Week 267 - The End of the Warsaw Uprising - WW2 - October 7, 1944

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World War Two

World War Two

8 ай бұрын

The Warsaw Uprising comes to its conclusion, a tragic one for the Poles. In the field in Europe, there are Allied attacks toward Aachen, Bologna, and Debrecen, while in China the Japanese have begun a new phase of their Ichi Go Offensive.
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Hosted by: Indy Neidell
Director: Astrid Deinhard
Producers: Astrid Deinhard and Spartacus Olsson
Executive Producers: Astrid Deinhard, Indy Neidell, Spartacus Olsson
Creative Producer: Marek Kamiński
Community Management: Ian Sowden
Written by: Indy Neidell
Research by: Indy Neidell
Map animations by: Daniel Weiss
Map research by: Sietse Kenter
Edited by: Miki Cackowski
Artwork and color grading by: Mikołaj Uchman
Sound design by: Marek Kamiński
Colorizations by:
Mikołaj Uchman
Spartacus Olsson
Source literature list: bit.ly/SourcesWW2
Archive footage: Screenocean/Reuters - www.screenocean.com
Image sources:
IWM CL 1482, B 10424, HU 105728
Bundesarchiv
USHMM
Soundtracks from Epidemic Sound:
Max Anson - Maze Heist
Philip Ayers - The Unexplored
Yi Nantiro - Watchman
Reynard Seidel - Deflection
Dram Cave - Choirs of War
Edward Karl Hanson - Spellbound
Fabien Tell - Weapon of Choice
Craft Case - Secret Cargo
Bonnie Grace - Imperious
Max Anson - Darkness Closing In
Brightarm Orchestra - On the Edge of Change
Johan Hynynen - Dark Beginning
Dream Cave - Blood in Water
Jon Bjork - Disposal
Miles Avida - Reasons to Love
A TimeGhost chronological documentary produced by OnLion Entertainment GmbH.

Пікірлер: 465
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
As Indy said, this episode has been dedicated by TimeGhost Army Brigadier Steven Przybylski to his grandmother Helena and all the Poles who played a part in the battle against the occupiers. We’re glad that we could do this for Steven and we’re grateful for his loyal membership of the Timeghost Army. Have you got someone who you would like to pay tribute to? You can do this by joining the Timeghost Army for a year at brigadier level or by making a one-time contribution.
@felwinter5528
@felwinter5528 8 ай бұрын
So many millions of stories to be told from this war, we mustn't forget that not all stories come from the front lines
@StevenPrzybylski
@StevenPrzybylski 8 ай бұрын
A deepest and everlasting thank you to Indy and whole crew for such a terrific job on the memorial. In researching these memorials and pulling at nearly forgotten threads of family history, I am forced to confront the uncomfortable question: how would I have reacted if challenged but such extreme circumstances? For me, the most charitable answer I can come up with is “I don’t know, but I hope I could make Helena proud.” I also recommend to all the Polish Museum on the Rising: Muzeum Powstania Warszawskiego ( www.1944.pl/en ) and another personal story told during D-Day Hour 6: kzbin.info/www/bejne/eXiknGmhnJ2Ni7M
@residentgeardo
@residentgeardo 8 ай бұрын
What a great episode and a wonderful story of courage and perseverance in the face of overwhelming odds. Thank you Steven Przybylski for sharing this. Stories like these really help alot to bring history to life!
@arekofpoland8735
@arekofpoland8735 8 ай бұрын
Warsaw Uprising - Germany lost about 2000 killed not 10000!!’ They all are known by names !!!
@arekofpoland8735
@arekofpoland8735 8 ай бұрын
Total German losses were about 10-13000 - you are using incorrect sources !!!!
@Icarusdecending82
@Icarusdecending82 8 ай бұрын
This series really helps me appreciate my own peaceful life.
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
History has a way of making you reflect on the present. Thank you for watching.
@mrb3nz
@mrb3nz 8 ай бұрын
My great grandfather hid under a pile of bodies during the uprising, and my great grandmother was fortunate to be on the other bank of the Vistula river when the uprising begun. The scars this uprising left run deep to this day. I was born in this city and I still live here and you can still find a building here and there with bullet holes.
@lousheehan9825
@lousheehan9825 8 ай бұрын
God bless.
@TheMasonK
@TheMasonK 8 ай бұрын
God bless you and your people forever and may Poland remain free until the world shakes off the yoke of war and oppression.
@nigeh5326
@nigeh5326 8 ай бұрын
You can still see bullet and shrapnel scars on buildings in many towns. When I went to Caen and Dunkirk the churches had them 😔 It’s so sad we could have achieved so much more if we put all of our energies into doing good for the world instead of war.
@JonathanWrightSA
@JonathanWrightSA 8 ай бұрын
The number of bullet impact sites on the corners of the old Luftwaffe Ministerium in Berlin are impressive.
@hannahskipper2764
@hannahskipper2764 8 ай бұрын
Wow. Thank you for sharing some of their story. Even that little bit hits me.
@MrPedroleiria
@MrPedroleiria 8 ай бұрын
"When they ran out of guns they used knives, sticks and bare hands. They were magnificient. They never ran out of courage, but in the end, they ran out of time." - Londo Mollari, Babylon 5
@Chris.in.taiwan
@Chris.in.taiwan 8 ай бұрын
Damn didn't think to see a star wars reference here.
@firstcynic92
@firstcynic92 8 ай бұрын
"Only an idiot would fight a war on two fronts. Only the heir to the throne of the Kingdom of Idiots would fight a war on twelve fronts." - Londo Mollari
@EdwardGatey
@EdwardGatey 8 ай бұрын
Nice reference. Slava Londo!
@michalsawa881
@michalsawa881 8 ай бұрын
Poles always fighted on two Fronts, we did not choose it. Thats the diffrence.
@captainyossarian388
@captainyossarian388 8 ай бұрын
"Guess there'll be a war now, huh? All that running around and shooting at one another? One would've thought that sooner or later it would've gone out of fashion." Londo has some of the best writing in that show coupled with a great performer.
@fredrichenning1367
@fredrichenning1367 8 ай бұрын
"The wounded happy for getting out of there." YOU BET! My brother was sure as hell happy despite losing an eye, parts of his left arm, and a couple of fingers. As he lay bleeding in a ditch, realizing what had happened, and he thought, "now I can go home".
