I am german, 43 years old and I want to thank you from the Bottom of my Heart. Its important to do such Videos and that People will remember the injustice and inhumanity that happend and that is the responsibility of all of us that this will never happen again.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thanks a lot for your feedback. I agree. It’s our responsibility to remember our past so that we can learn from it and take better choices in the future 🙏🏻
@EchoKiloАй бұрын
My wife and I visited Auschwitz in 2015, from America. The tours were indescribable and you’ll never really understand it until you go.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
I agree. A personal visit is always the best to really understand what it’s like to be there. But most people simply aren’t able to travel that far. And that’s why I am very happy that I can show them these places and educate them on our past via my channel ☺️
@peterhorak7542Ай бұрын
Ihr müsst Euch mal einigen, die eine Dokumentation sagt 6000000 Menschen getötet worden, ihr sagt1000000,was ist nun richtig? Ihr macht euch selber unglaubwürdig
@davidlauder-qi5zvАй бұрын
Auschwitz was only one of the extermination centres where inmates were gassed. There were other death camps in Poland - Treblinka, Sobibor, Chelmno, Maidanek, Belzec. And over one and a half million Jews were shot in the Nazi-occupied areas of the Soviet Union by the mobile killing squads of the SS Einsatzgruppen. Look up those units on line. It is too horrific to believe.
@fransrabie660925 күн бұрын
In 2018, my wife and I visited the Holocaust museum in the USA. It is terrible to imagine what all those people had to endure. My fore fathers were from Germany and the Nederlands. I think some of them were even Jewish? Keep up the good work. God bless. From South Africa
@sandychashaya721723 күн бұрын
I read this, I listened and I am crying now. Why this is so cruel, why they can do with human like this, I am so sad
@CasinoMan20058 күн бұрын
Thank you, Alina! I’m glad to see a young person aware of what happened here. People need to know history so it’s never repeated again.
@aventuralina2 күн бұрын
Thank you for watching! That’s why I documented this visit: to remind people of our past so that we will hopefully learn from it and make better decisions in the future 🙏🏻
@petebrandon816412 күн бұрын
Huge respect to you Alina for having the courage to make this presentation and tour 🙏 Thank you. Niemals vergessen 🙏
@aventuralina11 күн бұрын
Thank you for your words and for watching!
@ersrvdАй бұрын
Thank you for this video Alina. It's very important to never forget these events, and everybody should learn about this so we can someday live in peace. ✌
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
@@ersrvd yes, I agree. Everybody should learn from this part of our history 🙏🏻
@soleknight3212Ай бұрын
That's what I love about modern day Germans. Most are NOT afraid to look at their past, even if it includes family members who may have been involved. They ask questions. And they demand answers. They have a sense of justice. God bless you and your family
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thanks a lot for your feedback. I really believe that we can only learn from our past. We cannot change what happened but we can make sure to never repeat our mistakes. That’s why it’s so important to keep telling this part of our history 🙏🏻
@soleknight3212Ай бұрын
@@aventuralina Thanks for the response. Appreciate it. By the way, I am Jewish and lost ancestors in the Holocaust. As a student, I shared accommodation for a year with a German couple in the 1990s in the UK and they were just like you. Very open minded and were quite adamant that the actions of some from the previous generations in Germany should not be brushed under the carpet. We would even end up having a laugh with each other and teased each other about 'German vs Jew', but that's because we learnt to trust each other. This is all part of the healing process. The soul's journey. The thing that Hitler represented was the worst aspects of the human ego. He believed we were 'separate' - but of course, in reality, there is no division between humans - one pure consciousness. This issue is, of course, NOT only specific to Germans (even though that madman was not even a German and ended up a traitor to his own people), but it is the ego in all of us. The ego is the problem and the soul's journey is the solution. Peace
@soleknight3212Ай бұрын
Thanks for the response. Appreciate it. By the way, I am Jewish and lost ancestors in the Holocaust. As a student, I shared accommodation for a year with a German couple in the 1990s in the UK and they were just like you. Very open minded and were quite adamant that the actions of some from the previous generations in Germany should not be brushed under the carpet. We would even end up having a laugh with each other and tease each other about 'German vs Jew', but that's because we learnt to trust each other. This is all part of the healing process. The soul's journey. The thing that Hitler represented was the worst aspects of the human ego. He believed we were 'separate' - but of course, in reality, there is no division between humans - one pure consciousness. This issue is, of course, NOT only specific to Germans (even though that madman was not even a German and ended up a traitor to his own people), but it is the ego in all of us. The ego is the problem and the soul's journey is the solution. Peace
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
@@soleknight3212 thanks a lot for also sharing this personal story. It’s true that communicating with each other can only help our souls to heal. As mentioned before, we cannot change our past but together we can work on living with our past and on improving our future so that these kind of separations won’t happen again. In the end we are all humans, no matter our beliefs, our skincolor, sexuality or the country of origin.
