Walking Through Auschwitz | WARNING: Actual footage of entire camp
ATTENTION: I disabled comments due to the complete disrespect some people had towards the people who were murdered and suffered at Auschwitz. Also, filming and photographing is allowed throughout the camp except for the room of hair which I did not film out of respect for the people who suffered a great deal at this place. There are multiple signs showing no flash photography because this is not only disruptive and rude towards the people paying their respect but it also alters the items coloring over time. You can go to the website below and see it says on their website what is and isn't allowed to be filmed:
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My regular vlogs are very happy and positive but this one is very different... I've always wanted to go visit auschwitz to see it for myself. I brought my camera with me so I could share this experience with people who wish to go see this place one day as well. Its a difficult thing to do but I believe it is necessary.
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A City of Hope built in Auschwitz-Oświęcim, Poland
One Humanity Institute will serve as a global peace epicenter, with buildings for formal and non-formal education with global exchanges, an experiential museum of One Humanity, a media library and research center, a conference center, a peace garden and hall of reflection and understanding, lodging and a villa retreat, and cooperative organizational offices, where peace builders and peacekeepers will gather to share ideas and evaluate opportunities to create a more secure and sustainable world.
Cities of Peace - Honors Oswiecim, Poland - 70th Anniversary Liberation of Auschwitz
The International Youth Meeting Center in collaboration with the Judaica Foundation have a vision for the future of Oświęcim that includes Polish artists collaborating on a new Cities of Peace painting to honor the liberation of the town and the death camp on the outskirts of the town. This Vlog is a sneak peak at the artists' roundtable held at the center and a short discussion with the artist and visionary of Cities of Peace, Dr. Ellen Frank.
Author and educator, Heather Dune Macadam, sits on the advisory board of the Cities of Peace and is a part of the delegation that has come here to Oświęcim for the 70th Anniversary of the Liberation of Auschwitz.
These Haunting Photographs Of Auschwitz Prisoners Are Even More Harrowing In Color
Watch More Stories :
The Story Of How The Seven Dwarfs Of Auschwitz Were Preyed Upon By The Nazis’ Angel Of Death
This Woman Was The First Black Actor To Win An Oscar – But Her Treatment At The Awards Was Woeful
How British Soldiers Used The Game ‘Monopoly’ To Escape Nazi Prison Camps In WWII
How The Nazis’ Most Formidable Warship Left A Nation’s Forests Permanently Scarred
Psychotic German Couple Used Fake Newspaper Ads To Lure Women And Do The Unthinkable
Brazilian Marina Amaral, born in 1994, was studying international relations at university. But her twin passions for history and photography led her to abandon her studies to become a full-time artist. And her chosen medium is the colorization of historical photographs. It’s a skill that she’s honed to perfection and one she’s recently used for a project that combines a poignant sense of horror with a deep respect for humanity.
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auschwitz - oswiecim poland.avi
???????? TRAVEL DIARY: Poland #3 KRAKÓW 波蘭克拉科夫 ~魅力舊都
Thanks for watching, hope you enjoyed! ;)
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Touring krakow: Day 7-11
Krakow Zapiekanki Stand in Kazimierz
Kładka Ojca Bernatka//Father Bernatek Footbridge
Oskar Schindler's Factory
Oświęcim//Auschwitz concentration camp
Main Square
Kraków Cloth Hall
Wawel Castle
The National Museum in Kraków
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And So It Begins by Artificial.Music
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SOLO TRAVEL Auschwitz Krakow Warsaw Poland
Thanks for watching if you enjoyed and want to support me please LIKE THE VIDEO and SUBSCRIBE!
Town Hall Tower:
Auschwitz:
Warsaw Rising Museum:
Songs:
Kavinsky - Nightcall
MGMT - Kids
Tame Impala - New Person Same Old Mistakes
Eric Clapton at Oswiecim (Auschwitz) 2014 Pt 1
Part 1 (of 4) of EC's headlining show at the annual Peace concert at Oswiecim (Auschwitz) Poland.
