Anna German. Episode 10. TV series. English Subtitles. StarMediaEN. Drama
Anna German was a hugely popular Polish singer whose life was marred by tragedy. Known as the ‘White Angel of Polish Song’, she recorded dozens of albums during her short career and was admired and adored by all Polish people including Pope John Paul II.
She was born in Uzbekistan, USSR on 14 February 1936. She had her first experience of loss when her father was wrongly arrested and sent to a forced labour camp where he was subsequently killed. In 1946 her mother applied for repatriation, and the family moved to Poland. Anna began her music career at Wroclaw University. In 1967, after winning several local song contests, she was invited to perform at the San Remo Music Festival where she was awarded the Audience Choice Award making her an overnight success in Italy.
Tragically her promising career was interrupted by a serious car accident, which disabled her for two years. After a painful period of rehabilitation, she returned to the stage in 1972 with a two-month tour of the Soviet Union where she was invited to perform by acclaimed Soviet film director Yevgeniy Matveyev.
In 1975 she gave birth to her beloved son, Zbigniew and once again disappeared from public view taking time off to look after him. In 1982 Anna was diagnosed with cancer just before embarking on her last tour, this time to Australia. She died on 26 August 1982 aged 46.
Her extraordinary voice and unique interpretation continue to inspire her many fans.
Type: TV series
Genre: drama, biography
Year of production: 2012
Number of episodes: 10
Directed by: Val'demar Kshistek, Aleksandr Timenko
Written by: Alina Semeryakova
Directors of photography: Andrey Vorobiov, Aleksandr Krishtalovich, Gzhegozh Kendzerski, Pavel Fomintsev
Music by: Daniil Yudelevich
Producers: Galina Balan-Timkina, Vlad Ryashin
Premiere: 03/09/2012, Perviy (Russia), 09/09/2012, on Inter (Ukraine)
Cast: Joanna Moro, Szymon Sedrowski, Marat Basharov, Maria Poroshina, Ekaterina Vasileva, Konstantin Milovanov, Yulia Rutberg
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Anna German. Episode 10
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Anna German. Episode 3. TV series. English Subtitles. StarMediaEN. Drama
Anna German was a hugely popular Polish singer whose life was marred by tragedy. Known as the ‘White Angel of Polish Song’, she recorded dozens of albums during her short career and was admired and adored by all Polish people including Pope John Paul II.
She was born in Uzbekistan, USSR on 14 February 1936. She had her first experience of loss when her father was wrongly arrested and sent to a forced labour camp where he was subsequently killed. In 1946 her mother applied for repatriation, and the family moved to Poland. Anna began her music career at Wroclaw University. In 1967, after winning several local song contests, she was invited to perform at the San Remo Music Festival where she was awarded the Audience Choice Award making her an overnight success in Italy.
Tragically her promising career was interrupted by a serious car accident, which disabled her for two years. After a painful period of rehabilitation, she returned to the stage in 1972 with a two-month tour of the Soviet Union where she was invited to perform by acclaimed Soviet film director Yevgeniy Matveyev.
In 1975 she gave birth to her beloved son, Zbigniew and once again disappeared from public view taking time off to look after him. In 1982 Anna was diagnosed with cancer just before embarking on her last tour, this time to Australia. She died on 26 August 1982 aged 46.
Her extraordinary voice and unique interpretation continue to inspire her many fans.
Type: TV series
Genre: drama, biography
Year of production: 2012
Number of episodes: 10
Directed by: Val'demar Kshistek, Aleksandr Timenko
Written by: Alina Semeryakova
Directors of photography: Andrey Vorobiov, Aleksandr Krishtalovich, Gzhegozh Kendzerski, Pavel Fomintsev
Music by: Daniil Yudelevich
Producers: Galina Balan-Timkina, Vlad Ryashin
Premiere: 03/09/2012, Perviy (Russia), 09/09/2012, on Inter (Ukraine)
Cast: Joanna Moro, Szymon Sedrowski, Marat Basharov, Maria Poroshina, Ekaterina Vasileva, Konstantin Milovanov, Yulia Rutberg
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Anna German. Episode 3
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Anna German. Episode 9. TV series. English Subtitles. StarMediaEN. Drama
Anna German was a hugely popular Polish singer whose life was marred by tragedy. Known as the ‘White Angel of Polish Song’, she recorded dozens of albums during her short career and was admired and adored by all Polish people including Pope John Paul II.
She was born in Uzbekistan, USSR on 14 February 1936. She had her first experience of loss when her father was wrongly arrested and sent to a forced labour camp where he was subsequently killed. In 1946 her mother applied for repatriation, and the family moved to Poland. Anna began her music career at Wroclaw University. In 1967, after winning several local song contests, she was invited to perform at the San Remo Music Festival where she was awarded the Audience Choice Award making her an overnight success in Italy.
