the camp was ep 9, titled why we fight - points was ep 10
@a-a-ron46796 ай бұрын
Came here just for this.
@filthy_frankreborn47224 ай бұрын
That was I was gonna say
@ripvanwinkle18193 ай бұрын
Well this fairy tale was written by a Zionist I don't know what to tell you
@mikes64572 ай бұрын
thank you for acknowledging this
@zacharynunley96772 ай бұрын
I was bout to say the same thing.
@timmeinschein900711 ай бұрын
They hired cancer patients, most terminal, as the victims... Paid them more than what a normal extra would be paid
@Defender7811 ай бұрын
That's very interesting, i was wondering if it was ultra dedicated actors who would starve themselves for the roles of con-camp prisoners. do you have a link to this information? Is it in the DVD extras or something? I'd love to know
@timmeinschein900711 ай бұрын
@@Defender78 Sorry, but no. I heard it several years ago, and forgot the source.
@Defender7810 ай бұрын
@@timmeinschein9007 Maybe it's in the DVD or blu-ray extras... I only have a copy of schindlers list that I burned to DVD from an old VHS tape (no extras) that I got at a garage sale
@justinwatch9 ай бұрын
Why would you burn a copy of Schindler's List. That's so anti-Semitic. That's like burning the flag or calling an African-American the n-word. I can't believe you would put that in the comments.
@zachlaabs52579 ай бұрын
@@justinwatchburned as in copied
@jockellis5 ай бұрын
In trying to interview Waycross veterans who helped liberate the camps 40 years before, all I could get was tears and racking sobs. Any denier is an SOB.
@ashleighelizabeth59162 ай бұрын
As a student of history it makes me so sick to see people doing that. I can remember seeing film in the 80s where they were disposing of corpses that had not been incinerated and it was haunting. I remember reading about how the SS inventoried every single item the victims brought with them right down to their gold teeth and the hair on their head and I remember that it was said there were still rooms and warehouses full of that stuff. The one that elicited the strongest reactions from the soldiers that liberated the camps were rooms filled with toddler and infant shoes. People who deny that it happened are completely sick in the head. People who act like there is some direct line from what happened to those people to the way Israel is today are sick in the head too. Sometimes I don't want to live on this planet anymore if I think about all the terrible people that are on it.
@shaunpenne18402 ай бұрын
@ashleighelizabeth5916 I remember watching The World at War repeated on BBC 2 in the early 90's and I saw footage of concentration camp bodies filmed by an American soldier, I actually ran outside to throw up and started crying. I was 16 or 17 at the time, I've never forgotten that footage, it's burned into my mind! Quite recently, my little boy asked me who Adolf Hitler was and I had to tell him that he was a very evil man surrounded by evil people and was responsible for killing a lot of people! I told my son that he was too young for me to explain more of what those evil people did! He will eventually, very eventually learn about the second world war when he's older. What I do want him to understand is that evil like that still exists. It can and must be stopped!! I remember reading that Mel Gibson's Dad is or was a holocaust denier, the apple didn't fall from the tree in that regard! Reading your post and the details in it made me choke up!! What happened in those camps was beyond abhorrent!
@MisterHowzat2 ай бұрын
And some of the deniers say that they want to make ANOTHER Holocaust.
@josephososkie30292 ай бұрын
@@ashleighelizabeth5916 Yep. The sobering thought is that under the right circumstances we are ALL capable of being either the guard or the prisoners. Just designating the "other" as villain will never promote the spiritual growth we need.
@clockworkNate2 ай бұрын
I mean there are idiots that think the world is flat... of course there will be dumb people that deny horrible things to try and live in their fantasy worlds.
@Vincent-en8kp2 ай бұрын
God bless the liberators that were actually there...
@LegioPatriaNostra1822 ай бұрын
In 2004, I had the opportunity to speak with Major Richard Winters in France during the 60th anniversary of the Allied landings in Normandy. A truly wonderful man. One of the best field commanders of the 101st Airborne Division during World War II.
