Englishman Reacts to... Terror in Occupied Poland | How to we show the next generation?

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Rob Reacts

Rob Reacts

Ай бұрын

How do we show the next generation about what happened in world war 2?
Original: • Terror in Occupied Poland
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#poland #ww2

Пікірлер: 134
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 Ай бұрын
If you are enjoying my reactions to all things Poland, make sure you go and watch out trips to Poland on our vlog channel Charlie & Rob and subscribe! We have vlogs from Gdansk, Kraków, Warszawa and Wrocław. kzfaq.info/sun/PLw4JaWCFm7FeHG7Ad5PtaZzoYd1Vq5EXW
@RISmu-_-06
@RISmu-_-06 Ай бұрын
Today we celebrate the day of our Polish flag and tomorrow is the day of adopting the constitution on May 3, which was the first in Europe and the second in the world.
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 Ай бұрын
Unfortunately, I couldn't find a good video, but I do have one for constitution day tomorrow.
@user-yq4nf6bb1s
@user-yq4nf6bb1s Ай бұрын
​@@RobReacts1ok dzięki .ale proszę o napisy
@adamab9069
@adamab9069 Ай бұрын
Over 10,000 Polish children went to Germany to be Germanized, most of them do not know that they are Poles.
@piotrteper8852
@piotrteper8852 Ай бұрын
Nie 10000 a ok.200 000 z tego po wojnie do Polski wrócili nieliczni .
@wojtek5596
@wojtek5596 Ай бұрын
I'm afraid you can't understand 1 thing. Only in Poland German law was saying 'everybody who is helping the Jews will be executed .. and also his closest family'. It were not the same circumstances as in Denmark or France.
@erikajasinski4633
@erikajasinski4633 Ай бұрын
My uncle and grandfather died in Concentration camp Majdanek. M father 15 years old beat up brutally and left to die. He had busted eardrum and was death 💀 n one ear. Horrible things happened and ironically after this horror - Hoover and Churchill gave Poland to Russia so they lived another50 years of horror. Had dare hey just take a country and give it away to another occupant.
@RISmu-_-06
@RISmu-_-06 Ай бұрын
Horror, nie moge sobie wyobrazic jak oni mogli robic to z zimną krwią.😢
@belark69
@belark69 Ай бұрын
Hoover or Roosevelt?
@agataryznar5675
@agataryznar5675 Ай бұрын
the museum dedicated to the Ulma family and all the people who saved Jews is located in the Podkarpacie(Ruthenia) region, in the village of Markowa
@darknesswarmth1721
@darknesswarmth1721 Ай бұрын
The 2 things that stick with me about the war from my visits to Poland. 1) the sheer size of Auschwitz Birkenau, and 2) There is a part of Bydgoszcz (my lady’s city), a church near a park with a gorgeous fountain. It seemed really peaceful… until you hear of how Nazi snipers would sit in the church tower (and the one that was in the city square) and just shoot random people. The cruelty and brutality of both is too striking to forget.
@navynavy1449
@navynavy1449 Ай бұрын
Very important: In Yad Vashem the most trees are for Poles. Only in Poland for helping the Jews u were given death penalty not only to you as a helper, but your family also. Men, women, children. There were plenty of people who helped the Jews, but they didnt survive the war or there is not enough proof to acknowledge them as Rightneous between the nations. Even my great grandmother tried to save a Jew, but he was caught on the street and was shot during trial of escape. From Zamość (which they mentioned) came a lot of train cars with jewish children, citizens of Warsaw paid the Germans to rescue them. Germans took the money and opened those cars. Children were frozen to death. All dead. This is how it was. And now almost the same is happening in Ukraine. Soviets were worse than na.zi Nowadays russians are like soviets but with WW2 Germany twist. Orcs
@erikajasinski4633
@erikajasinski4633 Ай бұрын
Yes my grandma saved 2 Jews , hew family would have been killed. She send them to US- they lived in Miami Floria never said thank you
@sebastian-br9qy
@sebastian-br9qy Ай бұрын
we tried to save the Poles and that's why we were murdered, neither the English nor the French will understand it, they threw them out
@alh6255
@alh6255 Ай бұрын
My great-grandmother was murdered for hiding Jews - she was taken away together with the Jews she was hiding, no one knows where the Germans killed them and buried them. She has only a symbolic grave in the cemetery, only an inscription on the family tomb. Fortunately, she lived alone, she was a widow, and she lived in a separate house (otherwise the Germans would have probably also killed her neighbors living in the same building, although they did not always do so). And my grandfather and his family lived in their own apartment, not so far from her, so the Germans weren't able to find them right away. Moreover, my grandfather was active in the resistance movement and was warned very quickly. If he was just an ordinary person, it's possible they wouldn't have had time to escape. The Germans also murdered my grandfather's sister, who taught in secondary schools. During the war, she taught Polish youth at the so-called secret classes, because the Germans forbade Poles to obtain education beyond primary school and vocational training for work in factories. The death penalty was for studying in secret high schools and secret universities. My grandfather's sister died together with her students - all of them were sent to Auschwitz. Even though learning was punishable by torture and then immediate death or sending to a concentration camp, many Poles obtained an excellent education during the war - they studied very hard, had great motivation, and thus acted against the Germans and their sick plans.
