Imagine looking into the reactor core man. A few people did. Thats got to be like looking into hell itself, and knowing you're dead despite still breathing and being fine. RIP man.
Spokoynaya Noch is the perfect tribute to The Liquidators. It's about a person who's suffering a huge burden, facing a herculean duty, but they're doing it alone while wishing others a calm night.
I agree, it really matches the mood. People doing a horrific job because they know if they do it other people don't have to. We should forever remember their bravery.
The saddest thing is that, the majority of these heroes were forgotten after the collapse of the USSR, many died because they didn't have any money and were not taken in charge no more
Don't say what you don't know. All surviving liquidators are veterans and receive social assistance, including their families, and those who died are considered heroes in Russia.
@Mad Mark No , soldiers didn't voluntarily give their life for Soviet Spirit . You know thats BS ..The Soldiers were sent to do the job they were ordered to ,there is no voluntariily action in old Soviet Union .Everyone knows that.
My grandpa was a liquidator at Chernobyl, couldn't be more proud of the fact that he was. He's an absolute unit. Eternal respect to him and all others who were liquidators
@UC8No6G3WoC_x-WTZCMwegrA I believe that they manually pumped out the water or something along those lines that would have caused a secondary steam explosion and further radiation leakage if they hadn't have done their deeds. That's only from memory though so could be wrong. Also.the hundreds of men that helped clean up radiated debris and everything else.
They pushed graphite and other old radiactive rocks off Chernobyl roof to stop wind blowing radioactives to nearby forests and make ot safer for people working there to build iron shellter above reactor
These men didn’t just face a invisible enemy which would kill them in the most harsh way possible but also gave their option up to have children, to see their families and country, they sacrificed themselves for the world and for their people. True heroes, eternal in memory! From the United States to these Soviet men.
They did this in order for their relatives and residents of the USSR to live, the liquidators were given 10 minutes to cleanse the graphite debris, my uncle died from cancer, he was the liquidator of these very rods, about these very wrecks
Whats really sad is that every animal that wasn't homed, strays, escapes, or wild animals in the vicinity, were hunted down and euthanized for fear they would carry radioactive dust to other villages
From what I've read the inhabitants of the area were told that they could return in a short time and not to bring much, which left pets behind. And later these animals where killed off as part of the cleanup process.
It is sad to see, but I wonder if that wasn't one of the European wild cats, they look a lot like the domestic versions we're used to seeing. I'm not sure if those cats were the wildcats. I have heard that despite the radiation various types of animals have actually thrived in the region.
Spokoynaya noch fits so well as a tribute to the liquidators. The singer wishes other people a good night, but he can't sleep himself, he's facing a terrifying duty. The liquidators sacrificed everything so that others may live free from the fallout.
Today is Ukrainian orthodox Easter, so this is one hell of an Easter treat for me, as I had many relatives work as liquidators. Thank you samm! Keep it up
Spokoynaya Noch - *Quiet Night* in Russian, from the band *Kino,* is the song playing. And by god, is it my favorite song for just this reason. I've always enjoyed Kino, but this song is the be all end all of their short, yet extremely talented catalogue.
None of these brave heroes could have imagined that only a generation later Russians and Ukrainians would be fighting against each other in East Ukraine. Simply disgusting.
@@fenrirrising131 from time to time we could see these kind of things that makes us remember them but for how long? We just forget about them after closing the video or when we go to sleep.
I think about Chernobyl every now and then. Of course, not everyday, but sometimes I remember. In 100 years, less people will know Chernobyl, in 200 years, even less, and memories will fade, but it will still be in history books 1000 years later.
Kino, great band. So glad I got into Soviet/Russian rock. Rest in peace those who fought against the mighty atom, and the many more who volunteered. Lets pray for the modern liquidators still at Chernobyl cleaning it today.
Dude i want to unironically show these videos if i ever become a history teacher. They show volumes about the very real humans on all sides of a conflict.
What are you talking about? In high school it was basically red scare 2.0. I like these show the humility in us all. These guys were brave. On a side note instead of watching Saving Private Ryan we watched Wind Talkers. SPR had too much blood, the teacher said. Like Jesus fuck, war is nasty and bloody.
Beautiful song choice. Spokoynaya Noch (Calm night), perfectly embodies the feeling these heroes must’ve had when they knew they’re sacrificing themselves.
