“That’s the thing about world wars, even the winners lose” might be the best line
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
That's not an original; I got it from HistoriaCivilis and I'm sure he got it from other sources.
@nathanseper87387 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow Still an epic line on the sheer carnage of WW1.
@ag78986 ай бұрын
Heck... doesn't even have to be a world War. KZbinr Ryan McBeth constantly says about the Russo-Ukrainian War, "There is no winners and losers in war. Only one side losing a little less."
@DrVictorVasconcelos6 ай бұрын
I mean... the US's and USSR's superpower status were entirely confirmed by WW2. The US economy had vertiginal growth.
@Plasticcaz7 ай бұрын
As an Aussie, I'm so happy to see Monash mentioned here! I'd forgotten just how important he was. I know I learned about him in school, but I just remembered he was a good Australian-Jewish General in WW1. Now I'm even more proud of him.
@weevilstevil99017 ай бұрын
Honestly the paltry state of Australian's education about Australia itself is probably at fault. I myself can barely recall being taught much more than the broad strokes of Aussie history in school, and hell the vast majority of Australians are woefully unaware of Aussie history as is. Tell me, can you recall the first Aussie PM off the top of your head? Probably not, yet you can most likely name the first US president!! Makes me sad. That's why we should all read the 'Girt' series of Aussie history :)
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
@@weevilstevil9901 I was surprised by this. In my research about Monash I read a lot of handwringing from Australian politicians/intellectuals about how seemingly impossible it is to make Australian history feel relevant to New Australians. This baffled me for two reasons. (1) I'm American, and we're _very_ good at teaching immigrants and their children that our history matters to them. (2) John Monash is, like, _the model New Australian_ before the concept existed. This should be easy.
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
@@weevilstevil9901 Edmund Barton. I didn't even have to look it up. Unfortunately I only remember because he was cited as a counterpoint to George Washington for how irrelevant/forgotten he is. Not that that's necessarily _wrong:_ like I said, Australia was a _state_ well before it was truly a _nation,_ and its nationhood is very much a product of the World Wars which were after his time. Additionally, the US President isn't a fair comparison because he's also the ceremonial figurehead, and Washington has even more significance as Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army and was basically drafted to be President based on that. A prime minister is just one of many dispensable public servants, which I actually prefer.
@weevilstevil99017 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow Honestly it is unfathomable to me, even as someone that grew up in Australia, how little Australians seem to care about being Australian. Very well done on the Barton recollection! You've now achieved more than what 98.37%* of Aussies are capable of. I suppose that you've plucked at exactly the errant chord. Symbols. Australia cares precious little for her symbolic characters and stories that may aid in nation-building (sans Gallipoli and Ned Kelly, of course). *Actual figure may differ.
@weevilstevil99017 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow Another factor which isnoften overlooked is the odd shadow of Australia's fourth most famous foundational Jew. Sir Isaac Isaacs*. Isaacs was desperate to frame himself as having rejected his Jewish heritage, especially in a way that tied him to Zionism and responsibility to his community. This, coming so soon after Monash's support of Zionism in the postwar-years, and his fledgling identification as a symbol of Australian multiculturalism, muted Monash's memory outside of his martial achievements. The enforcement of the White Australia Policy during the second Yellow Scare come WW2, as well as the rather public refutation of the Kimberly scheme didn't help matters either. It's only since the 80's that Monash has been more widely recognised for his cultural and national symbolism and legacy rather than just martial. I hope Australia gets better at enjoying its own history. *A yid so nice they named him twice!
@joaovitormatos81477 ай бұрын
An Australian Murdoch lying on the news? Preposterous!
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
His father.
@superdevton11377 ай бұрын
@@SamAronowI suppose the apple doesn’t fall far from the tree
@patdan1237 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow like father like son I guess. I know it sounded a bit reductive and libelous but that is what they choose to be. Libelous tabloidmongers ala the hearsts
@DiamondKingStudios7 ай бұрын
@@patdan123At any rate libel against libel is probably much less condemned as libel against truth, and understandably so. When one is demonstrably shown to be untruthful, other rumors against him hold greater weight, as honesty is a commonly-known enduring sign of character to most of us.
@DiamondKingStudios7 ай бұрын
@@SamAronowLachlan’s grandfather also?