@user-eb6id4bi9r
@user-eb6id4bi9r Ай бұрын
Hi Rob, there is a Swedish group, Sabaton, making stunning and overwhelming history music and videos. They encourage people to get interested in history so insanely. I highly recommend to react (or even double react) to their "SABATON - Uprising (Official Music Video)" and Live version with 700,000 Polish audience. The song is about Warsaw Uprising in 1944 with real movie clips and war footages. Almost like an anthem, I watched several times and cried.
@darknesswarmth1721
@darknesswarmth1721 Ай бұрын
Uprising is an awesome song!
@MayaTheDecemberGirl
@MayaTheDecemberGirl Ай бұрын
Yes, this song, in this version, is indeed really great.
@adamab9069
@adamab9069 Ай бұрын
Don't equate everything to the Jews, Nazi Germany started the war and murdered Polish citizens, not only Jews. Why is a professor from Teawiva talking about the history of Poland? You do not use Polish materials, only from other countries, they are not entirely telling the truth because they were not here and they are prejudiced against Poles.
@dorotabarbowska2184
@dorotabarbowska2184 Ай бұрын
Rob, the Polish Jews were both Poles and Jews, they were Polish citizens, half of Poles who died during the WWII were Polish Jews, Jews had lived here for centuries, it was NOT just a small minority, it was a vital part of Poland, including the culture, art, cuisine, economy ect.
@peterfly2
@peterfly2 Ай бұрын
World War II was a terrible time. The next generations should definitely learn about it. My grandparents were greatly tested by the cruelty of Nazi Germany. One grandfather died in the Mauthausen concentration camp two weeks before the end of the war, killed by an injection of phenol. My great-grandfather, who owned a large farm, was displaced and deprived of his property. The Soviets also contributed.
@malkontentniepoprawny6885
@malkontentniepoprawny6885 Ай бұрын
It wasn,t Westerplatte, the war began with the bombardment of the town of Wielun a few hours earlier. Of course, the target was civilians.
@mpingo91
@mpingo91 Ай бұрын
After the bombing, Wieluń was occupied by the 1st Light Division, in which Captain Claus von Stauffenberg served. He expressed the following about the Poles: _"The local population is an unbelievable mob, a great many Jews and miscreants. A nation that, in order to feel good, apparently needs a whip"_ This individual is now a hero in Germany and German prime ministers (chancellors) lay flowers at his monument - just because he tried to kill Hitler, to do the same thing as Hitler, but in his own way.🙄
@pandynka1277
@pandynka1277 Ай бұрын
*a few minutes earlier
@MayaTheDecemberGirl
@MayaTheDecemberGirl Ай бұрын
​@@mpingo91Yes, exactly. Germans nowadays present themselves to the ignorant world as the poor victims oppressed by some Nazis - which is such a big historical lie.