@stevekaczynski3793
@stevekaczynski3793 8 ай бұрын
Stephen Ambrose reported in one of his books on US soldiers that after one soldier was wounded and being evacuated to the rear, he shouted to the others in his platoon, "Clean sheets, you bastards! Clean sheets!"
@jamesharmer9293
@jamesharmer9293 8 ай бұрын
My great uncle stepped on a landmine that blew his left leg off, just below the knee. He was medvac'd back to London and survived. After the war he used to smuggle bottles of whiskey through customs in his tin leg.
@fredrichenning1367
@fredrichenning1367 8 ай бұрын
@@jamesharmer9293 - Your great-uncle, wow! My great-uncle died in 1919. What a difference in time scale. My brother was flown to England in a DC3 (first flown in 1936, the year I was born). He didn't have a tin leg, but he did have a glass eye.
@jamesharmer9293
@jamesharmer9293 8 ай бұрын
@@fredrichenning1367 He told me it was the luckiest thing that ever happened to him. It happened shortly after D-Day. The rest of his squad went on down the road and were ambushed and wiped out by the Germans.
@fredrichenning1367
@fredrichenning1367 8 ай бұрын
@@jamesharmer9293 - War is hell, for sure. Just the fear 24/7 must have taken a toll. My brother's sergeant got fatally hit in the chest the day before when doing Recon. And, when my brother went to climb into the halftrack next morning, a new kid was sitting in "his seat". Instead of making a fuss, my brother went three seats farther in. All those sitting near the rear where killed when an 88 from a Tiger went through the rear end (it didn't even explode, just the shrapnel was enough). The new kid lasted less than one day. That could have been my brother!
@user-if4zv5nj5m
@user-if4zv5nj5m 8 ай бұрын
My grand grandfather saw his first combat around these days. He turned 18 in 1943 and was conscripted at a red army early in 1943. He has gone through basic training in 6 months, than he was assigned to a reserve batalion in a 417 id. He recalls that the batalion consisted of a new recruits with some veteran sergeants and officers, usually ones that were wounded earlier, to train them. He recalls that all the Frontline divisions were eager to be understrength but with only trained troops on the Frontline. He was assigned to heavy mg team (maxim mg). He recalls the drills, how to choose a position, to fortify it, camouflage, build reserve and false ones, to change them, everything on a clock and in shortest time possible. He hated to be near a Frontline for a year but never to go into combat and hated these endless drills. In October 1944 his batalion was finally moved into line as a proper combat unit. He told that all the drills they had were extremely helpful and saved his lives multiple time. He described that when they began to shoot, after a belt or two shot, german mortrars began to hit them, every time without exclusions. They waited until a "fork" was achieved (one overshoot and one undershoot), they knew that the next mine will hit their trench and they had around 30 seconds to grab their 50 kg mg, ammo, water for cooling, and abandon the position. Luckily they were training for a year to do so. This continued for 3 months until one time they weren't fast enough. A mine hit their trench. Two men were killed, my grand grandfather lost an eye and some fingers, 4th man had some wounds too. The bulky mashinegun saved them. He spent a year in a hospital, his lightly wounded teammate was again assigned to a reserve batalion after a short hospital time, and even participated in a siege of Berlin. But for my grand grandfather the war was over. One and a half years of training, 3 months of war and a year in hospital afterwards
@maciejkamil
@maciejkamil 8 ай бұрын
Helena's story was moving. Such a rare happy end among the sea of suffering. Never forget.
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
Indeed, stories like Helena's provide hope amidst the darkness of war. Thanks for watching.
@Medytacjusz
@Medytacjusz 8 ай бұрын
4:31 "There've been issues in Japanese command" - woah, that took me by surprise!
@senatorarmstrong4168
@senatorarmstrong4168 8 ай бұрын
''The Germans get pushed back''- woah, couldnt have seen that coming!
@pathutchison7688
@pathutchison7688 8 ай бұрын
29 minute episode? All the photos you have? All the interactive maps you are using? Such a deep level of research? I must conclude that just about every penny given by the TimeGhost is ending up on the screen. You all have definitely kept your word about pouring almost every cent into making this series the best it can be. I believe that this series will be looked back upon as THE quintessential World War 2 documentary. Thanks to everyone who works on these videos or helps make them possible. Your effort is much appreciated. 👍🏼
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
Thank you very much for the lovely words and thanks for watching!
@Cata-Holic_Doode
@Cata-Holic_Doode 6 ай бұрын
The Liturgy of WW2
@Mercurywheeler
@Mercurywheeler 8 ай бұрын
As a Czech, long live the Poland! What a brave nation, even though we had some problems in the past, I salute you and your bravery.
@crazytrain7114
@crazytrain7114 8 ай бұрын
Idk, a rifle or granades, molotovs vs sturmpanzers and machineguns feels pretty friggin brave to me. Also, not only thinning the hoard, but tieing up resources and damaging/ destroying equipment probably helped more than hurt. The nazis doomed them anyway, better to sit on their hands?
@eliasziad7864
@eliasziad7864 7 ай бұрын
Poland is literally an American slave state.
@user-lo1ut9df6d
@user-lo1ut9df6d Ай бұрын
Dont forget they bullied you too in 1938 along with the Germans and Hungarians
@illegalclown
@illegalclown 8 ай бұрын
I appreciate these videos talking about Poland. When I was a kid, the lady who lived across the street from us was a Polish immigrant. My parents mentioned that she was sent to a concentration camp during the war, but she was Catholic. As a kid I was confused because we only learned about the Jewish holocaust in school. Now I have an idea of what my neighbor and her family went through.
@blurrpp314
@blurrpp314 8 ай бұрын
Some how somebody wants to erase Polsh victims of IIWW. 3 milions non-jewish Poles died, 80% of industry destroyed + 3 milion Polsh Jews died. Polish ware second nation killed in concentration capms, and due go General plan Ost Polish nation was set for extermination. Why you haven't head this and thare are some environments who want to blame Polish nation (no bady in Poland deny that there ware Poles who cooperate with Germans but it was less than 0.2%) for holocaust (silly but its true :) ). First Germany own Poland a lot for this destruction and .. havent payad enything yet, remembering Poland as victim wont help them. Second Jews want to get properties of Poles with JEwish origin, you cant take mony from victim, you have to make them responsible for Germans crimes ;). Its long story short, politics and money :).