Poland/Kraków/Oświęcim(Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum) Part 18
Welcome to my travelchannel.On my channel you can find almost 1000 films of more than 70 countries.
See the playlist on my youtube channel.Enjoy!
Auschwitz-Birkenau State Museum
On July 2, 1947, the Polish government passed a law establishing a state memorial to the victims of Nazism on the site of the camp. In 1955, an exhibition opened displaying prisoner mug shots; hair, suitcases, and shoes taken from murdered prisoners; canisters of Zyklon B pellets; and other objects related to the killings.[205] UNESCO added the camp to its list of World Heritage Sites in 1979. In 2011, the museum drew 1,400,000 visitors.
Pope John Paul II performed mass over the train tracks leading to the camp on June 7, 1979. In the decades following his visit, controversies erupted over a group of Carmelite nuns founding a convent on the site and erecting a large cross originally used in the pope's mass. Protesters objected to what they saw as Christianization of the site, while others argued that the cross's presence effectively recognized the camp's Catholic victims.
On September 4, 2003, three Israeli Air Force F-15 Eagles performed a fly-over of Auschwitz-Birkenau during a ceremony at the camp below. The flight was led by Major-General Amir Eshel, the son of Holocaust survivors. On January 27, 2015, some 300 Auschwitz survivors and other guests gathered under a giant tent at the entrance to Auschwitz II Birkenau to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the camp's liberation. Attendees included president of the World Jewish Congress Ronald Lauder, film director Steven Spielberg, and world leaders such as Polish president Bronisław Komorowski and King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands. As the number of remaining survivors decreases each year, the attendance at the event is unlikely to be surpassed at future major anniversaries. Commemorations also took place at Yad Vashem in Israel, Theresienstadt concentration camp, and in Berlin and Moscow.
Museum curators note that some visitors try to take artefacts as souvenirs, which is strictly prohibited and usually leads to criminal charges. For example, on June 22, 2015, two British men were convicted of theft for stealing apparel buttons and shards of decorative glass they found on the ground near the area where camp victims' confiscated personal effects were stored. The men, both 17 years old, received probation and were fined £170. Curators said that similar thefts happen once or twice a year.Wikipedia
Oświęcim-Brzezinka Polska / Auschwitz-Birkenau Polen - Video presentation [2013.08.20] PL-EN
Please click on the link on my rodent. Everyone will find something for himself.
Link do mojich gryzoni, kazdy znajdzie coś dla siebie.
the password for the file in the description.
Zapraszam na bloga [audiobooki]
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English:
Auschwitz (Oswiecim) - the first camp (known as mother camp), mainly forced labor, who is also the managing center for the whole complex
Auschwitz II - Birkenau camp (Birkenau) concentration camp initially, then the a place mass extermination, equipped with gas chambers and crematoria
Auschwitz III - Monowitz (Monowitz), a forced labor camp for the Buna-Werke factory of IG Farben. (no head on in this film)
Starting at the end the seventies of the twentieth different people - mostly associated with the extreme right - negated the number of victims of Auschwitz, mass killing of gas and all dealings destruction.
Such views shall are called revisionism or negationism.
In many countries - including in Poland and Germany - are prohibited such statements and as so. Auschwitz lie.
Another issue was the operation of the world's mental shortcut Polish camps, originating from the geographical location these constructs of Nazi.
Poor knowledge of foreign history and geography in the West caused quite a frequent occurrence, usually in the daily press, the findings of Polish extermination camps, as well as the Polish Nazis. This suggested that the Poles, not the Germans were the perpetrators of the Holocaust.
At the turn of 2004 and 2005, in period of preparation to the 60th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, Poland started in socio-government action against falsification of history about the perpetrators of the crimes in the Nazi camps, and the spring of 2006 - a campaign to change the an official name of the camp site to Former Nazi German Concentration Camp Auschwitz-Birkenau.