@marekrondo9701
@marekrondo9701 Ай бұрын
Niestety, wszystkim siłom pasowała inna wersja, bardziej militarna niż Wieluń z cywilami. Podobnie pasowało wszystkim od wschodu do zachodu kłamstwo, że Polska padła zbyt szybko, szybciej niż inne kraje, że była słabo uzbrojona, że polegała tylko na koniach i szablach.
@alh6255
@alh6255 Ай бұрын
The Germans also bombed Kielce at dawn, before attacking Westerplatte, destroying the city center, especially the area around the railway station and arms factories. It was quite a part of the city in complete ruins. Many civilian inhabitants died. The station was rebuilt (or actually a new one was built) only at the turn of the 1960s and 1970s.
@RISmu-_-06
@RISmu-_-06 Ай бұрын
it was a horror, just a nightmare, I can't imagine how the Nazis could murder both Poles and other people in cold blood.
@user-ns5sf2nm5p
@user-ns5sf2nm5p Ай бұрын
Byli mocno skażeni propagandą, zgodnie z którą ich wrogowie nie byli ludźmi im równymi. Do tego napewno funkcjonował system kar za sprzeniewierzenie się ich ideologii i nagród za odpowiednie zachowanie. Tak bardzo uwierzyli w porządek hierarchii władzy, że podporządkowali się bezmyślnie nawet wizjom ekspansji chorego psychicznie zwyrodnialca. Swoje kompleksy chcieli podbudowywać kosztem krzywdy innych ludzi. W pewnym momencie doszło też uzależnienie od substancji, które miały pomóc im chociażby poprzez zwiększenie ich koncentracji lub pobudzenie, zwiększenie odporności na ból czy znieczulenie - podobno było to zjawisko występujące pod koniec wojny na dużą skalę. Oczywiście nie usprawiedliwiam ich działań pisząc o tym, a jedynie przybliżam co mogli mieć w swoich chorych głowach.
@MayaTheDecemberGirl
@MayaTheDecemberGirl Ай бұрын
The whole German society benefited for the whole war on this. The vast majority of German society supported Hitler. They were receiving items stolen from the victims, they could have slavery workers (not only the German factories, companies, but even the farmers were using slavery workers from occupied Polish territories). A lot of German companies, many of them still existing, had contracts with the concentration camps, for instance pharmaceutical and chemical ones, like AG Farbenindustrie, part of which were BASF or Bayer. The company was providing the concentration camps with the Zyklon-B gas used in gas chambers to murder people, earning huge money on genocide. The companies had also contracts with concentration camps in which they were ordering prisoners, for various purposes, like: we order for next week 100 women etc. They also ordered pseudomedical and pharmaceutical experiments on prisoners, with various illnesses, medicaments, forced sterilization methods etc. They looked down on other people, believing in their enormous sick pride and arrogance that they are "racially" superior "Übermenschen" (so above humans), while the others should only serve them as slaves. And it was not only about some "Nazis", but in fact the vast majority of German society.
@annakawinska5685
@annakawinska5685 20 күн бұрын
The "Nasis" ??? - Everybody knows, this were Germans ! Not any "extraterrestials" named later "Nazis" ...
@RISmu-_-06
@RISmu-_-06 19 күн бұрын
@@annakawinska5685 nie zesraj sie
@Monique-tw5rb
@Monique-tw5rb Ай бұрын
Dear Rob There are memorials commemorating victims of Nazis in each Polish city, town and village. I believe I won't exaggerate telling each Polish family carries its own postwar trauma throughgenerations. My own family is not the exception 😢. My great grand father (from my mother's side) was tortured by Gestapo and executed for conspiracy activity at the age of 38. (Back than my grandma was 9, her brother 5, and her mother had her baby sister on the way). My grand father was caught during roun-up and sent in the cattle wagon to do forced labour in Austria.he was only 16. His sister gave birth to her baby daughter during the Warsaw uprising and because of malnutrition she couldn't breastfeed so she fed her baby with her own blood. My father's brother was one year old when the Nazist soldier was keeping him as a hostage in the basement of our house for almost a month when red army came to "liberate" my hometown. My uncle survived only to be killed for antycomunist conspiracy activity (he was pushed out of the train wagon in winter and he died 3 days later). He was 21 years old and he studied economy in Poznań
@wojtasiksinski9351
@wojtasiksinski9351 Ай бұрын
Hardly anyone talks about it, but in 1939 Poland was attacked by three countries: Germany, Soviet Union and Slovakia.
