“If anyone ever tells you the Holocaust didn't happen, or that it wasn't as bad as they say, no, it was worse than they say. What we saw, what these Germans did, it was worse than you can possibly imagine.” - Edward "Babe" Heffron
@Jargolf862 жыл бұрын
It was. And we will carry the Shame and Burden for Centuries to come. -Greetings from a former German ISAF Soldier.
@williambranch42832 жыл бұрын
@@Jargolf86 Humility s a good thing. I am sorry Germany had to learn humility this way.
@marcstein25102 жыл бұрын
Not as bad as the chinese concentration camps will be in which they’ll put us.
@barreloffun102 жыл бұрын
@@Jargolf86 If you didn't do it you don't have yo be ashamed.
@RiseOfThePhoenix302 жыл бұрын
If anyone would have told my Grandfather it didnt exist they would have been knocked out. Not because he was Jewish but because he was a POW kept with the Jews in a concentration camp in Poland and saw everything. He went into the Army 190lbs and came home at 90lbs.
@johnmagill30722 жыл бұрын
My great uncle was in a unit that liberated a camp. He went through D-Day, Holland, Belgium, Market Garden, Bastogne. Never affected him. Till he saw one of the camps. It broke him hard. Had nightmares about it the rest of his life. Drove him to drink. He was at the one Gen Patton saw. Even Gen Patton himself broke down and bawled like a baby. As bad and hard hitting as this episode was. The real thing was a million times worse. The stench was unbearable. They were there days dealing with it. The ones rescued would still die days and weeks later. Watch the old news reel footage.
@arkadyfolkner2 жыл бұрын
Ohrdruf, the first camp the US forces liberated on April 4, 1945 is probably where your great-uncle was at. General Eisenhower brought Generals Bradley and Patton with him to see this for themselves. What they saw and experienced there made 'Ol Blood n Guts' Patton violently ill and he vomited against the side of a building, later refusing to go into others where the victims bodies had been piled up. Eisenhower ordered the citizens of the nearby town of Ohrdruf to be marched through the camp and to bury the bodies - this is where that practice of making the nearby citizens see for themselves and bury the bodies started.. The mayor of Ohrdruf and his wife, at the end of this, went home and were found to have hanged themselves in their house. Eisenhower also ordered any unit in the area not engaged in frontline combat to tour the camp and called for journalists and congress to come and see for themselves. I honor your great uncle's service. the greatest generation.
@lawrenceallen80962 жыл бұрын
That war was awful, but the behavior of the Japanese and NAZIS toward human beings was horrendous. Thank goodness Ike had it recorded, otherwise no one would believe it.
@BootyFish2 жыл бұрын
my great grandfather liberated multiple camps, fought the japanese at the Marianas islands, transferred to europe and fought from normandy to VE day. he never talked about anything besides Bastogne and Buchenwald. And he always said VERY few words. Bastogne was “cold” and Buchenwald “is the reason i can’t drive”. (he was among the first to arrive at Buchenwald and the nazis executed hundreds of prisoners on the road leading up to it, he was ordered to keep driving) we have pictures of him with the Jews holding their first synagogue service after liberation.
@michaelb.30412 жыл бұрын
Currahee ✈️🫡🇫🇷🙏
@robertmorwell5052 Жыл бұрын
The camp you're writing about was Ohrdruf, the first one liberated by American troops. My father was with the Fourth Armored Division which firat liberated the camp. He was there, he took pictures. Toward the end of his life, after hearing idiotic bigots up the nerve to ask him about Ohrdruf. He went ashen. His eyes took on a distant, stricken look. After struggling to find words, he finally said, "The smell was beyond belief." The residents there also denied knowing what was happening in the nearby camp, but he said the stench carried for miles. I had letter he wrote home during the war. Mostly they were filled with the usual GI complaints,homesickness, the weather, and the terrors of combat. But, after Ohrdruf...he became hard. He wrote more about how the Nazis had to be utterly crushed for what they had done, and what they would do, if not stopped. It changed him.
@george2172 жыл бұрын
My late uncle helped liberate Gunskirchen, a subcamp of Mauthausen when he was with the 71st. Almost 50 years later he said he could close his eyes and see it and smell it as if he were reliving it in his mind. It never left him...
@notme4112 жыл бұрын
We all MUST NEVER FORGET what they went through
@NiaMakiReacts2 жыл бұрын
absolutely!❤️
@patrickwaldeck6681 Жыл бұрын
The world forgot pretty quickly. There's been many, many genocides since the Holocaust.
@CoryGasaway2 жыл бұрын
I believe this episode began with the purpose of showing the disillusionment that the toll of the war created on the men of Easy Company.... however, after then seeing the horror of the concentration camp, and realizing truly what they were fighting and why they were fighting, it helps eliminate that disillusionment as they now know their righteous purpose of their endeavors of these last two years. For Nixon, the sad problems of losing his wife and dog are nothing compared to what those in the Holocaust experienced. Adds so much perspective.
@m_v__m_v2 жыл бұрын
Well said
@geraldjohnson40132 жыл бұрын
Your wife divorces you during war time then that's not a loss but a gain. His wife must've been one piece of work. Jeez lady!
@gravitypronepart22012 жыл бұрын
@@geraldjohnson4013 Maybe she found out about that "certain young lady he mentioned in Episode 5. 😏
@geraldjohnson40132 жыл бұрын
@@gravitypronepart2201 hell, I always thought that "certain lady" was a bottle of hooch. Dude always guzzling the fire water like it was life itself.
@iammanofnature2352 жыл бұрын
Except, Easy Company actually arrived the day after the camp shown in Band of Brothers, Kaufering IV (Hurlach), had been liberated by the 12th Armored Division. for dramatic purposes Easy company is shown liberating the camp. From the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: _As US armed forces approached the Kaufering complex in late April 1945, the SS began evacuating the camps, sending the prisoners on death marches in the direction of Dachau. Those inmates who could not keep up were often shot or beaten to death by the guards. At Kaufering IV, the SS set fire to the barracks killing hundreds of prisoners who were too ill or weak to move._ _When the 12th Armored Division and 101st Airborne Division arrived at Kaufering IV on April 27 and 28, respectively, the soldiers discovered some 500 dead inmates. In the days that followed, the US Army units ordered the local townspeople to bury the dead._
@nebidiaswift52002 жыл бұрын
My great uncle was one of the soldiers who liberated treblanka he only spoke once about his time in the war- I only know from my grandpa his brother that he regretted to his dying day that they were not there sooner. It’s a strange mentality to have that. My grandpa said if they knew they would have moved mountains to save them.
