3D-Trip: Cemetery of Soviet soldiers [Wrocław, Poland]. 2019-09-05
3D-Trip: Cemetery of Soviet soldiers [Wrocław, Poland]. 2019-09-05
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Poland: Red Army troops reburied with honours after exhumation
Scores paid tribute at a re-burial ceremony for Red Army soldiers, following their exhumation, at the municipal cemetery of Nowy Sacz, Thursday. In total, 28 deceased Red Army soldiers were moved following a decision taken by the town's authorities to remove the symbology of the Soviet Union from the war memorial, all of which was transfered to the District Museum.
Video ID: 20150820-063
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The Military Cemetery of the Soviet Soldiers in Legnica (Poland)
Here's the next one military (war) cemetery of the soviet soldiers in Poland, in the town of LEGNICA (Lower Silesia). It was established at the area of the local municipal cemetery. As usual, I avoid the contemporary political comments - just have a look at the things how they are at the very moment - that is in March 24th, 2019.
The remains of the Soviet military base in Wroclaw (Poland)
Here you can have a look at some relics of the cold war : the Soviet military base in Wroclaw (Poland), 1, Polbin Street. Most of them you could not find on the Internet so far, especially the secret repository for the chemical weapons. Somebody in Germany may find the names of his relatives on the headstones used earlier as the sidewalks. Also you may admire the old bridge hidden behind the trees and bushes. The videos and the photos I made in 2001, 2002 and 2018.
3D-Trip: Cemetery of Soviet soldiers [Bielsko-Biała, Poland]. 2019-12-30
3D-Trip: Cemetery of Soviet soldiers [Bielsko-Biała, Poland]. 2019-12-30
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Red Army Museum in Poland
Michal Sabadach is the owner of the only one Museum of the Soviet Army in Poland. More than 1200 souvenirs were collected here after the withdrawal of the Red Army in 1993. In the private museum it can be seen also the monuments that were supposed to hit the dumps of history.
“I was very interested in the history of World War II, and as I learned that there are over 620,000 Soviet graves in Poland, I think we ought to respect these people and show to future generations that these were the people of my son's age, eighteen years old and they certainly would not want to die, but they gave us life, that we can now talking, meeting” – said to Reuters TV Michal Sabadach.
The president of Poland signed a law that orders the removal of monuments commemorating communism. Many monuments of the Soviet Army will have to be disassembled within a year from Polish streets and squares. Against such a decision the Russian parliament protests.
This decision does not understand Michal Sabadach, who emphasizes that he is not interested in politics and he do not want to judge neither people nor history. His only interest is the fate of the people. He often calls soldiers of the Soviet army and even their generals as the “tragic figures of their time”.
Michal Sabadach does not talk much about himself. He is repatriate and came to Poland from the area of the former Soviet Union in 1956. His grandfather fought against the Soviets in the Polish and Bolshevik war in 1920. His father by the side the Soviet army won Berlin. He does not want to mention childhood, although he admits that the Soviet authorities have done his family much harm. After all, he is considered as a friend of the Russian people.
“As Soviet power came to the area of eastern Galicia, the peasants did not go to the kolkhoz to work. Then they made artificial famines to force them to work, just like 1937 in eastern Ukraine. You know, it dreams coming now almost every night to me and I wake up often and I am screaming: give me bread!” – remembers Sabadach.
Among the numerous remembrances photos on one of his home's walls is evidence that during the World War II his family hid Jews for one and a half years. Michal Sabadach received the “Righteous Among the Nations” medal. For the greatest virtue, Sabadah considers modesty, therefore such memorabilia are not available to the general public but only they can be seen to good friends.
“I continue the tradition of my ancestors. They taught me of honor, nobility and I try to instill it into my son as well. And this is the greatest treasure for a normal man to be the Pole to feel patriotic and not harm anyone. – Sabadach said.
European Journal | Poland -- Mass Graves in Malbork
64 years after the end of World War Two,construction workers have unearthed a mass grave with the bones of 2,000 people near Marienburg Castle in Malbork,Poland,the former Marienburg. The evidence suggests the bodies are mostly of German civilians -- men,women,and children -- killed in early 1945 towards the end of the war. Report by Darius Cierpialkowski.