A friend of someone I know was a driver that worked in Chernobyl in 1986. A lot of his friends died of cancer and other radiation related diseases after the incident. When he worked in Chernobyl he was promised to get a new apartment, but it took so long for him to get a new apartment and he eventually got his new apartment but after the USSR collapsed.
One of my favourite song. And one of the biggest tragedy happened to one of the biggest industrial country at that time. Rest in peace to those who volunteered and drafted.
@@kokko9507 I don't have one and I'm not gonna pretend that I do either. I'm aware that the official death count is 31 but I thought it was generally known that more than 31 died as a result of the incident, cancer etc.
My great Grandfather was one of the miners that worked underneath the site, I wish I had known him or had at least met him once but I was born in the US after immigration of my grandparents themselves but I heard so many stories from him. We really really do need to not ever forget who they were ever, saviors of the world they were.
I heard from somewhere that if the radiation from Chernobyl got farther, Europe and possibly other places in the world would have been uninhabitable. God bless those heroes.
If the molten material were to finally burn through the concrete foundation and reach the groundwater, an explosion of such magnitude and such pollution would follow that most of Europe would be affected.
Hello! My dad was a liquidator for Chernobyl when he was stationed in East Germany, since east Germany was also affected by Chernobyl, he went to the outskirts with OZK suit and helped. He is healthy and lives well, thank you for your amazing help and duty and all the liquidators who served.
@Report of the day No my dad wasn't German, he was from kazakhstan SSR but stationed in East Germany when he was in soviet army, then when Chernobyl happened he was moved there
Worked there in Radiation Safety department. The soldiers you see spent 15 - 20 min on the roof, got lifetime radiation dose and went home. About 250 thousand were used for that.
Aww man, i remember a couple of months ago i bought an old OZK NBC Suit off some guy from Belarus. The second it entered my country the Swedish Post Office lost the package
Like the quote from CoD but yeah, should be Ukrainians not Russians. Ukrainians actually lost more people in WWII than Russians did. Russia just takes credit for all of it.
@@007Evalyn Belarus suffered more than other soviet republics(25% of population and still have demographic problems since then). But in absolute numbers Russia had 50% from all irretrievable loses of ussr in ww2
Damn, wasn't expecting that song, but it fits surprisingly well. They knew they'd die, but they kept on their feet, it didn't matter. Real heros, that most people have forgotten about
This song has a special place in my heart, heard Kino once and it lived with me forever, but this song will hear it till i die. Good job Major, your videos gave me reasons to love music much more and find songs i love.
I confess, this video makes me cry! This is the best work, I have ever seen! I learn Russian and this song by Viktor R. Tsoj is simply amazing! The song is titled: The calm night... Greetings from Prague, stay safe and be healgthy!
Honorable men sacrifices should always be remembered.It’s sad how many people don’t know about Chernobyl and it’s people who sacrificed their well being to help so many innocent souls.It’s Erie you can see it in their eyes in the video.May they always be remembered.
Those are the biggest heroes of the world. They saved humanity, atleast Europe. Some one's hero might be an sports star, for me my heroe's have always been the Liquidators of Chernobyl.
Thanks to Major Samm for showing us these heroes! May they never be forgotten at any time, these strong men and women there did waaay more than just clean up.
I don't usually comment on videos, but I need to do it in this one. Great choice of footage and music. I love Kinó, and this one is my favorite song. It's like the perfect mix, the calm after the storm... RIP all heroes of Chernobyl. And good job MajorSamm!
My heart goes to these heroes who sacrifed their lifes for the wellbeing of everyone else. And also to the three divers who dived in pitch black in the nuclear reactor water cooling system.
Thousands thanks to those liquitators. I´v been born shortly before the accident. Even thought the radioactive cloud went towards central Europe, it hasn´t hit us that much. Those heroes managed to stop the leak and paid the ultimate price.
This song is to be honest the best pick for topic of the video. I knew this song for quite a while and at the moment when the intro started I immedietly knew this is going to be a good one. Great vid. God Speed bro :)
I am really impressed by this video it is quite a masterpiece And i am also surprised by the enormous number and variety from stalker fans to the chernobyl show enjoyers to people from all around the world to give Credit and respect to these People I also liked every comment on this video because yes i did it
As always, a wonderful job, and one of your best videos so far my man. What you do truly is something else, there are a lot of videos of historic events and wars with music, but none of them make me feel, if anything, they usually romanticize the idea of conflict and death. Yours are special though, your videos make me feel and that demonstrates the amount of effort that you put behind each one, for a video to be able to transport me to a historic event and make me feel things using just old footage, editing, and music, that's something else man. Keep up the good work, I wish you the best. Cheers.