@soleknight3212Ай бұрын
Well said. Have a blessed day :)
@nikhilbhadkamkar6440Ай бұрын
A overwhelming sad and disturbing experince, A very well done video, Alina!!
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
@@nikhilbhadkamkar6440 thank you!
@MaresaEngoАй бұрын
I am unable to visit this concentration camp so I am most grateful to those who are featuring it. Thanks so much!
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
That’s the intention of the video. To ensure that even those who cannot visit it know better what it’s like to be there. Thanks for watching!
@MaresaEngoАй бұрын
@@aventuralina Watching from Bacolod City, Philippines!
@Rayeast-uv3uo22 күн бұрын
I have seen 6 camps alot of people were gased in the one's I seen
@davidirvine64220 күн бұрын
I went on holiday from Scotland 🏴 to krakow Poland 🇵🇱 in June of this year My visit to Auschwitz educated me so much more than I ever knew our tour guide explained all of the horrendous atrocities that took place here A visit to Auschwitz is a must when in Poland 🇵🇱 The one place I didn’t manage to tour was Oskar Schindlers factory Thanks for your video ❤️
@darrinsmith1588Ай бұрын
Thought you did a great job of capturing your visit to the Auschwitz/ Birkenau camp. For anyone who has never been to a camp, it is quite a sobering experience. I have been to Dachau, sachsenhausen and Struthop/Natzweiler and the feeling I had visiting each one was the same. I expect that when get to Auschwitz on an upcoming trip,it will be the same. Keep up the great content and would love to see more videos like this
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
@@darrinsmith1588 it definitely is a shocking experience but so important if you want to understand better this part of our history. And it’s such an important visit to learn from 🙏🏻
@kimweidner7351Ай бұрын
I went to Auschwitz many years ago. Bless you for posting this, we should never forget what mankind is capable of doing to one another. May those souls that died there be soothed.
@aventuralina25 күн бұрын
Thanks for your words. I hope this video helps to keep remembering our past and to remember all the victims and innocent souls that have lost their lives during World War II.
@woodenseagull18999 күн бұрын
Only Germans are inherently responsible for such atrocities for the destruction of humanity. It is the nation of the damned. Be respectful and NEVER visit that broken country. ! out of respect...
@Kathy-y4dАй бұрын
I visited last year - a terribly sad place which gave me goosebumps on every level but we have to pay our respects to those that suffered A fantastic video and I learnt a few new facts from you - well done!
@aventuralina24 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot for the feedback! I’m glad that I was able to also teach you some new facts.
@petebrandon8164Ай бұрын
Thank you Alina for your sensitive and caring presentation of this horror and also your presentation I saw previously of Krakow. I just came back from a visit to Polná in the Czech Republic where my grandfather and his family lived for many generations, and was very moved that although there are no more Jews there, the Czech people carefully preserve their memory and history. Thank you for caring. Niemals vergessen 🙏
@aventuralina24 күн бұрын
Thank you for watching and for your feedback! I am glad to have this platform to make sure that this part of our history will never be forgotten 🙏🏻
@glennhorvath87923 күн бұрын
Good work Alina, exposing the truth of that evil place.And your English is good.
@aventuralina23 күн бұрын
Thank you!
@glennhorvath87922 күн бұрын
@@aventuralina you're welcome
@paulsmith19818 күн бұрын
@@aventuralina Propagating war propaganda is not being a good person. What happed to the shrunken heads and lampshades that were shown to German citizens by American psychological warfare officers at the end of the war? Were they real or fake. Can you even answer that honestly without fear of a very long prison sentence? A police state by definition is a state whose government exercises an extreme level of control over civil society and liberties.
@paulsmith19818 күн бұрын
And if you disagree with the "truth" its off to prison for ten years.
