FIFA ROSTOV - SYNAGOGUE INVITATION
Ukrainians Are Fleeing to Russia to Avoid Military Draft of 50,000 Civilian Troops!
Around 30 men arrived in Zolotaya Kosa village in Russia's Rostov region on Tuesday, after having fled from Ukraine to avoid being drafted into the army. Around 400 refugees are currently living at the Romashka refugee camp in the Rostov region, among them 119 men of military age
Russia: Kiev could consider us traitors, says Ukrainian officer
Video ID: 20140807-039
M/S Sleeping soldier
M/S Soldiers
SOT Anton Officer, frontier soldier (in Russian): The thing is that we didn't have enough equipment to hold the enemy. And given this lack the decision was made.
C/U Badge
C/U Soldier's boots
W/S Barracks
SOT Anton Shingera Ukrainian, Officer, 72nd brigade (in Russian) Yes, you are right, our country may accuse us.
Journalist (in Russian): Of what?
Anton Shingera (in Russian): They could consider us traitors - we crossed another country's border. I don't know.
SCRIPT
Ukrainian soldiers who fled their country and crossed the border into Russia spoke out at a camp in which they are staying in the Russian region of Rostov, Thursday. A number of the soldiers expressed awareness they could be considered traitors by Kiev for their decision.
Four hundred and thirty eight soldiers and officers of the Ukrainian armed forces crossed into Russia at the Gukovo Checkpoint, escaping intense fighting near Krasnopartizansk. About 200 of the Ukrainian troops have now left Russia and returned to Ukraine.
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Chanukah Shabbaton - Rostov, Russia 5777 - 2016
Russia: Jews lead memorial for 27,000 killed on anniv. of Zmievskaya Balka massacre
Mourners, many of them relatives and members of the local Jewish community, joined the symbolic funeral procession ‘March of the Living’ in Rostov-on-Don, Thursday, to mark 75 years since some 27,000 people were killed by Nazi soldiers in the 1942 Zmievskaya Balka tragedy.
Mourners wore black armbands and the identifying yellow six-pointed star that Jews had to wear through the years of the occupation.
Chief Rabbi of Rostov-on-Don and Southern Federal District Haim Danzinger explained that the massacre needed to be remembers because “it is in our debt; we owe it to them to come here.”
SOT, Haim Danzinger, Chief Rabbi of Rostov-on-Don and Southern Federal District (Russia): Today it is exactly 75 years since the tragic events took place here, where more than 27,000 people died. It is our debt; we owe it to them to come here. We owe it to them to pray. To show that we haven’t forgotten the events that transpired here.
SOT, Natalya Petrova, march participant (Russian): My great-grandmother, Sicily Makarovsky, and her younger daughter, younger sister of my grandmother, were in Rostov [on-Don]. When the Germans came, they tried to leave across the bridge. There were many people on the bridge, they were being shot at from all directions. They spent three days on this bridge.
Video ID: 20170811 015
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Russian Jewish Community Foundation 2014
Rostov Host city Football World Cup 2018
Southern Cluster is presented with the following cities:
1) Volgograd
2) Rostov-on-Don
3) Sochi
The story of the Don Cossacks, delectable fish and all the traditions of a large trading port: Rostov-on-Don treats visitors to the flavours of the Russian south
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Putin's influence could sway Serbia election
(19 Apr 2016) The wax museum in the Serbian city of Jagodina recently unveiled a figure of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Museum manager Jelena Bulatovic said visitor numbers have increased since the Russian leader's appearance.
Putin - the flesh-and-bones version - is proving equally popular throughout Serbia.
Support for Russia, and its president, appears to be growing in the Balkan nation, ahead of the 24 April general election.
The vote could decide whether the country pulls towards the European Union - or gravitates to Moscow.
It is widely expected that Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic will return to power.
However Vucic, a former extreme nationalist turned pro-EU reformer, is facing a stern challenge underpinned by influence from the East.
Many Serbs still feel victimised by the West, years after the NATO bombing, and see no real benefits from the lengthy accession talks with the EU.
For them, a close relationship with Slavic ally Russia seems a more attractive option.
After Serbia's surprise recent approval of an enhanced cooperation agreement with NATO, pro-Russian groups responded swiftly with anti-NATO rallies.
Pro-Russian propaganda has been in full swing ahead of the election.
Putin T-shirts are sold on the streets and several cafes named after the leader have opened.