@SuperfixrN2 ай бұрын
Damn that is a big honor.
@R__K2 ай бұрын
I still want to go back to Europe. I was stationed there from 2001-05 with 1st Infantry Division. We deployed to Iraq in February 2004-05. Our combat patch ceremony was in front of Saddam's bombed palace in Tikrit, Iraq. It was on the 60th anniversary of D-Day invasion. I haven't visited Normandy or that cemetery nearby. Definitely want to go back to Europe for that visit, if anything.
@rayray60182 ай бұрын
THATS AWESOME....IM SO JEALOUS!!!
@normmcrae11408 ай бұрын
My father DID help liberate one of the camps. His FIRST thought of it was when they were still MILES away - and the STENCH was OVERWHELMING. When they actually SAW the camp - they ALL got sick. When they all donated their rations to the prisoners - the prisoners hadn't had REAL food in so long, that it killed many of them. The Regimental Padre stopped them, then collected all the donations and made SOUP that the prisoners COULD handle. Till his dying day, His overwhelming recollection was the SMELL.
@debraberg45138 ай бұрын
I'm assuming he'd be even grossed out by mostly brit actors playing Americans in this series...with terrible looks/accents. Yuck...no wonder it was overly dramatic and stiff.
@normmcrae11408 ай бұрын
@@debraberg4513 How about all the Americans with TERRIBLE British Accents? Do you bitch about them, too? THEY'RE F*ING ACTORS.
@mahkimahkila63966 ай бұрын
@@debraberg4513 in what way was it overly dramatic and stiff?
@debraberg45136 ай бұрын
@@mahkimahkila6396 i was too reactionary my apologies. im a southern America and dislike how Hollywood seems to place preferences on famous actors including the Brits - many who are not that great with American and Southern American accents. Disregard
@mahkimahkila63966 ай бұрын
@@debraberg4513 but did you find any of the performances stiff?
@jacksontwilley-fl6yk9 ай бұрын
My great uncle liberated Dachau, the photos he took and the things he saw stuck with him till the end, never talking about it other than at reunions.
@karadan1004 ай бұрын
Those kinds of scars are for life. :(
@MadMan19902 ай бұрын
Could you see these photos?
@haroldbenton9792 ай бұрын
My grandfather helped bring home our POWs in the Pacific theater. 4 of the men stood out. 1 was a Marine one of the few we got back from Wake he was on the Shore Defense Batteries and his hands were beaten into clubs for daring to help sink a destroyer of Japan. Another was a survivor of the Bataan Death March had entered the war at a healthy 190 pounds was recovered weighing 80. The 3rd was an USAAF 1st Lt in the 21st bomber command as a bombardier they'd burned his eyes out for dropping bombs on Japan. The last one was an Army Nurse caught when the Philippines fell on the Rock. She'd been sent to an officer's only comfort camp and raped repeatedly for 3 years. She at first couldn't sleep unless sedated and an armed guard in her room. By the time they made San Francisco she was just needing her room guarded on the outside. My grandfather pulled most of those watches. Now for my grandmother on my dad's side I have no family left except for those that were in the USA prior to WW2. Why Hitler declared them being gypsies and others to being subhuman and sent them to Triblinca and Dachu for extermination.
@josephrochefort99892 ай бұрын
My Dad and his Captain were notified of a camp, and maybe two more. My Dad and his Captain liberated the camp. Dad was at a total of three camps. One camp all dead. One camp about half dead. One all alive One of the survivors gave Dad a hand painted Polish Flag.
@Vagabondobiondo2 ай бұрын
My grandpa liberated Dachau too. Yours and mine must have known each other.
@reidhirsh33382 ай бұрын
I did a report with a visual fact board in high school about the Holocaust and the death camps. I knew that it was a black mark on the history of humanity, but I didn't know how deep the rabbit hole went until I started and finished my research. While I got an A on the assignment, I felt dirty afterward and lost myself in a book to help me feel better if not still a bit creeped out. I even remember the episode of THE TWILIGHT ZONE where a Death Camp Commander returns to his former command and is haunted without mercy, pity, or remorse by the ghosts of his victims, making him feel and suffer all the same hell he put them through during that dark period of human history.
