupid you cant handle reading two sentences
bros attention span is less than 15 seconds@@Ungracious
My father was caught in this when he was 12! Him, his sisters survived by climbing a tree to survive from the Tsunami ! But my grandfather & grandmother died. My father and aunts moved to other parts of Bangladesh later on.
The way they described this it was scary to listen to!
My father is no more now!
Thanks for covering this!
Cyclones and tsunamis are very different
Yes very different
@@hylianrohe is talking about storm surge
@@hylianrothey can go hand in hand
may he rest in peace
This video was absolutely gut wrenching for almost the entire time. To think how the people of East Pakistan, now Bangladesh, had to suffer for simply existing. Great video, thank you for taking the time to make it.
At present day Pakistan is poor because Pakistan lost it's wealth source East Pakistan,
Most of things was produced in Bangladesh (then East Pak) and Pak people took away all the profits.
After independence they lost their source of wealth and became poor.
SImPLy fOR exiSTing
@@massey_2298 yes, that was written in the comment, good job
@@massey_2298 you can read!
@@smallcube-zn2mmIronic.
Imagine HUNDREDS of THOUSANDS of bodies being dragged out to the ocean. My lord, what a horrific way to die
Just how disgusting some humans with power can really be. I can't even imagine the feeling of surviving the cyclone, losing your family, civil war, annihilation and threat of nuclear war all at the freaking same time. Just pure evil.
facts...
You’re really blaming the cyclone on humans….
Bruh it was a natural disaster.
You people get the point okay? It's not my native language perfect humans
Don't be dense guys. We know people didn't cause the cyclone, but people prevented countless lives from being saved by being filled with greet and hatred. Sure, lack of preparation and miscommunication are also greatly at fault, but India could've easily warned Bangladesh and choice not to because of the greet and hatred of war. 🤦
My father is one of the survivors! His explanation of this cyclone is exactly matched with your given details. Thank you for this documentary. ❤
My father was holding the top of a coconut tree. At the end of the night when the water drained off so fast into the bay of bengal, the coconut tree broke from the middle. Later that morning my father found hanging the top of a mango tree unconscious and naked! Alhamdulillah he was alive! 🇧🇩
that must be horrifying experiencing that 🥺
Which are the mostly affected areas of Bangladesh during this cyclone ? 🌀
@@Yt_xavier Barishal as per books
Okay, actually I'm from middle Assam, India . Here also our grandpa told us that a severe cyclonic storm hitted in this region in between 1970 or 1972 almost all houses , shelters were levelled left behind debris only. I'm not sure it was the same 1970's one or else but it was devastating as well. During those days very often severe cyclone 🌀 " kal baishaki " hitted this zone but now a days in 20th century intensity of these tropical cyclone get reduced may be due to the other climatic factors.
Same im from bangladesh
I cant imagine holding onto a tree for a whole day while seeing dead bodies all over the place
And some pakistany army comes to clean up the survivors
I read accounts where some of the people holding on to trees found themselves right next to cobras. I can't imagine how horrible that would be.
I aint reading allat
@@UngraciousIt's one sentence my guy
There’s a scene in War of the Worlds where a river is carrying many bodies down. That was… nightmarish.
Who’s here during hurricane milton?
Me my lights got knocked😭😭Tampa feeling it
Mee
Thankfully, I didn’t get eaten by any surprise sky noodles 😅
Me
@@R3vbvbtell me abt it i got trees all over the streets where im at 😂
I'm a 16 year old from Bangladesh. My mother used to tell me stories about Cyclone Sidr of 2007 (she was pregnant with me that time). At that time she was pretty far from the coastal areas, yet felt the strength of this storm
Literally me, i was in my mums womb too
cyclone aila happend in 2009 and cyclone sidr happened in 2007
@@mushfikurazan8295 Sidr happened in November, 2007. And i was born in May, 2008
@@witheeeeeerx but you are telling in your comment that cyclone aila happend in 2007 which is not true
@@mushfikurazan8295 Oh yes i didn't notice that
Nobody talks about the terrifying sound a storm like that makes. It's like a jet engine whistle that sounds almost slow. Or it would if your eyes couldn't see nature actively trying to kill you.
I'm from the Caribbean and lemme tell you, you don't get used to hurricanes ever.