Tragically her promising career was interrupted by a serious car accident, which disabled her for two years. After a painful period of rehabilitation, she returned to the stage in 1972 with a two-month tour of the Soviet Union where she was invited to perform by acclaimed Soviet film director Yevgeniy Matveyev.
In 1975 she gave birth to her beloved son, Zbigniew and once again disappeared from public view taking time off to look after him. In 1982 Anna was diagnosed with cancer just before embarking on her last tour, this time to Australia. She died on 26 August 1982 aged 46.
Her extraordinary voice and unique interpretation continue to inspire her many fans.
Type: TV series
Genre: drama, biography
Year of production: 2012
Number of episodes: 10
Directed by: Val'demar Kshistek, Aleksandr Timenko
Written by: Alina Semeryakova
Directors of photography: Andrey Vorobiov, Aleksandr Krishtalovich, Gzhegozh Kendzerski, Pavel Fomintsev
Music by: Daniil Yudelevich
Producers: Galina Balan-Timkina, Vlad Ryashin
Premiere: 03/09/2012, Perviy (Russia), 09/09/2012, on Inter (Ukraine)
Cast: Joanna Moro, Szymon Sedrowski, Marat Basharov, Maria Poroshina, Ekaterina Vasileva, Konstantin Milovanov, Yulia Rutberg
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Anna German. Episode 9
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Anna German. Episode 4. TV series. English Subtitles. StarMediaEN. Drama
Anna German was a hugely popular Polish singer whose life was marred by tragedy. Known as the ‘White Angel of Polish Song’, she recorded dozens of albums during her short career and was admired and adored by all Polish people including Pope John Paul II.
She was born in Uzbekistan, USSR on 14 February 1936. She had her first experience of loss when her father was wrongly arrested and sent to a forced labour camp where he was subsequently killed. In 1946 her mother applied for repatriation, and the family moved to Poland. Anna began her music career at Wroclaw University. In 1967, after winning several local song contests, she was invited to perform at the San Remo Music Festival where she was awarded the Audience Choice Award making her an overnight success in Italy.
Tragically her promising career was interrupted by a serious car accident, which disabled her for two years. After a painful period of rehabilitation, she returned to the stage in 1972 with a two-month tour of the Soviet Union where she was invited to perform by acclaimed Soviet film director Yevgeniy Matveyev.
In 1975 she gave birth to her beloved son, Zbigniew and once again disappeared from public view taking time off to look after him. In 1982 Anna was diagnosed with cancer just before embarking on her last tour, this time to Australia. She died on 26 August 1982 aged 46.
Her extraordinary voice and unique interpretation continue to inspire her many fans.
Type: TV series
Genre: drama, biography
Year of production: 2012
Number of episodes: 10
Directed by: Val'demar Kshistek, Aleksandr Timenko
Written by: Alina Semeryakova
Directors of photography: Andrey Vorobiov, Aleksandr Krishtalovich, Gzhegozh Kendzerski, Pavel Fomintsev
Music by: Daniil Yudelevich
Producers: Galina Balan-Timkina, Vlad Ryashin
Premiere: 03/09/2012, Perviy (Russia), 09/09/2012, on Inter (Ukraine)
Cast: Joanna Moro, Szymon Sedrowski, Marat Basharov, Maria Poroshina, Ekaterina Vasileva, Konstantin Milovanov, Yulia Rutberg
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Anna German. Episode 4
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#StarMediaEN
Irena Sendler
The Holocaust - the systematic annihilation of six million Jews - is a history of enduring horror and sorrow. The charred skeletons, the diabolic experiments, the death camps, the mass graves, the smoke from the chimneys ... In 1933 nine million Jews lived in the 21 countries of Europe that would be occupied by Germany during the war. By 1945 two out of every three European Jews had been killed by the Nazis. 1.5 million children were murdered. This figure includes more than 1.2 million Jewish children, tens of thousands of Gypsy children and thousands of handicapped children.
Yet there were acts of courage and human decency during the Holocaust - stories to bear witness to goodness, love and compassion. This is the story of an incredible woman and her amazing gift to mankind. Irena Sendler. An unfamiliar name to most people, but this remarkable woman defied the Nazis and saved 2,500 Jewish children by smuggling them out of the Warsaw Ghetto. As a health worker, she sneaked the children out between 1942 and 1943 to safe hiding places and found non-Jewish families to adopt them.
For many years Irena Sendler - white-haired, gentle and courageous - was living a modest existence in her Warsaw apartment. This unsung heroine passed away on Monday May 12th, 2008.
She was dubbed the ‘angel of Warsaw’ by one newspaper. With her death on Monday May 12th, 2008, Irena Sendler’s legend took flight. A sheaf of obituaries paid tribute to the Polish woman who saved 2,500 Jewish children from the Nazi-created ghetto.
Irena Sendler was a member of the children’s section of Zegota, the codename given for the Polish Council to Aid Jews. She along with two dozen other members saved more than 2,500 children during WW2, smuggling them out of the Ghetto by posing as an inspector of sanitary conditions during a typhoid outbreak.