@bradprice80402 ай бұрын
So I take it that means you only used the jew approved sources since nobody would get an A if they reported on the truth.
@davidrice33372 ай бұрын
They didn't teach you this is school ???
@reidhirsh33382 ай бұрын
@davidrice3337 They scratched the surface but didn't go any deeper or go into the necessary details to "hit the nail on the head" about this dark moment in human history.
@topbreak382 ай бұрын
In what way is this ironic?
@bradprice80402 ай бұрын
Lol they deleted my comment for "hate speech." Cowards hiding the truth.
@ghostyboy94693 ай бұрын
Just so everyone knows the Jews depicted in this short are actually cancer patients that were kind enough and strong enough to do this. They got paid handsomely a bit better than normal extras! And they gave them all recognition! It’s truly a one of a kind show because they used actual sick people had genuine reactions. No over use of cgi and make up. This show rocks and so does everyone in it show series and real life!
@DanielMatthews-ql3wf2 ай бұрын
I worked for a man who was one of the men who found one of those camps. He said it was one of the worst days of the war for him. He said it was hard to believe that anyone could o that to another human being.
@ignatziusturret56412 ай бұрын
US president Harry Truman, ordering dropping atomic bombs:"...hold my beer."
@ignatziusturret56412 ай бұрын
US president Richard Nixon ordering to drop agent orange and napalm:"...I'd like some extra nuts..."
@marcinjedrzejewski70392 ай бұрын
Sometimes "people" just need some power to become a monster.
@playerthirteen96952 ай бұрын
@@ignatziusturret5641 Obviously not in Vietnam's case, but in WWII Japan instigated, refused to give up, the closer the US got the more desperate and suicidal the attacks, loss of life was estimated in the millions given a mainland invasion, and even yet, Japan still didn't surrender after the first bomb...Absolutely horrific, but absolutely justified, unlike the Holocaust, which was a premeditated and calculated persecution and genocide based upon that alone, zero comparison.
@tsubadaikhan63322 ай бұрын
Today - Benjamin Netanyahu, 'Hold my Kosher Beer'
@tylerdurden24609 ай бұрын
Came here to correct the mistakes in the vid. So happy that there's fans who beat me to it. The show, the men portrayed in it, and the actors who did such an amazing job deserve better.
@crisespinoza19792 ай бұрын
What especially got me was the realism of the scene. I teared up.
@rmills32322 ай бұрын
If you get a chance go to the "National Holocaust Museum " in Washington D.C. The museum is designed to make one FEEL like they are at Auschwitz. Slamming steel doors, claustrophobic feeling and the pictures. Emotions are simply yanked out of you. Very powerful.
@TheDuke2294 ай бұрын
"Why We Fight" was the episode for this scene.
@lizs47966 ай бұрын
And despite those poor guys being thin, they still weren’t as thin, ill and as sorry looking as the poor souls who were liberated during those days😢 And I’m guessing they could never reproduce the smell of the camp😢
@floydholder5972 ай бұрын
Have you taken a stroll through San Francisco lately? From what I've heard, it might be getting close.
@lizs47962 ай бұрын
@@floydholder597 no I’m from England. Is that where skid row is?