From the Carolina’s here not nearly as bad as the Caribbean but I know the feeling. I’m in my 30s now and still remember the sounds from when every major hurricane that hit Carolina you feel like you’re gonna die every time there is no getting used to it.
From Florida, the second time a hurricane hit, I immediately got used to it.
Dad built a brick tower, we safe
@@noblinkreal Don't really understand getting used to hurricanes considering that they vary as with every other natural disaster. Like, what, you get used to a cat 1 hurricane, you think every other hurricane is going to be the same as that one?
@@noblinkrealstunned
My paternal family used to live in Patuakhali, the closest region to the the Bay of Bengal in Barisal Division. My father and my Grandpa was the only survivors of their family in this cyclone. My father lost 6 elder brothers & 2 elder sisters. All of them were gone in that cyclone. My father and Grandpa climbed up on a tree. My father said that the raindrops felt like bullets. Saddest thing is, bodies of the dead relatives were never found at all. I wish I had all relatives alive today. My life would have been different, so would for my father too. That Goddamn cyclone didn’t just change the view of landscape, it changed the lives of the living people.
I'm sorry for your lost
Im so sry
Im sorry for you and your family’s loss. I hope you all can find peace
My condolences
im sorry for your losses, but how did he survive the genocide?
Imagine surviving a storm that horrible just to die by a dictator’s hand…
I can't imagine how terrifying it would be trying to save your family following your jump and then receiving not a single word, not a single hint, glance or whatnot to simply know if they're okay. Like they just disappeared in a split second, gone.
Exactly!
It will happen in our lifetime… whether it be an asteroid, super volcanic eruption, earth crustal displacement, a storm of epic proportions… it will happen
@@sprinkleddonuts6094?
@@sprinkleddonuts6094 Okay... is there anything that can back your claim?
@@sprinkleddonuts6094ohhhhh you mean the return of our lord and savior Jesus Christ THE ONE TRUE GOD? Yeah it’s gonna happen soon
this is actually tragic. Rest in peace for the people who died.
Respect of what? 🤨
Yeah and some guy said lol in a reply on another comment
@@lukeboy8081Yh he even doubled down. Clearly an attention seeker 😂😂😂
this is insane my mothers side of the family lived in bankura back when this was going on... and they all survived.
Thry bedn dead 90 years they dont need condolence
"Humans may be smart enough to make nukes but not smart enough to never use them..."
It's the creators of the nuke that are truly smart. The dumbass politicians and dictators are the ones who aren't
Europe: why are you making more nukes?
*USSR and USA pointing at eachother*
@@JustarLadarms race in a nutshell
@@JustarLad Well in the case of the USSR it’s actually understandable. After all the US showed that they clearly were insane enough to use nukes and not only that, but using them against civilians.
The only reaction to that is to build enough nukes that even the maniacs who actually used them would be afraid of doing it again.
@@The_real_Arovorwhile using the nukes was completely insane, japan were also incredibly stupid launching an attack on pearl harbor for no real good reason, even the n@zis were pissed at japan for launching the attack in the first place knowing it would aggravate america
I live in the philipines, so i can say there many people died too during tropical storm called "yolanda" It was strong storm that completely Reached the country itself, stay safe for everyone who experienced storms
Too much exaggeration man, we didn't feel Yolanda up north. I'm not saying Yolanda isn't strong, it is very strong. What really doomed a lot of people in Visayas wasn't rain or smth. It was the storm surge.
It didn't help nobody know what the heck does STORM SURGE means and didn't do any precautionary measures about it. It's just tragic when a lot of those deaths could've been prevented.
@@FrankToastyIt's not exaggeration . Data shows
Haiyan's 10 minutes sustained highest winds is 230 km/hr and 1 minute sustained highest wind is 315 km/hr while cyclone bhola 3 minutes sustained highest wind is 185km/hr and 1 minute sustained highest winds is 240 km/hr.
You may have a wrong conception of our country but Philippines is huge.