@MyEgoRulesАй бұрын
I need to go, u did a really good chat at the end for me, this world is about to do this again, some have learnt nothing and it’s upsetting … thank you xx
@FelixTheCat69Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing Alina😢
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@Grace.allovertheplace20 күн бұрын
Hi, I watched your first video and I wanted to say thank you and how much I appreciate it, and I want to thank you for doing this one too. Respectfully, Grace
@aventuralina19 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for watching and for your feedback!
@Grace.allovertheplace19 күн бұрын
@@aventuralina 🙏
@dianakent839328 күн бұрын
Thank you , this should be shown and taught in schools through out the world .
@aventuralina24 күн бұрын
I agree 💯
@stephencelestino345115 күн бұрын
Wonderful lesson on Auschwitz. I visited Auschwitz about 20 years ago. Very moving great job....😢
@__dissident__Ай бұрын
My father was from Poland. Somehow in 1939, he got into the USSR and thus he was able to survive. He passed away before I was old enough to find more information of my predicessors. I was visiting Poland in 2023 trying to find any traces of his big family but returned back to America empty-handed. All I know is the Russian spelling of his first and last name, year of birth(1919) and the first and last name of my grandfather. Thank you for reminding people of their past - forgotten past is often repeats itself - you can see what is going on nowadays in majority of the campuses. They not just don't know anything from the past but even don''t want to. That is why you effort is so valuable.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you for sharing your fathers story and for your feedback! This is exactly why I wanted to do this video: to educate people on our past that should never be forgotten and to remember the people who suffered and died under the nazi regime.
@Blackflagship17 күн бұрын
Damn, thank you for this tour. It created a big knot in my stomach I can’t imagine how horrible must’ve been. All the best
@aventuralina4 күн бұрын
Thank you for the feedback.
@regjauncey4843Ай бұрын
Another excellent documentary, presented in perfect English...well done🎉
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you so much for the feedback!
@simonjackson726916 күн бұрын
My daughter and I visited last year (2023) and to say we were moved by the sights and the atmosphere of the place is an understatement! I can not believe there are people who deny that the Holocaust took place! They are sick at best!!
@vintubeable19 күн бұрын
So many lives lost here....Sad. Looking at the remains of the camp, it is beyond one's imagination of the horrors the captives went through. Those remains in the camp are a witness to those horrific times. Many families who arrived would have got seperated at the entrance, not sure whether they would have met again. Even though it appears gruesome, the oncoming generations should spend a moment here to feel the pain a certain section of humanity went through during those times.
@maramé.rАй бұрын
Absolutely fascinating and deeply moving video. So well-presented
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you so much for your feedback!
@gcingiaАй бұрын
Very well made Alina. Very informative and I imagine quite a difficult topic. Wondering what you felt. But your thoughts at the end are important. Humans do not seem capable of learning to live in Peace with others. Even the victims of horrendous past crimes can also become criminals.... 😢❤
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Honestly, it’s pretty shocking to walk through the museum. I as a German know a lot about that history. But when I walked there I felt shocked and also somehow denial. Obviously I know that everything our guide has told us is true but it’s hard to accept that your own people are capable of such cruelties… Anyways, it’s important to keep the memories of all these innocent souls alive and to learn from our past 🙏🏻
@peterrusatsky8395Ай бұрын
Wonderful job ! There's a saying "That the destructive nature of Mankind has led to this..." It applies to many aspects of Mankind. The counterbalance are people like Saint Maximillian Kolbe. I went to a high school named after him !
@TimothyOHernАй бұрын
My wife and I visited in the spring of 2024. You can’t possibly see that and leave without a heavy heart. I agree with a comment from someone earlier, as hard as it is for the people, they feel a responsibility to never forget that history. A lesson we Americans should embrace. Thank you for sharing this, for anyone that hasn’t gone there personally, it is a good representation.
@aventuralina24 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot for your feedback! A visit to Auschwitz is definitely something you’ll carry around for a while after visiting. It’s shocking and yet so important to understand what human being are capable of doing. We must learn from our past to never repeat it 🙏🏻
@paulzuri27 күн бұрын
Another perfectly pitched video, many genuine thanks.
@aventuralina26 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot! I really appreciate your feedback!