@scottmiller897 Жыл бұрын
Treblinka was shut down by the NAZI'S in 1943. Was he an American soldier? No U.S troops liberated any camps in Poland. It was the Soviet army that liberated Auschwitz and the few remaining sub camps. The Americans liberated Dachau, Buchenwald , Flossenburg,Mauthausen and Dora-Mittelbau concentration camps. Maybe one of them? Treblinka was torn down before it could be liberated.
@Abbath772 жыл бұрын
I always saw the mentioning of Beethoven as a metaphore for the two extremes of Germany. One side is the highest class of artist (classical music) and on the other side the Holocaust. The violin case in the last scene always looked like a coffin to me, meaning the civilization died.
@steriopticon26872 жыл бұрын
Norbert Brainin, a famous violinist said, "Austria has the best propaganda ministry: they have convinced the whole world that Hitler was German, and Beethoven was Austrian."
@lidlett98832 жыл бұрын
During the 1930s Germany had the highest rate of university educated population in the world.
@andrewrippel61642 жыл бұрын
@@steriopticon2687 THAT is the true reason why that point was made in the episode. Mozart was Austrian too...Nix as a Yale man would likely have known this and they made his character very keen to point out that the Germans were playing GERMAN music, not Austrian.
@elioffman782 жыл бұрын
Also pretty sure its a reference to Juliek's violin, a scene from Elie Wiesel's Night
@ryanhampson6732 жыл бұрын
The older woman’s husband wasn’t SS..His uniform was of a normal Wehrmacht officer, so he wasn’t directly involved with the camps but he most likely would have known what was happening.
@anthony92399 Жыл бұрын
It's crazy when first Nixon is in her house and she gives him the "how dare you" look, only later for Nixon to give her the same look in the camp.
@stuartlatter825 Жыл бұрын
"I have heard it said the American soldier did not know what he was fighting for. At least now he knows what he was fighting against." Dwight D. Eisenhower
@keithschofield11582 жыл бұрын
My wife’s uncle was in ww2 one day he opened up to me and told me all about a concentration camp he liberated this was twenty years ago he was also almost killed in the battle of the bulge he used to always tell me stories about the war he knew I was fascinated he passed away a few years ago
@Sir_AlexxTv2 жыл бұрын
Hard episode to go through but absolutely necessary. I don't know in this particular place if everyone knew, people often confuse the army with the SS who were the ones doing this stuff.
@russelllapua49042 жыл бұрын
The Wehrmacht were not entirely innocent.
@daecimvs2 жыл бұрын
@@russelllapua4904 Also not entirely bad. My Polish great-grandfather was forcibly drafted into Wehrmacht. He escaped in 1944 to join Polish uprising and after the war was awarded Virtuti Militari the highest Polish military decoration. He died in 2007. I'm damn proud of him.
@diabetic2332 жыл бұрын
The actors used for the camp scene were cancer patients and if I remember correctly the director of the episode had family members killed in the holocaust.
@Short_Round1999 Жыл бұрын
Sadly, a lot of those patients were terminal and didn’t survive long enough to see the final product. They kept them separated from men of Easy to get a very real and visceral reaction
@Jargolf862 жыл бұрын
You noticed how Frank Perconte addressed O'Keefe the first Time with his real Name after seeing him crying in the Camp? Sometimes it dosent need Combat to make a Comrade your Brother, sometimes Compassion is enought..
@adamcottrell78852 жыл бұрын
I watch this series once every year I still can't watch this episode without shedding some tears
@dmprotector2 жыл бұрын
Hi. To answer your question about the German people and the concentration camps... I went to Munich a few years ago and actually visited Dachau concentration camp. The guide actually answered this question by telling us that back in the day, there was some sort of "Don't ask, don't tell." mentality about the camps. The camps were isolated from the towns and those who could see something, only saw the chimneys of the buildings. If I remember correctly, the side of the camp that was facing the town actually had a 10-foot tall brick (or stone ?) wall to actually hide the camp from the townfolks. So, yeah... They knew there was military buildings there, they saw transports coming and going but they didn't investigate more than that. Partly because if they did, they would most likely have been arrested by the Gestapo.
@svtpower032 жыл бұрын
I was Army stationed in Germany 10 years ago and I visited a lot of the camps that are museums now. Very somber place to be and can only imagine what these guys saw. I will never forget it.
@zh21842 жыл бұрын
On the question of what the German people knew about the Holocaust camps, historians are split. German Jews had been forcibly removed from their homes years earlier, and the average German knew not to ask questions under Nazism. Every day Germans were also told that the areas where camps existed were secret military installations and ordered to never approach. Still, historians have found a lot of evidence that the secrets didn't stay secret, and that Germans were aware of the fate of these victims.
@ronmaximilian69532 жыл бұрын
Germans in the town certainly knew. There were multiple work (to death) camps. In the area with prisoners working in factories, often being given orders by local Germans. Do they know all the details? No. But stories certainly came from the east about the mass shootings, as regular German army units participated along with the Einsatzgruppen
@mikecarson95282 жыл бұрын
This episode always makes me cry. Watching you break down made me cry even more. So important for people to see.
@repeter2 жыл бұрын
This has happened several times since. Genocides in various countries. Like you pointed out, people don't see others as people so its easier for them to annihilate them. Cambodia, Somalia, Rwanda just to name a few.
@ronmaximilian69532 жыл бұрын
There's mass murder and ethnic cleansing occurring right now in the latest Ethiopian civil War. And then we have genocide in China against Uyghurs.
@Unpainted_Huffhines2 жыл бұрын
My grandfather liberated a small camp like this in Germany. What they did with the townsfolk is accurate. They made them clean up bodies from sun up to sun down, no breaks, no food, no gloves. He said he couldn't help but feel sorry for them too.
@stevenward24082 жыл бұрын
Mozart was Austrian, Beethoven was German. German musicians were playing German music was a metaphor.
@NiaMakiReacts2 жыл бұрын
Thank you, I see
@Gruvmpy2 жыл бұрын
I only read it recently, but during this time of the war, on the 506th flank was a unit of Free French soldiers. One of the units they encountered (likely represented by that scene in this episode) was the Charlemange Unit, a Waffen ss unit made entirely up of french collaborators. Needless to say, they didn't have a good time when Free French soldiers got their hands on them. For a bit more elaboration on why they had to limit food intake, refeeding syndrome is a big problem for people who are starving, as the body as so little electrolytes from malnourishment that the metabolic and electrolyte shifts for the digestive system and other functions to start again can kill them.