Of all the typhoons that passed we didn't feel much of those winds here in South.
the saddest thing is that heavy rain and (most recently) a storm is happening right now in the brazilian state of rio grande do sul. people are losing everything, their homes, their families, their life. and the water doesn’t stop rising. there are so many ways to donate, please look into it! they are in dire need of help immediately. my whole family is from there. it’s an insane tragedy, the most violent natural disaster ever in the history of the state
Yes climate change is hitting the earth a lot recently. It's even getting worse
Dang that’s messed up
@@ArBh-zd6qmthat felt very sarcastic
Tis a shame
It sucks that the public isn't as aware about it as it should be :/
One correction. Indian government did tell pakistan about the storm. Pakistan authority did nothing because the storm was going to hit east pakistan( bangladesh). They were having some politiCal tension among themselves
Fr🔥🔥🔥
Why do Indians straight up lie so much?
Source: believe Indian's.
Source ?
Is this real, or are you just being another angry indian throwing tantrum toward pakistan?
I was never taught this stuff in school because its been forgotten in the western world but I'm glad to see youtubers have taken it into their own hands to do the research!
Yea because the US sided with the dictator who used a storm and then his military to genocide people simply because of Cold War politics
Right? Seems like we missed a lot of important points history, they practically taught us about the war in every grade but left out so much
Just a bit of light censorship…
@@aster1438do you think those countries learn everything that has happened here? Theirs way too much history to cover everywhere lmao
I would hardly consider this history, let alone history that should be taught in the west. Do you think they know about hurricane Katrina or hurricane andrew? Lol Americans who try to act like their country is inferior intellectually are so cringe
I can't imagine the horrors my grandparents witnessed back then. My grandpa on my mom's side even went to fight in the war after the cyclone.
I'm so grateful to my grandparents for surviving through that hellish period in time. My parents, my little sisters, and myself wouldn't have been here if not for them. I hope my people never have to suffer like that again.
Imagine how horrifying it would be if you found out you were in the eye of a hurricane
What? Why would that be horrifying? The dead bodies everywhere would be horrifying but being in the eye of a storm is more horrifying to you? It's actually a good thing, it's the calmest spot during a storm
@@editaxolotls I've already been in several eyes of hurricanes. I live in the tropics. It's a nice break after the storm first hits.
LoL eye of the storm is the safest spot
@@BaitMaster22Yeah and guess what? There's still 1/2 of a storm that's gonna hit you. That's why it's very unsettling.
The eye of the storm is usually the safest. The one around is the most dangerous.
As Bangladeshi , i was trying to find information about this topic for my project but couldn't find much but this video is great and goes in detail. Thanks for covering this topic.
Agreed
W
The book he cited should go even more in depth if I had to guess
@@clownfishman6511 I would like to know name of it
This was nothing new. Look up "New England's Killer Hurricane of 1938." ONE man knew it was coming, but he was told NOT to report it.
I'm from Bangladesh (East Pakistan of that time) This stoem was so devastating, i studied about this as a student, even my dad said that it was the deadliest in our country's history.
As an american who was born after this happened. I am SO SORRY for what OUR DESPICABLE government did and stood by a genocidal tyrant. I actually started crying watching this video. My heart hurts for you all. I can only pray that Jesus blesses your home-country.
Well yeah, mud huts and third world shithole style homes?
There have been worse hurricanes in history, the dealt toll no, because we’re smart
@@georgejohnson8674
>Deprives innocent Bengalies from any means of knowing about an upcoming storm
>Blames it on them
>"Smart"
@livingwordwitness1413 it's honestly alr , but I'm completely sure that our country will be fine for over a few hundred years . No cool things happen anymore , weird ahh rain and its so damn hot . But then in winter it's so cold but NO SNOW ...... crying for snow
@@livingwordwitness1413bla bla bla stop apologizing for something Americans will do again
Your videos are amazing and teaches me about history Im subscribing 👍🏻
hey bro just wanted to let you know these recent documentary videos are fantastic and i have been binging them no matter the topic. id love to see some longer form documentaries, and your format of creating videos is fresh and very interesting. i specifically loved the K2 summit video and the video on the bhola hurricane. please keep making videos like this, and keep up the good work. i need more to binge!
Thank you so much for your kind donation! I will continue making videos, I love this style of documentary content and I don’t intend on stopping anytime soon :) glad you enjoy my videos it really makes me happy to see people binge watch them :) thanks! I’ll keep it up :)
“Oh this seems interesting”
“Holy shit”
Exactly my reaction as I listened to this while driving back home.
Same bruh
Exactly
Same
During the island destruction section of the video, i had 😧 on my face the whole time.