@terryroots5023
@terryroots5023 8 ай бұрын
The tragedy of Poland continues. What a brave nation.
@SiegfriedDerDrachentoter
@SiegfriedDerDrachentoter 8 ай бұрын
Their tragedy doesn’t end until 1989
@rajeshkanungo6627
@rajeshkanungo6627 8 ай бұрын
I had a Polish officemate in grad school who intensely hated the Russians. The Soviets used to present a face of wonderful-beautiful-workers-paradise. He was the first to tell me about the massacre of the Polish officers. Amongst other things.
@swallowxx
@swallowxx 8 ай бұрын
Arguably still present today. Extreme right wing nationalism is a dangerous foe. @@SiegfriedDerDrachentoter
@captainyossarian388
@captainyossarian388 8 ай бұрын
@@rajeshkanungo6627 The Soviet Union, much like Russia today, was painted rust.
@graceneilitz7661
@graceneilitz7661 8 ай бұрын
Looking at the uprising with hindsight it was silly. The Polish Government in Exile had seen what the USSR did in Lviv, so why would Warsaw be different? And even then, the government should have at least made sure the Soviets planned to cross the river to begin with. Due to the Soviets being stretched at the limits of their supply lines. Obviously this is 20’20 hindsight, and I don’t mean to disparage the brave men and women. But, I believe that if you do decide to revolt in such a position, you should be strong enough to fight the occupying power on your own, like Yugoslavia.
@21bugger
@21bugger 8 ай бұрын
Good job mentioning the cumulative psychological effects of war, especially how one cannot get “used to it” - Too many books/accounts/myths, to me, glorifies the war a bit too much. I, for one, appreciates not experiencing fighting on the frontline. If everyone is shown at school those who survived combat but with mental impairment and physical mutilation, I think there’ll be more acceptance/effort that war is to be treated as an absolute last resort and avoided as much as possible. Definitely shocked the hell out of me seeing the negative effects of the war on the human body.
@juankovacs6033
@juankovacs6033 8 ай бұрын
War is the ultimate failure of humanity. And everyone who exalts or glorifies combat is just a propagandist, to put it politely.
@rajeshkanungo6627
@rajeshkanungo6627 8 ай бұрын
There is an episode by Perun on the medical side of the Ukraine war. Pretty awful, what soldiers go through physically. And then the psychological toll is just as bad if not worse.
@DrVictorVasconcelos
@DrVictorVasconcelos 8 ай бұрын
Certain psychological conditions could be interpreted as "getting used to combat". Dissociation, depersonalization, verneunung and verwerfung are all mechanisms to avoid the kind of frightful behavior that gets you killed. The problem is that it might get you "suicided".
@brucebartup6161
@brucebartup6161 8 ай бұрын
0 Battle hardened. Temporary psychopathy. The ability to do things that would normally give rise to endless doubt. To do them quickly , and without hesitation. Use of a bayonet for example; or rifle shooting an advancing enemy; 10,yads away from cover or (in my father's case) calling down an artilery strike on a target surrounded by civilians in hiding. To avoid the behaviour or avoid the conseequrences?
@user-gx8kv4nd1m
@user-gx8kv4nd1m 8 ай бұрын
Żyjąc między dwoma mocarstwa i które w przeszłości podzieliły się nami . Byliśmy pod ich zaborami mamy prawo się obawiać
@gunman47
@gunman47 8 ай бұрын
This week may be a good week to watch the first half of Episode 5 *Crossroads* of the 2001 television miniseries *Band of Brothers* , where Dick Winters writes an after-action report about Easy Company’s actions during the Battle of the Nijmegen salient. One particular note that is shown is Winters being troubled by his shooting of an unarmed German teenage soldier during the battle.
@PhillyPhanVinny
@PhillyPhanVinny 8 ай бұрын
Really hoping the soon to release Apple+ show Masters of the Air (also made by Spielberg and Hanks) will be as good as Band of Brothers or the Pacific.
@firingallcylinders2949
@firingallcylinders2949 8 ай бұрын
Its always a good week to watch Band of Brothers
@firingallcylinders2949
@firingallcylinders2949 8 ай бұрын
​@@PhillyPhanVinnyI feel like that show has been in production forever
@ahorsewithnoname773
@ahorsewithnoname773 8 ай бұрын
To tie in with gunman47's excellent suggestion, it might also be a good time to watch episode 7 of The Pacific, which is set partially set during the fighting for Umurbrogol on Peleliu that was described by Indy this episode. The death of Captain "Ack Ack" Haldane was on October 12, 1944 during K/3/5's assault Hill 140, which is part of Umurbrogol. That event described by Eugene Sledge in With the Old Breed at Peleliu and Okinawa... "My first thought was that the Japanese had slipped in thousands of troops from the northern Palaus and that we would never get off the island… My imagination went wild, but none of us was prepared for what we were about to hear. "Howdy, Johnny," someone said as he came up to us. "OK, you guys, OK, you guys," he repeated, obviously flustered. A couple of men exchanged quizzical glances. "The skipper is dead. Ack Ack has been killed," Johnny finally blurted out.… I was stunned and sickened. Throwing my ammo bag down, I turned away from the others, sat on my helmet, and sobbed quietly … Never in my wildest imagination had I contemplated Captain [Andrew A.] Haldane's death. We had a steady stream of killed and wounded leaving us, but somehow I assumed Ack Ack was immortal . Our company commander represented stability and direction in a world of violence, death, and destruction. Now his life had been snuffed out. We felt forlorn and lost. It was the worst grief I endured during the entire war. The intervening years have not lessened it any."