@floydholder5972 ай бұрын
@lizs4796 I had to Google it since I didn't know myself, but skid-row is in Los Angeles according to the results of that search. My comment about San Francisco is regarding all of their homeless encampments and people openly urinating and defecating in the streets and on sidewalks, many of whom are hardcore drug addicts, mostly fentanyl and heroin from what I've seen on the few news reports that come out of their now. Property crimes, muggings and assault are through the roof, and many of the drug addicts resemble those prisoners in the video from malnutrition. The Police don't even investigate crimes such as car or house burglaries there anymore, unless it's some rich person or politician's house or car. I've heard estimates as high as 75% of all business's in the downtown area have either closed or relocated due to the losses from theft and the aforementioned factors. Almost every major city in California also have the same issues to greater or lesser degrees. Several journalists filming in San Francisco have been assaulted, with at least two being chased by an individual brandishing an axe and others being chased by mobs carrying clubs and knives. You will rarely see any of the corporate media outlets showing the true conditions. Fox used to give reports from SF, but I haven't watched them in years and it sounds like they're becoming just as corrupt as the rest of American media. You might check out SkyNews as I've seen them do some truthful reporting about the problems in those areas even though there an Aussie news outlet, they at least seem to still be trying to report the truth. Hope I didn't bore you to death with all that. Have a good day!
@user-cj6yw5fu4l2 ай бұрын
I do remember my Uncle Charlie,going into a c. Camp,he had been a pilot,and always said " the only German he wanted to see was dead ones,it was bad, very bad
@imitationofwoman2 ай бұрын
My great uncle was there at the liberation of Belsen. Apparently he never spoke about it. He was around 24 years old.
@susanbazinet96642 ай бұрын
Why We Fight was the best episode. The look on the soldiers faces is stunning. They are trying desperately to understand what they are looking at. The questions of what is this place and why is clearly etched on the actors faces. I've watched it a few times and am chocked up every time I see their faces.
@Nscalemike56 Жыл бұрын
Really dislike " bot" narrations..."Dat-Chau"??
@17MrLeon11 ай бұрын
Its as bad as DaKAu. English cant pronounce Ch
@thomaslarkin451810 ай бұрын
@@17MrLeonthe narrator is American not english so it would seen that the American can not pronounce it properly.
@tereseshaw76509 ай бұрын
Yeah, me too.The phrasing is always off.
@borntoclimb71169 ай бұрын
Lol
@mahockey34 ай бұрын
@@thomaslarkin4518 Americans speak English...
@AlphaSergio-pl4bm2 ай бұрын
Absolutely love the band of brothers
@AJ_Sparten13372 ай бұрын
I personally think that it should be mandatory to watch in all history classes in High School.
@angelamary949329 күн бұрын
Me too ❤
@ryhk32932 ай бұрын
I was ten years old when my dad took me to Dachau and the preserved camp museums there when we were stationed in West German in the late 80s. I had no idea what I was in for until the moment I was able to clearly make out what the sculpture at the entrance represented. It sets the the tone that this is not a happy place you are entering. That day charted the course of my adult life, first as a soldier, then following with a decade plus with Doctors WIthout Borders. I'm glad I did what I did before I got cynical and my body and mind fell apart. And whie idealism was still alive in me and the world and the world was worth saving.
@tk009032 ай бұрын
When I was a child, around 4, 5 years old, my dad had pictures of a concentration camp during WW2. It showed an inmate standing, lower half of his body naked, in front of a pile of corpses. Not an ounce of fat on them. Just skin on bones. 74 years old now, just as clear in my mind as the first time I saw them.
@ItsMercYMG10 ай бұрын
Episode was titled “Why We Fight”
@scrubsrc40849 ай бұрын
My uncle liberated belsen, never spoke to another german ever again.
@alexrolf74155 ай бұрын
What woud he say about Guantanamo?
@scrubsrc40845 ай бұрын
@alexrolf7415 there's no comparison between the two.
@averagejoe83584 ай бұрын
@alexrolf7415 Guantanamo is a detention center for terrorists, Belsen was exclusively designed for extermination.
@andrewharrison77674 ай бұрын
@@alexrolf7415 stupid question dopey - Belsen was liberated by brits for a start
@leeg48042 ай бұрын
Wow
@rmills32322 ай бұрын
I loved this episode. It conveyed the innocence and goodness of the American soldier.