Im Pakistani and i had no clue of this level of cyclone, we have never been taught or anything about this, this further shows me how how bad tensions were between east and west pakistan, this makes me sympathetic towards the people of Bangladesh, Peace ✌️
thanks bro, all in the past, brothers fight but they make up again.
@@Antiwesternthug They raped your mothers and sisters, and you call them brothes now. It was India who answered your call and helped you gain independence.
@@Antiwesternthugwell I mean even the people in Central Pakistan voted to get rid of that guy... so it sounds like to me that it was more that one dictator vs both sides of the country
@@myweirdsecondchannelwithap9070 that's how it usually is brother. Old men with grudges and power forcing young men and women to hate each other.
Wow bangladeshi dogla, that time india helped you now you celebrate when india looses world cup
This is so scary. I lived through a major, largely localised storm in France in 2020. A quarter of the village was wiped out by a flood but in the higher parts of the village (incl. where I was staying), there was no damage. It's frightening how fine lines can make such a difference. I slept through the flood just thinking it was heavy rain and yet it the house I was in was located slightly lower, it would've been washed away. RIP to all those who did pass away in the French storm, the East Pakistan storm and in all storms and floods throughout history.
Were you or your family affected
@@envy_kazzy4171^
@@envy_kazzy4171. What?
I could not imagine that man's suffering. Lose family to a storm and survive it only wanting to die.
Respect to the camerman for recording the whole storm
Funny 69
Respect
Dead meme
I'm pretty sure there WAS a cameraman recording the storm. But he's prob dead now.
@@viktorkalven2457
@@viktorkalven2457still surprising how the video still got recorded
Who’s lookin at this because the hurricane that’s coming in Florida
fellow floridian myself
I'm in the hurricane rn orlando
There’s a tornado warning 😔
Bro r y'all In Florida good?
@@kennykillr5735 no we r getting hit with a hurricane stronger then kartina
that clip of the camera slowly going underwater was bone chilling. good ass video as well, damn near netflix documentary level.
When
Those diagrams are simple as hell and they were on repeat for minutes like wtf quality 😂
They are different, but he did a good job. This employs mostly emotional imagery and fear. A professional documentary just uses factual info, more breaks, and wider variety of sources.
does anyone have any idea of the source of that clip?? and the accompanying clips ??
It's an interesting video but nowhere near Netflix level.
Nah imagine how scary this was..
imagine rough waters almost as tall as coconut trees. It’s pitch dark, you don’t hear your entire family anymore and they’re most likely dead and holding on to that tree for a night.
The book you mentioned 'The Vortex' is amazing! I've lived through some hurricanes, but nothing like what these dear people experienced.
0:11 its the end of the world as we know it
And IIIIII FEEEL FINEEEEE
I know that song
6o clock
REM
@@Knape-vz5mlgreatest band of all time
"In the eye of hurricane there is quiet. For just a moment."
sent chills down my spine
“Yellow sky..I was 10 when a hurricane destroyed my town, I didn’t drown..I couldn’t seem to die”
@@B3LLA-90
“i wrote my way out, wrote everything down far as i could see”
@iffat_karim I guess all the kids who liked Hamilton moved on 😢
@@svenrio8521 I WILL NEVER MOVE ON HAMILTON FOR LIFE
am i tripping or did i watch this video earlier today
edit: i forgot that i made this comment and im coming back to rewatch this video two months later
ALSO these replies are hilarious LOL
had to reupload the vid due to some copyright
lol I thought
I was tripping too
me too
Fr same
ME TOO
The Bhola Cyclone makes our Galveston 1900 Storm with an estimated 12,000 fatalities look like just a little bit of rain. I despise how political tensions and differences can just get in the way of hundreds of thousands of people's lives like that and its genuinely sickening how they intentionally left the Bangladeshi people for dead
i mean at the time they weren’t bangladeshi so they were forced into the mess of war
@@SmthThere oh yea true dat
The kim chi that day must have been pretty bad
Author of a hurricane history book here.Thx for sharing this information,now i can make more parts for my book,again thanks.I appreciate this video
I don't think i have ever heard of a natural disaster more scary than this
What about the krakotoa volcano???