@ExUSSailor2 жыл бұрын
The Free French, and, Polish forces, who also wore French equipment, did not take prisoners. ESPECIALLY not from Waffen SS units, ANY Waffen SS units. After Malmedy, neither did U.S. troops, for the most part.
@Gruvmpy2 жыл бұрын
@@ExUSSailor Yeah, I'm not at all surprised that they didnt.
@Melrose51653 Жыл бұрын
The number of prisoners taken by the US vastly increased after the Battle of the Bulge. It is incorrect to claim they killed hundreds of thousands of Germans who surrendered
@mikeyj96078 ай бұрын
The French officer in that scene was Tom Hanks in a uncredited role
@Gruvmpy8 ай бұрын
@@mikeyj9607 If you're referring to the french soldiers executing the Germans, that's not Tom Hanks, freeze frame and it looks nothing like him
@Liam_ben972 жыл бұрын
My grandpa survived Auschwitz, and he still carries the number on his arm. Every weekend, he tells me and my other siblings that every day he thinks of the family he lost in the ovens. But he is also happy to see that G-d gave him another chance to build a new family of his own. About what you said: As a grandson, I studied the holocaust, and the rise of Nazi Germany, but the Germans didn't know about the concentration camps. The German regime didn't report them deliberately, because they knew it would end up as a disaster and civil revolt. Same for the Germans, the Polish, Ukrainians, and Lithuanians who participated in the carnage. Those who knew- didn't talk about it anywhere. May the memory of the 6,000,000 Jews shall never be forgotten. But also let's not forget those fought with Russian/American flag on their shoulders to defeat Nazism and Japanese Fascism (almost 1 million Jews). A small unknown fact: the Soviet officer who liberated Auschwitz- was a Russian Jew named Jazep Pasternak, son of refugees.
@ian_forbes2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for continuing to react to this series, Nia. Hopefully you can take some extra comfort or connection knowing we were all crying with you. I’ve seen the series over 20 times … and I cry every time.
@michaelb.30412 жыл бұрын
My Name is Michael, my auntie was Janine Fiant, who was from Grandcamps Les Bains in Normandy, she died in 2020 from covid but she has lived the Neptune Operation from WW2 in Normandy at the age of 5, she tomd me she saw her first black soldier, she discovered the chewing gum, the silent rangers, the chocolate bar...she was at 6kilometers from La pointe Du Hoc, the epicentre of the operation. Thanks to all the soldiers.
@coyotej48952 жыл бұрын
Couple points Id like to make. One, the women whose house Nix went in to, then later was shown helping to bury the dead at the concentration camp, her husband, shown in the photo Nix dropped was not a Nazi, he was regular Army no party affiliation, (NO Party Pin that would have been seen prominently on a lapel otherwise). It bares saying that most of germen officer core backed at the notion of taking the pledge to Hitler as opposed to the German state but had to or be broke and living on the street, possible even imprisoned and at the time the German people where despite to be out from under years of slavery to France and England after the treaty of Versailles literally indentured an entire country. Now while none of this makes what the Nazis did ok it bares reminding people many did not agree with what the Nazis where doing but at first it was rumor and gossip that was considered Unpatriotic then made Illegal to talk about. So by the time they realized it was true, you either turned a blind eye to it, or left everything and everyone you ever knew or loved and ran, or like most chanted the party slogans till you believed it and it quieted your conscience and pushed on with living. Next and to the point, My Sister in-law is second generation Japanese American. I went to stay with her Family for a week and came to love and respect her parents. Her father and I were watching and discussing this episode and he told me a story about what his dad had been through in a camp in the US. After he said, nodding at the Germans burying the dead in the camp; "I was in an argument with my father about how I thought America was treating Minorities he shut me down by telling me , What we went through in the camps in America was not present but Men where dyeing to fight against eval, blood was being spilled, lived dreams and hopes lost across the globe so people that would never even know their names could avoid being under a global dictatorship that was at the time engaged in wholesale genocide. What we had to go through was NOTHING compared to what the other side was doing. We were treated like an inconvenient necessity while in Germany and in Asia the unwanted where butchered, mutilated, gassed and burnt alive. So don't tell me how bad it is here until you have seen how Horrible it is elsewhere". He paused and then finished. "I Joined the service that year and was the wiser and better for it". A couple good lessons many today could stand to learn.
@robertmiddel10282 жыл бұрын
We live in a Society that people call those who disagree with them or do not believe what they believe a Nazi. I sometimes feel that today's society does not know what a true Nazi is. In this episode of Band of Brothers, we see what a true Nazi is and what a true Nazi does.
@satoncho2 жыл бұрын
The most heartbreaking episode of the whole show, because it was real.
@susanstein66042 жыл бұрын
Anne Frank was Dutch and so were the people who protected her family.
@gravitypronepart22012 жыл бұрын
There is a wider lesson to be learned here. Nazism possible because Hitler and his followers used victimhood. when humans feel like victims we become capable of unimaginable evil, and even feel justified in it. Hitler, Tojo, Staln, Mao, Pol Pot, all jutitfied their action as necessary. This is why we must never forget the Holocaust or any of the other travisties that have occurred that started with the politics of victumhood.
@victorpena98242 жыл бұрын
So true, Hitler believed the Treaty of Versailles was unjustly harsh on Germany with $Billions in restitution to be paid to the allies. He raged that Germany was a victim of revenge and grew his military in secret, while his power grew. You have a good point.
@ryanhampson6732 жыл бұрын
@@victorpena9824 yes, WW2 was in a way directly influenced by the Allies strict punishment of the Versailles treaty, a “perfect storm” of sorts that allowed someone like Hitler to come to power…If that art school had just accepted Hitler who knows what history would have been like.
@LolGamer511 ай бұрын
@@ryanhampson673 Very VERY true, and dont forget like at least half of us back then didnt even know about the camps and the rest either couldnt blow the whistle since there was no internet and anyone who talked about it was vanished.
@davidmacy4112 жыл бұрын
The University of Minnesota conducted an experiment on volunteers from contentious objectors where they were subjected to long periods of starvation with the expectation of massive food shortages to study how best to save as many of the starving as they could. This experiment ended up being extremely useful for concentration camp survivors which saved a ton of lives.