@johncox22842 ай бұрын
We have a lot of people from Eastern Europe in my church. We had one woman who had been in a camp during the war. After the liturgy we always have a coffee hour with food. This one particular woman would.always take an extra piece of bread or a roll and put it in her pocket. She had retired from a good job and had a nice life but she couldn't get over having being nearly starved to death in the camp 50 years before
@robertsandberg22462 ай бұрын
I used to work for a man who was involved in liberating Dachau Concentration Camp. He showed me photos that are seared into my memory.
@risatungol6 ай бұрын
The episode name was "Why We Fight"
@JewpocalypseNow2 ай бұрын
Answer “Because of the J_ws.”
@henryblanton69922 ай бұрын
My Father Served with the 66th Division and arrived in France Christmas Eve, 1944 after his Troop Ship the SS Leopoldville was Torpedoed about 6 miles out of Cherbourg. After the German Army had Surrendered, being Last, as it were, he was part of the Occupation Force in France. Members of his Outfit, including himself, were Instructed to Visit any of the Concentration Camps when ever Possible. Dad went to at least One (which one I have no idea). While living in North Carolina, one day while at home and doing my homework and listening to the TV there was a Talk Show on (I'm not sure w
@henryblanton69922 ай бұрын
(I'm not sure which one). The Host had a Guest who was Denieing that the Holocaust had happened. When my Dad returned home I fixed him a Rum and Coke while he was getting cleaned up from work. When he sat down at the kitchen table to put on his socks and shoes I told him about what the Denieing Guest had said about the Concentration Camps being made up. He looked at me in Disbelief, didn't say anything. He turned his gaze away from me. I'd seen that look before so I left him alone with his Thoughts. About 25-30min later he was still sitting at the kitchen table, the Ice had melted in his drink as he hadn't moved. That Told me All that I needed to Know about that Scumbag Denier on TV that Day. Just thinking about my Dad's Thousand Yard Stare still makes me feel Uncomfortable. Semper Fi.
@igzymig2 ай бұрын
@@henryblanton6992 Great read, also... *denying.
@BearandRioLasVegas9 ай бұрын
Something tells me, despite their efforts, this wouldn’t have even come remotely close to the impact of stumbling on an actual concentration camp.
@edwardhutchinson42078 ай бұрын
A film will never truely depict the holocaust ever, it's too extreme
@olechristianhenne65833 ай бұрын
@@edwardhutchinson4207I was in the main camp as a kindergarten kid tour guide told us not to hear any voices but we did!
@Jordanmode2 ай бұрын
I don’t know about that. They portrayed confusion, disgust, horror, anger, sorrow pretty well, I thought. We can’t know, though. I wouldn’t say “remotely” though. I mean, I know I bought their performances.
@yakhoovesАй бұрын
The smell. Most of us modern people of western civilization are unable to comprehend true foulness of odor. But consider a combination of rotting human excrement, decomposing bodies and waste, all to the tune of thousands upon tens of thousands. We’re actually instinctively attuned to the smell of biological rot. I’ve read that we are even more finely attuned to the scent of human decomposition, a quirk of our early evolution perhaps. So depending on the prevailing winds, they would have almost certainly smelled the camp (even though the depicted camp seemed relatively small) from *miles* out. I know Webster says something about “the stench” when going off on the baker, but the patrol certainly didn’t act like they smelled it until they were right on top of it.
@thewatcher52712 ай бұрын
My Dad Was There & Told Me About It Almost 60 Years Ago. Of Course, I Was Too Young To Realize It Was Only 20 Years Or So After It Happened. Thank You.
@shannonobrien99222 ай бұрын
My GUncle liberated Dachau......he was also the unit photographer (our family still has his photos) Im told he was never the same.....
@darthmong7196 Жыл бұрын
I love how we all know more about this episode than you.
@annhopkins917211 ай бұрын
One of the best war movies ever made.
@ashishhembrom390510 ай бұрын
@@annhopkins9172its a mini tv series not a movie.
@itsabigchungus2 ай бұрын
@@annhopkins9172except it wasn't a movie...