Poland: Nazi and Jewish symbols graffitied on Soviet Military Cemetery in Warsaw
The Soviet Military Cemetery in Warsaw was desecrated with graffiti depicting Nazi insignia alongside the
Jewish Star of David and Israeli flag on Monday.
The graffiti was sprayed on the steps of the memorial commemorating Soviet soldiers who fell in World War II.
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The war cemetery of the soviet soldiers in Świdnica
Here you can have look at the War Cemetery of the soviet soldiers in Swidnica (Lower Silesia, Poland) which died mostly in 1945. The cemetery is located close to the local municipal graveyard - it is well preserved and clean. Very impressive is the long white wall ended with the red stars made of bricks and the black plates with the names of the soldiers placed on it. The symbol of the red star is visible on the headstones and on top of the high memorial standing in the center of the necropolis. RIP.
WARSAW, changing the guards, TOMB of the UNKNOWN SOLDIER (POLAND)
SUBSCRIBE: - Let's watch the change of guards at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Warsaw, Poland). Vic Stefanu, vstefanu@yahoo.com. Warsaw (Polish: Warszawa); is the capital and largest city of Poland. It stands on the Vistula River in east-central Poland, roughly 260 kilometres (160 mi) from the Baltic Sea and 300 kilometres (190 mi) from the Carpathian Mountains. Its population is estimated at 1.740 million residents within a greater metropolitan area of 2.666 million residents, which makes Warsaw the 9th most-populous capital city in the European Union.
Poland is the sixth most populous member state of the European Union. Poland's capital and largest metropolis is Warsaw. Other major cities include Kraków, Łódź, Wrocław, Poznań, Gdańsk, and Szczecin. Poland is bordered by the Baltic Sea, Lithuania, and Russia's Kaliningrad Oblast to the north, Belarus and Ukraine to the east, Slovakia and the Czech Republic to the south, and Germany to the west.
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POLAND: YOUTHS VOICE THEIR ANGER AGAINST POLICE AT BOYS FUNERAL
Polish/Nat
Ignoring pleas to grieve peacefully, hundreds of Polish youths threw stones at police who blocked mourners from marching to the spot where an officer fatally beat a 13-year-old boy.
During the funeral on Wednesday in the city of Slupsk, the boy's mother appealed to youths who have vented their frustration in nightly riots since his death to mourn the boy peacefully.
More than 1-thousand youths arrived from all over Poland for the funeral of Przemek Czaja, who was killed on Saturday as he walked home from a second-division basketball game.
Some of the hundreds of youths who gathered in the city of Slupsk for the funeral threw stones at riot police who blocked mourners from marching to the spot where the boy died.
Young basketball fans wrapped in team colours arrived from all over Poland for the funeral of Przemek Czaja on Wednesday.
They appeared to ignore pleas to mourn peacefully, as the scuffles with riot police intensified.
The crowd took a different street to reach the place where the boy was killed.
Police detained 50 people, but there was no immediate report of injuries.
Przemek Czaja was beaten to death by a police officer as he walked home from a second-division basketball game on Saturday.
Police said they were responding to reports of hooliganism when they went to break up the crowd of basketball fans on Saturday night.
Fans said they had done nothing more than jaywalk.
During the confrontation, one officer struck the boy on the head with a police baton.
He died on the way to the hospital, and the officer has been arrested.
One eyewitness described what she had seen, while some of the demonstrators voiced their anger against the police.
SOUNDBITE: (German)
I went over to that building to go shopping and when I came back there was an ambulance here. The little boy was already in it and they tried to save him but it didn't help.
SUPER CAPTION: Slupsk resident
SOUNDBITE: (Polish)
The police killed a sports fan, so what is going on here? After the funeral today, no one knows what is going to happen. Anything can happen, anything like what happened already this week, on Monday and Tuesday.
SUPER CAPTION: Demonstrator
Crowds gathered outside the red brick Heart of Jesus church in the centre of the city where the funeral was being held.