June 27, 2007, the UNESCO World Heritage Committee sitting as New Zealand has decided to change the name of the concentration camp Auschwitz-Birkenau in the entry on the list of World Heritage Sites. As proposed by submitted jointly by Poland and Israel, on June 27, 2007, the official name of the listed locations include: Auschwitz-Birkenau. German Nazi Concentration and Extermination Camp (1940-1945).
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Polski:
Auschwitz I (Oświęcim) -- pierwszy obóz (tzw. obóz macierzysty), głównie pracy przymusowej, pełniący również funkcję centrum zarządzającego dla całego kompleksu
Auschwitz II -- Birkenau (Brzezinka), początkowo obóz koncentracyjny, potem także miejsce masowej eksterminacji, wyposażone w komory gazowe i krematoria
Auschwitz III -- Monowitz (Monowice), obóz pracy przymusowej w fabryce Buna-Werke koncernu IG Farben. (nie ma g o na tym filmie)
Począwszy od końca lat siedemdziesiątych XX w. różne osoby -- na ogół powiązane ze skrajną prawicą -- negowały liczbę ofiar Auschwitz, masowe uśmiercanie gazem oraz cały proceder zagłady.
Poglądy te noszą miano rewizjonizmu bądź negacjonizmu.
W wielu krajach -- m.in. w Polsce i Niemczech -- twierdzenia takie są zakazane i jako tzw. kłamstwo oświęcimskie
Osobnym zagadnieniem było funkcjonowanie na świecie skrótu myślowego „polskich obozów, pochodzącego od geograficznego położenia tych konstrukcji hitlerowskich.
Słaba znajomość historii obcej i geografii w krajach zachodnich powodowała dość częste występowanie, zwykle w prasie codziennej, stwierdzeń o polskich obozach śmierci czy koncentracyjnych, jak też o polskich nazistach. Sugerowało to, że to Polacy, a nie niemieccy naziści byli sprawcami Holocaustu.
Na przełomie roku 2004 i 2005, w okresie przygotowań do 60. rocznicy wyzwolenia Auschwitz, rozpoczęto w Polsce społeczno-rządową akcję przeciwko fałszowaniu historii o sprawcach zbrodni w obozach nazistowskich, a wiosną 2006 roku -- kampanię na rzecz zmiany przez UNESCO oficjalnej nazwy obozu na „Były Niemiecki Nazistowski Obóz Koncentracyjny Auschwitz-Birkenau.
27 czerwca 2007 r. Komitet Światowego Dziedzictwa UNESCO obradujący w Nowej Zelandii podjął decyzję o zmianie nazwy byłego obozu koncentracyjnego Auschwitz-Birkenau we wpisie na listę Światowego Dziedzictwa. Zgodnie z propozycją przedstawioną wspólnie przez Polskę i Izrael, od 27 czerwca 2007 r. oficjalna nazwa wpisanego na listę miejsca to: Auschwitz-Birkenau. Niemiecki nazistowski obóz koncentracyjny i zagłady (1940-1945).
Kościuszko Mound | Krakow Poland
A friendship forged in the Holocaust
Jozef Jarosz still lives next door to an underground hideout where he and his parents offered protection to a Jewish family hiding from Nazi prosecution during World War Two.
The dugout was located at a Polish farm, some 160 kilometers away from the town of Oswiecim, where the German occupiers created one of the most relentless extermination machines in history, claiming the lives of at least 1 million Jews.
In peacetime, the small underground space was used by his father and owner of the farm, Franciszek Jarosz, to store potatoes and beetroots.
But after the war broke out - despite a death penalty for those caught aiding Jews in the territories occupied by Nazi Germany - the Jarosz family sheltered a total of 14 Jews, including 11 in the dugout, and one behind a wardrobe.
My father was a brave man. Today, for some people it is hard to believe that so many people have been saved. And here nobody knew about it, we needed to deal with it so that nobody found out, Jarosz, now 85, recalled.
Together with his father, Jarosz would spend nights in a nearby mill, grinding wheat under the cover of darkness. Also at night, windows tightly shut and covered, his mother would then bake bread. His sister would deliver the food to the refugees. A family consuming unusually large amounts of food would have raised suspicion of the German authorities or their informants.