@ElvingsMusings7 ай бұрын
Murdoch Family origin story was unexpected. Great video.
@israelilocal7 ай бұрын
especially with all the conspiracies that they are "part of the Jewish elite"
@ElvingsMusings7 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow I am not sure I understand. I didn't mean it like that. I meant that I didn't think the Murdoch family reached as far back as World War I in terms of their chicanery.
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
@@ElvingsMusingsI was responding to someone else whose comment is gone.
@ElvingsMusings7 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow Ah ok. Thanks.
@Mackyle-Wotring6 ай бұрын
I feel surprised and unsurprised at the same time considering Keith Murdoch's son, Rupert Murdoch, being involved with Fox News and the Tabloid industry.
@mayaburak937 ай бұрын
I really like how you show the Jewish perspective on events from so many different sides. Really shows well how Jews at this time were mostly very attached to the countries they lived in. On one side you've got Victor Klemperer the German nationalist already writing in his diary, on the other side Alfred Dreyfus (and his entire family) were proving themselves to be the staunchest French patriots. I look forward to videos about Jews in the USSR - my great-grandfather massively profited from the Bolshevik takeover, eventually rising to lieutenant-colonel. Lieutenant Colonel David Khoder - who could have imagined such a thing when he was a boy growing up in a shtetl? Our family only left the former USSR in the 21st century. In previous videos, many people commented with stories about ancestors who left, and it will be nice to find out more about the people who stayed.
@israelilocal7 ай бұрын
Since this is the last WWI video and as such an end of a chapter on your channel I wanted to say that this chapter was brilliant and what an incredible way to end it. By this time most of my great grandparents were young teens living in Warsaw, Eastern Galicia, Vienna, Morocco and Tunisia I know some of their parents were recruited especially my Moroccan and Tunisian ancestors
@milobem44587 ай бұрын
It may be the end of WW1, but our great-grandparents in Galicia wouldn't get a break for another couple of years, which I suspect will be covered in the coming episodes. Polish-Soviet border went quiet in 1921.
@israelilocal7 ай бұрын
@@milobem4458 I am well aware both of my branches in Galicia just so happened to live in the border regions of Galicia one branch on the Galicia-Volhyna border to the north and the other on the Galicia-Podolia border to the East.
@jedimmj117 ай бұрын
Jewish Australian here, had no idea why John Monash was famous. Thanks for the education.
@seanlander93213 ай бұрын
Derrr…
@SaulKohn7 ай бұрын
I applaud the use of the Bleucher horse whinny. Also, was this the first episode with video footage? Mazal tov on completing the WW1 arc.
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
Film footage was first used in "The Dreyfus Affair," but not to this extent. Thanks!
@elh937 ай бұрын
I think you mean Bleucher [horse whinny]
@zachesherman7 ай бұрын
And also if we disregard the present-day footage used in early episodes, like of the 1st Temple-era aqueducts and the house in Jaffa in the Jesus episode.
@ekmalsukarno23027 ай бұрын
Sam Aronow, can you please make videos on these following topics: - History of Jewish communities in Penang, Singapore and Manado (that way you can talk about Singapore's David Marshall) - History of Yemeni Jews - History of Sephardic Jews in Suriname and the Caribbean - History of Montreal's Jewish community (that way you can talk about Montreal bagels and Mordecai Richler) - History of Jewish communities in Latin America (that way you can talk about Don Francisco, Alejandro Jodorowsky, Jacobo Timerman and Silvio Santos) - History of South Africa's Jewish community (that way you can talk about Helen Suzman and Harry Schwarz) Thank you very much and please accept my requests.
@gamermapper7 ай бұрын
He's usually much more active on Reddit than in KZbin comments
@smorcrux4267 ай бұрын
It is so bizzare to me that Yemen was not even mentioned once until now especially in zionism, since basically all early zionism was Yemeni
@ryalloric10887 ай бұрын
@@smorcrux426Yemen has actually been mentioned; see for example the India and Ethiopia videos.
@Lunaticsofearth7 ай бұрын
What about South Africa’s Jody Scheckter, F1 world champion
@yellowlightsyndrome99597 ай бұрын
If the talks about Montreal he should also talk about Sam Steinberg and Sam Bronfman (the former was my great grandfather)
@WeekzGod7 ай бұрын
"Where there had never been a Jewish Question..." that resonated with me. I'm not Jewish. But I've always wondered what it must be like to live in a place where racism toward my people doesn't have a home.