2013 Typhoon Haiyan
2011 Japan earthquake
1960 Chile earthquake 💀💀
2022 Hurricane Ian
2005 Hurricane Katrina
Despite the fact that people do not talk about the Bhopal disaster even in Bangladesh 🇧🇩, I am thankful for you covering it. In the early stages of Bangladesh/East Pakistan, we faced numerous bad omens from natural disasters, genocidal wars, and then a famine in 1974, which killed over 1.5 million Bangladeshis. Alhamdulillah, we come a long way
Just Subscribed to your channel and Having a blast watching your videos.
Bangalis are dying to join Pakistan now days
@@Deira854 nope we're not
@@MrSheponKazah You are. I have seen so many Bangali interviews and comments and so many desperate Bangali men ogling over beautiful Pakistani women to marry. Do you actually think Pakistanis would give daughters to you to marry? Its such a pathetic behavior I have seen in young Bangalis
At my age I remember what Bangladesh went through and the famine. I hope it never happens again to you
@@Deira854 i mean it depends on each person, for me just off of money and allat probably would rather move to pakistsan, but there’s ups and downs to both
Imagine hating your enemy so much. You’re like “let the storm take them.”
Are you talking about india? If yes then let me clear, india did tell Pakistan about the storm. But pakistan authority didnt care because it was going to hit east pakistan (bangladesh). They were having some political tension among themselves
Brother when you don't have knowledge of something please don't bark east pakistan and real pakistan were having political tensions at that time and you can take information about it through internet Indian government warned them but they did nothing
Bro is the defenition of yapping without having any knowledge
I hate like 3 people in the world that much and I'd still at least give them a warning
I'm confused about these other replies op never said who the enemy is??? They very well could have referred to central VS east Pakistan why are y'all mad?
You just got yourself a new subscriber! What a fascinating subject matter and I was glued to my seat! Thanks ❤
I was wondering why the old video was unlisted. I didn't see any major inaccuracies from a historical standpoint. Calling East Pakistan Bangladesh whenever Bangladesh wasn't independent yet is like calling the USSR Russia during ww2. It's also, not really clickbait at all. Cause the storm indirectly caused the nuclear powerhouses to be at it at another region again. This storm was very likely a breaking point between the two sides of the conflict but still very well done.
It was a copyright issue with one thing, I got it resolved tho. :)
(in case it wasn't clear, I commend you for calling it East Pakistan as that is accurate to the time)
I also want to add that I'm really glad you added the story of that boy and what he went through. So many times, for so many horrific events, the casualties--the people, are seen as statistics and just numbers, but the fact you added the story made them not just numbers but real people you can emphasize with.
I feel the same way and that’s why I added it to be honest. It’s always hard to grasp the suffering people faced until you really are shown or told what happened.
Most bengalis people that survived the genoicde hates bangladesh being called east pakistan
This video put more fear into my soul than a horror movie ever would. Masterpiece of a video!
What eves
Geometry dash
@@Mist Sup Mist
A storm like this is extremely terrifying even just imagining it gives me shivers
I was so captivated by this video…. And then you said NUKEYULLER LIKE 10 TIMES IN A ROW.
A small addition/correction. India trained and equipped the Bangladeshi resistence and also deployed about 150,000-175,000 troops to the invasion of east pakistan, blitzing straight for Dhaka by both ground and airborne operation & US basically sent its fleet in to tackle the Indian Navy and its aircraft carrier, only to be dettered by the Soviet Nuclear Submarines.
Gotta say, did not know about my country supporting a dictator in this war, and not proud.
I couldnt believe that India didnt warn East Pakistan! Bro, you knew that this big storm was coming? They planned from the very start to break Pakistan......
@fleetingimmersion got more bad news pal. During kargil war between india and pakistan, the us disabled the gps trackers and fed info to pakistan army to make india surrender. US has always been on Pakistan's side. That's why in current conflict india is not on their side for ukraine. And remains neutral.
@@sohininandi5742 How annoying, and it's probably not wrong to say that most Americans have no clue about this. We've always got a 'main war' (Ukraine, Afghanistan, Iraq) and then a handful of 'secret wars' (Camaroon, Libya, Mali, etc) that we just don't see in the news on a daily basis like the others. It may or may not actually be 'hidden', but it may as well be unless you google it specifically. This conflict, I feel, is probably one of those, though tbf, maybe it's logical that the Military didn't want to brag about this one to the public.