Jelena Milic, of the pro-Western think tank 'Centre for Euro-Atlantic Studies', claimed Russia's soft power - acting on Serbian politics through attraction and persuasion rather than by force - has reached alarming levels.
Will it be enough to tip the direction of travel for Serbia? The 24 April election may well provide the answer.
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Renowned Turetsky choir performs V-Day songs in European cities
Renowned Russian men's a cappella ensemble and musical collective Turetsky choir performs famous Victory Day songs in different European cities.
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UK: Police shot member of public while firing 50 rounds to kill attackers - commissioner
Metropolitan Police Assistant Commissioner Mark Rowley stated that police fired roughly 50 rounds to neutralise the three London Bridge attackers during which a member of the public was accidentally shot and injured.
Video ID: 20170604 037
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Russian Speaking Jews Outreach In Philadephia
USSR anti-religious campaign (1928–1941) | Wikipedia audio article
This is an audio version of the Wikipedia Article:
USSR anti-religious campaign (1928–1941)
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The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.
- Socrates
SUMMARY
=======
The USSR anti-religious campaign of 1928–1941 was a new phase of anti-religious persecution in the Soviet Union following the anti-religious campaign of 1921–1928. The campaign began in 1929, with the drafting of new legislation that severely prohibited religious activities and called for a heightened attack on religion in order to further disseminate atheism. This had been preceded in 1928 at the fifteenth party congress, where Joseph Stalin criticized the party for failure to produce more active and persuasive anti-religious propaganda. This new phase coincided with the beginning of the forced mass collectivization of agriculture and the nationalization of the few remaining private enterprises.
Many of those who had been arrested in the 1920s would continue to remain in prison throughout the 1930s and beyond.
The main target of the anti-religious campaign in the 1920s and 1930s was the Russian Orthodox Church, which had the largest number of faithful. Nearly all of its clergy, and many of its believers, were shot or sent to labour camps. Theological schools were closed, and church publications were prohibited. More than 85,000 Orthodox priests were shot in 1937 alone. Only a twelfth of the Russian Orthodox Church's priests were left functioning in their parishes by 1941.In the period between 1927 and 1940, the number of Orthodox Churches in the Russian Republic fell from 29,584 to less than 500.The campaign slowed down in the late 1930s and early 1940s, and came to an abrupt end after the commencement of Operation Barbarossa. The challenge produced by the German invasion would ultimately prevent the public withering away of religion in Soviet society.This campaign, like the campaigns of other periods that formed the basis of the USSR's efforts to eliminate religion and replace it with atheism supported with a materialist world view, was accompanied with official claims that there was no religious persecution in the USSR, and that believers who were being targeted were for other reasons. Believers were in fact being widely targeted and persecuted for their belief or promotion of religion, as part of the state's campaign to disseminate atheism, but officially the state claimed that no such persecution existed and that the people being targeted - when they admitted that people were being targeted - were only being attacked for resistance to the state or breaking the law. This guise served Soviet propaganda abroad, where it tried to promote a better image of itself especially in light of the great criticism against it from foreign religious influences.
Escape from Sobibor 1987 (dutch/eng subs optional)
Escape from Sobibor is a 1987 British television film which aired on ITV and CBS.[1] It is the story of the mass escape from the German extermination camp at Sobibor, the most successful uprising by Jewish prisoners of German extermination camps (uprisings also took place at Auschwitz-Birkenau and Treblinka). The film was directed by Jack Gold and shot in Avala, Yugoslavia (now Serbia). The full 176 minute version shown in the UK on 10 May 1987 was pre-empted by a 143 minute version shown in the United States on 12 April 1987.
The script, by Reginald Rose, was based on Richard Rashke's 1983 book of the same name, along with a manuscript by Thomas Blatt, From the Ashes of Sobibor, and a book by Stanislaw Szmajzner, Inferno in Sobibor.[citation needed] Alan Arkin, Joanna Pacuła, and Rutger Hauer were the primary stars of the film. The film received a Golden Globe Award for Best Miniseries or Television Film[3] and Hauer received a Golden Globe Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role—Television Film or Miniseries. Esther Raab, who died on April 15, 2015, was a camp survivor who had assisted Rashke with his book and served as a technical consultant.