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
He was being very literal. Australia is the only country with a large Jewish population where emancipation was never legislated because it was always assumed. Australia has a lot of problems but this isn't one of them. Also another thing they can flex on New Zealand, which had the first Jewish prime minister in modern history yet didn't allow Jewish immigrants for decades afterward. ETA: It also probably wasn't seen as necessary to discriminate between people who were already being sent there as punishment.
@weevilstevil99017 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow Hi folks, i'm here to be a downer. The statement about never having a Jewish Question in Australia is quite daintily counterbalanced by a far darker mirror. The Kimberly plan was a proposal to shove a bunch of Jewish refugees from pre-war Germany and Poland into the relatively under-settled Kimberly region of Western Australia. The Australian government rejected the plan via the following claim: ""as we have no real racial problem, we are not desirous of importing one"...mentions of their contemporaneous treatment of Aboriginals aside....jesus fucking christ aye. Also as for New Zealand, I was born there! In its tiny and gorgeous Jewish community. Most of us left in 2004 facing brutal antisemitism which was partially state-condoned 🤷♂️🥰.
@ehudshapira27457 ай бұрын
@@weevilstevil9901 What happened in 2004?
@felixbabuf57267 ай бұрын
@@ehudshapira2745He’s massively overblowing what actually happened, but feel free to look up “Israel-New Zealand Passport Scandal” since KZbin hates links apparently
@ronmaximilian69537 ай бұрын
@@SamAronowUnited States has never had emancipation of Jews
@weevilstevil99017 ай бұрын
The arc is at an end! How fantastic! Also mister Aronow, I commented on an old video and shall do so here to keep up to speed. I just found John Henry Patterson's grave in Moshav Avichayil!!! HOW COOL!!??
@bomoose7 ай бұрын
woah
@alanhughes91935 ай бұрын
Being an American video, you may be excused from mentioning that Pershing didn't want any of his American troops participating in the battle of Le Hamel. 4,000 American troops were supposed to take part, but in the end, only 2,000 took part. General Pershing wanted to draw the war out until 1919 when he would have all of his troops available.
@seanlander93213 ай бұрын
The remaining American troops were kept in reserve after Pershing disobeyed orders. They didn’t see much fighting, except from where they were sitting. Pershing revealed his character as a cowardly grub, who accepted battle honours from Foch, as did Haig, to the exclusion of the Australians. He should have been court-martialled instead.
@paulhicks35957 ай бұрын
Well done. A century later John Monash is well remembered and is still held in the very highest regard by Australians.
@Game_Hero7 ай бұрын
I love the art style, humbleness, professionalism and proper sourcing of your videos. You can't help but enjoy them.
@mikhailv67tv7 ай бұрын
Wow I remember a couple of years ago writing in your comments about Australian Judaism and Monash in particular. Sam you’ve made my day, month and half year.
@SawdEndymon7 ай бұрын
Just wanna say, this is some of the best historical videos I’ve ever seen. Learned more stuff about WWI than I did in community college. Keep up the amazing work💯🙌
@thedemongodvlogs76717 ай бұрын
Amazing episode and very much long awaited! I'm originally from Melbourne and my family has a very strong connection to the Monashs. John Monash's congregation (also happens to be my family's) is one of the oldest in Melbourne and is a gorgeous looking synagogue!!
@Thecognoscenti_17 ай бұрын
As an Aussie, great to finally see Monash, and almost in time for ANZAC Day too. They shall grow not old, as we that are left grow old, Age shall not weary them, nor the years condemn. At the going down of the sun and in the morning, We will remember them.
@jeffreyschweitzer82897 ай бұрын
The quality of these videos just keeps improving, both content and production value. Thank you!
@mattzager48797 ай бұрын
My great grandfather served in the "Lost Battalion". He was in Company H of the 308th Infantry. However, he was wounded in action about a month before the 77th division launched their attack into the Argonne. We have his two journals from the war, along with a series of letters and photos from his service and the purple heart he later received.
@fredrikcarlstedt3937 ай бұрын
And while Wilson made Europe safe for democracy, he did otherwise back home .