When Jarosz meets with one of the people he helped save from near certain death in a Nazi concentration camp, it's not a reunion after years of separation, but rather a casual visit for cake and coffee to nearby Nowy Sacz.
Anna Grygiel-Huryn was only 2 years old when in 1943, together with her mother, she entered a dugout in Stankowa, southern Poland.
She continued to live near the site where she spent 2 years in hiding - and one of her saviors, the boy who gathered fruit for her and the others in hiding and made risky trips to the local market to buy enough food without raising suspicion.
Now and then there'd be a ray of sunshine. And so I' would ask: What is that? And my mum would explain that it's the sun, when the war is over, it will be warm and you will see the sun, Grygiel-Huryn said about her experience living in the shelter.
Underground, the little girl spent her days playing with a potato.
It would not be until January 1945, when the advancing Soviet troops pushed the Germans out of the area, that, starved and bald, legs bent by rickets, she would finally see the sun.
When all these people spilled out (from the dugout), in the house mom and dad organized a farewell... Oh, Jesus, how they were happy that they survived, that they can come out now, Jarosh said, recalling the moment they were released.
6,620 Poles, including the Jarosz family, were officially recognized for their efforts to save Jews.
Today, Poland boasts the highest number of rescuers who were granted the Righteous Among the Nations title by the Israeli Holocaust research institute, Yad Vashem.
Poland: An Uncomfortable Legacy | Focus on Europe
Auschwitz is the most infamous of the extermination camps in the Holocaust. 70 years after it was liberated, the local authorities are eager to show that there’s more to Oświęcim (the town’s Polish name) than death and horror. The upcoming 70th anniversary of the liberation is expected to be attended by a range of high-profile leaders from around the world. One big name will be missing, however: Vladimir Putin.
More Focus on Europe at:
Central Europe Tour (2019) - Part 2 - Czestochowa, Kraków, Auschwitz-Birkenau
We headed south in Poland on Tuesday 20th
We stopped in Częstochowa, Poland to visit the famous St Paul’s Monastery of Jasna Góra, which houses the Black Madonna painting.
Arriving in Kraków, Poland around 3:45pm, we headed out promptly to the Wieliczka Salt Mine just within the Kraków metropolitan area for a few hours before returning to the hotel and heading out on the town.
On Wed 21st, the next day, we were up early for a guided tour of Medieval Krakow : The Wawel Royal Castle, the Jewish Quarter, Ghetto Heroes Square, the Lonely Chairs, Old Town Market Square (St. Mary's Church) and the Renaissance Cloth Hall.
Late afternoon, putting on our thinking hats, we visited the Auschwitz-Birkenau Memorial and Museum** in Oświęcim, Poland before returning to the city for evening out in the neighborhood.
** NOTICE : The sections of this video covering the visit to Auschwitz-Birkenau contain DISTURBING IMAGES. ** Please be mindful of the intent and content.
MUSIC in this section:
Wrong, by Dan Henig
English Country Garden, Aaron Kenny
I Am a Man Who Will Fight for Your Honor , by Chris Zabriskie
NOTICE: I Am a Man Who Will Fight for Your Honor by Chris Zabriskie is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Source:
Artist:
When We Found The Horizon, by Late Night Feeler
**Upon a request filed by Poland, the reading of the entry for the remains of the Auschwitz concentration camp was changed in 2007 from “Auschwitz Concentration Camp” to: “Nazi German Concentration and Extermination Camp (1940-1945)”
Central Europe - part 3 - Poland - Krakow, Auschwitz, Wieliczka mine, Warsaw; Czech - Praque 1998
Krakow - main square, Wawel Castle & Cathedral, church processions, museum, old town, Auschwitz concentration camp, local train to Wieliczka Salt Mine, Kosciuszko Mound, Chopin Statue, Warsaw - Wilanow Palace, Tomb of Unknown Soldier, City Hall, opera house, old city square and city wall, presidential palace, train to Czech. Praque - National Museum. Municipal Hall, National Theatre
Eric Clapton at Oswiecim (Auschwitz) 2014 Pt 4
Part 4 (of 4) of EC's headlining show at the annual Peace concert at Oswiecim (Auschwitz) Poland.