The coffin was carried through the city's cemetery following the funeral service.
After three nights of rioting that have left dozens of officers injured, national and local authorities joined appeals from the boy's family and church officials for calm at the funeral.
Government and police officials in Slupsk have banned alcohol and have formed a committee to handle the crisis.
The dead boy's parents wept as his coffin was lowered into the ground.
Bishop Tadeusz Pieronek, spokesman for Poland's powerful Roman
Catholic church, asked the young people in Slupsk to remain peaceful.
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Forgotten germany cemetery in POLAND/Urban exploration/Streitwalde /Łukomin/Neumark
Cemetery found in the forest
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#RepublicInExile: Poland outside Poland 2/5
Rzeczpospolita Londyńska
Odcinek 2: Polska poza Polską
Republic in Exile
Episode 2: Poland outside Poland
Nowy projekt multimedialny o historii Rządu RP na Uchodźstwie. Niepublikowane zdjęcia, archiwalne filmy, współczesne wywiady. Śledź #RepublicInExile na Facebooku i Twitterze!
A new multimedia project on the history of the Polish Government-in-Exile. Unpublished photos, archive films, fresh interviews. Follow #RepublicInExile on Facebook and Twitter for more!
produced by Polish Embassy UK
filmed and edited by Light Leeks
To Central Asia by Bicycle - #44 The Polish cemetery in Tehran (English subtitles)
in this episode, we visit the Polish cemetery in Tehran, where thousands of Polish soldiers and also civilians were buried who fled the miserable conditions in the Soviet Union, where they were gathering in order to fight the nazis together with other army units in 1942. A big part of them did not survive the journey to their homeland because of starvation and illnesses and was buried in Iran.
Some background information:
An article about the now non-existent Polish cemetery in Qazvin
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Music: Eagle Rock, YouTube Audio Library
In the Memorial to Polish Soldiers and German Anti Fascists.
In the Memorial to Polish Soldiers and German Anti Fascists with the Mavic Air. Location Berlin.
Wroclaw (Wrocław) | Must see in Poland
Wroclaw is a large undiscovered gem of a city in southwestern Poland in the historic region of Lower Silesia. It boasts fascinating architecture, many rivers and bridges, and a lively and metropolitan cultural scene. Like many cities in Central Europe, it is a city with a troubled past, having seen much violence and devastation. Prior to the Second World War, Wroclaw (Breslau in German) was the capital of the German province of Prussian Lower Silesia. It was annexed by Poland when, after the War, the Soviets moved the German/Polish border westward to the Oder/Neisse Line. Wroclaw was almost completely destroyed during the end of the War as the Red Army fought its way into Germany towards Berlin, being declared a Fortress City by Hitler. However, it has been wonderfully restored and can now be counted amongst the highlights of Poland and of all Central Europe. As Poland rushes headlong into further integration with the rest of Europe, now is the time to visit before the tourist hordes (and high prices) arrive. There are also many Japanese and Korean businessmen and their families living in Wrocław now.
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War Museum | Poznan | Poland
This museum is located on Citadel Hill, a huge park area in the city. The park is also where the Poznan Old Garrison Commonwealth War Cemetery is located.