@moffjerjerrod15792 ай бұрын
I cannot imagine how it would have felt to be a soldier coming up on one of these camps and finding these poor souls in there. My favorite line in this episode was Webster to the fat bakery chef ‘TELL ME YOU NEVER SMELLED THE SMELL!!’ with his 1911 pointed at the guy’s face.
@ChannelUmptyThree2 ай бұрын
My grandmother was in the RAF during World War II. She knew some of the soldiers who found the concentration camps. She told me that the soldiers literally described it as seeing "walking corpses". Just horrifying thinking about it.
@greendeane1Ай бұрын
Hey AI its DACK-cow.
@bobbarclay3168 ай бұрын
The name of the episode was "Why We Fight"
@americanfreedomlogistics9984 Жыл бұрын
that wasn’t “points” . that episode was titled “why we fight”
@sandrahernandez56910 ай бұрын
I'm watching it right now
@mcoleman6893 Жыл бұрын
I thought that the episode about the concentration camps was titled "Why We Fight".
@1987FX166 ай бұрын
Why we fight - Part 9. Watching right now on BBCA
@kenoconnell77309 ай бұрын
Saying the concentration camp episode is called points makes it sound like they were keeping score. The episode is called "Why We Fight", and the title is explained by the episode.
@robertbobbypelletreaujr21732 ай бұрын
"points" are added up to decide who goes home when
@kenoconnell77302 ай бұрын
@@robertbobbypelletreaujr2173 I know, that was the "point" of using the term to name the final episode. I was "point"ing out that they had gotten the title wrong on this video.
@thirdgen3772 ай бұрын
Love this show and The Pacific.
@user-ym1zn9pg8b10 ай бұрын
That was my father's camp. He was more than a little shocked too.
@c.galindo96392 ай бұрын
The horrors of war are always impactful even amongst the most professional to hardened men. Unless they’re very sadistic or cruel in nature, the person will seem unfazed by such sights brought upon them in the midst of war
@lev0n32419682 ай бұрын
This style of filming was William Friedkin's trademark (The Exorcist)
@0maj0hns0n3Ай бұрын
That wasn't in points. It was in why we fight.
@movienerd20210 ай бұрын
This is from the episode, "Why we Fight".
@blastechee-35462 ай бұрын
I remember the character (one pointing from the Jeep second frame of video) ran back to tell HQ. HQ asked what they found and the character responded. “I do not know what it is sir”. He was talking to Damien Lewis’s character Winters.
@bjstengel4 ай бұрын
My wife and I visited the concentration camp Dachau just outside of Munich 🇩🇪 Germany last August. It was sobering and emotional spending hours walking around this place, and seeing recreation of many of the original items, and many of the actual original items still on site, such as the death chamber. Many of the buildings have been destroyed over the years, but the towers and other items are still there along with many of the tools and restroom items that were used. if you’re ever in Europe, you absolutely must take the time to visit this location, and or Auschwitz in Poland, which we have not visited yet. This location that we visited was the first concentration camp was originally built to hold political prisoners, believe it, or not, and then turned into, of course of location where they would hold Jews, and other people that were murdered.
@bradprice80402 ай бұрын
Did they still have the pool? What about the concert hall/theater? Did you find the movie set they created for you moving?
@amymar5922 ай бұрын
I love Band of Brothers ❤
@Grow5ft9 ай бұрын
Episode was "Why We Fight" not episode "Points" 👍
@richardwilliams538711 ай бұрын
Not Points, Why We Fight.
@shellytheim251510 ай бұрын
Episode “why we fight”
@RobTebaldiАй бұрын
The episode was Why We Fight not points.
@GrandpawTheGreat2 ай бұрын
My father and father-in-law were with Patton during the Camps liberation. Both men said what they saw haunts them to this day.
@patfromamboy2 ай бұрын
I have a letter from my uncle’s friend about him liberating a concentration camp and describing it. It was one of the first because of how he talked about it. Bodies stacked like cordwood. The big shots should see it he said.