Paolo Nutini cover MGMT - Heineken Open'er Festival 30.06.2011 Poland live Opener Gdynia
Paolo Nutini - Heineken Open'er Festival 30.06.2011 Poland live Opener Gdynia
Searching for the Warsaw Ghetto - Poland 4K Travel Channel
No major city in Europe suffered more under the Nazi terror regime than Warsaw. After the withdrawal of German troops, the city was largely destroyed and in most parts practically uninhabitable. All the more remarkable is the considerable achievement the Poles have made in rebuilding the city. Today you see modern urban features in which international star architects like Norman Foster and Daniel Libeskind have played a part. However, the first steps towards reconstruction were taken immediately after the war and aimed at the construction of the old town true to the original.
Later one rebuilt the streets Miodowa, Diuga, and Senatorskaand restored innumerable palaces.
A central topic in Warsaw's war history is the Warsaw Ghetto, into which hundreds of thousands of people were crammed and later deported to concentration camps. The Pawiak prison plays a particular role. 37000 people were murdered and 60000 were transferred to concentration camps from there. Today it is a museum. Another important museum is the Museum of the History of Polish Jews.
But we want to see the quarters and buildings of the Warsaw Ghetto and start our search. We are aware that almost everything has been destroyed after the war and many prefabricated buildings stand on the sites today.
We take the Metro to the station Metro Ratusz Arsenał. It was the location of the main synagogue from Warsaw until it was blown up.
But there is no trace of the synagogue anymore. There is supposed to be a plaque (Warsaw Ghetto boundary marker) somewhere, but we didn't come for commemorative plaques. Where once stood the synagogue is the Blue Tower Plaza, an office complex with the logo of the insurance company MetLife at the top today.
On the opposite side of the street is the City Hall of Warsaw with the seat of the Lord Mayor. The museum Kolekcji is in the round extension of the former stock exchange in this at the left end of the complex, in Jana Pawła II. It houses the most important collection of European art in Warsaw, dedicated to Pope John II. 450 exhibits are donations of Zbigniew and Janina Porczyński.
We turn off in into the Senatorska. Here is the Teatr Wielki Opera Narodowa, the national theater, and the national opera.
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please read more:
Keine Großstadt in Europa hat unter dem Nazi-Terrorregime mehr gelitten als Warschau. Nach dem Abzug der deutschen Truppen war die Stadt zum größten Teil zerstört und praktisch unbewohnbar. Umso bemerkenswerter ist die beachtliche Leistung, die die Polen für den Wiederaufbau erbracht haben. Heute zeigt sich ein modernes Stadtbild, an dem internationale Stararchitekten wie Norman Foster und Daniel Libeskind mitgewirkt haben. Doch die ersten Schritte beim Wiederaufbau wurden bereits unmittelbar nach dem Krieg unternommen und hatten den originalgetreuen Aufbau der Altstadt zum Ziel.
Später wurden die Straßen Miodowa, Diuga und Senatorska wieder aufgebaut. Außerdem wurden unzählige Paläste und Palais wieder hergestellt.
Ein zentrales Thema der Kriegsgeschichte in Warschau stellt das Warschauer Ghetto dar, in das hunderttausende Menschen gepfercht und später in Konzentrationslager deportiert wurden. Eine besondere Rolle spielt das Gefängnis Pawiak, in dem 37.000 Menschen ermordet wurden und 60.000 an Konzentrationslager weitergeleitet wurden. Heute ist es ein Museum. Ein weiteres bedeutendes Museum ist das Museum der Geschichte der polnischen Juden.
Wir wollen aber die Viertel und Gebäude des Warschauer Ghettos sehen und machen uns auf die Suche. Dabei ist uns bewusst, das fast alles nach dem Krieg zerstört war und viele Plattenbauten auf dem Gelände errichtet wurden.