@sagnhill2 жыл бұрын
Americans knew about these camps before and during the war. My grand parents knew about them because they got letters from family still living in the old country. There was nothing they could do about it. My Grand father was in the Navy in the PAcific and he and his fellow sailors knew about the camps.
@NiaMakiReacts2 жыл бұрын
Ohhh, I am hearing different things, I guess it wasn’t widely spread? Or maybe not readily accepted/believed by all ?
@sagnhill2 жыл бұрын
@@NiaMakiReacts I think it just depends if you had family still over in Europe at that time. If you had no family there, then you may have not been fully aware of what was going on.
@eq13732 жыл бұрын
@@NiaMakiReacts during World War I, the British put out a lot of phony propaganda about supposed German atrocities to influence America into getting involved. When stories started coming out about concentration camps, 30 years after World War I, many Americans thought it was bullshit put out of British intelligence again.
@pablocointry Жыл бұрын
Heartbreaking episode, i just kinda forgot that part of the war watching the series, and then it hit like i was one of the soldiers.This production is a masterpiece
@Andyman-bg8jv2 жыл бұрын
Her husband was already killed when the camp was liberated. The black strap over the photo indicates that he was killed in action. My great uncle liberated a camp, Haunted him till the day he died.
@NiaMakiReacts2 жыл бұрын
yeah, I wasn't sure if it was something that would change how she felt about his service after seeing what she saw burying them... I can only imagine how your great uncle felt, that can never leave you
@Aeolusdallas2 жыл бұрын
I was worried for you when this episode was coming. It's such a punch int he guts. I saw a reaction video with some kids watching it. I'm not sure if they were High School or Collage but they were young and this episode just devastated one of them.
@NiaMakiReacts2 жыл бұрын
Yes, when I watch Anne Frank and I’m pretty sure Schindler’s list it really messed me up as a kid… I was in the 6th grade I think
@EastPeakSlim2 жыл бұрын
I have watched this series dozens of times. The scenes at Landsberg never fail to bring on the tears. It is a testament to the quality of production, and of course, the history of Hitler's "Final Solution."
@farrellwhittington40882 жыл бұрын
You are so sweet, love your reaction to this
@davidfoxall87652 жыл бұрын
I appreciate your kind heart.
@NiaMakiReacts2 жыл бұрын
aww, thanks David!!
@johnstevenson94292 жыл бұрын
I understand that cancer patients volunteered as extras for the camp scene in this episode. Some did not live long enough to see the movie. I hope they know what an important contribution they made to help the world understand
@CapnBlackJackHonour6 ай бұрын
When I went to high school, most of my teachers were ex military men, and women. They had fought in World War Two, and I heard stories of B-17 bombing runs. Or tales of watching battered B-29s returning and ditching off the coast of Tinian Island. My schools art teacher was an older German lady, who had one of the tattoos on her forearm. Along with being in the room with these people and having a direct link to their experiences, we were shown things like Judgement At Nuremberg whereas today I doubt it would win approval from school boards. This episode should be required viewing in every school. While the camp scene is an amalgamation of several units experiences, it portrays as accurately an experience as film ever could. One of, if not THE most powerful moments in film history.
@panzerwolf4942 жыл бұрын
That lady's husband was Heer, regular army. You can tell from his collar. He would have had nothing to do with the camps. The SS is who ran and guarded them. He was just some random German officer killed somewhere, likely against the same forces that were now taking over where she lived.
@christianforsstrom22222 жыл бұрын
@@madurso Very true, Wehrmacht new what was going on and was complicit, but they didn't run the camps, that was only the SS.
@pangkaji2 жыл бұрын
Although the Wehrmacht did not round up Jews across occupied Europe and send them to death camps, they certainly planned and participated in war crimes and crimes against humanity. They systematically killed POW and ethnic Slavs in the eastern front. They along with the SS front line Waffen SS units slaughtered jews and non Jewish Italians civilians. Just to name a few.
@eq13732 жыл бұрын
@@madurso where did you learn this crap?
@usmcrn44182 жыл бұрын
Outstanding reaction..
@clutchpedalreturnsprg77102 жыл бұрын
Hi Nia Maki, after WW II, there was another large-scale incident in the 1970s, that was attempted to be described in the movie " The Killing Fields ".
@gravitypronepart22012 жыл бұрын
just one of many examples unfortunately.
@hwheelez242 жыл бұрын
What's even harder is that the polish guy was saying, he's not dead please , help him, or something along those lines. Also the extras acting as the camp inmates, were those affected with cancer, sadly many, didn't live long enough to see this epispde.
@deborahzuchero73482 жыл бұрын
I always cry during this episode
@NiaMakiReacts2 жыл бұрын
yea... this one was a hard one for sure =(
@TMConstructionOntario Жыл бұрын
This episode makes me cry, every single time...
@barryfletcher71362 жыл бұрын
The main-cast actors for BoB were NOT told about the concentration camp scene in advance. The set was staffed with people from cancer hospitals who really looked like that. The directors equipped the set with rotting meat so those reactions were legitimate.
@Demigord2 жыл бұрын
"We're back with baby face. Damn it, is that why I'm going to be sad?" Oh, dear. You're in for a rough ride
@justsmashing46282 жыл бұрын
You handled it pretty well…wait for Schindlers List 😊
@tduffy52 жыл бұрын
Nia, FYI those were French troops that executed the two prisoners, not ours. The French had a raised strip down the center of their helmet.
@dastemplar96812 жыл бұрын
The Adrian Helmets 😉
@americanfreedomlogistics99842 жыл бұрын
in the end the musician places his violin in a “coffin style” case
@cra0422 Жыл бұрын
I can never watch this episode without tearing up. It was said that American soldiers didn't know what they were fighting for in WW2, but after finding the camps, they knew what they were fighting against.
@Jonw82222 жыл бұрын
I always like to show people this episode.. and it reveals a lot about them in terms of how they react. Great news that you'll be reacting to the doco as well. A lot of other channels leave that out, but happy to know that you'll be giving that one a look as well. I was the one who pointed out that they didn't know about any of this.. especially in episode 1, but even this late in the war.. they didn't and I have a hard time accepting that. It's probably true, I trust the accounts of these fine people, it's just that it's a hard truth to accept. Apparently there's books out there saying that American Intelligence knew and that even the NY Times knew. I don't know I wasn't there but it's hard to accept that they had to just "stumble" on a camp like this when they had such advanced air reconnaissance, intelligence, spies etc. The D-Day invasion was orchestrated like a symphony, especially the deception campaign in terms of where the landings were going to be. Despite the lower technology they had, the counter intelligence was still very advanced. To put yourself in the shoes of the people in those camps, it's a very sad thing. Especially those that lost hope or didn't survive compared to the people who did. I grew up next door neighbors (in Australia) to a Polish couple who lived in similar camps. I was born in the 80's but the events shown here still affected my life even 40 years later. The story of Anne Frank is another very sad story.. the people who didn't make it. Your reaction was great as always..