Ahhh, I've been thinking about finding some footage or making a video on this but didn't know where to start. Amazing stuff, as always. I've been intrigued by the whole cleanup operation for a bit now.
R.I.P to all those forgotten heroes of Chernobyl.
You're wrong!
They are not all dead.
And who are dead - they not forgotten.
Makes me wanna re watch the HBO series
@@vladimirtherussian166 whatched it at least 3 times
@@someweedseed Why you gotta be like that?
@@aaronto3827 because it's the truth, and hbo exaggerated the injuries and many lived to old age even the guys swimming in the water.
Imagine looking into the reactor core man. A few people did. Thats got to be like looking into hell itself, and knowing you're dead despite still breathing and being fine. RIP man.
What core? It disintegrated when the reactor exploded, they could have stepped over chunks of it though. What an awful disaster
Your profile name and profile picture confuse me.
@@AndrewArminRyan Polish-Lithuanian Fascist Wehraboo who sometimes simps for the USSR, have fun figuring that out.
@@kazak8926based
@@catalinshunk3447 ikr
Spokoynaya Noch is the perfect tribute to The Liquidators. It's about a person who's suffering a huge burden, facing a herculean duty, but they're doing it alone while wishing others a calm night.
I agree, it really matches the mood.
People doing a horrific job because they know if they do it other people don't have to. We should forever remember their bravery.
Can you tell who sing this song and the name?
@@enterBJ40the song is sung by Victor tsoi and is by the band kino, the name is spokoyanya Noch
@@3ru457 RIP Viktor 😞
🙏
My grandpa was a liquidator. And, of course, I visited that place. It’s so sad and breathtaking at the same moment.
His sacrifice saved the world. Be proud, friend.
I regularly pray for those heroes! If he is still alive tell him that a French guy loves him. He is my hero!
God Bles your grandpa !! Greetz from Croatia ✴️🇭🇷✴️
Bless your grandpa! Greetings from Denmark 🇩🇰
Your grandpa is a hero!
The saddest thing is that, the majority of these heroes were forgotten after the collapse of the USSR, many died because they didn't have any money and were not taken in charge no more
More like died fucking god awful deaths. Cancer.... cells dying. And the fact most probably didnt know wtf radiation accumulation does to the body.
i don't know their names, but i will forever be thankful for their sacrifice
Don't say what you don't know. All surviving liquidators are veterans and receive social assistance, including their families, and those who died are considered heroes in Russia.
After the fall of the ussr the liquidator pension and benefit where taken away
@@pijim в Казахстане также!
RIP for those men who sacrifice their live
Unfortunately ,They didn't sacrifice their lives, they were sacrificed ... It's different
31 people died cause of Chernobyl disaster. While fukushima 2202 died cause of evacuation and 1 from radiation.
i cannot express the manny like id like to give em , but its more than 1
How about the government.......Sheep
@Mad Mark No , soldiers didn't voluntarily give their life for Soviet Spirit . You know thats BS ..The Soldiers were sent to do the job they were ordered to ,there is no voluntariily action in old Soviet Union .Everyone knows that.
My grandpa was a liquidator at Chernobyl, couldn't be more proud of the fact that he was. He's an absolute unit. Eternal respect to him and all others who were liquidators
My eternal respect for your grandfather, he’s a true hero. God bless your family 🙏🏻❤️
🫡🚩
Bless him, dude. Brave man.
@@daseapickleofjustice7231 Disgusting flag, the communists killed my grandfather's entire family
Did he entirely know how dangerous the radiation was or wasn't it told the liquidators?
These men were fighting an invisible enemy that kills you in one the slowest and most agonizing ways. Hats off
I remember that one engineer describing their death in HBOs Chernobyl
@@nirmalgogineni1432 HBO's Chernobyl is propaganda of US
@@obama-bin_laden Really? HBO's main source is a book produced with the approval of the Soviet Government which spread the soviet narrative.
That level of radiation would kill you pretty quick.