Wir fahren mit der Metro zur Station Metro Ratusz Arsenal. Hier befand sich ursprünglich die Hauptsynagoge von Warschau bis zu ihrer Sprengung.
Von der Synagoge gibt es aber keine Spur mehr. Es soll zwar eine Gedenktafel (Warsaw Ghetto boundary marker) irgendwo geben, aber wir sind nicht wegen Gedenktafeln gekommen. Wo einst die Synagoge stand befindet sich heute das Blue Tower Plaza, ein Bürokomplex der an der Spitze das Logo des Versicherungskonzerns MetLife trägt.
Auf der gegenüberliegenden Straßenseite befindet sich das Rathaus der Stadt Warschau mit dem Sitz des Oberbürgermeisters. Am linken Ende des Komplexes befindet sich im runden Anbau der ehemaligen Börse das Muzeum Kolekcji, im Jana Pawła II. Hier befindet sich die bedeutendste Sammlung europäischer Kunst in Warschau, die Papst Johannes II gewidmet ist. 450 Exponate wurden von Zbigniew und Janina Porczyński gestiftet.
Wir biegen ab in die Senatorska. Hier befinden sich das Teatr Wielki Opera Narodowa, das Nationaltheater und die Nationaloper.
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weitere Infos im Reisevideoblog:
Xterra Poland 2016 airfilms
The first Xterra Poland crosstrathlon race in Krakow.
My first fly with Yuneec Typhoon H.
Let's see this fantastic place in the middle of Krakow.
KRAKOW's finest video. Sit back, relax, and enjoy quality views and music. HD Kraków wideo.
BEAUTIFUL POLAND! Visiting Kraków? Here's your city tour video. Complete Old Town KRAKÓW walking tour: Wawel Castle, Schindler's Factory, St. Mary's Basilica, Barbikan, and much more. As always, this is a high definition video.
Please note: It takes a lot of time and a significant effort to produce these videos. Please LIKE, SHARE and SUBSCRIBE if you enjoyed. Thank you!
Lily
Featured in this video:
00:02 Old Town Square
00:17 Town Hall Tower
00:44 Cloth Hall
01:08 Adam Mickiewicz Monument
01:27 Church of St. Wojciech
01:33 St. Mary's Basilica
02:07 St. Barbara's Church
02:18 Wawel Castle
03:00 Dragon's Den
03:16 Floriańska St.
03:25 Florian's Gate,
03:43 Barbikan,
04:07 Juliusz Słowacki Theatre
04:19 Schindler's Factory
04:42 St. Andrew's Church
04:50 Church of Saints Peter and Paul,
05:03 Szczepanski Square
05:21 St. Florian's Church
05:48 Jan Matejko Academy of Fine Arts
05:54 Pomnik Grunwaldzki
06:04 Church of the Holy Cross,
06:11 Carmelite Church of Piasek
06:20 Jagiellonian University Museum,
06:25 Church of St. Anne
06:46 St. Katherine of Alexandria Church
07:14 Bonifratrzy Church
07:24 Vistula River
07:30 Pilsudski Bridge
07:39 Father Bernatek Footbridge
07:45 Church of St. Joseph
07:57 Museum of Contemporary Art
08:08 Basilica of St. Hyacinth
08:26 St. Francis of Assisi Church
08:47 St. Mary Magdalene Square
08:49 Pontifical University of John Paul II
09:02 Full of Beauty Palace
09:10 Archdiocesan Museum
09:21 Archaeological Museum
09:28 Geological Museum
09:33 Lord's Transfiguration Church
09:37 Institute of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology
09:55 Jagiellonian University
10:15 Nicolaus Copernicus Statue
10:19 Collegium Philologicum
Audio tracks: Worthy of Praise, by Jay Man, OurMusicBox.com, and By your side, by Nicolai Heidlas licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 / 4.0.
At the end of the video: Underdog, by The 126ers.