Sendler began smuggling out the children in ambulances, sometimes using bodybags and other times hiding them in amongst sacks and loads of goods. She often had difficulty convincing parents to let their children go, with them asking Irena to promise them that their children would live. The only guarantee could give them was telling them that by staying, their children would most certainly die.
Once safely smuggled from the ghetto, Irena would provide the children with false documents and place them with non-Jewish families. Their true identities were kept in glass jars buried beneath a neighbour’s apple tree. She hoped that one day she could reunite the children with their parents.
The Germans found out about Irena’s activities and she was severely tortured. She survived but the effects crippled her throughout the rest of her life. Despite her ordeal, Irena said nothing of the people who had helped her or the children she had helped to save. Her silence left her sentenced to death, which she avoided only through the bribery of one of the Gestapo by a member of the Zegota.
Irena escaped from prison and spent the rest of the war on the run from the Nazis. Once the war was over, she set about sifting through the names in the jars, attempting to reunite the families destroyed through war. Though most had lost their families Irena’s efforts were remembered. Irena Sendler saved twice as many Jews from death as the celebrated Oskar Schindler, who inspired Steven Spielberg’s film.
Unlike Schindler, she was arrested and tortured by the Gestapo. Unlike Schindler, who knew the people he helped, she risked her life for strangers.
Yet astonishingly, Irena lived in obscurity for decades and when she was finally acknowledged was presented as a bland icon, not nearly as interesting as the paradoxical Schindler.
It was really only in 1999, after four teenage girls from Kansas were assigned a school history project – to find out more about this rumoured heroine of the German occupation – that her story was uncovered.
The pupils tracked her down and wrote a play about her which they performed across America. Now it’s being made into a film, with Angelina Jolie mooted to star.
Irena Sendler died in 2008 but her legacy lives on, albeit quietly and under the celebrity radar of those who are awarded more for doing far less.
Auschwitz now in the eyes of Dore | VPRO Documentary
How is Auschwitz in the eyes of Dore? Why is Dore visiting Auschwitz again? What is it, that makes Dore going back to the city of Auschwitz? A travel documentary about Auschwitz, family, and roots.
The 100th anniversary of the country is celebrated on the independence march in Warsaw. There, Dore speaks with ultra-right nationalists about their ideal Poland. How does Poland celebrate 100 years of independence? Seas of white-red flags, popping fireworks and the slogan: God, honor, homeland. These are the characteristics of the independence march in Poland. Every year on November 11, thousands of Poles walk on the streets in Warsaw to express pride for their home country.
A quarter of a million Poles live in the Netherlands. Dutch-Polish journalist Dore van Duivenbode is one of them. In this series, she travels back to her motherland, where she visits her family house near Oświęcim, former Auschwitz. In Bialowieza, in eastern Poland, she tries to find out why a forest is causing much tension. In Warsaw, she gets deeper into the hot topic of abortion. Here strong supporters and opponents are giving their perspective. Her travels bring her also to North Poland, where she meets a low-income family and talks with the famous and notorious opposition judge Igor Tuleya. A travel series about Poland, a country that is more and more divided and cursed by its geography location.
In this first episode, Dore is present at a special edition: the celebration of a 100-year-old independent Poland, which attracted around 200,000 people. What are they celebrating?
The curse of Poland. That's how the country is called because of its geographic location.
Enclosed by two great powers, Russia and Germany, Poland has existed for years in the spheres of influence of others. In 1795, the Polish territory was divided between Austria-Hungary, Prussia, and Russia, thereby losing its independence. Until a hundred years ago. Then after the First World War Austria-Hungary fell apart, Germany emerged as a loser and Russia had to contend with a civil war. Military Józef Piłsudskizag took his chance and declared Poland, after 123 years of non-existence, again independent.
That happened on November 11, the day on which Polish independence is now celebrated annually. Piłsudski is still remembered today, also on the march, as founder of the Second Polish Republic. However, despite his big win, Poland again did not have a say. The Second World War meant German aggression followed by decades of Soviet, and only when Communism fell in 1989, Poland was more able to move freely again.
The Soviet influence has left his trace. Also, the urge to make your own decisions all the more significant. Among those decisions are NATO membership in 1999 and EU membership in 2004. Something that conflicts with Poland's desire to act entirely independently. All these emotions play a role in the independence march. Moreover, that makes it for many Poles so important to embrace their own Polish identity on this day (and all other days of the year).
Original title: Mijn Poolse huis (1/5)
Presentation: Dore van Duivenbode
Director: Britta Bosman
Production: Elleke Claessen
Camera: Jacko van t´Hof, Maarten Kramer, Pim Hawinkels
Sound: Dennis Kersten
Sound Mix: Joost Oskamp
Edit: Paul Delput
Research: Anna Stylinska, Michiel Driebergen
Music: Kaveh Vares
Commissioning Editor: Henneke Hagen
© VPRO March 2019
On VPRO broadcast you will find nonfiction videos with English subtitles, French subtitles and Spanish subtitles, such as documentaries, short interviews and documentary series.