@alexstenschewski834214 күн бұрын
Thank you, Alina, for this video. Yes, I have been to this place, Almost all of my family got murdered only in Auschwitz, only my father survived the IIWW.
@aventuralina13 күн бұрын
I‘m sorry about your loss. Your family won’t be forgotten 🙏🏻 May they rest in peace.
@alexstenschewski834213 күн бұрын
@@aventuralina Thank you very much.
@johnbarnes9379Ай бұрын
You have a lovely caring genuine personality and it especially shows doing these tours.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you so much for your words!
@MeaHeaRАй бұрын
Verry good video, Excellenté produced and directed. und most informative
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you for the feedback!
@sandychashaya721723 күн бұрын
Thank you Alina, this makes me feel 2 things: Yes I am so sad, I cant explain what's in my head and I am crying This is so heartbreaking. How can they hate "human" and killed them like that, I had no ideas Kids / Old / everyone there .... I am sad and I am crying when type this comment Second thing, I feel appriciated my life now I some complain my life: food isnt yummy, I am fat, I want to but new earrings but what I have now it's so perfect that I am still breathing Next month, I will visit Amsterdam, I will go to Ann Frank House But if I have a chance to go to Poland, I will visit this place - Auschwitz Birkenau We SHOULD know what was happened and respect them Everybody SHOULD learn and SHOULD NOT kill each others, please stop killing I hope humans will learn from the pass, I hope
@jasonpayneuk6 күн бұрын
Thank you Alina - this was such an interesting video and a great way of understanding what you will see before you go. Sadly I don’t think humanity has learned, there is so much hatred that is being normalised. I hope we return to the “centre” again soon
@aventuralina2 күн бұрын
Thanks a lot for your feedback! Unfortunately I agree with you that it currently doesn’t seem that we’ve learnt from our past… But the more important I felt it is to share this experience and to remind people of our past. We should never forget about it 🙏🏻
@allanwright523110 күн бұрын
Thankyou Alina for this video
@aventuralina10 күн бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@HamidullahTahiriАй бұрын
It is sad, especially the children who were set on fire.
@frankcumbo5512Ай бұрын
Thankyou for sharing and well done 👍
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you for watching :)
@Myou2_Ай бұрын
Excellent video! Keep telling us stories from around the world 🌎
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
@@Myou2_ I will ☺️
@KingshieldwallАй бұрын
Thank you Alina, a part of history that should never be forgotten. Keep up the good work beautiful Lady.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thanks you for watching!
@apocalypticraids17 күн бұрын
I totally agree with you that this my never be forgotten but shamefully it's all ready been forgotten and the world didn't learn anything from this disgusting and dark episode in history
@toddmoen5829Ай бұрын
very good job on this video. such an important topic to always remember.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thanks a lot for the feedback. It’s definitely a part of our history that should never be forgotten 🙏🏻
@annmariefields2508Ай бұрын
Love your videos, very informative ❤️❤️🙏🏿👏👏
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you!
@ACAjc152Ай бұрын
I am polish and watching your videos. Good someone is making them in English for the world to learn
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thanks for this comment and for your feedback. I am happy that this way I can reach and educate more people on this important topic!
@healinginfluence6 күн бұрын
Thank you for your thoughtful video. I found it informative and helpful.
@aventuralina4 күн бұрын
Thank you for watching and for your feedback.
@adriankelly37219 күн бұрын
I visited there in July 2024 and yes, it is a moving place. It was very hot that day, which made it stifling and the fans did a poor job. But yes, it is a place that saddens you and you find it difficult to fathom the cruelty and much more.
@catherinebrown911928 күн бұрын
Chilling. I sat here shaking my head in disbelief even thought I know the story.
@aventuralina23 күн бұрын
It’s really hard to believe what human beings are capable of doing… But the more important it is to educate on this to hopefully do better in the future 🙏🏻
@danielprosperi6196Ай бұрын
Nuevamente un excelente video sobre la historia del campo de concentración de Auschwitz, como bien comentas hay que aprender del pasado para no volver a cometer estos crímenes tan despreciables!
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Gracias por tu feedback! Si, tenemos de acordarnos de nuestro pasado y aprender de ello 🙏🏻
@kendrarivers7799Ай бұрын
Thank you for the video!