@nigeh5326
@nigeh5326 8 ай бұрын
@@PhillyPhanVinnyfirst episode is released Jan 24th next year on Apple TV
@alansewell7810
@alansewell7810 8 ай бұрын
I just downloaded the Kindle Edition of FORGOTTEN ALLY by Rana Mitter for $2.99. Thanks for recommending it. It truly is a forgotten theater of the war. If I'm remembering correctly, we staged B-29 raids on Japan from China before moving close enough to stage them from the Pacific Islands. Although Stillwell made our relations with China difficult, the Chinese who fought with us retained fond memory of Americans for decades, and probably made our relations with China better from the 70s onward than they would have been if we didn't have those shared experiences of fighting the Japanese together. I read the book DEVOTION by Adam Makos about Americans trapped behind the Chinese lines in the Korean War. Chinese enlisted soldiers saved the Americans' lives rather than turning them over to their officers for torture and execution because the Chinese enlisted men remembered fighting with Americans against the Japanese.
@porksterbob
@porksterbob 8 ай бұрын
A lot of the People's Volunteer Army soldiers in Korea were actually former nationalist units.
@alansewell7810
@alansewell7810 8 ай бұрын
@@porksterbob The book DEVOTION mentioned that. The victorious Communists told them: "Join our army or die." (DEVOTION is about the first African-American Navy pilot who flew many missions over Chinese-occupied North Korea before being shot down. A heroic rescue mission behind Chinese lines was undertaken to attempt to recover him).
@annehersey9895
@annehersey9895 8 ай бұрын
I think Ike's report from the Surgeon General could well be why the men who fought in WWII never talked about it. I was part of the baby boom and I remember we would ask father's who had been in the war about their stories and to a man they would just say benign things like 'it was just another day' or I don't remember much except rise, fight, march and sleep repeat'. No one sat around 'telling war stories' even when asked.
@stuartmc4422
@stuartmc4422 8 ай бұрын
This week was the week that I finally caught up with the series. It's honestly such an incredible achievement, and I want to thank the Time Ghost staff for all of their amazing efforts over the years. I'm particularly enamoured with the quality of the maps. Whoever makes them is so talented.
@arseneken
@arseneken 8 ай бұрын
Same! I started this august and caught up just in time for his episode! This show is incredible and I can’t believe it took me this long to find it.
@awesome24712
@awesome24712 8 ай бұрын
I think they're made by the YT channel Eastory, who has some nice WW2 videos of their own
@Grenadier311
@Grenadier311 8 ай бұрын
​@@awesome24712That is correct.
@jimster1111
@jimster1111 8 ай бұрын
but did you get caught up on indies "the great war" channel?
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much for your kind words and dedication to the series!
@Valdagast
@Valdagast 8 ай бұрын
Yeah, my grandfather was in the Finnish army, and he never really recovered from the horrors of the war.
@conormacneill8284
@conormacneill8284 8 ай бұрын
I think at this point Indy is like Bart in that Simpsons meme every time he talks about German counterattacks on the western front: *The Germans send counter attacks* "Say the line, Indy." Indy: "They also fail"
@Jarod-te2bi
@Jarod-te2bi 8 ай бұрын
Long love Poland 🇵🇱 from Canada 🇨🇦 ❤
@gunman47
@gunman47 8 ай бұрын
A footnote this week on October 7 1944 is that P-51 fighter pilot 1st Lieutenant Urban Drew will shoot down two Me 262 fighters (flown by Oberfeldwebel Heinz Arnold and Leutnant Gerhard Kobert) as they were taking off from Achmer Airfield. The only witness to these victories was his wingman 2nd Lieutenant Robert McCandliss. However, he would be shot down by anti-aircraft fire and captured before the end of the mission, so Drew did not receive credit for these two downings until after the war when McCandliss was released from captivity. This is noted to be the first and only time in the war a pilot scored two jet victories in one mission.
@firingallcylinders2949
@firingallcylinders2949 8 ай бұрын
That's actually insane, how did he manage that.
@wellwell7950
@wellwell7950 8 ай бұрын
When you look into it the evidence is very shaky. For example Heinz Arnold has no record of being s hot down, Kobert does. The evidence supposedly from Georg-Peter Eder is unverifiable. German reports also indicate it was not one Fighter but mutiple that were firing at the planes taking off, which when you think for 2 seconds, makes more sense than just one plane deciding to go for two easy targets and everyone else just idk just starring
@wellwell7950
@wellwell7950 8 ай бұрын
​@@firingallcylinders2949 when they were taking off which is the second easiest time the only easier one being Landing. He also didn't pull it off, as reports indicate mutiple planes in the group were firing at them not one.
@wellwell7950
@wellwell7950 8 ай бұрын
the evidence for this is shaky. E.g. Kobert was shot down, Heinz Arnold has no record of being shot down. The evidence supposedly from Georg-Peter Eder is unverifiable. German reports also indicate it was not one Fighter but mutiple that were firing at the planes taking off, which when you think for 2 seconds, makes more sense than just one plane deciding to go for two easy targets and everyone else just idk just starring.
@wellwell7950
@wellwell7950 8 ай бұрын
It's a fascinating story it just seems to have not been the exact truth. Arnold for example has no evidence of him being sh ot down in this event. Also german records say it was mutiple fighters that were firing at the Aircraft taking off.
@doolittlegeorge
@doolittlegeorge 8 ай бұрын
*"We're falling back faster than the enemy can advance."* Field Marshall Gert Von Runstedt
@brokenbridge6316
@brokenbridge6316 8 ай бұрын
I often feel a sense of tragedy whenever I think of the Warsaw uprising in WWII.
@nicolass4425
@nicolass4425 8 ай бұрын
These episodes only get better and better.
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
Appreciate the kind words!
@jonathanmcalroy8640
@jonathanmcalroy8640 8 ай бұрын
For the also curious; Cpl Eugene Sledge and Cpl Merriell "Snafu" Shelton were in the 5th Marine Division on Peleliu.
@porksterbob
@porksterbob 8 ай бұрын
Also, people should read Eugene sledge's second book "China Marine" about his time in China in the latter half of 1945.
@nicholasconder4703
@nicholasconder4703 8 ай бұрын
As was Chester Nez, a Navajo Codetalker.
@eddiefaccioni2453
@eddiefaccioni2453 8 ай бұрын
@@nicholasconder4703 I just finished reading his 2011 book "Code Talker".