@1ST3N9 ай бұрын
You mean Episode 9: "Why We Fight"
@calkelpdiver2 ай бұрын
My father fought in WWII in Europe as part of the Army. When I was young I asked him if he ever saw a Concentration Camp while there. He said "Thank God, No." He heard enough stories about them at that time and how the soldiers who liberated them were permanently changed and mentally scarred. But I know he had other memories that left a mark on him. Never again.
@user-hl1yp6jr8r2 ай бұрын
❤ Wow, I've heard so much about this movie but, I've never had a chance to look at it.. I hope that someday I'll be able to.. Thanks for sharing this amazing video..🍿😥❤️🇺🇲😊👍😇👌🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲 I'm 64 year's old and I can remember my relatives talked so much about it.. 🤔 hmmm ( I can't wait to see it..) I'm having deep thoughts about the Vietnam War and President Jimmy Johnson and Richard Nixon and the crazy WaterGates hassles and scammers 😮😢.. But, I still LOVE my country of America because I believe in it..The land of the Free and home of the Brave..😢🇺🇲🇺🇲🇺🇲👍✝️
@adamlee37722 ай бұрын
This wasn’t the episode “Points.” It was “Why We Fight.”
@marksasahara11152 ай бұрын
I think that the most despicable aspect, set up by the Nazis, was that sympathetic soldiers, who wanted to help, tried to feed the prisoners. That made the situation worse. How could that be?? Who could possibly know that?? It is so crazy! I can only imagine the feeling of helplessness, anger and futility experienced by the soldiers.
@swiftmatic2 ай бұрын
I visited Dachau back in the 80s, on a trip organized by our battalion chaplain. It was preserved exactly as it was on the day it was liberated, lacking only the prisoners and guards. That place gave me the fuckin willies. Most of the guys in my unit felt the same way.
@rogersheddy64142 ай бұрын
Although the problem is that you can Almost never get people who are synonym and start enough to look the actual part. Additionally, there is that stench of death. I understand it's pretty much wafted on the air where you could almost walk on the smell.
@douglasgillingham681711 ай бұрын
Why we fight is the episode
@littlebiker_21552 ай бұрын
Fiction is sad, but most people doesn't know the truth, truth is really sad, at the point that I don't know if I would prefer to know the truth that hurts every day or live happily like most people who ignore truth
@thomaspeacock72483 ай бұрын
This is in the episode "Why We Fight" not "Points."
@gustavobermudez18217 ай бұрын
It's called why wey fight
@Marilyn-oz1op3 ай бұрын
Important movie so well done in so many ways 🌠
@iammanofnature2358 ай бұрын
What is shown in Band of Brothers is fictional. The camp depicted in Band of Brothers is Kaufering IV which was actually liberated by the 12th Armored on April 27, 1945 with some units of the 101st Airborne Division arriving on April 28. For dramatic purposes, Easy Company is shown liberating the camp.
@davidinflorida68144 ай бұрын
Yes, but the dramatic license works well.
@pattyamato87582 ай бұрын
Of course it's fictional. The Holocaust, however, was real, WW II was real, and for many of us, this series did a good job of recreating that.
@loudini563 ай бұрын
This was in episode 9 titled “Why we fight”
@davidforbes4392Ай бұрын
"Why We Fight". NOT "Points". "Points" had them in Austria, and Shifty Powers won the lottery to go home.
@dkk21142 ай бұрын
Absolutely love this series. Best out there I'd say, following the move Saving Private Ryan. Can't wait to watch Pacific. Actually, I can cause I once I start it I know it won't be long til it's ending
@ryanbennett19338 ай бұрын
Why we fight. Not points. But such a moving scene
@brendarueda84602 ай бұрын
And in God 's eyes we are all brothers , male and female from young to old, thank GOD this liberation .
@corbettmanley9322 ай бұрын
One of, If not the Best War Mini Series EVER !