If you ever wondered how a Hero looks like, here you can see a whole army of them.
R.I.P to all of them.
The men that secretly saved the world
I’m not trying to be a smart ass just genuinely curious. How did these guys save the world? What exactly were they tasked with?
@UC8No6G3WoC_x-WTZCMwegrA I believe that they manually pumped out the water or something along those lines that would have caused a secondary steam explosion and further radiation leakage if they hadn't have done their deeds.
That's only from memory though so could be wrong.
Also.the hundreds of men that helped clean up radiated debris and everything else.
@@R4zorW0lf Wow interesting! I always see so many videos but not enough info.
They pushed graphite and other old radiactive rocks off Chernobyl roof to stop wind blowing radioactives to nearby forests and make ot safer for people working there to build iron shellter above reactor
@@NYMAN110 Cleaning up the chernobyl nuclear disaster
*“Careful! There are pockets of radiation all over this area. Absorb too much, and you’re a dead man.”*
-Cpt MacMillian, CoD 4 Modern Warfare
@@roopeseppanen9029 ah yes, a fellow individual of culture
Are you daft laddie?
50000 people used to live here.... Now is a ghost town
@Numidon
"That's how it's done. Let's go."
KINO's music gives us both nostalgic and somewhat fearful vibe, like this video.
For real though. And at the same time it’s also sad and depressing in a way.
These men didn’t just face a invisible enemy which would kill them in the most harsh way possible but also gave their option up to have children, to see their families and country, they sacrificed themselves for the world and for their people. True heroes, eternal in memory! From the United States to these Soviet men.
They did this in order for their relatives and residents of the USSR to live, the liquidators were given 10 minutes to cleanse the graphite debris, my uncle died from cancer, he was the liquidator of these very rods, about these very wrecks
May God bless your uncle.
@@honourandtradition8078 Thanks
Hero
May he rest in peace what a legend
The cats at the end made everything even more sad, "requiescat in pace" all humans and animals who perished in Chernobyl.
Yeah, that ending was absolutely beautiful.
I read alot of animals where evacuated along with their owners so one can hope that poor kitten was aswell.
Whats really sad is that every animal that wasn't homed, strays, escapes, or wild animals in the vicinity, were hunted down and euthanized for fear they would carry radioactive dust to other villages
From what I've read the inhabitants of the area were told that they could return in a short time and not to bring much, which left pets behind.
And later these animals where killed off as part of the cleanup process.
It is sad to see, but I wonder if that wasn't one of the European wild cats, they look a lot like the domestic versions we're used to seeing. I'm not sure if those cats were the wildcats. I have heard that despite the radiation various types of animals have actually thrived in the region.
Spokoynaya noch fits so well as a tribute to the liquidators. The singer wishes other people a good night, but he can't sleep himself, he's facing a terrifying duty. The liquidators sacrificed everything so that others may live free from the fallout.
Today is Ukrainian orthodox Easter, so this is one hell of an Easter treat for me, as I had many relatives work as liquidators. Thank you samm! Keep it up
Happy Easter from a fellow Orthodox nation!
@@Madrigos Дякую Брате Мій! Христос воскрес! Christ has Risen!
Tommorrow is Orthodox Easter
@@AP-ec8os consider the timezones hours changes and you are good.
@@ncrvako Ukraine is in my Timezone
Already loved this song, now MajorSamm puts Chernobyl footage over it? I couldn't be happier
Same
Get out of here, stalker
Exactly lmao
Kino has alot of really good songs.
Thought the exact same thing
4:59 - 6:24 is just insane. The music and video just mixes. Its among one of the best solos I've heard.
I have exactly the same feeling
Spokoynaya Noch - *Quiet Night* in Russian, from the band *Kino,* is the song playing. And by god, is it my favorite song for just this reason. I've always enjoyed Kino, but this song is the be all end all of their short, yet extremely talented catalogue.
None of these brave heroes could have imagined that only a generation later Russians and Ukrainians would be fighting against each other in East Ukraine. Simply disgusting.
Putin is power hungry manlet
Russians against Russians and some Ukranians...actually
@@ryanclancy2295 The whole conflict was orchestrated by the Obama administration you muppet...
@@adamevert1618 That's a lie.
@@ionbing2884 No it's not!
The sad part is that they are all forgotten. Unfortunately.
Wouldn't this video be evidence to the contrary?
