Thank you for your service! I will never forget the sacrifices that were made for my freedom. God bless the USA!
@suzanneanderson69215 жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience AND your service.
@Perspective125 Жыл бұрын
After watching this video, I have a deep respect for James Sanders. And in particular, his manner of speech, his responses, and his questions for the interviewer. At times, the interviewer asked questions in such a way, that they come across as completely bereft of human emotion, and even callous. Mr. Sanders remained determined to inject humanity, feeling, etc. into the conversation throughout the interview. I appreciated too, his reading of portions of the doctors speech during the 50 year remembrance. I salute this man! Thank you James Sanders.
@Lps.kingdomm3 жыл бұрын
Love testimony from other brave soldiers and persons male or female trying to help save lives ty
@sodoffbaldrick30385 жыл бұрын
It's particularly interesting to me to hear that this gentleman was a Medic. My father was also a Medic, attached to the Luftwaffe. As this gentleman also said, my father did not want to kill anyone. He was able to finish his medical training after the war, and came to the US in 1955 as a Dr. for the state of Maine.
@st.charlesborromeo97933 жыл бұрын
Interesting perspective you must have.
@nunya2954 Жыл бұрын
So, your Dad was all for the German war but then fled? I still find it egregious the U.S.A. let any Germans come to the States during and for at least 15 years after the war ended, they should have been made to stay in Germany and help rebuild the disaster the Germans allowed to happy. That being said, any German will be answering to God when they bend that knee and give an accounting for the slaughter of God's chosen people, the Jewish. So your Dad and others only think they got away....................
@louisemoore77153 жыл бұрын
These interviews must extend to the horrors and consequences of communism. People from Hungary, Cuba, Cambodia, USSR, Vietnam, No Korea, etc need to be interviewed. My daughter went to Scripps College with a survivor of the Killing Fields in Cambodia...All educated ppl there were imprisoned, and her father was a professor that qualified him and his family for the horrors that were to come. Her mother was injured harvesting rice or wheat. She died of infection. A sibling also died. Their skulls and bones are still there, and stacked with the others in pictures many of us remember. . The father and daug escaped and were part of the boat ppl who landed in holding camps. They eventually made it to Orange County CA where he drove a cab, and she became highly educated. They were the victors but with unbearable memories. These stories also need to be recorded for humanity!
@mariekatherine52384 жыл бұрын
Jewish jokes? I grew up going to daily Mass, but nearly half of our neighbors were Jewish, only a few religious. I can honestly say I don’t recall any anti-Semitism although it must have been there. We kids played on the block with everyone. Religion, race, nationality wasn’t a factor. I didn’t come across discrimination until I was in high school, in Virginia. I became a loner because I’d talk to or sit with anyone, but soon began to get bullied, even by teachers. I was punished once, for studying in the library with a Black girl. I could be friends with most anyone, but couldn’t get my friends together because they hated one another. It came down to having to choose one clique, never to associate outside of it. It was a choice I couldn’t, wouldn’t make, so I stayed to myself. I moved back to New York at 16 to finish high school.
@st.charlesborromeo97933 жыл бұрын
Interesting experience.
@karenembury64674 жыл бұрын
Churchill also before end of W11 tried to encourage America leadership for the next phase , Russia ! Fight for peace not war .
@martinezdjm2 жыл бұрын
I think that those in command wanted soldiers to see the evil to hopefully recognize that THEY (the soldiers) stopped the horrible evil. Their sacrifices, their fight was not in vain. They set the world free.They were the good guys. What this soldier did was for all mankind.
@sandralandsman14342 жыл бұрын
I amoffended by his report. What was the point of this interview?
@raementkow8434 Жыл бұрын
Seriously....His compassion is palpable
@joek6005 жыл бұрын
I wonder whose ''bright'' idea it was, to have that man interviewed by a german robot.
@lorrettacrowley59225 жыл бұрын
She is jewish by birth and german by nationality,which simply makes her another Human Being.
@leonstrand3295 жыл бұрын
@@lorrettacrowley5922 yea, the interviewer seemed.. well like a robot, it felt awkward
@elsastephenson53494 жыл бұрын
She sure asked him some dumb questions like "why did you drive with your headlights on?.....duh
@mariannebonner15203 жыл бұрын
I don’t believe she’s “robotic” - rather she is most likely an amateur and/ or volunteer and I am sure that she received training as to how to conduct an interview, what points to touch on and not to become emotional. This gentleman is presenting as being very matter of fact. However, I have seen other interviews collected by the Shoah Foundation where those being interviewed become very emotional and tearful. It’s critical for our and especially, future generations to view these interviews to ensure it never happens again. I was privileged to have been able to visit both the US Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, DC as well as Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. Every high school student in the US should be required to visit the national museum in DC or their local Holocaust museum. I was happy to see that my local Catholic parish in Philadelphia has a representative from a local Holocaust museum speak to each 8th Grade class. The Philadelphia Police, along with many police departments, take each class of new cadets to the Holocaust museum in Washington to understand the role and contribution of the German police to the rise of Nazism and the perpetuation of the Holocaust. It’s critical, especially now, that we don’t forget the consequences of anarchy and allowing individuals to take away our civil rights and threaten our democracy. It has happened before and it can happen again -- if we let it!
@slisha49402 жыл бұрын
It sounded like she was ill. Good job people, still judging
@donreed5 жыл бұрын
The Other Side of Time by Dr. Brandon Phibbs (1987) is spectacularly good. Beware that Amazon is fraudulently presenting a book by the same author entitled "Our War for the World: A Memoir of Life and Death on the Front Lines in WW II" Paperback - June 1, 2002" (witnessed on 08/03/19) --- THIS IS THE SAME BOOK, not a sequel by Phibbs.
@sodoffbaldrick30385 жыл бұрын
This interviewer sounds like she has a bad head cold.