@wojtasiksinski9351
@wojtasiksinski9351 Ай бұрын
The French and British laughed at Polish soldiers because they fought for only 5 weeks. France and its allies (Great Britain, Belgium, the Netherlands and the remnants of the Polish army) surrendered after just 6 weeks. But it was the Polish soldiers who they insulted, saying that they lacked the will to fight and determination. and sometimes of low combat value. Poles fought on all fronts in the world and have proven many times that it is from them that we can learn all these features, and above all, patriotism. I hope that the Jews will calm down and stop demanding compensation from Poles for the wrongs suffered during World War II. No one gave Poland any compensation, on the contrary - it was another occupation, looting and murdering of Poles by Stalin's torturers and his successors.
@saimur2126
@saimur2126 Ай бұрын
Hmm i didnt know slovakaia's participation in WW2 beginning. That nation has nothing to get, and 3rd Reish with Soviet Union were about exploit ''curzon's line'' plan to take over west and east polish terrritories. Also i think during WW2 it was checko-slovakia union, not just slovakia.
@user-ns5sf2nm5p
@user-ns5sf2nm5p Ай бұрын
Raczej wtedy nie było Słowacji na mapie z tego co mi wiadomo...🤔
@wojtasiksinski9351
@wojtasiksinski9351 Ай бұрын
@@user-ns5sf2nm5p bez urazy, ale powinieneś/aś natychmiast wrócić do szkoły.
@user-ns5sf2nm5p
@user-ns5sf2nm5p Ай бұрын
@@wojtasiksinski9351 powinnam mniej harnasiować w majówkę 🥴🙄🤭🤫🤗😁🤐😶‍🌫️ Ale chętnie cofnęłabym się do podstawówki, chociażby po to, żeby dopytać jak bardzo można uznać za niezależny kraj, który formalnie był suwerenny a de facto wasalny wobec Rzeszy, bo chociaż 14 marca 1938 autonomiczny parlament Słowacji ogłosił w Bratysławie akt niepodległości i utworzenie Republiki Słowackiej, ale nastąpiło to pod presją Hitlera i groźbą aneksji kraju przez Węgry (których częścią terytorium Słowacji było do traktatu w Trianon z 1920). Słowacja została zmuszona do zawarcia układu podporządkowującego politykę zagraniczną III Rzeszy. Hitler przeprowadził tak naprawdę okupację reszty Czechosłowacji. Czy to nie pewien paradoks, że Polska w różnych formach popierała aspiracje słowackie do niezależności, jednak słowacki przywódca ks. Józef Tiso w kolejnych miesiącach postawił na sojusz z Niemcami, a na Słowacji rozpoczęto antypolską kampanię propagandową? Ale pewnie nauczyciel odpowiedziałby mi, że pomijam kwestie samostanowienia o sobie narodu słowackiego, które wówczas w dziejach historii się akurat obudziły i zapominam, że sama Polska uznała niezależność Słowacji (zresztą z entuzjazmem). I że może próbuje wypierać w ten sposób częściowo nadszarpnięty mit o braterskości Słowian. Spotkałam się już wogóle z poglądem, że (według niektórych) od ataku Niemiec na Czechosłowację powinno się datować początek II wojny światowej. To chyba przemawia za tym, że ta Czechosłowacja to jest jednak jakaś problematyczna😅🤭😉. Możliwe jednak, że taka data rzuciłaby wyraźniejszy rys na zachowanie Francji i Wielkiej Brytanii chociażby. Chyba dopiero zaatakowanie Westerplatte było pozbawieniem złudzeń świata co do faktycznych zamiarów Niemiec - brutalnej ekspansji. I uświadomieniem sobie, że polityka ustępstw wobec Rzeszy zachęca ich do sięgania po więcej... Kupię sobie jakąś książkę z podstaw historii z obrazkami - najlepiej z mapami z wyraźnymi granicami państw z czasów wojny...😉😄😂
@historiezesnu
@historiezesnu Ай бұрын
Odpowiedź na twoje pytanie na pewno znajdziesz w Muzeum Auschwitz - Oświęcim . To miejsce zostało zachowane po to aby ludzie nigdy więcej czegoś takiego nie zrobili innym ludziom , ku przestrodze dla następnych pokoleń .