@@fenrirrising131 from time to time we could see these kind of things that makes us remember them but for how long? We just forget about them after closing the video or when we go to sleep.
@@uranuuss i mean, if you put it that way...yeah
I think about Chernobyl every now and then. Of course, not everyday, but sometimes I remember. In 100 years, less people will know Chernobyl, in 200 years, even less, and memories will fade, but it will still be in history books 1000 years later.
@@YszapHun Quite an optimistic idea that there will be anyone around to remember in 1000 years.
I really still can’t believe we this awesome content for free. Thank you.
You're welcome man, thank you for watching.
Last time I was so early the radiation cloud was over my country.
Nippon?
@@Kctubes Nope
Im old enough to remember the Chernobyl accident, i was in preschool and we where kept inside for 2 weeks after it came out in the news.
@@SwedishEmpire1700 Where do you live?
@@Војвода-т7ш Belarus maybe
This song fits so well with Chernobyl.
Haha nice profile picture, also fits well with the video.
It's a song by the Soviet band, Kino.
@@palomanbroadcastingnetwork3606 Fantastic band. I recently discovered them and I can't stop listening to their music.
I remember this song from an early majorsamm video, I never heard of kino til I found this channel but I like it
@@Sacrilege7294 welcome to the club
Kino, great band. So glad I got into Soviet/Russian rock. Rest in peace those who fought against the mighty atom, and the many more who volunteered. Lets pray for the modern liquidators still at Chernobyl cleaning it today.
Lets pray.
This honestly makes me weep, such a great display of nobility and sacrifice
Chernobyl Liquidators and Kino, a match made in heaven.
I see video from you.
I click.
Мы любим тебя , МаjorSamm :)
Thank you for watching :)
@@MajorSamm no need to thank me/us for watching , we simply love you and your content :)
"These men work in the dark. they see everything"
Great show I gotta say
It would have been great to see this in history class in high school.
Indoctrination centers dont want you to know how bad their best buddy the ussr fucked up a lot
Dude i want to unironically show these videos if i ever become a history teacher. They show volumes about the very real humans on all sides of a conflict.
@@kazak8926 i've tried recommending them to a couple of my teachers for specific lessons, none of them did it but they at least thought about it
What are you talking about? In high school it was basically red scare 2.0. I like these show the humility in us all. These guys were brave.
On a side note instead of watching Saving Private Ryan we watched Wind Talkers. SPR had too much blood, the teacher said. Like Jesus fuck, war is nasty and bloody.
Such a beautiful masterpiece, yet a sad and devastating incident.
If there is paradise, then let their souls be there.
If there is no paradise, they are still in our hearts.
amen.
honestly this is one of the most beautiful quotes I heard in a while
Such a beautifully somber quote.
Beautiful song choice. Spokoynaya Noch (Calm night), perfectly embodies the feeling these heroes must’ve had when they knew they’re sacrificing themselves.
A friend of someone I know was a driver that worked in Chernobyl in 1986. A lot of his friends died of cancer and other radiation related diseases after the incident. When he worked in Chernobyl he was promised to get a new apartment, but it took so long for him to get a new apartment and he eventually got his new apartment but after the USSR collapsed.
The men who went there, did a duty, no one would have done. They gave their health, for others.
Спите спокойно Герои!
А те кто ещё не ушёл дай Бог вам Здоровья!
♥️
nice pfp. SLAVA RUSSIA
I hear Kino, this is going to be a good one!
Da
Да lol
Agree.
Da
Spasiba
Да
One of my favourite song. And one of the biggest tragedy happened to one of the biggest industrial country at that time. Rest in peace to those who volunteered and drafted.
31 deaths doesn't even come close to biggest in Ukraine, let alone whole USSR.
@@kokko9507 31 isn't even remotely close to the actual amount of lives who perished as a result of this tragedy.
@@Bjeddul I'm waiting for your sources.
@@kokko9507 31 lives, 31 families.
It's not just numbers
@@kokko9507 I don't have one and I'm not gonna pretend that I do either. I'm aware that the official death count is 31 but I thought it was generally known that more than 31 died as a result of the incident, cancer etc.
Простые люди, сделавшие великие дела.
might actually be one of my new favorites from Sam, remember hearing this song accompanying a S.T.A.L.K.E.R pixel animation.
Link?