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@einfachicke1417Ай бұрын
Hello from Germany. What an outstanding video. Thank you for that. This story must be continued to be told so as not to be forgotten. You made a big contribution to this with this great video. We can't thank you enough for this. I'm not entirely sure, but I believe that at least one of the gas chambers was blown up by prisoners during an uprising. Unfortunately the uprising was bloodily suppressed but I think at least two prisoners managed to escape. Before the revolt, the prisoners debated whether they should blow up gas chambers or the railway line. Thank you for your outstanding work again.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you for your feedback! I wanted to create this video to remember our past and to ensure that more people who may not be able to get to places like Auschwitz themselves, can learn from our mistakes in the past. Especially nowadays it seems more and more important to remember 🙏🏻
@Metal_Life33326 күн бұрын
To quote the terminator “it’s in your nature to destroy yourselves” We have learned nothing still destroying each other in one form or another🥲🥲🥲
@sherrieshatzen3801Ай бұрын
Thank you Alina. The work you are doing is very important. There are very few survivors left. Soon there will be no survivors left to attest to these atrocities. I fear the sanitization of history as time passes. It is too easy to look at history & think that no matter how depraved, how cruel, how terrifying events of a distant time were, that was then & this is now & we react without the drama of emotions. After a while we are in a relationship with "historical" facts. There is mostly just an intellectual interest. Anti semitism is on the rise. Some in the US want to ban Muslims from entering the country. Children as well as adults are asserting their power with the use of guns. Please keep showing the truth. Please keep having an impact.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thanks a lot for your feedback. I think it’s very important to keep our past alive. There is a growing right movement in Europe as well and we cannot allow to forget our mistakes from the past. I have some ideas in mind for future videos to keep such memories alive. I’ll hopefully be able to do many more videos such as this one.
@Muffin_HamburgАй бұрын
Hast du richtig gut gemacht 👌🏻
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Ich danke dir sehr für das Feedback ☺️
@alanmcmillan1163Ай бұрын
Thank you for this video. I visited in 2022. It’s a case of one look being worth a thousand words. The Polish guide was excellent as was the introductory film. Absolutely chilling in intent and scale. Worth mentioning that by the time the Hungarian Jews arrived in 1944 there was no segregation, just straight into the gas chambers. A perpetual stain on humanity. Man’s inhumanity to man.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thanks a lot for the comment. It’s definitely worth mentioning this, as horrible as it is. But yes, the brutality of the Nazis got worse and worse over time…
@lesleycooper754429 күн бұрын
I have seen so many films about these terrible times. It still shocks me and makes me feel sick. WHY
@aventuralina25 күн бұрын
It’s absolutely terrible and keeps being shocking as you’ll always learn something new which makes this part of our history even darker then it already was.
@paultucker127212 күн бұрын
An extremely sobering video, thank you. Sadly your conclusion is correct, far too many of us have not leaned the lessons of the past and we continue to see and hear of mans inhumanity to man on a daily basis. It may not be on the same scale and in such a small location like these concentration camps, but it's still happening throughout the world. However, if your video helps to make one individual a better person, then you have achieved something great.
@margaretpaterson7297Ай бұрын
I think it's great that you hv done these videos about the Holocaust. Your so young it's great to see these past event's will not be forgotten. Everyone said after the war never again but here it seems Everyone is turning on Israel just for defending herself. Shocking. I'm English and I don't think any of this is being taught in schools today and it should. I'm not Jewish but I say thank you for keeping everyone reminded. God Bless ❤
@aventuralina29 күн бұрын
Thank you for your comment and feedback. I agree that this is a very important topic and one that we can only learn from. That’s why I think it’s so important to keep the memory alive and to keep telling this part of our history.
@paularrigoАй бұрын
Thank you, Alina. You are correct about people who do not get along well, because of our differences, even today. May God help us,,, pozdrawiam,,,,,
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Unfortunately it seems like we didn’t learn as much by now as we should have… The more important it is to keep this part of our history alive 🙏🏻
@paularrigoАй бұрын
@@aventuralina Unfortunately, I remember too much, Sometimes, it can be a problem, but yes, overall , every living person should understand that we are just renters on this planet, not owners. Thank you for responding to my note, pozdrawiam
@MegaShorts121Ай бұрын
@@aventuralina we learn nothing and will never learn
@Nightopian198211 күн бұрын
Whilst Auschwitz-Birkenau was the deadliest in terms of the total number of murders, many often overlook Treblinka in terms of the murder rate. Up to 900,000 people were killed there over a period of only 15 months. They were murdering up to 25,000 people per day. When one also considers how horrible and prolonged a death it was to be killed by carbon monoxide poisoning (not that potassium cyanide wasn't awful enough), I think it strangely tends to avoid the same notoriety, probably due to the sheer scale of Auschwitz-Birkenau, and the presence of Josef Mengele. It's important never to forget that ALL of those operating the camps - including the forced labour camps - were partially responsible for the mass murder of millions, no matter what their role was.