@iammanofnature2352 жыл бұрын
_I don't know I wasn't there but it's hard to accept that they had to just "stumble" on a camp like this when they had such advanced air reconnaissance, intelligence, spies etc._ Many of the larger camps were well known. Dachau, for instance, had been in operation since 1933...6 years before the war began. But there were well over a thousand sub-camps scattered all over Germany and the occupied territories. The camp shown in Band of Brothers is Kaufering IV (Hurlach) which was one of eleven labor sub-camps of Dachau located in the Landsberg region of Germany known as the "Kaufering complex" that began operations in June 1944. Contrary to what is shown in Band of Brothers, it was actually soldiers of the 134th Ordnance Maintenance Battalion of the 12th Armored Division who stumbled on to the camp while looking for a disabled tank on April 27, 1945. Colonel Edward Seiller of the 12th Armored Division military government took control of the camp on April 27 and he is the one who ordered civilians from the Landsberg am Lech area to bury the dead. Easy company actually arrived the day after the camp had been liberated on April 28. For dramatic purposes Easy company is shown liberating the camp. From the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: _As US armed forces approached the Kaufering complex in late April 1945, the SS began evacuating the camps, sending the prisoners on death marches in the direction of Dachau. Those inmates who could not keep up were often shot or beaten to death by the guards. At Kaufering IV, the SS set fire to the barracks killing hundreds of prisoners who were too ill or weak to move._ _When the 12th Armored Division and 101st Airborne Division arrived at Kaufering IV on April 27 and 28, respectively, the soldiers discovered some 500 dead inmates. In the days that followed, the US Army units ordered the local townspeople to bury the dead._
@lidlett98832 жыл бұрын
Nixon didn't fire his weapon in combat because his job was intelligence. He was tasked with relaying orders from HQ to the different company comanders and relaying what situations the company comanders were finding in the field. As far as the wife of the Nazi officer. She probably knew what was happening. I say this due to an interview of a wife of a officer at Auschwitz . She spoke of a time finding 3 or 4 young children that had some how escaped the camp. She found them hiding in a drainage ditch in her back yard. She said she made them sandwiches to eat. Then after eating she took them back out to the ditch. Pulled out a pistol as shot them. When.asked how she could murder children. She replied "They were Jews" as if she was talking about killing rats.
@jamezguard2 жыл бұрын
Great reaction.
@LimerickWarrior12 жыл бұрын
There's a lot of confusion about the woman and her officer Husband. The officer in the picture is not SS and so had nothing to do with the camps. He is a regular Wehrmacht officer. I think the breaking of the picture is deliberate and hints her husband might be dead, if you pause when she looks down there is a lot of sadness in her eyes and she is angry. I suspect not at Nixon but everything. This scene is far more complex than most people think.
@michaelstach57442 жыл бұрын
This episode is brilliant. It first sets up the idea of a kind of equivalence in the interviews with the vets. Well, maybe they weren’t so bad, maybe they were like us. Then we see a series of scenes that show how hardened the men of Easy are from where they were in episode 1. We worry about the girl in the barn with Luz. We don’t think Luz is a rapist but still we worry. Spiers is looting without a blink. A family is dispossessed not a thought about where they will spend the night. Perconte sees the French soldiers execute a prisoner and shrugs. Is Easy really that different from the Nazis? And then we see the difference. The moral difference comes into focus with remarkable clarity. Some people knew. We had intelligence from Poles and Jewish resistance fighters. Some of it was discounted. In WWI the British did propaganda against the Germans that was horribly exaggerated. We didn’t want to do that again. Our Allies in the East, the Russians, had problems of their own with incidents like the Katyn massacre. There was also a lot of anti- Semitism in the US State Dept. Look into the story of the passenger liner St Louis. The troops on the ground did not know. The woman in red… the photo of her husband had a black ribbon in the corner of the frame. This indicates he was deceased. His uniform indicates he was Wehrmacht, regular military. The camps were usually run by the SS. That’s not to say she had no guilt. People try to explain the Mozart / Beethoven thing with a German / Austrian contrast. Hitler, of course, was born in Austria. I try to watch BOB every year. I still cry.
@iammanofnature2352 жыл бұрын
What is shown in Band of Brothers is representative of the camps in general but is not accurate for this specific camp. In reality, the camp shown in Band of Brothers, Kaufering IV (Hurlach), was found and liberated by the 12th Armored Division on April 27, 1945 and Easy Company didn't actually arrive until April 28. And there were only a handful of survivors (those who been able to hide) found alive along with about 500 bodies. The Germans had evacuated all eleven Kaufering complex camps and forced the prisoners to march in the direction of Dachau. For dramatic purposes Easy Company is shown liberating the camp. From the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: _As US armed forces approached the Kaufering complex in late April 1945, the SS began evacuating the camps, sending the prisoners on death marches in the direction of Dachau. Those inmates who could not keep up were often shot or beaten to death by the guards. At Kaufering IV, the SS set fire to the barracks killing hundreds of prisoners who were too ill or weak to move._ _When the 12th Armored Division and 101st Airborne Division arrived at Kaufering IV on April 27 and 28, respectively, the soldiers discovered some 500 dead inmates. In the days that followed, the US Army units ordered the local townspeople to bury the dead._
@jamesdakrn Жыл бұрын
The change in tone from Luz roasting Perconte for the Bastogne comment to the scene where Perconte runs back to Winters is brilliant. Just a sudden shift in tone and suspense and really builds up the theme of the episode
@johnmagill30722 жыл бұрын
After you finish episode 10. You really need to react to the special edition Interview episode with the actual Easy Company guys. Called We Stand Alone Together. It's really something.
@LolGamer511 ай бұрын
"its right there... They had to know" even IF you knew, you'd end up there or in prison if you dared to speak up. So you had a lot of people who might have know but also a lot of people who never got told, since that would endanger both people.