This channel offers some of the best travel series from the Dutch broadcaster VPRO. Our series explore cultures from all over the world. VPRO storytellers have lived abroad for years with an open mind and endless curiosity, allowing them to become one with their new country. Thanks to these qualities, they are the perfect guides to let you experience a place and culture through the eyes of a local. Uncovering the soul of a country, through an intrinsic and honest connection, is what VPRO and its presenters do best.
So subscribe to our channel and we will be delighted to share our adventures with you!
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Анна Герман. Сериал. 10 Cерия. StarMedia. Фильмы о Любви. Драма
Все серии / All episodes:
Над этим сериалом работала международная команда. Ведь Анну Герман знают и любят поляки и русские, украинцы и немцы ... Эта любовь объединяет, и она - лучшая награда и лучшая память о великой певице.
С Анной Герман сотрудничали самые знаменитые советские поэты и композиторы - Александра Пахмутова, Матвей Блантер, Владимир Шаинский, Николай Добронравов, Роберт Рождественский, Евгений Евтушенко и многие другие.
Но судьба ее не баловала: еще в довоенном детстве Анне пришлось пережить первую потерю. И в дальнейшем, ее недолгая, но яркая жизнь будет состоять из головокружительных взлётов и неожиданных падений.
Формат: телесериал
Жанр: драма, биография
Год производства: 2012
Количество серий: 10
Режиссеры: Вальдемар Кшистек, Александр Тименко
Сценарий: Алина Семерякова
Операторы-постановщики: Андрей Воробьев, Александр Кришталович, Гжегож Кэндзерски, Павел Фоминцев
Композитор: Даниил Юделевич
Продюсеры: Галина Балан-Тимкина, Влад Ряшин
В ролях: Йоанна Моро, Шимон Сендровски, Марат Башаров, Мария Порошина, Екатерина Васильева, Константин Милованов, Юлия Рутберг
Смотреть онлайн бесплатно Анна Герман. Сериал. 10 Cерия. StarMedia. Фильмы о Любви. Драма. 2012
Онлайн-кинотеатр StarMedia на YouTube
Смотреть онлайн фильмы и сериалы бесплатно в хорошем качестве.
Лучшие русские фильмы и сериалы, лучшие мелодрамы, военные фильмы, новинки кино, фильмы с русскими английскими субтитрами — смотреть онлайн бесплатно в хорошем качестве в онлайн кинотеатре StarMedia на YouTube. Приятного просмотра!
Star Media в социальных сетях:
#StarMedia
Анна Герман. Сериал. 3 Cерия. StarMedia. Фильмы о Любви. Драма
Все серии / All episodes:
Над этим сериалом работала международная команда. Ведь Анну Герман знают и любят поляки и русские, украинцы и немцы ... Эта любовь объединяет, и она - лучшая награда и лучшая память о великой певице.
С Анной Герман сотрудничали самые знаменитые советские поэты и композиторы - Александра Пахмутова, Матвей Блантер, Владимир Шаинский, Николай Добронравов, Роберт Рождественский, Евгений Евтушенко и многие другие.
Но судьба ее не баловала: еще в довоенном детстве Анне пришлось пережить первую потерю. И в дальнейшем, ее недолгая, но яркая жизнь будет состоять из головокружительных взлётов и неожиданных падений.
Формат: телесериал
Жанр: драма, биография
Год производства: 2012
Количество серий: 10
Режиссеры: Вальдемар Кшистек, Александр Тименко
Сценарий: Алина Семерякова
Операторы-постановщики: Андрей Воробьев, Александр Кришталович, Гжегож Кэндзерски, Павел Фоминцев
Композитор: Даниил Юделевич
Продюсеры: Галина Балан-Тимкина, Влад Ряшин
В ролях: Йоанна Моро, Шимон Сендровски, Марат Башаров, Мария Порошина, Екатерина Васильева, Константин Милованов, Юлия Рутберг
Смотреть онлайн бесплатно Анна Герман. Сериал. 3 Cерия. StarMedia. Фильмы о Любви. Драма. 2012
Онлайн-кинотеатр StarMedia на YouTube
Смотреть онлайн фильмы и сериалы бесплатно в хорошем качестве.
Лучшие русские фильмы и сериалы, лучшие мелодрамы, военные фильмы, новинки кино, фильмы с русскими английскими субтитрами — смотреть онлайн бесплатно в хорошем качестве в онлайн кинотеатре StarMedia на YouTube. Приятного просмотра!
Star Media в социальных сетях:
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Анна Герман. Сериал. 9 Серия. StarMedia. Фильмы о Любви. Драма
Все серии / All episodes:
Над этим сериалом работала международная команда. Ведь Анну Герман знают и любят поляки и русские, украинцы и немцы ... Эта любовь объединяет, и она - лучшая награда и лучшая память о великой певице.