@royxeph_arcanex7 ай бұрын
"How many Sabaton songs will be referenced in this video?" "Yes"
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
Enlighten me.
@gideonm.74257 ай бұрын
"The Lost Batallion"
@utha266522 күн бұрын
Well, that was the most comprehensive look at John Monash I've seen. I've never studied him but what you have presented here is an inspiration to learn more. Thank you.
@KosherCookery7 ай бұрын
>19 Jewish generals in the first world war This list is fascinating for the states which are absent on it.
@Brian-----7 ай бұрын
I’m American, and a student of the war and era, and yet learned who Monash was only a few years ago. Wow. He all but invented multinational interoperative cooperative combined arms warfare. Today, that concept is core to collective security and NATO. Australia should be very proud.
@raymondhorvath2406Ай бұрын
we are thanks
@TheoHyman-Bockman7 ай бұрын
Absolutely delightful. I would pay so much for a feature film about Monash
@מ.מ-ה9ד7 ай бұрын
Sam, you can't expect us to listen to your narration with the banger "Over There".
@Airman11217 ай бұрын
My great-grandfather fought in St. Mihiel. Cool that you mentioned it.
@mammuchan89237 ай бұрын
What a fascinating man. I love the role that Monash and Currie and even Smuts played in the war
@michaelbettinger34867 ай бұрын
You are doing a great job of storytelling.
@scottwarthin15287 ай бұрын
Opening with Ecclesiastes like an absolute savant ! Right out of the gate you know its going to be a good history-buff episode. Thank you for your awesomeness, Sam.
@rosswebster78777 ай бұрын
Monash now joins the ranks of fascinating characters like Trumpeldor and Sarah Ahronsohn that I've never heard of prior to Sam Aranow's videos!
@amsellem7 ай бұрын
If only he had accepted the proto-Israel proposal...
@mikhailv67tv7 ай бұрын
You need an Australian $100 bill Monash is Australian and Jewish
@raymondhorvath2406Ай бұрын
What a fantastic show. Here in Melbourne we have a Monash university and a district called Monash and a Highway called the Monash freeway. He was brilliant and saved a lot of Aussie lives by the way he saw war. If he was in charge at the start of the war maybe it would not have gone so long. But the British didn't like Aussies doing well every time we won a battle it was always written up as a British victory.
@Eunacis6 ай бұрын
Monash deserves a miniseries. To quote Australians, he's a fucking legend!
@anthonyeaton51536 ай бұрын
Legend means untrue. Besides there has been enough bullshit about Monash. The Last Hundred Days was not masterminded by a mere Lt General. It was five British Armies advancing rapidly and by the 11th of November the Australians were 60 miles behind the final front line.
@Eunacis6 ай бұрын
@@anthonyeaton5153 calling someone a legend is a compliment in Australia.
@dwarvenminer33297 ай бұрын
You summarize and give a better narrative end to WW1 then some documentaries that focus on the war do
@therongjr7 ай бұрын
In addition to the actual content and presentation of your channel, can I point out that you have some of the BEST maps out there?
@erel7517 ай бұрын
So good, again and again you make such incredible videos, thank you Sam!
@michawozniak59557 ай бұрын
"yadda yadda ... Operation Blucher" * NNNNEIGH! * Damn it, Sam, that got me. XD
@friget2347 ай бұрын
Hey Sam have been greatly enjoying all of these videos. It's very interesting to me having watched this entire series how well Jewish History works as a lens for all of human history both in terms of longevity and geographic spread. It doesn't work perfectly of course as places like Ancient America and swathes of Africa and Asia are ignored or are at least of lesser importance but still fascinating.
@MrMeAgain7 ай бұрын
An outstandingly good video.
@Curt-y6l7 ай бұрын
Awesome as usual .you wouldn't believe how much I look for ward to your editions
@blackkat70736 ай бұрын
Very well written video.
@smorcrux4267 ай бұрын
What are the cities at 33:18? I recognize Berlin, Istanbul, the no clue what the third one is, London, Paris, and again no clue, Sofia, Alexandria, Jerusalem, no clue, new york, Tel aviv, DC.
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
Berlin, Istanbul, Lisbon, London, Paris, Thessaloniki, Vienna, Alexandria, Jerusalem, Melbourne, New York, Tel Aviv, Washington.