@sheila-dt5np Жыл бұрын
my father went thru this war and helped liberate a camp of 15,000 he still would wake up screaming 30 years later he said you never forget the smell and walking dead if anyone tells you it didnt happen there full of it my father was a big man 6' 4" 350 lbs and to see him cry like he did it had to be disturbing to bring him to that
@aranerem55692 жыл бұрын
Hello Nia, your reactions are great
@BryonLape2 жыл бұрын
When battle hardened troops, who have been through hell, find out there is something worse.
@iammanofnature2352 жыл бұрын
Well yes...but then Easy Company actually arrived the day after the camp shown in Band of Brothers, Kaufering IV (Hurlach), had been liberated by the 12th Armored Division.
@canadian__ninja2 жыл бұрын
It really says something that the first, or one of the first soldiers we see at the camp is Bull and even he is rattled and can't look at it. Also I'm always amazed at how careful people are to not spoil this. Every reactor is told episode 9 is really bad but they're never told _why_
@Cerridwen77772 жыл бұрын
There is a show called Man In the High Castle that takes place in a world where the Axis powers won the war. You should check it out!
@mikeserot141026 күн бұрын
There are stories of other units finding camps and straight up killed fleeing guards. 12th Armor actually found this camp on I believe April 27 and liberated it. Easy showed up on the 28th to handle it. This was a subcamp of Kaufering IV I think. The Russians liberated Auschwitz.
@ohhSpxcy2 жыл бұрын
The husband of the woman is a officer from the Wehrmacht. He didtn had anything to do with the Camps.
@BlueCore2010 Жыл бұрын
This episode and the concentration camp scene is powerful because thanks to Steven Spielberg to make it authentic like Saving Private Ryan. The extras who acted as the prisoners, were actually cancer from hospitals.
@ariochiv2 жыл бұрын
It doesn't take that much to start de-humanizing your opponents... you need only listen to some of the rhetoric coming out of the news media right now, referring to people who don't share their views as "evil." It can always happen again; we're the same species of animal today that we were in 1945.
@gravitypronepart22012 жыл бұрын
So true. easy to demonize, then blame then punish. We see it more and more in our universities where fre flow of ideas is noe stifled.
@mikeb45952 жыл бұрын
Ask anyone who is unvaccinated how they’ve been blamed, ostracized, cut off from friends, family, work and school. I’m not equating this with the horror of the Holocaust. But make no mistake, what would become the Holocaust started with regular people being blamed, ostracized, cut off from friends, family, work and school. The more things change, the more we stay the same
@johnord684 Жыл бұрын
The young guy when you asked who is he was Tom Hardy also Michael Fassbender is in BoB too
@riffgroove2 жыл бұрын
There are very few television series that I would consider life-changing. This is one of them. Rough episode.
@lauraruth63582 жыл бұрын
And this is why they fight!!!
@the_eaglefan2 жыл бұрын
Another great reaction. Thank you.
@davidgagne35692 жыл бұрын
Episode 9 is SO intense.
@johnsmith-es7zk2 жыл бұрын
6 million Jews and 5 million others makes 11 million in total. For perspective, if you stood on the street and one person walked past you every second you would be stood there for 4 months, 7 days and 7.5 hours. Each and every second someones father, mother, son, daughter. Whole families including young children. I have watched this episode many times but still the tears flow every time.
@ScarlettM2 жыл бұрын
13:40 - it's very easy to keep large objects secret from nearby civilians in a dictatorship. Trees are a great sound suppressing system. Smell can be chalked up to chemical usage. If people know that asking questions and going near the location is punishable - no one will go. So, yes, most of those people did not know about concentration camps next door.
@iammanofnature2352 жыл бұрын
First off, please know that the camp liberation scenes, including the dialog, in Band of Brothers are completely fictional. The camp depicted in Band of Brothers is Kaufering IV (Hurlach) which was one of eleven labor sub-camps of Dachau located in the Landsberg region of Germany known as the "Kaufering complex." Kaufering IV (Hurlach) was actually found and liberated by the 12th Armored Division on April 27, 1945 with Easy Company actually arriving on April 28. And there were only a handful of prisoners found alive along with about 500 bodies. For dramatic purposes Easy company is shown liberating the camp. Prisoners of the Kaufering camps were primarily tasked with building underground production facilities as well as performing infrastructure repair (roads, rail lines, etc.). The prisoners were routinely, almost daily, marched through the local towns and villages on their way to various jobs, and so yes the local populace knew of the camps. And there are stories of the locals attempting to leave hidden food in the hopes that the prisoners would find it.
@ScarlettM2 жыл бұрын
@@iammanofnature235 I'm sure the locals knew there was "something" there. That's why I included the line about "asking questions". What I'm saying is that locals had no way of knowing how bad it was inside. They saw work detail? It was war time, those could have been prisoners of war or criminals, not necessarily innocent people being tortured to death.
@iammanofnature2352 жыл бұрын
@@ScarlettM _It was war time, those could have been prisoners of war or criminals, not necessarily innocent people being tortured to death._ All the people placed into concentration camps, including those assigned to labor camps, wore insignia sewn onto their shirts identifying the reason they were incarcerated. All Jews wore the Star of David. The people in the towns and villages knew exactly who these people were. From the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum: *_Identifying Prisoners: The Marking System_* _Criminals were marked with green inverted triangles, political prisoners with red, "asocials" (including Roma, nonconformists, vagrants, and other groups) with black or-in the case of Roma in some camps-brown triangles. Homosexuals were identified with pink triangles and Jehovah's Witnesses with purple ones. Non-German prisoners were identified by the first letter of the German name for their home country, which was sewn onto their badge. The two triangles forming the Jewish star badge would both be yellow unless the Jewish prisoner was included in one of the other prisoner categories. A Jewish political prisoner, for example, would be identified with a yellow triangle beneath a red triangle._
@ScarlettM2 жыл бұрын
@@iammanofnature235 At that time being Jewish was akin to being a criminal. So the town's people might (rightfully) think that the marching people are there because they are Jewish. Once again, them knowing the prisoners are Jewish and done nothing wrong, would not make them automatically think that the Jews were being tortured to death. All they saw were marching people.