@stoffls
@stoffls 8 ай бұрын
Thank you Steven Przybylski for sharing the story of your family. We are used to have more personal stories in Spartys WAH series, but it is good to have those personal stories also here. My grandfather fought in the Wehrmacht from 1941 to 1945, as far as I know Army group north. So when Indy talks about the fighting there, I think of my grandfather and where he might have been at that time. He had the luck to survive the war, like Helena and her family, and could reunite with his family in 1946. And it was not only war fatigue that plagued the soldiers. For decades many would suffer under PTSD, as we know it today. I know for sure my grandfather did.
@HealthyCigarette864
@HealthyCigarette864 8 ай бұрын
most German soldiers on the eastern front committed war crimes and if your grandpa was really there for all four years, there is a 100% chance he did. I can help you find out what he was involved in if you have his unit.
@ziumzium5049
@ziumzium5049 8 ай бұрын
@@HealthyCigarette864 Nah, the Germans tend to glorify their foot soldiers as if they weren't an armored fist of the nazi governemnt that murdered, pillaged and raped. The simple fact this guy is not ashamed of what his grandfather did is very telling.
@nickmacarius3012
@nickmacarius3012 8 ай бұрын
Always loving this great historical content that is put out every week for the past 5 years in the face of all the challenges & obstacles!
@Adonnus100
@Adonnus100 8 ай бұрын
It's a really great idea and so wonderful to give the opportunity for subscribers to share their family's photos and stories in conjunction with the events of the episodes.
@hannahskipper2764
@hannahskipper2764 8 ай бұрын
This episode got me. Thank you for bringing it to us. Never forget.
@chuckvt5196
@chuckvt5196 8 ай бұрын
Brilliant episode. So many civilians sacrificed everything just as the soldiers did. Dark times with small beacons of light shining here and there to help and to encourage others to carry on.
@irenagreg7373
@irenagreg7373 8 ай бұрын
Nobody asked civilians to give up their lives to satisfy politicians' ambitions. Great Britain lost about 380 thousand troops during WW II and 70 thousand + civilians who perished during Luftwaffe bombing. In Warsaw the losses were 200 thousand + only in Warsaw Uprising in 1944. I let you decide if it was worth it. In addition the entire city has been erased completely.
@vgotnofingers
@vgotnofingers 8 ай бұрын
What a great channel. I am always waiting for the upload on Saturday.
@matt338r5
@matt338r5 8 ай бұрын
Thankyou again Time Ghost for the episodes. The world can never forget.
@brucebartup6161
@brucebartup6161 8 ай бұрын
Ohhh but the world can forget. all too easily. The world forgets more each year. Where once on Remembrance Sunday there marched maybe 50,000? today wed be lucky to get 1,000. Wheelchairs commonplace. We can never let the world forget for fear of repitition.
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@Jorlaan42
@Jorlaan42 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the little personal story at the end. I always appreciate the little stories.
@kyleduell2577
@kyleduell2577 8 ай бұрын
Love the smaller maps in the corner
@bananabourbonaenima
@bananabourbonaenima 8 ай бұрын
8:55 That's the village where my granddad was born...
@prazcuray1388
@prazcuray1388 8 ай бұрын
Love the work y’all put into the series, thank you 🙏
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching!
@chrisedwards4403
@chrisedwards4403 8 ай бұрын
Thanks to the team for another excellent show and special thanks to Indy: he could read the telephone book and make it entertaining! Bravo, sir - keep on keeping on. 👍🏻
@anthonyforbes9657
@anthonyforbes9657 8 ай бұрын
Another stunning episode.
@thcdreams654
@thcdreams654 8 ай бұрын
Cool to see you work with Squire. Thanks for all the wonderful content Time Ghost cast and crew.
@Professor_sckinnctn
@Professor_sckinnctn 8 ай бұрын
Great episode, seriously. Never forget.
@gordonjulien9074
@gordonjulien9074 8 ай бұрын
I was hyped to see this week’s episode after watching Pacific on Netflix. It just how shocking how harrowing warfare was no matter how small and insignificant it’s outcome is to the greater military picture
@JHF_Gaming
@JHF_Gaming 8 ай бұрын
These episodes just keep getting longer and longer. Hard to believe that in your first season the average episode was 11 minutes. Now they're almost three times as long. Is that because there is more happening now (almost the entire world is involved) or that you have more resources and can therefore spend more time covering events? Or a combination? This really is a remarkable series. It would likely be prohibitively expensive, but have you considered when it is finally over putting the weekly summaries and the War Against Humanity series on Blu-Ray for purchase? I know many people would appreciate having these on physical media.
@Southsideindy
@Southsideindy 8 ай бұрын
It’s entirely because there is more happening. I mean, until the fall of France there was only one European front at a time to cover, and No Africa, no eastern front. There was the winter war, the phoney war, and occasionally stuff in China. But that’s it. Now there’s stuff everywhere every week. I still write these all by myself and sure it takes more time and research now, but it’s not overwhelming. We are now though at maximum editing capacity so that’s a limit to them being any longer.
@bertrandruskin3406
@bertrandruskin3406 8 ай бұрын
Absolutely brilliant.
@1991jerzy
@1991jerzy 8 ай бұрын
Piotrków Trybunalski my home town!
@iasontzortzis9472
@iasontzortzis9472 8 ай бұрын
Congratulations on the great video!
@cowhand6112
@cowhand6112 8 ай бұрын
Outstanding presentation this week (just like every other week).
@chrisaiken900
@chrisaiken900 8 ай бұрын
Thanks! Many thanks for all your work
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
Thank you so much!
@El_Presidente_5337
@El_Presidente_5337 7 ай бұрын
28 minutes and it is just a single week. This episode is easily double of that what we had a few years ago and it is mind boggling.
@chedelirio6984
@chedelirio6984 8 ай бұрын
Every week in every episode of every series of WW2 channel's comments: "Why don't you mention the thing I want mentioned the way I want it mentioned?!?!?!??" ... Even if they did a month earlier or tell us it will be covered in the other series. Carry on team, you are doing good work. I can't and don't expect EVERYTHING to be included the way I want it but here there's more than usual.
@Raskolnikov70
@Raskolnikov70 8 ай бұрын
Yep, we're already up to 28 minutes for this week's episode and they're only going to get longer. If people want their pet battle covered, maybe they should fund the TG Army and have them make a special episode? Just an idea.....