@AstralAu23 күн бұрын
Lest we forget... May God bless all Jews and Christians, for evermore
@javedalive1023 күн бұрын
THANK YOU ALINA
@aventuralina23 күн бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@ianmilsteadАй бұрын
Thank you for making this video. Germany is not alone in having a past stained with atrocities, but it is one of the few countries that really is open and honest about what happened. Burying it makes it less painful, but only increases the chances of it happening again.
@aventuralina29 күн бұрын
It’s important to face our past and to remember it so that we can learn from it and improve our future 🙏🏻
@akhilcs499318 күн бұрын
Wounds that never heal!!!
@antonioadventureАй бұрын
It's a story that saddened more than one😥. It's cruel that they have built a concentration camp of that magnitude to mistreat the prisoners in the most cruel way possible just for example of being Jews where they were innocent people. It's an interesting story that should never be forgotten so that events like these are never repeated and we can be better human beings and be accepted as one is according to their culture and religion. Excellent video Alina, thank you for teaching us and giving us a lot of information about this place 👍
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thanks a lot for your feedback!! Yes, it’s a cruel story and extremely shocking to hear what human beings are capable of doing… I just hope that someday we’ll really learn from our past 🙏🏻
@jamesstays719212 күн бұрын
OMG that was terrible. I just can say I love you Israel 😢 from Toronto. I'm Colombian Christian Evangelical living in Canadá. Thax for showing us.
@aventuralina11 күн бұрын
It is a terrible part of our history but so important to remember it and to learn from the mistakes of our past 🙏🏻
@GL1998XАй бұрын
On about March 15, 2022, I crossed from Poland into Ukraine at Medyka. We were headed to evacuate people from the front line areas. I remember momentarily thinking I am right between Auschwitz and the front lines, right between the genocide of my ancestors and someone's genocide of the now. It's hard to describe the feelings. Very present. Rapidly reflective. Resolved. Angry. Apprehensive. Afraid. Very sad. Furious. Infinitely focused. Thank you.
@EnriqueDeQuesada101Ай бұрын
You are amazing. your video is excellent, ❤❤❤
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you!
@theoztreecrasher264719 күн бұрын
Less than 2 minutes in and I just had to hit the "M" key and turn the captions on! Why Oh Why do folks who post videos always think that obscuring the natural sounds (or silence!) of a location "improves" their efforts???!! 😱 These 2 locations (they are quite a long walking distance apart) are extremely important and moving memorials to the depths of human depravity. The emotional impact of a visit does NOT need "enhancing" - of that I can assure you! 🙄
@Joseph314587 күн бұрын
I was there one year ago from the USA, and it was a haunting experience!
@aventuralina4 күн бұрын
It sure is a haunting experience but at the same time a history that is so important to understand so that we can learn from it and hopefully make better decisions in the future.
@Robby33424 күн бұрын
Thank you for your clip. One of my last wishes on this earth was to visit Auschwitz Birkenau Nazi Concentration Camp to pay my respects to all that were tortured and died in this camp, but because I have agoraphobia I would find this impossible, So may I thank you for your visit there are I can watch this on KZbin.
@aventuralina23 күн бұрын
It’s a pleasure to show these kind of places to people who are interested in this part of history and who may not have the chance to visit it and learn about it personally. Thank you for watching and for your feedback!
@VineyardGaden28 күн бұрын
A very meaningful presentation. Thanks. I would feel awfully uncomfortable just walking within that once place of hell. I truly pity those who were forced to be exterminated there. Absolutely no one should be allowed to take a single photograph there. No doubt the place is profoundly haunted.