@@urgamecshk late to this, but here's the video th-cam.com/video/TIZWlW1YhbU/w-d-xo.html
A stalker walk among their ghosts while listening to this song
Lost to the zone.
Also used in the movie Durak. Helluva film!
@unresfriado no....
@unresfriado who?
@unresfriado my friend this is not a among us reference
It's a S.T.A.L.K.E.R reference
My great Grandfather was one of the miners that worked underneath the site, I wish I had known him or had at least met him once but I was born in the US after immigration of my grandparents themselves but I heard so many stories from him. We really really do need to not ever forget who they were ever, saviors of the world they were.
These men sacrificed their health and lives to protect millions. Their sacrifice should never be forgotten.
I heard from somewhere that if the radiation from Chernobyl got farther, Europe and possibly other places in the world would have been uninhabitable. God bless those heroes.
Imagine that
Things would change and it would probably suck to varying degrees everywhere in the world. But it being the sole end to civilization no
If the molten material were to finally burn through the concrete foundation and reach the groundwater, an explosion of such magnitude and such pollution would follow that most of Europe would be affected.
"These are the most important 90 seconds of your lives. Commit your task to memory and do your job."
Hello! My dad was a liquidator for Chernobyl when he was stationed in East Germany, since east Germany was also affected by Chernobyl, he went to the outskirts with OZK suit and helped. He is healthy and lives well, thank you for your amazing help and duty and all the liquidators who served.
@Report of the day No my dad wasn't German, he was from kazakhstan SSR but stationed in East Germany when he was in soviet army, then when Chernobyl happened he was moved there
@@KozakDio I am from Kazakhstan, your dad is a great man
Your dad is a hero my respects to him
This was probably the best background video for that song.
A relative of mine was on the roof of the reactor to remove the graphite blocks. It is a wonder he is alive and has no cancer.
Hero !!!!
Worked there in Radiation Safety department. The soldiers you see spent 15 - 20 min on the roof, got lifetime radiation dose and went home. About 250 thousand were used for that.
Wow!
Aww man, i remember a couple of months ago i bought an old OZK NBC Suit off some guy from Belarus. The second it entered my country the Swedish Post Office lost the package
Postnord: the most cursed postal service in the world.
@@tobiasgunsche1139 Yes, it is the world's most brutal terrorist organization
Imagine a company collapsing and going into bankruptcy despite having a literal monopoly on it's market. That's the Brazilian post service for you.
One of the best Kino songs, coupled with such poignant footage... a masterpiece, per usual.
Russian music from that time just hits different
Thank you major samm
bruhh the cats made me tear up at the end, rest in peace to all heroes of this accident
“No victory can be achieved without sacrifice, Russians know this better than anybody.”
belarus and ukraine be like excuse us
Like the quote from CoD but yeah, should be Ukrainians not Russians. Ukrainians actually lost more people in WWII than Russians did. Russia just takes credit for all of it.
@@007Evalyn what credits? 26mlns murdered citizens and lack of 100mlns people for 2020
@@nicknamenick9448 because it was all the Soviet Union, Russia claimed the death of all the Ukrainian during WWII as "Russians", Same with Chernobyl
@@007Evalyn Belarus suffered more than other soviet republics(25% of population and still have demographic problems since then). But in absolute numbers Russia had 50% from all irretrievable loses of ussr in ww2
Мой дед провёл первые три месяца в самом пекле ликвидации аварии на ЧАЭС.
Слава советским офицерам и солдатом, ликвидаторам аварии в Чернобыле!
Damn, wasn't expecting that song, but it fits surprisingly well.
They knew they'd die, but they kept on their feet, it didn't matter.
Real heros, that most people have forgotten about
This song has a special place in my heart, heard Kino once and it lived with me forever, but this song will hear it till i die. Good job Major, your videos gave me reasons to love music much more and find songs i love.
The heroes that saved the world.
Glory to these brave souls !
Слава ликвидаторам ! 🙏
These videos hit me in ways I've never experienced. All of the Major's videos do this to me. Pride? Empathy? Idk but I feel kinship to them all.
Rest in peace chernobyl liquidators
You have the world's respect
Played this song on repeat to and from work. This track worked so well with the footage man. Thanks for putting it together!