@@fleetingimmersion well man, things are weird....I mean i have known history through documentaries, books and movies, and honestly no matter what one says, America was fighting a some what "Righteous" war, I mean fighting against the Nazis and defeating an all truely evil empire/regime, understanding the value of human life and kindness.......but man something changed as a whole after that, and i feel that change is never really understood.....US after and before the year 1950 are totally different things in my opinion. Things done even for the good became bad.
7:05
These videos are bone chilling.
The rain coming down so hard that it looks like severe fog.
Wind so loud that you can't hear the person filming.
And waves so mighty that nothing could survive.
I'm a bit of a geography nut, and I never knew that Bangladesh was once called East Pakistan. Great video I've learned several things today thanks!
You must just be getting started on your geography journey then! You'll learn so many amazing things and I can confirm this as someone who has loved geography for well over a year
Not just called East Pakistan, It was part of Pakistan. In 1971 it split into a separate country through indigenous military action supported by Indian Army owing to years long suppression and repression on the east pakistani people by the dominant west Pakistan political and military structure.
But the actual geographical misconception in this video is the small bay. How could it be the largest bay in the world denoted as a small bay?
That’s awesome! It’s always cool to learn something new, especially when it ties into your love for geography. 🌍 The history of Bangladesh as East Pakistan is such a fascinating and complex chapter-it’s amazing how much the world has changed in just a few decades. Glad the video could add to your knowledge! What other interesting geography facts are you into?
Pakistan split from India after the Second World War. Bangladesh, which was predominantly Muslim, remained a part of Pakistan until 1971 when the war of liberation ended Pakistani rule. Today both countries coexist rather peacefully, although neither government has really fared well after 50 years. Pakistan’s tensions with India have not gotten much better and there’s still constant dispute over who has claim to Kashmir.
Interesting video. Thanks for the info. 👍
This video demonstrates the further need of a universal weather advisory and category system so that all people may be aware of the weather conditions that pose a threat to property and life. Amazing video!
This video made me so sad that I almost cried with that man's story. A tragedy that happened so many decades ago might feel distant to some but in a lot of places in the world is so common and happens every year. Here in Brazil the state of Rio Grande do Sul had the worst flood in the history of our country and it literally wiped cities off the map. It's so sad and it's happening right now. This made me connect with those people who lost everything in Bangladesh.
Sorry for bad English
@@_equinoxeno, your english is good
@@paranaenselol thanks 🙏
@@_equinoxehonestly, if you hadn’t said anything, I would’ve thought you were a native english speaker. ☺️
@@BOOPBEEP859 thank you 🙏 been practicing for a long time but I still find it dificult to construct grammatically correct texts
Based on the title I thought it was two enemy cyclones that almost used nukes to destroy the world, thank you for clearing this up for me.
Hi
return to tds plssss
Didn't expect to see you here
Rare Sighting!
@@REZLZ1man, I remember OBS before TDS. Was crazy.
Obama wears a helmet riding a bike? "BREAKING NEWS THE PRESIDENT IS GAY! And also black!" Obama uses Dijon mustard? "BREAKING NEWS THE GAY PRESIDENT IS GAY! And black don't forget!" Obama deports more illegal immigrants than any other president in history? "GAY MUSLIM black PRESIDENT OBAMA LOVES ILLEGAL IMMIGRANTS, ESPECIALLY MEN!"
Man, my parents had Fox News on every night and it was hilarious how EVERYTHING was breaking news. Anything Obama did. Don't forget Tan Suit-Gate!
This one video, THIS video. This is what got me into docu-edu videos. Absolute greatness.
This is a really interesting and important story to tell, but you genuinely need to work on your script. I found myself being pulled away from the content itself by awkward phrasing, constant repetition, and poor narrative construction. I’m not trying to be harsh - I just really think you would benefit from giving your scripts another pass.
Constructive criticism my friend. Some people will take it as advice to better make their work
Nobody asked for your opinion. YAHOOOOOOOOO-
@@jellai645 just like me your comments holds no significant value
You just have ADD. Don't blame the creator for your learning disability.
@@jellai645= 🤡
Wow this is an insane storm and story I had never heard of. Incredible work man I feel horribly for all these people who fell victim to this tragedy.