@iammanofnature2352 жыл бұрын
@@ScarlettM The Kaufering camps where located next to towns and villages. Kaufering IV (Hurlach) itself was located within 600 yards from the Village of Hurlach adjacent to a major road. There were no barriers preventing people from peering into the camp and local merchants serviced the camp. Claiming that the locals didn't know what was going on is completely absurd. _would not make them automatically think that the Jews were being tortured to death._ The prisoners were not being tortured to death. The Kaufering complex camps were labor camps not death camps and most prisoners died as a a result of typhus which was rampant in the camps or of malnutrition. Kaufering IV (Hurlach) was designated a "sick camp" where prisoners from all the camps who were unable to work were sent to die.
@teddybearclarence2 жыл бұрын
lol fun little titbit, tom hanks cameo'ed in this episode... he's the soldier who executed the germans at the barn while easy rode past...
@karstenstormiversen48372 жыл бұрын
One of the reasons that most Germans did not know about these camps is also beacause most of them was located in Poland and not in Germany! The picture of the officer was a whermacht officer and if you looked closer on the picture you see a black ribbon! That mean that he is dead! The camps was guarded by SS and not whermacht! Most likly her husband was serving on the eastern front in Russia!
@noregerts52472 жыл бұрын
What a load of BS. People in America knew, they didn't believe it but they knew. I don't believe for one second that they didn't know what was happening to those people, they just chose not to know. People talk, always, they always have. They watched the Jews being rounded up and and what was happening to them long before the camps. I'm sick of people like you making excuses for them.
@Big_Bag_of_Pus2 жыл бұрын
No. The extermination camps were in Poland, yes. But most of the concentration camps were in Germany. Most of the camps provided slave labor for war production, and that work was in Germany.
@karstenstormiversen48372 жыл бұрын
@@noregerts5247 First off,i am not an american but Norwegian! And that is what we learned in school and on a trip to Auschwitz as a part of the history class! And also it comes from my grandfather who was a member of the resistance here during the war! It is not exuses of what was happening but the reality!
@noregerts52472 жыл бұрын
@@karstenstormiversen4837 I never said you were American, and if you think people in America knew but people in Germany didn't, then you are a fool.
@gasperpoklukar83722 жыл бұрын
The Wehrmacht gladly helped perpetrate the Holocaust.
@ArtofFreeSpeech2 жыл бұрын
Easily the hardest, but also easily the best episode in the series, IMHO.
@ChuckJansenII2 жыл бұрын
The German General's wife felt shame.
@freakyflow2 жыл бұрын
So you get moments in WW2 And other wars where war it's self is horrific But then you find things like the holocaust, The atomic bomb killing civilians, The rape And killing of Nanking Etc etc I remember asking my grandfather "what was the worst thing you did or saw?" He told me : I remember vividly a platoon captain going threw the ranks Telling other CO's a dozen Or more of our own men tied with their hands being their backs most with blindfolds And a bullet in the back of their heads behind a church Well of course this went threw the men like wildfire. And for a good 3 weeks HQ wondered why They were not getting many If at all..German SS prisoners No one cared if they surrendered They killed them anyways You have to remember You are at war So is your brother Or highschool friend And friends you went into combat with And these German SS might of took them away as the surrendered And shot them anyways ..Anyways the last i heard of it from HQ orders was: Anyone found killing surrendering prisoners will be arrested and tryed .....The Canadian troops after that Just started to hand over any SS to the French people... That had no such orders .. And by Holland I had enough - A Hunter / Fisherman He never picked up a rifle coming back home Nor told the story to my Mother Or father And 5 others in the family He had a military funeral with new members of his Regiment And Native soldiers honoring him 2011 Edit my neigbour that lives next to me has the last name "Gies" You might not know that name.....It was the last name of the lady that took in Anne Frank And her parents
@christopherparrisjr.31462 жыл бұрын
Even Speirs is shook (11:45).
@davidshattock95222 жыл бұрын
I used to work in homes of lord of the people who had been in the armed forces in ww2 some stories were if thought about stuff of nightmares that is the stories ,so the experience can only have been a nightmare IE the driver of a truck ordered to liberate prisoners from concentration camp stopped en route for a comfort break in forest are a offered same to his passengers to comeback to find one clinging to front wheel afraid of being left behind and having to return in case he drove off
@mr.osclasses50542 жыл бұрын
As I tell my students when we watch this episode, it really is a two-part episode. The title explains it, "Why We Fight". So many of the men were becoming disillusioned with the war, forgetting why they signed up and why they were over there fighting by the time March/April/May of 1945 came around. You saw it with Perconte yelling at O'Keefe, Webster yelling at the surrendering Germans, Nixon after the failed jump, etc. They have all forgotten or lost focus on why they were there. It took a massive trauma of finding that camp to immediately to bring them all back into focus and finish out the war. You'll notice, not one complaint about themselves or their being "stuck" there once they found the camp...they remembered why they went. One detail you missed was that Perconte, when he found the kid sitting in shock in the camp, finally got his name right and called him O'Keefe. This shows that he partly was getting the name wrong to be petty and haze the kid a bit. Germany had what was called "forced confrontation" with the Holocaust. Just like in this episode, as the camps were found many Germans claimed the allies were exaggerating the situation. The higher-up's knew that allowing people to not be forced to see what their actions or inactions had done would lead to a rise in denial of the Holocaust as the years went on. It was our way of getting ahead of any problems. Sadly, in my studies to become a history teacher, I have seen videos of elderly people whose parents were part of the Nazi Party who still believe that the Nazis were right, and hold their parents up as some beacon of trying to "save Germany". Today, Germany has laws in place that make every school child visit one of the camps to learn about the atrocities committed by their ancestors to make sure something like that never happens again. It is a shame we don't have similar here in the U.S. Every high school student should have to visit a plantation, Native American Reservation, a Japanese-American Internment Camp site, or something of the like to see and learn what happened there, instead of banning books and claiming actual history is "CRT" just because it makes some white people uncomfortable. If that makes you uncomfortable, imagine what the people who lived through it must have felt or what their descendants still feel. Having a fear of knowledge is only going to breed ignorance, which breeds hatred and fear, which will lead to MORE problems here and abroad.
@eq13732 жыл бұрын
I was with you until your third paragraph. After that, i have to say you are a huge part of the problem in this country. You are indoctrinating children based on your political beliefs and a very perverted version of history written by people like Howard Zinn and Ward Churchill.
@georgeedward12262 жыл бұрын
The thing is, even if the locals knew, if they objected in any way, they would find themselves in the camp about 2 seconds later. That's what it is like living under tyranny.