@hijittajames8336Ай бұрын
Thank you for your videos 🙏🙏
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@bjorklive2379Ай бұрын
I went there a month ago. Such a sobering overwhelming experience. They say the birds don't sing there and they were absolutely right. I didn't go to some of the places you did but what I saw was enough. I believe a visit to Auschwitz should be compulsory as part of your education in school.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
@@bjorklive2379 yes, it should definitely be part of our education in school! It’s such an important place to remember and to learn from our past 🙏🏻
@bjorklive2379Ай бұрын
@aventuralina absolutely! I was overwhelmed how sad it was. It made it real being there and not on TV. I just wish our tour had been more exrltensive,I wanted to see everything so I had full knowledge but the guides were excellent all the same. Lovely ladies called Camilla and Barbara. I felt guilty at the end when she asked if there were any questions and no one answered because I had so many but I was processing what I'd seen. I'd like to go again someday.
@Grace.allovertheplace20 күн бұрын
1:44 *The bedding of the bunk beds isn’t particularly in alignment with the truth of how these beds were presented to those who had the great misfortune to find themselves there as a “prisoner.”* I’d go so far as *to claim that there wasn’t any bedding’s in any concentration camps* throughout the entire “Na3i” Germany. *A prisoner who was able to get hold of a blanket were considered lucky.* Respectfully, Grace
@arulcastro5013Ай бұрын
One learns from history that one never learns from history.
@2493463712 күн бұрын
Excellent video! Thank you! One thing that has been very noticable about many sources of information regarding the industrial slaugher by the Nazis, is that there is often quoted the figure of 6 million murders which relates to the Jewish people killed, but rarely any mention of the (almost as many) people from other groups that were also slaughtered in the same horiffic conditions such as Roma, political prisoners, homosexuals and people with disabilities, and addictions! Any ideas why this is? It's consistently something that is ignored by so many videos I've seen, and rarely gets mentioned during conversations related to the subject on Social Media!
@aventuralina11 күн бұрын
I think it is just as important to mention all the other nationalities that have suffered under the Nazi regime but I do agree with you, that most people only focus on Jews. In Auschwitz I guess it does make sense, because by far most of the people that died there were Jews. Although at this point it is worth to mention that they were Jews coming from all over Europe. I am dedicating a video made in a camp in Austria to the Spanish that have suffered and died under the Nazi regime. There I hope that it’ll be more obvious that this war wasn’t only against Jews but everyone that didn’t share the same ideology… That video will be up in November and I hope you’ll like that one as well.
@249346379 күн бұрын
@@aventuralina Thank You for the reply. My comment WASN'T in any way a criticism of your very interesting and informative video, just a general comment / question that related to other sources!
@aventuralina9 күн бұрын
@@24934637 yeah, I totally understood that 💯
@rafaelangel2656Ай бұрын
La verdad plasmaste mucho de los sucedido alli. Y la cita al comienzo es algo que siempre resuena para todos como humanidad... Habia escuchado y leido sobre mengele... Sobre klaudbert la verdad no.. si acaso alguna vez... El tema de resaltar también a los alemanes y que no fueron solo los judios... Sino tambien rusos, gitanos y otras etnias y opositores y disidentes...es importante... Y lo mas importante entender asimilar lo sucedido aprender de ello y asi evitar que se repita... Con respecto a lo que indicas de si aprenderemos a vivir todos en paz.. quiero ser positivo y pensar que si... Pero es un camino de paso a paso... Y si queremos evolucionar como humanidad es totalmente necesario... Un abrazo Alina tremendo vídeo
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Gracias Rafael. Hay muchas razones hoy en día en varios partes del mundo por los que estoy dudando que los humanos puedan convivir en paz 😓 Pero de todos modos es importante seguir contando estas historias. Quizás sirve para cambiar la mentalidad de alguien y si no, por lo menos sirve de recordar todas las almas inocentes que murieron allí de varios países.
@unnamedchannel123723 күн бұрын
Sorry but music to voice ratio was too much couldn’t hear what was being said at times
@aventuralina23 күн бұрын
Thanks for the feedback. I will keep that in mind for the future!
@bonvoyageauLSD14 күн бұрын
To be clear, Krema 1 is not in its original state. When the soviets arrived it had been converted into an air raid shelter, and had been so for a long time. The soviets decided to throw in a couple of ovens, put up new chimneys besides it, throw out the bathroom, and cut new holes in the roof. That's why it's now a bit of a Frankenstein monster of a building that doesn't make much sense to its supposed purpose. Should also note that before its short stint as a gas chamber it was just a plain crematorium.