@CARL_093
@CARL_093 8 ай бұрын
Thanks indy and crew
@Roamor1
@Roamor1 8 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@porksterbob
@porksterbob 8 ай бұрын
I like the China coverage this week. It would be good to have a special about the utterly abysmal state of the Chinese economy/army at this moment. People dont realize that US lend lease in the past three years has yet to reach the level that the soviets sent in just 1938. The Hump is finally running in the tens of thousands of supplies per month since the seizure of myitkyina in august, but more than 90% of that tonnage is going to support US forces in China. Some of these, like the 20th airforce, are explicitly forbidden from operating against japanese forces in China itself. The Chinese themselves are bending over backwards to accomodate the US presence. They are building airfields and dormitories by hand, with no heavy equipment. The Columbia educated finance minister Kong Xiangxi will mention how the Chinese are killing their plow oxen to satisfy the american taste for beef.
@TukozAki
@TukozAki 8 ай бұрын
I didn't realize that up to now. Thank you.
@user-gx8kv4nd1m
@user-gx8kv4nd1m 8 ай бұрын
Może też o polskiej gospodarce Jaki wielki mamy dług, po tym jak przyjęliśmy przyjęliśmy z otwartymi rękami 5 milionów naszych sąsiadów w naszych domach A teraz mają nas obrażają Pewien Pan napisał w komentarzu Szczury wasze dzieci będą się uczyć naszego języka
@OshadhaRanawaka
@OshadhaRanawaka 8 ай бұрын
Hey Indy love your show I would like to give you guys a idea for some ww1 and ww2 specials, can you guys do some detailed episodes about how in both wars Naval combat, Navys from both sides and Naval ships fought and involved and what we're their tasks, incredible missions, doctrines about specifications and any special details about them I am sure it would be an interesting topic to discuss on this show thanks and good luck .
@carrickrichards2457
@carrickrichards2457 8 ай бұрын
Combat fatigue was an issue in 1944. There was increasing delay waiting for air and artillery support after even small contacts. I can't recall which source it was, suggested the difference in the East was that Russians conserved their elite units for key moments and pulled them out of the line quickly after breakthroughs. Montgomery used his elites at the front until there were none left. Sounds too simplistic, but your closing remarks were widely recognised at the time. 6 months of combat is still used as a yardstick today for combat tours in the British Army. Thank you for these memorials.
@Raskolnikov70
@Raskolnikov70 8 ай бұрын
Sad thing is the Germans figured this out back during the Great War. They build up elite units but used them sparingly for assaults, then pulled them back immediately. The US did a somewhat better job in the Pacific with the USMC, bringing in Army units to replace them after the intital assault phase in most cases. But it's still an issue in modern armies as well, I have a few friends who did 13-14 month tours in Iraq during the height of that occupation in the mid-2000s. You can only take so much.
@MegaShens
@MegaShens 8 ай бұрын
A couple of years ago I visited Bergen Belsen where a lot of prisoners from the uprising were killed. It is worth a visit
@shawnr771
@shawnr771 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the lesson.
@bencejuhasz6459
@bencejuhasz6459 8 ай бұрын
Greetings from Hungary! I have the feelng that the Germans must make a move in Hungary, like an armoured fist.
@glenmartin2437
@glenmartin2437 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for this episode and the vignette at the end. I had Polish friends in grade school, highschool and a number of universities. My Uncle Clarence told me of the atrocities he observed as a US POW in a Nazi prison. As a fifth grader, I was thoroughly disgusted when a friend inked a toothbrush mustache on his school picture, them bragged how he looked like Adolf Hitler. I did not think, I just punched him in the face, knocking flat on the sidewalk and grass, then walked off in a huff, not wanting to do more harm.
@jujubean54ify
@jujubean54ify 8 ай бұрын
You are my hero!
@McRocket
@McRocket 8 ай бұрын
I realize there were - literally - countless tragedy's in this war. But the Warsaw Uprising seems like one of the sadder one's to me. ☮
@BeanManolo
@BeanManolo 8 ай бұрын
Brazil side of the war this week: the FEB troops are moved to the Sercchio Valley region, where by the 7th they will occupy between other cities, the city of Fornacci di Barga, securing the Catarozzo Ammunition Factory, being captured by the 6th RI. By the 7th they'll also enter without resistance in the cities of Gallicano, Fabricche and Cardoso, securing the Fabbriche-Coreglia-Antelminelli transversal highway, a important point for the Allied supply chain; Also by the 4th the 1st Fighter Aviation Group of the brazilian air force, the FAB, will disembark in Naples, receiving already their motto that would become synonimous with them ('Senta a Púa!') and their iconic badge. They would arrive in Livorno by the 6th, where they would be incorporated under the american air force 350th Fighter Group; Also in the 7th a counter-attack by the Axis to try and retake Fornaci was succesfully repelled by FEB troops.
@oneshotme
@oneshotme 8 ай бұрын
I enjoyed your video so I gave it a Thumbs Up
@andyreznick
@andyreznick 8 ай бұрын
Sleep well, Helena. May the earth hold you like feathers.
@StevenPrzybylski
@StevenPrzybylski 8 ай бұрын
Thank you for the kind words.
@frasqai23
@frasqai23 8 ай бұрын
Man it's really weird to now finally see my hometown on the map in an episode!
@belbrighton6479
@belbrighton6479 8 ай бұрын
Commenting for the algorithms. A brilliant episode, so much war and yet the murder will continue on.
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
Thanks for the comment and thank you for watching.
@dbibbyma
@dbibbyma 8 ай бұрын
Wow, Indy, that was deep. Can't stop conflating that last thought with modern times.
@IosifStalin2
@IosifStalin2 8 ай бұрын
Something very special about the last third of this episode
@kname1882
@kname1882 8 ай бұрын
Bravo Indy🎉🎉🎉
@jackieking1522
@jackieking1522 8 ай бұрын
My dad was a pilot, flying transport and medevac, so not getting shot at much. Still, he was away from home for 5 years straight and I still wonder just how that affected him.
@AeciusthePhilosopher
@AeciusthePhilosopher 8 ай бұрын
No mention of the start of the Battle of Overloon, also sometimes called "The Second Battle of Caen" due to it being relatively unknown for the size and bloody nature of it? Hmm, hoping for more of that in a nearby epsiode.