This song fits so nicely with the imagery, Sam you have outdone yourself yet again
By far the best footage and compilation I've seen about Chernobyl
I confess, this video makes me cry! This is the best work, I have ever seen! I learn Russian and this song by Viktor R. Tsoj is simply amazing! The song is titled: The calm night... Greetings from Prague, stay safe and be healgthy!
The craziest thing is seeing the truck and the BTR covered in lead in order to help shield them from radiation.
That shielded KrAZ at 2:09 looks straight out of Mad Max.
Honorable men sacrifices should always be remembered.It’s sad how many people don’t know about Chernobyl and it’s people who sacrificed their well being to help so many innocent souls.It’s Erie you can see it in their eyes in the video.May they always be remembered.
Those are the biggest heroes of the world. They saved humanity, atleast Europe. Some one's hero might be an sports star, for me my heroe's have always been the Liquidators of Chernobyl.
MajorSamm perfect song choice, this is easily one of your best
Wonderful edit as always majorsamm
MajorSamm used my favourite version of Спокойная ночь in a video. My life is complete.
I clicked faster than Usain Bolt could run a inch forward
Same lol
Same, I was late though, and I feel ashamed
me and the bois when shotgun grunt
@@eleskeletitto4900 SQUAD. WE. GOT. FREEMAN.
@@semaj00 oh crap
Thanks to Major Samm for showing us these heroes! May they never be forgotten at any time, these strong men and women there did waaay more than just clean up.
Beautiful song, good footage, I thank this brave men for doing their best to clean chernobil
I don't usually comment on videos, but I need to do it in this one.
Great choice of footage and music. I love Kinó, and this one is my favorite song.
It's like the perfect mix, the calm after the storm... RIP all heroes of Chernobyl. And good job MajorSamm!
Тысяча за миллион. Пусть эта тысяча останется в наших сердцах
last time i was this early Chernobyl reactor no. 4 was still under control
Cleaning up other people incompetence..
RIP
My heart goes to these heroes who sacrifed their lifes for the wellbeing of everyone else.
And also to the three divers who dived in pitch black in the nuclear reactor water cooling system.
this kino song really fits how bad being liquidator was
Mmm liquid organs
Yes it was a bad thing
Badass
One of the best videos in all of youtube. Definitely a masterpiece.
4:53 I dont know why this part of the music causes me a sensation of despair for an imminent "end " of an era.
Respect to these men for rising to the occasion, only to be weighed down by the heaviness of their massive balls
Thousands thanks to those liquitators. I´v been born shortly before the accident. Even thought the radioactive cloud went towards central Europe, it hasn´t hit us that much. Those heroes managed to stop the leak and paid the ultimate price.
This song is to be honest the best pick for topic of the video. I knew this song for quite a while and at the moment when the intro started I immedietly knew this is going to be a good one. Great vid. God Speed bro :)
I am really impressed by this video it is quite a masterpiece And i am also surprised by the enormous number and variety from stalker fans to the chernobyl show enjoyers to people from all around the world to give Credit and respect to these People
I also liked every comment on this video because yes i did it
They are heroes. I hope I can meet with one of them someday.
Aaahhh kino the best music of a forgotten era. Also major Sam is a big plus in this hehe
As always, a wonderful job, and one of your best videos so far my man. What you do truly is something else, there are a lot of videos of historic events and wars with music, but none of them make me feel, if anything, they usually romanticize the idea of conflict and death. Yours are special though, your videos make me feel and that demonstrates the amount of effort that you put behind each one, for a video to be able to transport me to a historic event and make me feel things using just old footage, editing, and music, that's something else man. Keep up the good work, I wish you the best. Cheers.
One of my favorite kino songs good work sam
Ahhh, I've been thinking about finding some footage or making a video on this but didn't know where to start. Amazing stuff, as always. I've been intrigued by the whole cleanup operation for a bit now.
Этих людей нужно помнить, они совершили великий подвиг! =(
The music just fits perfectly. So much respect for those brave men
Straight loyal duty R.I.P to the biorobots. And like always great video with music and I can't wait for the next one.
Major Samm really gets the vibe
Wow, I recently started listening to Kino and here comes MajorSamm, uploading a new video featuring one of my favorite songs by them.
"I miss the good old days"
The good old days: *cleaning radiation without protection*
Major Samm has a collection of my favourite songs from around the world. Kino
The world has never thanked these people enough for what they have done.
The music,the video, they’re both just perfect together