@dstraker77 күн бұрын
THE LONGER YOU STARE INTO THE ABYSS IT STARES BACK AT YOU
@JohnFeichtlАй бұрын
Alinia, great job on the spokemanship and videos on those consentration camps, my heart and mind hurts for all those people a generation before me. Vietnam has never fully left my nightmares, but nothing compared to,ww2 and those camps!!!
@aventuralina24 күн бұрын
Thank you for your words!
@terenceadams3525Ай бұрын
We visited the camp last year and it was a harrowing experience
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
It is… But it’s so important to learn from this 🙏🏻
@terenceadams3525Ай бұрын
@@aventuralina yes it is I went there to actually to understand how some humans could to this to another religion
@VictoriaGirlBC20 күн бұрын
Thank you for giving this informative tour. It’s unimaginable what these poor souls had to endure. Yet it still continues… Palestine, Ukraine. ❤🇨🇦
@daveglover6115Ай бұрын
Excellent and obviously disturbing. Unfortunately bigotry and cruelty is still widespread across various societies, often from generation to generation...
@mikeybraz915Ай бұрын
Great video
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you!
@marialobensteijn561021 күн бұрын
Sorry: why is the music's so loud and annoying? Want to but can't watch this
@kevbrown7137Ай бұрын
Watch the 1970s documentary with Kitty Hart.. She surived that place and tells of her real experience during those times....
@ronalddesiderio7625Ай бұрын
Ya has to be an extremely sobering experience of man’s inhumanity to man. Talk about just total insanity. Beyond RIP 🙏🏼
@newbeginnings856628 күн бұрын
Think you'll find Treblinka was the top of the list for the deadliest...
@Nightopian198211 күн бұрын
Yes, that's an often overlooked element of the Holocaust. Treblinka's murder rate - both daily and over the course of its operation - eclipsed even Auschwitz-Birkenau. Up to 25,000 killed on the worst days, and 900,000 in barely over a year. It just beggars belief. Mind you, a great many of the murders at Auschwitz-Birkenau took place over the course of only three months, when over 400,000 Hungarian Jews were killed. Those numbers are just incomprehensible.
@AllysonRichman-mu7co20 күн бұрын
That was just terrible 😭😭😭😭😭😭
@marsattacks7071Ай бұрын
Thank you.
@aventuralina25 күн бұрын
Thank you for watching!
@ronalddesiderio7625Ай бұрын
Your English is very good 👍🏾
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Thank you :)
@HamidullahTahiriАй бұрын
Damn Josef mengele hell.
8 күн бұрын
This doesn’t look like a summer camp to me!
@ZionIst-liessssssАй бұрын
Euraopa the last battle. Watch
@paulweaverАй бұрын
So sad alina 😭❤️
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Yes, it’s the most shocking feeling of being there and hearing all these stories… 💔
@paulweaverАй бұрын
What makes it interesting I have been it bought tears to my eyes and I am 62 years old 😢
@BertiOnTourАй бұрын
Gutes Video gegen das Vergessen.
@aventuralinaАй бұрын
Danke dir für das Feedback!
@alfredb17512 күн бұрын
Thank you young lady for this, I will never be able to afford to go myself, you did a good job of showing (WHAT THEY DID), everyone needs to see (WHAT THEY DID). My heart goes out the Jewish people, we must never forger (WHAT THEY DID).
@22pcirishАй бұрын
I intend to visit. I won’t be taking a camera. The images you see there should be engraved on your soul, not in a stupid smiling selfie.
@AnandaKumara-15 күн бұрын
I'm very glad now that I left the Germany. after being 10 years there ! from 1998 to 2008 .. 😢 ..
@bobshaw8112Ай бұрын
Where are the guards? And those administratiing the crimes? 😊
@pat14192247 күн бұрын
well done on this video, great to see a young German doing a video like this, it needs to be done. I was there in 2014 and organised a private tour guide to show me around the camp. he was a descendant of a jewish family from Ukraine. It was properly the most spine chilling day i even spent with a tour guide, he delivered the history of Auschwitz in such a way that i am still haunted by the experience to this day. I asked him how much of his (extended) family were affected by the Holocaust. He explained to me his family like any other family was like a big oak tree, by the time the Nazi's were finished 98% of his family tree was wiped out.