С Анной Герман сотрудничали самые знаменитые советские поэты и композиторы - Александра Пахмутова, Матвей Блантер, Владимир Шаинский, Николай Добронравов, Роберт Рождественский, Евгений Евтушенко и многие другие.
Но судьба ее не баловала: еще в довоенном детстве Анне пришлось пережить первую потерю. И в дальнейшем, ее недолгая, но яркая жизнь будет состоять из головокружительных взлётов и неожиданных падений.
Формат: телесериал
Жанр: драма, биография
Год производства: 2012
Количество серий: 10
Режиссеры: Вальдемар Кшистек, Александр Тименко
Сценарий: Алина Семерякова
Операторы-постановщики: Андрей Воробьев, Александр Кришталович, Гжегож Кэндзерски, Павел Фоминцев
Композитор: Даниил Юделевич
Продюсеры: Галина Балан-Тимкина, Влад Ряшин
В ролях: Йоанна Моро, Шимон Сендровски, Марат Башаров, Мария Порошина, Екатерина Васильева, Константин Милованов, Юлия Рутберг
Смотреть онлайн бесплатно Анна Герман. Сериал. 9 Серия. StarMedia. Фильмы о Любви. Драма. 2012
Онлайн-кинотеатр StarMedia на YouTube
Смотреть онлайн фильмы и сериалы бесплатно в хорошем качестве.
Лучшие русские фильмы и сериалы, лучшие мелодрамы, военные фильмы, новинки кино, фильмы с русскими английскими субтитрами — смотреть онлайн бесплатно в хорошем качестве в онлайн кинотеатре StarMedia на YouTube. Приятного просмотра!
Star Media в социальных сетях:
#StarMedia
Анна Герман. Сериал. 4 Cерия. StarMedia. Фильмы о Любви. Драма
Все серии / All episodes:
Над этим сериалом работала международная команда. Ведь Анну Герман знают и любят поляки и русские, украинцы и немцы ... Эта любовь объединяет, и она - лучшая награда и лучшая память о великой певице.
С Анной Герман сотрудничали самые знаменитые советские поэты и композиторы - Александра Пахмутова, Матвей Блантер, Владимир Шаинский, Николай Добронравов, Роберт Рождественский, Евгений Евтушенко и многие другие.
Но судьба ее не баловала: еще в довоенном детстве Анне пришлось пережить первую потерю. И в дальнейшем, ее недолгая, но яркая жизнь будет состоять из головокружительных взлётов и неожиданных падений.
Формат: телесериал
Жанр: драма, биография
Год производства: 2012
Количество серий: 10
Режиссеры: Вальдемар Кшистек, Александр Тименко
Сценарий: Алина Семерякова
Операторы-постановщики: Андрей Воробьев, Александр Кришталович, Гжегож Кэндзерски, Павел Фоминцев
Композитор: Даниил Юделевич
Продюсеры: Галина Балан-Тимкина, Влад Ряшин
В ролях: Йоанна Моро, Шимон Сендровски, Марат Башаров, Мария Порошина, Екатерина Васильева, Константин Милованов, Юлия Рутберг
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MONTE CASSINO POLISH WAR CEMETERY, CIMITERO MILITARE POLACCO POLSKY CMENTARZ WOJENNY U.FARAGLIA
The Polish war cemetery at Monte Cassino holds the graves of over a thousand Poles who died storming the bombed-out Benedictine abbey atop the mountain in May 1944, during the Battle of Monte Cassino. The cemetery is maintained by the Council for the Protection of Memorial Sites of Struggle and Martyrdom.
The religious affiliations of the deceased are indicated by three types of headstone: Christina crosses for Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox and Jewish headstones bearing the Star of David.
The cemetery also holds the grave of General Władysław Anders, who had commanded the Polish forces that captured Monte Cassino. Anders died in London in 1970 and his ashes were interred in the cemetery.
Polski Cmentarz Wojenny pod Monte Cassino - cmentarz polskich żołnierzy poległych w bitwie powstał na przełomie 1944 i 1945 roku, według projektu architektów Hryniewicza i Skolimowskiego. Zbudowano go na płaskim odcinku terenu pomiędzy Monte Cassino i wzgórzem 593, a więc w miejscu najbardziej wymownym. To właśnie tamtędy szły główne natarcia 3 Dywizji Strzelców Karpackich. Uroczyste oddanie cmentarza nastąpiło 1 września 1945 r. Zbudowali go żołnierze, uczestnicy bitwy. Spoczywa w nim 1051 poległych. Ze względu na sytuację polityczną, weterani bitwy nie mogli powrócić po wojnie do kraju, wielu z nich pozostało na emigracji we Włoszech i Wielkiej Brytanii. Sam gen. Anders, który zmarł w 1970 r. w Londynie, zażyczył sobie być pochowanym wśród swoich żołnierzy pod Monte Cassino. Jego grób stanowi centralny punkt cmentarza
.