@Boodoosh69
@Boodoosh69 8 ай бұрын
Why am I crying? again! Thank you TG just thank you.
@stephenhodgson3506
@stephenhodgson3506 8 ай бұрын
My chemistry teacher in High School was involved in the Warsaw uprising (I will not attempt to spell his name because it would only be an insult to do so). He told us stories of things he did as a boy scout before the uprising and some of what he did during the actual uprising itself. He did say that he and his friends did see the writing on the wall when it came to Stalin and what the future post war would hold for Poland. At the first opportunity he, some of his family and friends headed west looking for refuge with a Western power and eventually settle in the UK where he lived out his life.
@Wineballs
@Wineballs 8 ай бұрын
Tomorrow, October 8th 1944, in the village of Leveroy in the Netherlands, my grandfather, aged 16, will attend Sunday mass with his family. When they leave the church, German soldiers will take him and 17 fellow villagers and force them on a train to Germany. He will end up in Dachau and be forced to load the corpses into ovens. When he weighs 40 kilos and his health takes a turn, he will be moved to a farm to work. The German family spare as much food as they can, and he recovers. When the war ends a few months later, it will take him three weeks to travel home barefoot, but he makes it. He passed away just over a month ago at 96.
@j.4332
@j.4332 8 ай бұрын
In Italy in WW2,a British officer did a study of men in combat,concerning Commonwealth forces.He found that in general men would hardly fire a shot,and were happy to let artillery do the job,and in fact were quite willing to retreat and give up hard won ground.Some men would fight hard and encourage others,but in general men would try to survive.Mongomery did not agree and had it suppressed.Morale i guess..The Germans had 4 categories of soldier-from those who actually enjoyed the fighting,to those who would be known as "Shirkers"..I guess these types were in ALL armies.This is according to Antony Beevor,"D-Day".
@stevekaczynski3793
@stevekaczynski3793 8 ай бұрын
Perhaps a coincidence but the Germans also had four categories of "Volksdeutsch" or ethnic Germans, certainly in occupied Poland. Categories I and II were genuinely seen as German - perhaps left in Poland by the Treaty of Versailles. Categories III and IV were seen as technically German but really Poles and often with little knowledge of the German language. Category III was an especially large group and many were conscripted into the German armed forces. They were considered potentially unreliable in battle, though more so against the Western Allies than against the Soviets. Quite a lot of Category III Volksdeutsche were sent to Hungary to try and stop the Red Army advance.
@Raskolnikov70
@Raskolnikov70 8 ай бұрын
The Marshall studies done after WWII found the same phenomenon. Most individual infantry soldiers didn't ever fire their rifles because they felt the battle was bigger than them and didn't feel like there was any point. It led to a lot of changes in the way soldiers were trained and to equipping them with weapons with higher rates of fire in order to make the more aggressive and effective in combat.
@j.4332
@j.4332 8 ай бұрын
@@Raskolnikov70 Artillery was the biggest killer.Modern war-you shove thousands of guys into holes and trenches and towns etc,then the other guys shell them to bits,just in time for replacements to fill in.
@j.4332
@j.4332 8 ай бұрын
@@Raskolnikov70 Ive always believed one way the Red Army was able to defeat the Germans was its widespread use of the Ppsh-41 with its large capacity,over the German Kar-98k bolt action rifle..In close battle id rather have the machine gun,than long cumbersome rifle.
@Raskolnikov70
@Raskolnikov70 8 ай бұрын
@@j.4332 IIRC the percentage of U.S. casualties caused by artillery was 65% according to the studies. I could be off, it's been a while since I read that stuff, but it was pretty high for the reason you mentioned - a lot of 'combat' was just sitting around waiting to get blasted by artillery or air strikes. The Red Army didn't just have the PPSh, but better tactics overall. They organized a lot of their infantry battalions with one assault company armed entirely with them; the entire BN would advance under cover of rifle and MG fire, then the assault company would perform the final approach. Ironically this was the same thing the Germans did in WWI and what the Americans had been planning to do with their Pedersen device - a drop-in SMG modification for their Springfield rifles. Armies keep having to learn the same lessions over and over...
@mahfl22
@mahfl22 8 ай бұрын
Very nice story at the end.
@stonedtowel
@stonedtowel 8 ай бұрын
Fucking a, Indy what an ending. You have such a mindset of our history that just leaves me dumbfounded. I’ll always be an eager student to your historical coverage.
@frankunderbush
@frankunderbush 8 ай бұрын
"things going slowly in Italy" - the entire Italian campaign summed up
@geheimnisvoll_lp
@geheimnisvoll_lp 8 ай бұрын
I live in geilenkirchen its cool to see that there was fighting here
@the1ghost764
@the1ghost764 8 ай бұрын
Nice Episode
@sidkubric7613
@sidkubric7613 8 ай бұрын
dziękuje Indy
@hendrikvanleeuwen9110
@hendrikvanleeuwen9110 8 ай бұрын
Wow, the timing of this is uncanny. History doesnt repeat, but it sure does rhyme.
@jamestoy4835
@jamestoy4835 8 ай бұрын
Well done. Once again. I won't miss a episode,😎 Veteran says
@teronevala2064
@teronevala2064 8 ай бұрын
Hats off to Helena. One tough lady.
@lostwizard
@lostwizard 8 ай бұрын
Watching this series week by week gives a real appreciation for the sheer scale and duration of the war. It seems forever ago now that we saw the Russians falling back in the face of blitzkrieg, or the British fighting in Egypt, or the Japanese bombing Pearl Harbor, let alone the Germans invading Poland so many years ago now.
@WorldWarTwo
@WorldWarTwo 8 ай бұрын
It can be hard to imagine that it wasn't just a series of events but years of sustained effort, sacrifice, and upheaval for countless individuals. The transformation of the global landscape over those years and the evolution of strategies and allegiances are mind-boggling. Thank you for watching.
@captainyossarian388
@captainyossarian388 8 ай бұрын
Thank you, Steven, and kudos to your grandmother for being part of the resistance.
@felipepereira214
@felipepereira214 8 ай бұрын
Two weeks to see Brazilians in action on the Italian theater of the war!