@everettduncan75437 ай бұрын
I thought that was Haifa and not Tel Aviv @@SamAronow
@tztubeАй бұрын
Fun fact: there is village in Israel named after Monash - "Kfar Monash". It was built in 1946, by Jews who served in the Corps of Royal Engineers, using funds from Australian Jews.
@russellreading-xi7fe4 ай бұрын
At Hamel after blsck jack nixed US participation in the anzac assault .some dougboys (not to be left out) actually donned Aussie gear to be in the game .. knowing that it took class to travel with the southern cross .. ref ."The Doughboys" book account.
@jonyprepperisrael607 ай бұрын
15:01 I disagree, his plans werent overambitious. Moving his drinking cabinet 12 inches closer to Berlin isnt that ambitious
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
That wasn't his intention. He was trying to advance like 20 miles every day. That was the problem.
@jonyprepperisrael607 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow and all he got is a desk size dirt advancment. With a little worm on it
@matthewbrotman29077 ай бұрын
The 77th Infantry still exists, as the 77th Sustainment Brigade, based in Fort Dix, NJ.
@sportzajent7 ай бұрын
Out of curiosity Sam, how did you come across the primary source of the NYT op-ed published on 06/10/1917? What was your process? I'm fascinated by how you are able to weave so many sources together. Kol hakavod!
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
I got an NYT subscription for one day, looked in their archives, and immediately canceled. It was surprisingly cheap, so I'll probably use that tactic again.
@shawnwaite30267 ай бұрын
I’m assuming we’re talking about Rosa Luxembourg next?
@ryanwidjaja42527 ай бұрын
Would you make a video about the Balfour Declaration? If so, then I can't wait for that topic!!
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
It's in the WWI playlist: "The Jewish Legion (1917-1918)."
@SomasAcademy7 ай бұрын
Love learning some Australian history in this one, even though my mum's side of the family is Australian I was raised in America so the only Australian history I ever learned growing up was the general, half-remembered stuff I got from them lol
@danhworth1003 ай бұрын
Terrific video
@patrickkelmer62907 ай бұрын
Oh yes, a nice addition in the middle of Pesach!
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
I wish I'd known about ANZAC Day so I could release it yesterday.
@patrickkelmer62907 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow Still a good timing!
@Gallalad17 ай бұрын
In news completely unrelated to this video the Padres are one game back from the NL West.
@robloxfanboy867 ай бұрын
Didnt even know this was up, i didnt get a notification
@Mark_Williams3007 ай бұрын
Science, literature, art and music. The SLAM subjects
@banjobongle6 ай бұрын
Great video! I found it interesting that the last thing in your list of achievements at 37:17 that Monash was the (first) President (and one of the founders) of the ZFA. With his fierce Australian nationalism I think his presidency here is an interesting decision. On another note, as we are in the late 1910s, youth movements such as Blau-Weiss, Hashomer Hatzair and Dror are beginning to emerge. Will you be delving into youth movements in a later video?
@rsfaeges52987 ай бұрын
SUPER episode! 👍👍
@perryawe21217 ай бұрын
Murdoch is Rupert Murdoch's (owner of Fox) father.
@Mark_Williams3007 ай бұрын
I had no idea George V was a pirate
@welcometonebalia7 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@TheLoyalOfficer6 ай бұрын
Great work with Monash here - a clearly underrated general in a war full of donkey leaders.
@trunkage7 ай бұрын
I would point out that the word Nationalists meant something different at the time in Australia, as can be seen by PM Billy Hughes being a Nationalist... after being the Labour leader.... and becoming the Labour leader again later We still have a major party called the Nationals
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
Yes, I was going to say his nationalism was more Bob Hawke than Pauline Hanson.
@itayeldad33177 ай бұрын
17:52 I think j just did the most sarcastic auidble gasp of my life
@seanlander93213 ай бұрын
At Hamel, Pershing ordered his troops to do a runner, and they did. Monash was furious and even more disparaging of the Americans in the coming months as they were useless to the point that Rawlinson recommended their complete withdrawal. The way Foch had slighted the Australians by giving battle honours for Hamel only to Haig and Pershing made Monash even more determined to ensure that his way of warfare would succeed. It’s to the credit of the King that he had Rawlinson sideline Haig and to ignore the French and the hapless Americans to have Monash and his commanders plan and give their troops the lead to break the German lines to bring on the Armistice. The intellectual breakthrough and organisation of the Australians who had developed combined arms warfare turned their attack into mobile warfare, which was completely contradictory to the British and French tactics of static warfare in a contest of endurance. Monash was simply a genius, who came from the only developed democracy to fight in WWI with an influence on the victories that far outweighed its tiny population of 4.5 million. He and his men were simply freaks from the future that Europeans still couldn’t see coming until revolutions upended the old order.