This video went from a cyclone to a straight up nuclear war in just a minute 😭😭💀💀
Very well put together vid!
bro summarised my whole BGS book history part in 17 minutes
bro we read that part too lol
Lmao if we could write it in 17 minutes too
Bro also used like 7 minutes more than was needed. The whole few first minutes were HERE IT COMES. IT’S VERY NEAR AND DEADLY. AND EAST PAKISTANIS DON’T KNOW ABOUT IT. IT COMES. SO NEAR
I was there as an infant child in the relative safety of a concrete building in Dhaka that night but still felt the horrendous power of that storm. I remember it like it was yesterday. This was long before Global Warming had even got started! Thank you very much for covering this event.
Global warming started the moment the atmosphere formed
Global warming? Oh that myth..
@@TheWanderingWiltsmanIt's a scientifically proven fact that global warming is a thing.
@@TheWanderingWiltsmando you ever wonder why we’ve been having RECORD BREAKING temperatures these past few years you DUMBO😭10 years ago it wasn’t this hot. And I’m from Texas on of the hottest states. The Average temp has risen at least 5-10 degrees in the past 10 years…
@@TheWanderingWiltsmanthe temperature around the world has risen5-10 degrees in the past 10 years. And you say global warming isn’t real?LMAO👎🏾🤣
"It was a 2ft jump even his grandma could make," You know my humor is fucked when I'm giggling in the middle of a very serious video😭
Gotta cope somehow 😂🤷♂️
Youre just edgy.
@@RealBadman554 alright goody two shoes when you experience actual trauma then get back to us 😂 till then keep your trap shut
Ah, the edgy phase.
How edgy
I like how this video shows next to the news livestreams and videos about hurricane milton
you should be getting tens of thousands of views within the first few hours of your new videos. your content is really underrated & insane!!
His content is VERY underrated. I've watched most of his videos and they're actually good
(Also why is the creator and OST composer of Liquid Breakout here)
hi lux
hi lux
10:59 The eye of a hurricane is like the pause before a boss goes to phase 2
And now Bangladesh is approaching 2x the gdp per capita of Pakistan.
Love from India brother ❤
Pakistan is China's pet dog now 😂
Now THERE is something I had not heard! That is amazing. When I was a wee lad, one of the things I remember learning was that Bangladesh was the poorest nation on earth. It is good to know that they recovered so well from their devastating birth. I am going to dive into Bangladesh history now...
bangladesh once had most doctor,lawyers,teachers during 1970 in the world when 1 night changed everything..i think it was Pakistan kill Bangladesh local farmers for no reason and blaming on farmers resulting mass killing of bangladeshi citizens.
@@mikebronicki8264 You're Welcome to our History man! :D
Let's just hope that Pakistan and India don't go to nuclear war.
this is very instresting. amazing video
Omg… anyone that lives near a hurricane prone area knows how devastating a full moon during landfall will be for the area…
This is amazing. Heartbreaking and terrifying and tragic. And wonderfully done. New sub.
0:01 calm before the Horrible Storm
No way another gundam fan
@@GundamSeltsam yes that's true
Your comment is the definition of Literally😆👌
Bro, I watched this video two times in one hour. It was this good
I’m glad you liked it makes me happy :)
@@spdsyt keep it up loved the K2 one 2
I watched it 5 times in 30 minutes no big deal
Same here!!!
@@C0c0nut-K4tIt’s called sarcasm, you bumbling idiot…
One of the best vid i ever watched its just so interesting to see the storm that almost ended the world
And still we were never taught about this in history
What?
I was thought this in geography
Basic education rarely covers specific world history because there's just not time, and priority is given to world events and events local to you because those actually have/had a large traceable effect on your country. University history class also specializes local and global but focuses largely on how history is recorded, preserved, investigated and unearthed to prepare historians for investigating and interpreting history. Then post graduate historians typically only focus on one era, location or even event because history as a field of study isn't that well-funded. Unfortunately if you want to learn specific history from all over the world you have to go find it yourself.
@@charmaduplessis6854crazy
This person is the next big docu channel. I know it. Millions of subscribers, I am sure of.
Definitely
Millions are you sure
@@LaylaKalyanvideos very sure
@@LaylaKalyanvideos one day yes
Hopefully! Great editing, nice speaking voice and an interesting topic. I hope to see more from this guy
My father was 11 years old at that time.