The Second Worldwide war Memorial to Russian Solders From USSR in Wroclaw Poland 2015
Grand Son in two generations Anthony with Mother , Bring the cundels ,Grand Grand father Andrew Kirilowich Babich died in Lublin 1944 , Anthonys memory about grand grand father is very iportnant to continuen lines from Dynastys since 16th centres in Russia Babich Attaman Cossak Michail Pavlovich Babich Michael P. Babich (July 23 (August 4), 1844 - October 18, 1918, near Pyatigorsk) - Russian infantry general, head of the Kuban region and ataman of the Kuban Cossack Army (1908-1917). Heros ,Anthonys Babich-West is a Talent ,his mother Marina worked in Poland and England as a specialist at sport and culture ,Eton College is our Best Education in Windsor at English Royal family private college since 12 th ,am wish Anthony have an education at Eton in 2023 -2029 as an a Irish Grand father Poetry Hero to Great Britian 'Richard Doddridge Blackmore (7 June 1825 – 20 January 1900), known as R. D. Blackmore, was one of the most famous English novelists of the second half of the nineteenth century. He won acclaim for vivid descriptions and personification of the countryside, sharing with Thomas Hardy a Western England background and a strong sense of regional setting in his works.[1]
Blackmore, often referred to as the Last Victorian, was a pioneer of the movement in fiction that continued with Robert Louis Stevenson and others. He has been described as proud, shy, reticent, strong-willed, sweet-tempered, and self-centred. Apart from his novel Lorna Doone, which has enjoyed continuing popularity, his work has gone out of print. Here
Warsaw Uprising remembered 60 years later
Warsaw, Poland - July 31, 2004
1. Pan from building to military music band playing and marching at Polish President Alexander Kwasniewski's reception for the survivors of the Uprising
2. Military band playing and marching
3. Honour guard holding flags
4. Veterans marching
5. Honour guard
6. Veterans watching ceremony
7. SOUNDBITE: (Polish) Aleksander Kwasniewski, Polish President:
It is with pain and shame that it must be admitted that the trauma to the people of the uprising lasted for many more years. In post-war Poland they were often imprisoned, suppressed, pushed to the margin, and offended. Previous politics (ie the Soviet era) aimed to falsify history, but the truth and human memory are always stronger.
8. Audience
9. Various of veterans receiving medal from Kwasniewski
10. Polish Prime Minister Marek Belka at Warsaw Uprising museum opening ceremony
11. Honour guard at Warsaw Uprising museum opening ceremony
12. Audience
Warsaw, Poland - July 30, 2004
13. Various of Pathfinder squad marching, symbolising the great number of pathfinders who were killed during the uprising ahead of the ceremony of the lighting of the Memorial flame at the Warsaw Uprising Square
14. Veterans with flags watching
15. Pathfinders on horses
16. Pathfinders marching
17. Pan from pathfinders with torches to pathfinders marching
18. Pan from Warsaw hotel to the stage with the ceremony of the lighting of the Memorial flame at the Warsaw Uprising Square
19. Memorial flame
20. Various of stage
Moscow, Russia - July 31, 2004
21. Set up shot of independent Russian defence analyst Pavel Felgengauer
22. Pan from eyes to book
23. SOUNDBITE: (English) Pavel Felgengauer, independent Russian defence analyst:
Russia is a bit more a free country and different historians express different opinions, but the official line basically is the same as in the Soviet times - that we did our best and it's the Polish fault that they began their uprising too early.
Vistula River, Poland - 1944
24. Various of boats being dragged into Vistula River
25. Tank with people on top driving into Vistula River
26. Man
27. Various of explosions next to the Vistula River
Warsaw, Poland - 1944
28. Damaged buildings in Warsaw
29. People running across street
STORYLINE:
Almost 60 years after Poles fought a doomed battle against Nazi occupiers in Warsaw, the first museum devoted to the uprising opened on Saturday in the Polish capital.
Some 3-thousand aging veterans attended the ceremony as part of an emotional three-day remembrance of the 63-day revolt, which left an estimated 200-thousand fighters and civilians dead and most of Warsaw destroyed by the Germans.
Polish Prime Minister Marek Belka spoke to a large crowd in the museum garden, standing in front of a granite wall inscribed with the names of thousands of fallen combatants.
Compounding the tragedy for Poles, the uprising was written out of official history during 40 years of communist rule, when leaders aimed to suppress the fact that the Red Army watched from the other side of the Vistula River as SS-led Nazi troops put down the uprising.
Polish soldiers bearing flags of Home Army units led veterans of the uprising in a procession at the presidential palace, where several dozen former fighters received medals.
Several stood and saluted the Polish flag with their right hands while holding canes in the other as a large video screen showed sepia-toned images of the burning city in 1944.
Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski told the audience: Previous politics aimed to falsify history, but the truth and the human memory are always stronger.
Poland's sense of betrayal also includes the Western allies, who did little to help the uprising.
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Abandoned SOVIET Base In Poland