@raymondhorvath2406Ай бұрын
Great Comments totally agree. By the time the Americans arrived to do battle in 1918 the Germans were cooked they were not the fighting force they were from 1915-1917 if the Americans faced them then they would have been destroyed lucky they didn't.
@Lunaticsofearth7 ай бұрын
You should do a video on Jewish Racing drivers, like Stirling Moss and Jody Scheckter
@robertbollard54752 ай бұрын
I can also add another peculiar featue. Check out the letters to Smith's Weekly, a popular magazine in Australia in the late 1920s and early 1930s and you will find many letters arguing for a fascist dictatorship in Australlia. Most of them argued for Monash to be the dictator. To be fair, Monash repudiated these suggestions. But it's funny that would be fascists in Australia wanted a Jewish Fuhrer.
@samwill72597 ай бұрын
Bit of a niche topic but have you ever thought about maybe a side episode about the way that Jewish creators basically invented the American comic book? The Superhero genre specifically? I know the 60s and especially the 40s would be a very heavy time for this show so it might be something fun to do on a tangent.
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
I’ve thought about it, but the Scots might take issue with that statement.
@samwill72597 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow I say you should totally do it. Siegel, Shuster, Kirby, Simon, Lee of course. You could probably find way more than that. I just...you know I think you should take every chance to do something a little less dark and heavy. Jewish creation and triumph and all that nice stuff
@raphaelreichmannrolim257 ай бұрын
I love this Channel. Many thanks. In a few weeks, I Will share with you the story of my family. Some were the Wasserbergers and Landaus of Krakow. From the other side, the Reichmanns. The 1933 Bernheim Petition was issued from the desk of my grand grandfather, Marek. He never told us that. I discovered researching for myself, last year.
@adastra5537 ай бұрын
13:36 Fascinating that twenty years after Dreyfus, France has more Jewish generals than all other powers combined
@gideonm.74257 ай бұрын
There is a moshav called Kfar Monash.
@mlovecraftr7 ай бұрын
Now that we are going into the postwar era, are we going to hear about John Maynard Keynes and the accusations of antisemitism that libertarians make about him?
@jonyprepperisrael607 ай бұрын
Funny,I noticed that out of the 19 Jewish generals there werent any British ones. I understand America and their small armies at the start of the war, and other commonwealth nations since they either had a small army like NZ or a small jewish community but Britian I do not, especially wince they had a jewish generalin 1887 like you mentioned in the previous episode in the comments.
@borkerman7 ай бұрын
11:57 I think that was every General in that era
@reesyroxlol7 ай бұрын
Great video, learnt alot. What is the name of the accordion song, starting at 34:25? Thank you
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
"Kass' Theme" from BOTW. All music is listed in the end credits of each video.
@TheBurg2297 ай бұрын
Monash was fucking based
@raymondhorvath2406Ай бұрын
Australia was always in the toughest area of the Somme with the Canadians who were brilliant as well. Aussies were constantly on the front line and had over 100,000 wounded and over 60,000 dead in a army of 200,000 a hole generation of men with Australia only having 4 million people it was devastating. All the Aussie troops were VOLUNTEES for the hole war.
@alexischerkasskiy39557 ай бұрын
thank you for ewerything i learn a lot a thing
@johngillespie34097 ай бұрын
Armee Polski sent 23,000 from Chicago in 1917, for the win.💪🇺🇲🇵🇱🇮🇱
@jamesives43757 ай бұрын
Why are comments on the next video turned off?
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
Because it's just a promo. Why, have you found a technical issue with the survey? I'd be happy to address it.
@angelao11336 ай бұрын
A general question about this channel - are all the videos on here? I'm struggling to figure out how to watch things in order. I keep coming across "corrections" videos but then can't find the originals. Or I watch a video and then he says at the end "in my next video..." but then I'm not sure what the next one actually is.