Although they didn't live in the islands but their home was very close the destructive zone.
He told me that the disaster almost destroyed the whole house as the roof was flown away and a tree fell over. The weather was so bad my grandfather couldn't return from store.
After the storm ended most places were flooded.There were fallen trees and parts of people's houses everywhere.
The damage in the whole country was unimaginable. Main reason was lack of accurate forecast which led to people being unprepared for such a powerful cyclone.
1970-1971 was the most tragic years in history od this place.
The cyclone caused the death of 300k+ people and insane amount of destruction in a country that's already too poor.
Then the bloody liberation war of 1971 costed the lives more than 3M people.
Unbelievable
Amazing video!
0:15 "Small bay" bruh that's THE LARGEST bay
Buh no it's very BIG
"In a small country known as Russia..."
It's a big country known as San marino
In a small city, known as Shanghai...
In a small planet known as Jupiter..
It's not just the full moon that creates higher tides. They are also higher during a new moon. And when a full or new moon also coincides with the lunar perigee (when it is closest to the earth), tides are even a bit higher. The moon wasn't at perigee when this storm made landfall. The lunar perigee was on November 9th, and the lunar apogee was on November 21st, so the moon was still a bit closer than average on November 12th when the storm hit.
I can sense this channel covering very interesting topics and exploding in popularity, subscribers and algorithms! Well done keep it up man! 👍🏼👊🏼👌🏻
THIS EDITION IS 🔥🔥🔥!!
Can't wait for more videos like this!
These videos will definitely help me with History Class!
thanks man
Thank you for covering Bangladesh's history. I was born in the uk but many of my family still is in Bangladesh its heart breaking to hear what my grandparents went through and so many millions of humans ❤
Watching this while a hurricane is heading toward my country😂
Hurricane beryl?
@@Yaper96 yea
@darqmatrix oh stay safe out there from the hurricane
Lol watching after
it hit my country 3 days ago
10 out of 10 chanel i recomended this channel really nice video the edir voice visual everything is just perfect
Hey man!!!! Thx for making such a knowledgeable content. As a Bangladeshi, I’m really surprised to know that a huge nuclear war was about to happen due to the political turmoil between Pakistan and Bangladesh, because we weren’t taught about this event back in school though the current educational system in my country anyways yapping about Liberation war,sheikh mujib and Awami league ( Awami league was the political party during the 1970s which the majority mass of East pakistan used to support and led the country during the war and now is the current governing political party of Bangladesh). Anyway I’ve learned something new today and good luck so that you can more this type of content in the future
yo that sequence at 1:40 along with the music is TOUGH, again!!!! great reupload as always!
I like how you took your content from minecraft to real world stuff. It's nice to hear
2:57 were is this video from
Hurricane Sandy 2012
NOW THIS IS SOME REAL STUFF G... IM A BANGLADESHI AND DIDNT EVEN KNOW BOUT THIS SHI... LOVE THE DOCUMENTARY
I somehow knew when I started watching this would lead to two superpowers threatening nukes lol.
Insane storm, crazy story.. this guys awesome for bringing this stuff to light for a bunch of people
Real ones know this is a repost
It indeed is
Yuh
Yep, I thought I was on mushrooms when I saw this one was uploaded 3 hours ago, although I remember watching it yesterday.
yea
vid was reposted due to some copyright
6:55 first time I've heard the power of a natural phenomenon be called 'disgusting' lol
Well yeah it just killed a lot of people caused people to be homeless and almost started a nuclear war (probably)
I also noticed that and absolutely love it, either he or his scriptwriter is talented
please make more like this i love it
I've seen a few people criticize your narration for the video and all i have to say is 3MILLION VIEWS . And the people who criticized are either just jealous or giving you what THEY want to hear lol 3 million people is hard to keep everyone happy , but i think i can speak for most of us and say - keep doing what your doing young buck . Great video!... and it kept me very amused when i couldn't sleep at 2am
Not only that, but the alarm makes it even more terrifying 7:17
Too bad that alarm isn’t from this event and is instead a former tornado siren used in Chicago.
It gave me sirenhead flashbacks
@@thesilentone6186 same
That's the point. I'm not really a fan of artificially messing with things like that. Cheapens things.
great vid
The fact humans are capable of literally destroy the planet they grew and lived on is insane and horribly scary