@cmck472
@cmck472 8 ай бұрын
I can remember as a nurse in the late '80's dealing with a patient who had some interesting psychological damage following WW2 service - An elderly patient with severe depression (along with other medical problems related to age). The cause of his depression was his service as a concentration camp guard. An interesting ethical situation when it came to treating him (No, I never discussed the specifics of it with him - don't ask a question unless you REALLY want to know the answer!). I wasn't a psychiatric nurse, so I confined myself to his physical ailments. Not everyone who served and required treatment afterwards was a good guy...
@8.bit_gun340
@8.bit_gun340 8 ай бұрын
Can y’all believe it’s already 1944 I’ve been watching since the start of this series. And I gotta say…It’s gone faster than I expected. Time flies.
@agactual2
@agactual2 8 ай бұрын
The Warsaw Uprising might have failed but at least the Poles were able to take a ton of Nazis down with them. And they were able to show that the Poles are no one's subjects. The entire saga was horrific but I think Poland should be insanely proud of the Uprising, to this day.
@Chris.in.taiwan
@Chris.in.taiwan 8 ай бұрын
And yet all of it was in vain, considering what happened next with the soviets in Poland.
@102830189291
@102830189291 8 ай бұрын
"Poles are no one's subjects" Then explain how they became soviet subjects directly after.
@rajeshkanungo6627
@rajeshkanungo6627 8 ай бұрын
@@Chris.in.taiwan , Which is why most Eastern European countries have a visceral hatred of Russia.
@michalsawa881
@michalsawa881 8 ай бұрын
It was not in vain,they set an example to the later uprising and strikes and creation of Solidarity!!! Even thoe the Communist regime in Poland called them bandits, we all knew the truth. We will never Forget!! Germans still hasnt payed a cent for what they did....... There is insanly big hatred for germans in Poland for what they did to WARSAW. If it comes to another war, there will be no prisoners of war. We Remember and still suffer from that
@TukozAki
@TukozAki 8 ай бұрын
@@Chris.in.taiwan , @102830189291 Guys, any empathy for what many Poles endured since September 1939 -- by whom? And between 1793 and 1919 before that.
@langdontomkins001
@langdontomkins001 8 ай бұрын
I had 2 Uncles that were at Monte Casino. Another uncle wh was a para and his younger brother was in Coventry the night it was bombed. They all saw terrible things and I realise I could see it in their eyes even as a child. My Grandfather is buried in Malta. He didn't make it through his second world war..
@duncancurtis5108
@duncancurtis5108 8 ай бұрын
Warsaw itself dies next. One of the greatest acts of cultural savagery since Carthage.
@j.4332
@j.4332 8 ай бұрын
I can recommend Rana Mitters book on the Chinese war.I cant remember its title,"Chinas war with Japan" or something,but do try check it out,interesting on a war that little is really known about outside China.
@christopherrasmussen8718
@christopherrasmussen8718 8 ай бұрын
I have talked about my granduncle before. He came across Africa, up through Sicily. All the way through Italy, France and into Germany. My grandad was the youngest and his unit came over just in time to be in Batstone. He was fortunate to have been picked up by a Generals command unit. He had won and 'art contest' and was able to hand letter the new command building commandeered by the General's staff. The offices doors and the staff cars and trucks. He was not there when his unit was wiped out in the battle. The third brother, the oldest was in the Navy when the war started and fought his way across the Pacific with his shipmates. My granduncle had many books about WWII. He often outlined the battels he was in, marked the maps in pen with his locations. I have one of them to this day along with his dress uniform with his ruptured duck.
@SeriousPoo
@SeriousPoo 8 ай бұрын
Great episode! Thank you so much
@danielwillens5876
@danielwillens5876 8 ай бұрын
Weird. I love your maps, they are stylistically "period," and aesthetically pleasing. However, sometimes all that comes across is a field divided into a "red" zone and an uncolored zone, with little dots with unpronounceable names standing in for towns and cities. I was about to suggest that you should have insets in the corner with a "zoomed out" view so we can (at least) see where, in the "big picture" the action was happening. Just as I was about to hit pause... there was EXACTLY such an inset. Thank you!!! I am familiar enough with Europe that I can follow events there, but as far as China and the Pacific go? Thank you! Please continue (and expand) this policy.
@petepal55
@petepal55 8 ай бұрын
In so many cases the wish to lay blame outweighs the wish to understand. But fully understanding is impossible, so the best we can do is try to put ourselves in the other man's shoes for a few miles. It takes me ½ an hour to walk two miles, how many of us can say we've put ourselves in someone else's position for that long? I know I haven't, and I've tried many times for many years.
@milibaeindustries
@milibaeindustries 8 ай бұрын
It's crazy looking at the general map of Europe and how quickly everything has changed - now the Allies are touching Germany itself from East and West.
@Batuhanify
@Batuhanify 8 ай бұрын
That is how overextension often works. You see it through out history, expansion to the breaking limit of armies and then rapid loss of conquered territory due to counterattacks.
@ingloriuspumpkinpie9367
@ingloriuspumpkinpie9367 8 ай бұрын
Really good pronunciation of Slovak names
@sandermaertens1959
@sandermaertens1959 4 ай бұрын
I know a lot of people with first hand accounts of WW2. I work as a activity coordinator with elderly people in Leuven, Belgium, and some of them have been born in the early 30s. They have amazing stories about their lives under german occupation and allied liberation, but also allied bombing of their town. Is there a way or a platform we can share these stories with people who might be interested?
@beachboy0505
@beachboy0505 8 ай бұрын
15:17 Very rare uncensored Soviet photograph. The Russians are on USA 🇺🇸 half tracks with .30 cal machine guns. The American supply to the Soviets was incredible.
@stevekaczynski3793
@stevekaczynski3793 8 ай бұрын
.50 calibres actually. They weren't censored though the American (or British) origin of the equipment might go unmentioned. Most people wouldn't recognise equipment as foreign.
@nickdanger3802
@nickdanger3802 8 ай бұрын
Lend-Lease Vehicles in the Red Army (in Russian, quantities appear in video, oil is in metric tons) kzbin.info/www/bejne/jYSYaHieepVpacU
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