La Battaglia di Montecassino, e le altre battaglie che si sono svolte in questa area in questo periodo, furono lunghe e determinarono una immensa perdita di vite umane. Molti sono i cimiteri di guerra dislocati nei dintorni di Montecassino e che oggi possiamo visitare. Tra questi c'è il Cimitero Polacco, visibile dalla ricostruita Abbazia. Qui giacciono 1051 soldati polacchi che morirono combattendo nella battaglia finale a Montecassino nel maggio del 1944. Un monumento con una iscrizione in polacco dice: Per la nostra e la vostra libertà / Noi soldati polacchi / Abbiamo donato le nostre anime a Dio / I nostri corpi al suolo italiano e i nostri cuori alla Polonia.
Tra le storiche visite papali a Montecassino, al Cimitero di Guerra Polacco e al memoriale, ricordiamo quelle di Papa Giovanni Paolo II nel 1979 e nel 1980 e quella di Papa Benedetto XVI nel 2009. Il cimitero di Guerra del Commonwealth a Cassino è il luogo nel quale giacciono i soldati caduti in guerra, provenienti dalla Gran Bretagna, dal Canada, dalla Nuova Zelanda, dal Sud Africa e dall'India. Qui ci sono più di 4000 tombe, centinaia delle quali appartengono a soldati non identificati.
The Girl in Red - Schindler's List (3/9) Movie CLIP (1993) HD
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CLIP DESCRIPTION:
In the middle of all the chaos during the liquidation of the ghetto, Schindler (Liam Neeson) notices a young girl in a red coat walking down the street unharmed.
FILM DESCRIPTION:
Based on a true story, Steven Spielberg's Schindler's List stars Liam Neeson as Oskar Schindler, a German businessman in Poland who sees an opportunity to make money from the Nazis' rise to power. He starts a company to make cookware and utensils, using flattery and bribes to win military contracts, and brings in accountant and financier Itzhak Stern (Ben Kingsley) to help run the factory. By staffing his plant with Jews who've been herded into Krakow's ghetto by Nazi troops, Schindler has a dependable unpaid labor force. For Stern, a job in a war-related plant could mean survival for himself and the other Jews working for Schindler. However, in 1942, all of Krakow's Jews are assigned to the Plaszow Forced Labor Camp, overseen by Commandant Amon Goeth (Ralph Fiennes), an embittered alcoholic who occasionally shoots prisoners from his balcony. Schindler arranges to continue using Polish Jews in his plant, but, as he sees what is happening to his employees, he begins to develop a conscience. He realizes that his factory (now refitted to manufacture ammunition) is the only thing preventing his staff from being shipped to the death camps. Soon Schindler demands more workers and starts bribing Nazi leaders to keep Jews on his employee lists and out of the camps. By the time Germany falls to the allies, Schindler has lost his entire fortune -- and saved 1,100 people from likely death. Schindler's List was nominated for 12 Academy Awards and won seven, including Best Picture and a long-coveted Best Director for Spielberg, and it quickly gained praise as one of the finest American movies about the Holocaust.
CREDITS:
TM & © Universal (1993)
Cast: Liam Neeson
Director: Steven Spielberg
Producers: Irving Glovin, Kathleen Kennedy, Branko Lustig, Gerald R. Molen, Robert Raymond, Lew Rywin, Steven Spielberg
Screenwriters: Thomas Keneally, Steven Zaillian
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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.
Magic flight to Berlin with Polish, Italian and Indian students starring
Magic flight to Berlin with Polish, Italian and Indian students starring
Warsaw Ghetto MEMORIAL ROUTE
Memorial Route of Jewish Martyrdom and Struggle in Warsaw
Weg der Erinnerung an das Martyrium und den Kampf der Juden
Trakt Pamięci Męczeństwa i Walki Żydów w Warszawie
Music: Chopin Nocturne No. 20 perf. by Wladyslaw Szpilman - The Pianist - Original Recording
The Route consisting of 22 memorial places (19 one-meter high black stone blocks, 4 engraved stone plates, one monument) is located in the Muranów district.
Each oft the blocks is dedicated to an important person or a fact associated with the Jewish Ghetto Uprising and recalls the terrible route that hundred thousands Jews had to pass by on their way to the concentration camp.
Copyright © Anna Karolina Heinrich 2016
Idea and Concept Anna Karolina Heinrich
All Rights Reserved
The content of *The Warsaw Ghetto - Memorial Route of Jewish Martyrdom and Struggle in Warsaw“ movie has been compiled with meticulous care and to the best of my knowledge. However, I cannot assume any liability for the up-to-dateness, completeness or accuracy of any of the pages.
All files and information contained in this Video may not be duplicated, copied, modified or adapted, in any way without my written permission.
Images displayed on this web site are my own property. Black and white images are in the public domain because its copyright has expired and its author is anonymous.