@DeborahVallier-vx4il2 ай бұрын
Best Mini series of all time!!!
@laapache19 ай бұрын
This was Why we fight
@harrisondejoux85205 ай бұрын
Thats not points, the episode is why we fight.
@gusm27522 ай бұрын
Best mini series ever 👍👍
@judithrobinson34252 ай бұрын
When I was watching the band of brothers I wonder how they were going to represent the concentration camp scenes. They did it with honor and they showed what nobody else wanted to believe it happened.😢😢😢😢😢
@twwtjohns8 ай бұрын
They even got cancer patients to play some of the concentration camp victims.
@Ulyssestnt2 ай бұрын
Wonder how much this mini series alone helped with recruitment,and im talking across NATO. I know they got me with this show,Blackhawk Down and a childhood osession with Platoon.
@DanieVargas2 ай бұрын
I remember watching this scene during Band of Brothers and thinking the prisoners WERE NOT thin enough…
@kenkahn1382 ай бұрын
A world war II sniper friend said he could smell the stench three or four miles away
@kyle479222 ай бұрын
Omg when ever I watch that episode I cry.
@USSResolute14 күн бұрын
Camps, even empty ones like Plaszow, still have a shock value today. See one if you can stomach it.
@nathanielnate849316 күн бұрын
The best war series ever i watched more than 30 times
@bigrebone10 ай бұрын
Pronounced "Dak-ow"
@andreikizzie11402 ай бұрын
They did a good job. No lines needed the looks on their faces said it all
The allies were initially ignoring reports from the Polish resistance regarding extermination camps.
@JohnCunningham-sy5ug2 ай бұрын
My Father liberated Dachau. Much more horrific than than movie.
@user-vy6fn1xn5m5 ай бұрын
Dachau is pronounced Dahau 😮
@Avoid_The_Clap-Jimmy_Dugan2 ай бұрын
“Why We Fight”, ep 9. Moving. Very moving. I have read/ watched many docs on this.
@Gabebigdog2 ай бұрын
Points was episode 10. The concentration camp episode is episode 9 titled WHY WE FIGHT
@jillthompson12482 ай бұрын
Those places have a bad feel to them that you can’t ignore it’s a heavy bad feeling that I still remember when we visited them and I was only like 6-7 yrs old it’s not something I ever forgot and that was over 50 yrs ago when that much evil and suffering and death happens in a place it taints the ground the whole area and never goes away it ticks me off when people say it never happened I say go there and the feeling the place gives you will change your mind. Other places where lots of deaths and suffering have happened are the same like wounded knee little big horn Antietam Gettysburg these places also have that feel to them but the worst was the concentration camps just really bad feeling there you won’t ever forget
@mikehoncho72522 ай бұрын
Why would someone take a 6or7year old to a place like that?
@jillthompson12482 ай бұрын
@@mikehoncho7252 we b went to introduce my baby sister to her Yugoslavian grandparents aunts and rest of her dads family and except for going there I loved being with her grand parents her grandpa would take me across the street to tiny. Store and get me chocolate bar almost every day
@alanwright78192 ай бұрын
Well, they kind of forgot about the one biggest factor, which they wouldn’t have been able to duplicate anyway… the health (or lack thereof) of the prisoners was the most striking element described by the actual soldiers who liberated them. Not many of the actors and extras were dedicated enough to starve themselves for months, I’m sure.
@elenacaddell36392 ай бұрын
Sickening evil time in our history. And NOW ITS BACK!💔💔💔🤦♀️
@Yolbosun2 ай бұрын
Sgt marlarky sez in his book E- company was no where near a concentration camp And he didn’t know why it was in the movie I do
@gailmcquiston48922 ай бұрын
As bad as these prisoners looked they didn't look nearly as bad as the real prisoners looked... they were like human skeletons with skin stretched over them. It was horrendous to think anyone could treat another human being in such a way that these prisoners were treated.
@skipmalone40972 ай бұрын
Thus episode was not Points it was why we Fight. Great series.