@jhilal23852 жыл бұрын
- In general, the internal story told to the German people by their government was that Jews and other ethnic minorities that had been rounded up had be "resettled in the east" (meaning the newly conquered territories in Poland and the Soviet Union (modern Ukraine and Belarus)). - Keep in mind that wartime Germany was a socialist dictatorship without free press and no modern media, so information control and propaganda was very strong. - Locals might have known that there was a secret or restricted facility in the forest nearby, but anyone who was too curious or nosy would be "disappeared" by the Secret Police (GeStaPo), so most would have not looked too closely. - The photo of the German officer in the home that Nixon broke into was wearing a regular army uniform but not a general or field marshal (look at 2 bars on collar patch), so he would not have been involved in the camps, or probably had any knowledge of them. The black ribbon on the photo indicates that he is dead, so most likely killed on the eastern front against the Soviets. - The existence of the camps was compartmentalized, so even other parts of the SS, at least at the level of the common soldier or low level officer, such as the Waffen SS or civilian police did not know about them. - Some Waffen SS soldiers wounded in combat were sent to the camps as guards for light duty while they recovered. Those who did not express too much horror were transferred to the 1st SS Division when they returned to duty, which concentrated those more fanatical or sociopathic personalities in that unit. The 1st SS under commander Sepp Dietrich was know to have committed a number of atrocities and war crimes against both civilians and Allied personnel in France in 1944 and during the battle of the Bulge. - Check out the PBS series "Secrets of the Dead" episodes "Bombing Auschwitz" (S18E02) and "Bugging Hitler's Soldiers" (S12E02) for some insight on who knew what when. (streaming on the PBS website, - Also check out the 4-part documentary "Einsatzgruppen: The N--- Death Squads" (I'm not sure how CensorTube reacts to the WW2 n-word) on Netflix. We covered this in high school, but apparently many younger reactors don't know anything about it. If you do reactions to it, it might be a public service to raise people's awareness of what happened. It might also make you look at other things differently, like the scene in "Avengers Infinity War" where Thanos' troops are taking over child Gamora's home planet (this was deliberate, but again many younger viewers missed the reference).
@Rensune2 жыл бұрын
The head of the Abwehr (German Intelligence), Admiral Canaris, didn't even know. (When he found out, he actually turned Against the German government and helped the Allies as much as he could until he was caught and Executed) Almost No one outside of High ranking Axis and a few Allied Intelligence agents knew. (Aside from the actual Staff that was assigned to those Camps)
@NiaMakiReacts2 жыл бұрын
I see, the comment section has mixed messages about whether people knew...either way it was horrible...
@hrotha2 жыл бұрын
Canaris had been ambiguously against the Nazis since even before the war started, and he certainly knew about the Holocaust. While the details and the exact scope weren't known to many, rumours about what was going on ran through Germany. It was no secret that the Jews were being forcefully deported to the east, never to return (this was done quite openly), and enough regular soldiers took part in mass shootings and other actions that many people back home put 2 and 2 together. This was the worst kept secret in the Reich
@vernonrabbetts2 жыл бұрын
You mentioned them covering their noses and mouths and asked if it was the shock or the smell. It was the smell, its the one thing that a lot of camp liberators could never forget. I once read an article by the commander of a unit that cleaned up battlefields in the US Army in WWII. He finished by saying that if you want to end war, make the politicians stand on a battlefield 24 hours after the last bullet flew but before it was cleared of the corpses, human and animal and make them breathe it all in. Why do you think Eisonhower had no interest in war afterwards, he'd smelt the outcome.
@AFMountaineer20005 ай бұрын
When Buchenwald was liberated General Patton forced the entire town to march through the camp so they could see firsthand what theu claimed to know nothing about
@RP_Williams2 жыл бұрын
"please be grateful" - yes. Well said. We are lucky, and we don't have to live through this horror....but we can NEVER forget...NEVER (this from a Canadian middle class white guy, who's never experienced anything even remotely as horrible as the holocaust). It's too easy to be complacent and ambiguous in our comfort, but we MUSN'T...because this CAN happen again (hate is STILL so strong, in our world, and we must be AWARE).
@legoomyego2 жыл бұрын
its happening in China, Russia, North Korea, Iran.. Axis of Evil is once again forming and WE must do anything and everything possible to prevent another World War. Support the West, Support NATO.
@barreloffun102 жыл бұрын
It will happen again. Heck, it already has happened again, and it will again in the future. It is a part of human nature, the dark side, and human nature does not change.
@petis19762 жыл бұрын
We warn everyone about this episode, because it breaks people.
@Melrose51653 Жыл бұрын
?
@petis1976 Жыл бұрын
@@Melrose51653 there are reactors who become distraught watching the camp scene.
@EricPalmerBlog2 жыл бұрын
Well done. Thanks for sharing. If you dig into the post-war Nuremberg trials, it is very illuminating.
@xdestoration78162 жыл бұрын
You're a beautiful soul.
@scottsutoob2 жыл бұрын
The French soldier shooting the Germans was played by Tom Hanks. Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg were the guys who put this series together. Some have speculated but it is not explained in the series that there were some French citizens who joined the Nazis and that is why a French soldier would execute them on the spot as traitors.
@EricPalmerBlog2 жыл бұрын
Dear old dad, who was with Patton 44-45, stated that, post-war, the French used German POWs to clear minefields in France. Mostly by probing by hand. When one blew up, the French would just laugh.
@susanstein66042 жыл бұрын
The ordinary soldiers didn’t know but the generals knew and Roosevelt and Churchill knew.
@bizjetfixr83522 жыл бұрын
Re: the woman and her deceased husband. We don't know if her husband "did" anything. He was Wehrmacht, not SS. It's just as likely he was killed in action, with zero involvement. While burying bodies, she came face to face with the type of regime that her husband died for.
@xXTheVigilantXx2 жыл бұрын
Even if Liebgott were to try and explain, it wouldn't matter. When you're starving higher thought processes go out the window. All they would understand is that they were being told to go back into the camp. The reason why wouldn't really process in their heads.
@HerpaDerp9992 жыл бұрын
Its worth mentioning that the people who played the camp survivors were terminally ill cancer patients who wanted to help show what had happened.
@rishmani Жыл бұрын
The Fallen of WW2 by Neil Halloran is another good video to react to.
@Michael-yl2iq2 жыл бұрын
This is what happens when humans get comfortable with label their fellow humans as unwanted, unnecessary and inhuman.
@Sidraughen2 жыл бұрын
It's a very hard episode. You have probably already watched the last one but it's very sweet with some sad moments.