If you find anything that could be considered a violation of the copyright or other norms, please contact me immediately.
Once I have become aware of a specific infringement of the law, I will immediately remove the content in question. Any liability concerning this matter can only be assumed from the point in time at which the infringement becomes known to me.
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Russia and poland in quarrel over world war Two cause!
Poland is to summon the Russian ambassador over remarks which appeared to suggest he said Poland was partly to blame for the start of World War Two.
Sergey Andreyev said Poland had blocked a coalition against Nazi Germany several times in the run-up to war.
He also said the USSR's invasion of Poland in 1939 was not an aggression.
Relations between Poland and Russia have been poor in recent years, with Poland one of Moscow's sharpest critics over its intervention in Ukraine.
The row comes a day after Poland's ambassador in Moscow was summoned over the vandalising of graves of Soviet soldiers in a Polish village.
Poland has also condemned the desecration at the Milejczyce cemetery.
'Lack of respect'
In an interview with a private Polish TV station aired on Friday evening, Mr Andreyev said that Poland had stood in the way of an alliance against the Nazis.
Therefore Poland partly bears responsibility for the catastrophe that ensued in September 1939, he said, referring to the Nazi invasion of Poland.
He appeared to be referring to Poland's refusal to allow the transit of Soviet troops through its territory.
Mr Andreyev also said that the Soviet invasion of eastern Poland later that month was not an aggression but to ensure the safety of the USSR when the outcome of the German invasion of was already clear.
The ambassador added that relations between Poland and Russia were at their lowest ebb since 1945, because Poland had frozen political, cultural and humanitarian contacts.
The Polish Foreign Ministry said Mr Andreyev had undermined historical truth.
We take it as a lack of respect for the memory of the victims of the NKVD [Soviet secret police], it said in a statement, referring to the repression which followed the Soviet invasion.
What this music revival means for Polish cultural identity
Young musicians in Poland are reviving what they are calling the country’s golden era -- which was cut short by the Nazi invasion and World War II. Dances from the 1930s such as the foxtrot and tango are making a comeback as people of all ages flock to listen to ensembles playing songs that died along with many of those who used to perform them. Special correspondent Malcolm Brabant reports.
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Ulma Family In MEMORIAM. Polish Righteous among the Nations (p.I)
PAMIĘĆ / MEMORY -- -- Servants of God Józef and Wiktoria Ulma, a Polish husband and wife, living in Markowa near Rzeszów in south-eastern Poland during the Nazi German occupation in World War II, were the Righteous who attempted to rescue Polish Jewish families by hiding them in their own home during the Holocaust. They and their children were summarily executed on 24 March 1944 for doing so.
At the onset of World War II, Józef Ulma (born in 1900) was a prominent citizen in the village of Markowa: a librarian, a photographer, active in social life and the local Catholic Youth Association. He was an educated fruit grower and a bee-keeper. His wife Wiktoria (born Wiktoria Niemczak in 1912), was a homemaker. The Ulmas had six children: Stanisława, age 8, Barbara, age 7, Władysław, age 6, Franciszek, age 4, Antoni, age 3 and Maria, age 2. Another child was due to be born just days after the family's summary execution on 24 March 1944.
In the summer and autumn of 1942, the Nazi police deported several Jewish families of Markowa to their deaths as part of the German Final solution to the Jewish question.[4] Only those who were hidden in Polish peasants' homes survived. Eight Jews found shelter with the Ulmas: six members of the Szall (Szali) family from Łańcut including father, mother and four sons, as well as the two daughters of Chaim Goldman, Golda and Layka.[5] Józef Ulma put all eight Jews in the attic. They learned to help him with supplementary jobs while in hiding, to ease the incurred expenses.
In the early morning hours of 24 March 1944 a patrol of German police from Łańcut under Lieutenant Eilert Dieken came to the Ulmas' house which was on the outskirts of the village. They were informed ahead of time about the Jews in hiding by Włodzimierz Leś – a member of the Polish Blue Police – who was Ukrainian himself and who knew the Szall family from Łańcut and who took over their property there.[4] The Germans surrounded the house and caught all eight Jews belonging to the Szall and Goldman families. They shot them in the back of the head according to eyewitness Edward Nawojski and others, who were ordered to look at the executions. Then the German gendarmes killed the pregnant Wiktoria and her husband, so that the villagers would see what punishment awaited them for hiding Jews. The six children began to scream at the sight of their parents' bodies. After consulting with his superior, 23-year-old Jan Kokott, a Czech Volksdeutscher from Sudetenland serving with the German police, shot three or four of the Polish children while other Polish children were murdered by the remaining gendarmes. Within several minutes 17 people were killed.
