7:50 feli from germany (yt channel) have a great video on how we teach history here 😊
@minischembri98933 ай бұрын
German history teacher here: We do not hide ANYTHING ! A visit to a concentration camp is mandatory for most 16year olds and older students. And yes, we know that "fascism" comes from the Roman fasces and who Mussolini was . Check out NALF, an American with Italian heritage ( Nick Alfieri) living in Germany. He has a very good vid about Germany dealing with its past.
@GerMauro3 ай бұрын
Thank you for your honest comment, i will check out Nick Alfieri!
@Humpelstilzchen3 ай бұрын
Kaya yanar is also a very funny comedian 😁
@bayernhof11583 ай бұрын
ja, er ist der özil der deutschen comedy!
@Stolzer_Sachse872 ай бұрын
@@bayernhof1158 ich denke özil und kaya sind ganz was anderes.. stell dich in die ecke und schäm dich für so eine aussage!
@zasou5713 ай бұрын
I think Germany is doing a really good job when it comes to teaching this topic. When I think back: from the 5th to the 13th grade, every year it was about National Socialism - and not just in history, but also in religion, art, social sciences, politics, etc... We examined every aspect imaginable and the focus was on the question of how this could have happened and how best to avoid such atrocities in the future. Individual battles were not discussed in order to avoid glorification. We read relevant books, watched documentaries (which were often very difficult to bear!), visited former concentration camps and we had the opportunity to talk to survivors several times. We were never made to feel guilty or ashamed - on the contrary, we always made sure to emphasize that our generation had nothing to do with it (I was born in 1966). What feeling stuck from this class? A high level of responsibility... In my parents' house it was also very desirable for us children to ask questions. However, something helped me more than anything else to understand the horror and everyday life of war: a diary that was started by my great-grandpa (shot as a resistance fighter) and by my great-grandmother (who had to flee with a terminally ill daughter and 3 small grandchildren). and later my mother continued it. This diary is still in the family today and was passed on from me to my son. Thank God I know for sure that no one from my family was involved in the crimes... My great-grandpa on my mother's side was a resistance fighter and helped bring many Jews to safety. My paternal grandfather, who also had to flee, did the same. As a passionate photographer, he contributed many pictures from that time to our family diary, which vividly show the horror of the war - including photos of my hometown, which was 90% destroyed by a devastating firestorm shortly before the end of the war). My ancestors suffered like animals in and through war; since they weren't able to talk about all of their experiences, they kept this diary and tried to process at least part of it and make their children / grandchildren / great-grandchildren understand the horror of that time - in the hope that they too will never take part in such a war/genocide...
@Winona4933 ай бұрын
You're so right!!!
@79Testarossi2 ай бұрын
Great reaction 🤘greetings from Graz/Austria .. nice jersey..my girlfriend is from Piemont 🇮🇹🇦🇹🇮🇹
@emiliajojo57033 ай бұрын
The pupil thing is exactly what any german would answer.
@ingogromann18523 ай бұрын
Maybe you should try Jan Böhmermann, e.g. „[Extended version] Comedians for Worldpeace - Do they know it‘s Europe“ or „America first - Germany second“! 😆
@GerMauro3 ай бұрын
I have reacted to the Germany second video, but it got blocked for copyright, maybe soon the claim will be released!
@CavHDeu2 ай бұрын
History lesson: Rammstein - Deutschland. And don't skip the credits
@markwtal94533 ай бұрын
In german school, they tell it all. That's pretty unique. I was sick of it after some year's.
@emiliajojo57033 ай бұрын
Most Lederhosen indeed are passed through generations.at least some.
@ianetams2279Ай бұрын
It is not!! Freimarkt in in Bremen is the first one!! Find it out by yourself - .,