Cast
In credits order:
Alan Arkin as Leon Feldhendler
Joanna Pacuła as Luka (Gertrude Poppert)
Rutger Hauer as Lieutenant Aleksandr 'Sasha' Pechersky
Hartmut Becker as SS-Hauptscharführer Gustav Wagner
Jack Shepherd as Itzhak Lichtman
Emil Wolk as Samuel Lerer
Simon Gregor as Stanislaw 'Shlomo' Szmajzner
Linal Haft as Kapo Porchek
Jason Norman as Thomas 'Toivi' Blatt
Robert Gwilym as Chaim Engel
Eli Nathenson as Moses Szmajzner
Kurt Raab as SS-Oberscharführer Karl Frenzel
Eric Caspar as SS-Hauptsturmführer Franz Reichleitner
Hugo Bower as SS-Oberscharführer Rudolf Beckmann
Klaus Grünberg as SS-Oberscharführer Erich Bauer
Wolfgang Bathke as SS-Unterscharführer Hurst
Henning Gissel as SS-Scharführer Fallaster
Henry Stolow as SS-Untersturmführer Johann Niemann
Ullrich Haupt as SS-Scharführer Josef Wolf
Patti Love as Eda Fiszer Lichtman
Judith Sharp as Bajle Sobol
Ellis van Maarseveen [nl] as Selma Wijnberg
David Miller as Tailor Mundek
Jack Chissick as Hershel Zuckerman
Ned Vukovic as Morris
Sara Sugarman as Naomi
Peter Jonfield as Kapo Sturm
Dijana Kržanić as Esther Terner
Irfan Mensur as Kalimali
Zoran Stojiljković as Boris
Svetolik Nikačević as Old Man
Miša Janketić as Oberkapo Berliner
Dejan Čavić as Kapo Spitz
Zlatan Fazlagić as Weiss
Predrag Milinković as Kapo Jacob
Svetislav Goncić as Gardener 1
Bozidar Pavićević-Longa as SS-Sturmmann Ivan Klatt (uncredited)
Erol Kadić as Gardener 2 (uncredited)
Predrag Todorović as Ukrainian Guard (uncredited)
Howard K. Smith as Narrator (American version)
Jelena Žigon as Shlomo's Mother (uncredited)
Rastislav Jović as Shlomo's Father (uncredited)
Milan Erak as SS Corporal (uncredited)
Miroljub Lešo as Escaping Prisoner (uncredited)
(source wikipedia)
Love for Love - Episode 1. Russian TV Series. StarMedia. Historical Melodrama. English Subtitles
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The eve of World War I. An Uhlan regiment stations in a remote town in Ukraine. The officers in the regiment spend their free time in a miserable local tavern, killing time by playing cards. Young Lieutenant Aleksandr Grigoryev is even ready to play Russian roulette from boredom. But suddenly he meets Her… Nina, niece of magnate Stakhovsky, immediately wins his heart during their first meeting. The lieutenant is conquered. In love, he seeks invitation to dinner given by Stakhovsky where he meets his daughter Lera… The dinner is nearing completion and Aleskandr, who has danctd all the evening with Nina, suddenly remembers he has never asked the young lady of the house for a waltz. Wishing to rectify his omission, he asks her for a dance, but is sharply refused. It turns out that Lera is half-paralyzed and is condemned to the wheelchair for the rest of her life. To make amends, Aleksandr sends to Stakhovsky’s daughter a bouquet of gorgeous roses. The answer comes immediately: the young lady is waiting for his another visit…
Type: TV series
Genre: historical melodrama
Year of production: 2013
Number of episodes: 4
Directed by: Sergey Ashkenazi
Written by: Sergey Ashkenazi, Maria Zvereva
Production designer: Iraida Shul'ts
Director of photography: Vladimir Klimov
Music by: Aleksey Ashkenazi
Producer: Vlad Ryashin
Cast: Irina Vinogradova, Anna Peskova, Maksim Matveev, Sergey Shakurov, Mikhail Porechenkov, Aleksey Gus'kov, Valery Afanasiev
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Anti Zionist Rabbis brutally atacked by Israelis
Anti Zionist Rabbis brutally atacked by Israelis
Павел Полян | Pavel Polian | Marcel Nadjary sonderkommando | eng subtitles | Марсель Наджари
Pavel Polian about manuscript of Marcel Nadjary
Павел Полян о рукописи Марселя Наджари
Perm
Perm is a city and the administrative center of Perm Krai, Russia, located on the banks of the Kama River in the European part of Russia near the Ural Mountains. From 1940 to 1957 it was named Molotov.
According to the 2010 Census, Perm's population is 991,162, down from 1,001,653 recorded in the 2002 Census and 1,090,944 recorded in 1989 Census. As of the 2010 Census, the city was the thirteenth most populous in Russia.
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