The names of the other Nazi executioners are also known due to their frequent presence in the village (Eilert Dieken, Michael Dziewulski and Erich Wilde). The village Vogt (Polish: Wójt) Teofil Kielar was ordered to bury the victims with the help of other witnesses. He asked the German commander whom he had known from prior inspections and food acquisitions, why the children were also killed. Dieken answered in German, So that you would not have any problems with them.[5] On 11 January 1945, in defiance of the Nazi prohibition, relatives of the Ulmas exhumed the bodies to bury them in the cemetery, and found out that Wiktoria's seventh child was almost born in the grave pit of its parents.
On 13 September 1995, Józef and Wiktoria Ulma were posthumously bestowed the titles of Righteous Among the Nations by Yad Vashem. Their medals of honor were presented to Józef's surviving brother, Władysław Ulma. Their certificate informs that they tried to save Jews at the risk of their lives, but fails to mention that they died for them, as noted in the book Godni synowie naszej Ojczyzny.
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Music: Stolen Memories from Schindler's List /John Williams (1993), Universal Pictures Film Music.
Genocide. Animated documentary movie
Genocide. Animated documentary movie about crimes done to polish nation since 1939 till present day
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St. John's Archcathedral, Warsaw, Masovian, Poland, Europe
St. John's Archcathedral in Warsaw is a Catholic church in Warsaw's Old Town. St. John's stands immediately adjacent to Warsaw's Jesuit church, and is one of the oldest churches in the city and the main church of the Warsaw archdiocese. It is one of three cathedrals in Warsaw, but the only one which is also an archcathedral. St. John's Archcathedral is one of Poland's national pantheons. Along with the city, the church has been listed by UNESCO as of cultural significance. Originally built in the 14th century in Masovian Gothic style, the Cathedral served as a coronation and burial site for numerous Dukes of Masovia. The Archcathedral was connected with the Royal Castle (Zamek Królewski w Warszawie) by an elevated 80-meter-long corridor that had been built by Queen Anna Jagiellonka in the late 16th century and extended in the 1620s after Michał Piekarski's failed 1620 attempt to assassinate King of Poland Sigismund III in front of the Cathedral. After the resolution of the Constitution of May 3, 1791, at the end of the session at the Royal Castle, King Stanisław August Poniatowski went to the Cathedral of St. John to repeat the Oath of the Constitution in front of the Altar, in the face of God. Also the Marshals of the Great Sejm were carried to the Archathedral on the shoulders of the enthusiastic deputies of the Sejm. The church was rebuilt several times, most notably in the 19th century, it was preserved until World War II as an example of English Gothic Revival. In 1944, during the Warsaw Uprising the Cathedral was a place of struggle between insurgents and advancing German army. The Germans managed to induct a tank loaded with explosives into the Cathedral, a huge explosion destroyed large part of the building. After the collapse of the Uprising German Vernichtungskommando (Destruction Detachment) drilled holes into the walls for explosives and blow up the Cathedral destroying 90% of its walls. Leveled during the Warsaw Uprising (August--October 1944), it was rebuilt after the war. The exterior reconstruction is based on the 14th-century church's presumed appearance (according to an early-17th-century Hogenberg illustration and a 1627 Abraham Boot drawing), not on its prewar appearance. The profuse Early Baroque decoration inside from the beginning of the 17th century and magnificent painting on the main altar by Palma il Giovane depicting Virgin and Child with St. John the Baptist and St. Stanisław were destroyed in German bombing of the church on August 17, 1944. The remains of the church were blown up by the Germans in November 1944. Only one wall that somehow managed to survive was all that was left of the six hundred year old edifice. This devastation of a Polish national monument was a part of the Planned destruction of Warsaw, which had officially begun after the collapse of the Warsaw Uprising. The painting of the Virgin and Child.. was created in 1618 for King Sigismund III Vasa especially to place on the central altar of the St. John's Cathedral. As a masterpiece it was confiscated on Napoleon's order and transported to Paris. Retrieved by Warsaw authorities in 1820s after the Congress of Vienna. It survived many wars and the bombing of Warsaw since it was created, but did not survive the last one during World War II. Among the sculptures lost due to German bombardment the most worh mentioning was a marble bust of Jan Franciszek Bieliński, voivode of Malbork (died 1685), carved by Jean-Joseph Vinache. The interior reconstruction design considerably differed from the pre-war Cathedral, taking it back in time to its raw Gothic look, because very little of the cathedral's original furnishings has been preserved. The Cathedral is a three-nave building, two aisles are the same height as the main nave. On the right side from the front a belfry is situated, a passage to Dziekania Street is situated underneath it. There is a pulpit from 1959, designed by Józef Trenarowski and stalls which are a replica of the destroyed baroque ones, founded by the king John III Sobieski. Moreover, there are many chapels, gravestones and epitaphs in the Cathedral. All left aisle is filled with numerous chapels. They are, in turn, from main altar: Baryczka Chapel, it ends the left aisle (it contains a wooden crucifix, regarded as the most precious element of the cathedral's furnishings; it was brought from Nuremberg in 1539 by the merchant Jerzy Baryczka).