@@SamAronow thank you! It's confusing as it looks like that's a playlist about Jewish Prehistory. But I've got it now - 100 videos to watch now!
@SamAronow6 ай бұрын
@@angelao1133I also have playlists organized by time period and by region.
@nathanielcrawley16 ай бұрын
lol Murdoch of course.
@PennyLane437 ай бұрын
Elliot Roberts voicing Monash?!?
@Mark_Williams3007 ай бұрын
Keith Murdoch. Any relation to Rupert?
@baelonthebrave54747 ай бұрын
He's Rupert's father
@milobem44586 ай бұрын
What does "The hundred days" refer to? This must be something obvious to people from some cultural backgrounds but not to me, and I haven't noticed explanation in the video.
@SamAronow6 ай бұрын
Sorry, I should have realized that. This refers to the Hundred Days Offensive, the final offensive of the Western Front that began with Amiens.
@milobem44586 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow Thank you for quick response, and congratulations on your 50k. I've been following your channel for couple of years and never checked the counter, always assuming you were already much higher than that. While kind of a niche subject, at the same time, everybody and their aunt already has opinions on it.
@zachesherman7 ай бұрын
OK, I’m getting an AUS$100 now!
@raymondhorvath2406Ай бұрын
Lucky you I can not afford one,
@mrmr4467 ай бұрын
Australia being in any sense tolerant during the period seems at odds with its' reputation as somewhere nationalism of the Anglo and Protestant kind ran rampant. The Dominion territories were effectively independent by 1918 with participation in the war not guaranteed without local input. You mention Australia having never had a Jewish Question, surely that also applies to India at the time?
@seanlander93213 ай бұрын
After the war, in which Australia had captured most of the Holy Lands, the government offered part of north west of Australia for Jewish settlement. There wasn’t much interest and of course, the rest is history.
@Jacobsoetsrto32116 ай бұрын
Where is third aliya video?
@tsr2077 ай бұрын
Strange Welsh accent on Lloyd George....
@geraldmeehan89427 ай бұрын
Thank you for enlightening me on the importance of John Monash. Sadly I feel we are at the precipice of yet another age of bigotry
@jaystrickland41517 ай бұрын
Event he winners lose... At least most of the time looking at the Untied States.
@DanielLLevy7 ай бұрын
It is a bit strange, to see that Sir John Monash's name scores only two places in Israel's toponymy, a street in Tel Aviv and a charming Moshav Northeast of Nétagnât on route 4. You'd think that such a Gibor Israel would have a street by his name in every city of the New Chelm! Hey Jerusalem municipality, I'm looking at YOU!
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
1. I don't think he would have wanted that. 2. Northern hemisphere bias.
@DanielLLevy7 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow 1. Maybe, but I do! 2. That where most of WWI took place. Namibia was a footnote...
@DanielLLevy7 ай бұрын
@@SamAronow 1. Maybe, but I do! Didn't you mention he headed Australia's Zionist Federation? 2. That's where most of WWI took place. Namibia was a footnote...
@SamAronow7 ай бұрын
Monash also tends to get downplayed outside of Australia as a major player in the war, especially by the British. That may play a part.
@seanlander93213 ай бұрын
The Israelis are ignorant of Australia’s role in defeating firstly the Turks and then in the next war, the French in the Holy Lands. I mean, just how many countries have captured Damascus twice? It doesn’t suit the Jewish narrative that a country from the other side of the world has turned up twice, in a thankless task, to defeat the colonial occupation of Jewish land.
@amsellem7 ай бұрын
13:38 I'll try to find the first name of these French Generals !
@nobodysanything23306 ай бұрын
💯
@HistoricalFootageRestored3 ай бұрын
9:07 Blücher! 🐴🤣
@junefranklin4587 ай бұрын
THEY PUT A JEW ON THE $100 NOTE I CANNOT
@zacharytrosch34067 ай бұрын
Blucher!
@Wombat-gm4ne4 ай бұрын
First knighthood awarded by a King for some 400 years and the last to this day.
@dwarvensphere10947 ай бұрын
Your analysis of British generalship and the role of the colonial forces (dumping ground etc.) is wildly inaccurate