@mpingo91
@mpingo91 Ай бұрын
7:55 Rob, the goal was the same as always - domination of the continent. But to achieve it Germany needed access to raw materials - hence the desire to reach the Caucasus, so they had to move East. However, due to the existence of a whole network of alliances (in which Poland also participated) and empires of course, Germany had to deal with many countries at once, and secure itself in very remote areas, such as Africa. In any case, Poland was by no means intended to be the only conquest.
@agaw225
@agaw225 Ай бұрын
Hi Rob, during this cruel war, a lot of monstrous crimes happened in Poland. The one that shocked me, and which is difficult to comprehend with my mind, was the massacre in Wola (a district of Warsaw) committed by SSman H. Reinefarth, the butcher of Wola.... and in the link below you can see what Warsaw looked like in 1939, just before the outbreak of World War II. kzfaq.info/get/bejne/oNCgpph4rb2pl3k.htmlsi=aYT8SyDY2s0p-WV1 It was so beautiful...it was said to be the Paris of the North.
@MayaTheDecemberGirl
@MayaTheDecemberGirl Ай бұрын
Yes. Everyone should read about the Wola Massacre in August 1944, during the Warsaw Uprising (Wola is a name of one of the districts of Warsaw). Just in few days, especially between 5 and 7 August, Germans murdered there, in the most inhuman, bestial way about 50 000 of civilians, women, children, even infants, old people, patients and medical staff of few hospitals. And in the whole Warsaw Uprising they murdered 200 000 of Polish civilians. So many Germans have never been punished, at all for all these horrible acts of genocide. The best is example is the above mentioned Heinz Reinefarth, responsible as the leader of Germans troops committing genocide in Wola, for slaughtering of thousands of Polish civilians. And after the war he lived peacefully for his whole life in Germany, undisturbed by anyone, as a respected citizen. He was even for years a mayor of one of the German towns on island Sylt. He died in 1979, not being punished at all. And there were more examples like that.
@erikajasinski4633
@erikajasinski4633 Ай бұрын
That’s why we have you to help adults understand what happened . It’s a good start. The history of Roland was 11:56 tarnished It’s about time that the truth comes out Germans , Russia and Israel rewrote Polish history.
@andHAM8
@andHAM8 Ай бұрын
It was not the best film to learn about the real causes of September 1, 1339 - the German attack on Poland. The main cause of this war was "Drang nach Osten", the German philosophy of Germany's expansion to the east, into the areas of "subhumans", mainly Slavs. It started with Germany's demands to give them a strip of Polish territory in order to unite the Reich with East Prussia, which Poland could not agree to. The direct pretext for Hitler was the "Gliwice Provocation" faked by Germany.
@tomaszrydzewski4011
@tomaszrydzewski4011 Ай бұрын
My grandads were saying that russians then were thousand times worse than germans. German's topic is just more catchy today. What russians were doing back then - they're still doing the same things in Ukraine today. Pure brutal evil. It requires some effort to find out how they really are, that's why Western people don't really know anything about russians. They were much worse than germans back then and they still are the same today. If you can't imagine how it was back then - just google "butcha ukraine" - and you'll get the same pictures what russians did during wwII. Germans could be stopped in September 1939 but they got help from russians. At the beginning of wwII - they've been friends. That's why germans succeded in Poland.
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
no, I really can't look at it, I feel so sorry for them, God, now I'm crying so much... I don't think I'll finish this video...poor, modest, weak people, my compatriots, Poles, my heart hurts for them... unimaginable pain, pain for Poland... which I love more than life...and I can't look, I burst into tears when I looked at the faces of these poor, humble people... , someone give me a hug....
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
I answer your last question briefly and simply, with a quote, and I don't think need to add anything more: "It's better to know than not to know. Always". and I agree with this opinion 100% always like to know everything ;)
@januszrogowski3771
@januszrogowski3771 Ай бұрын
To był taki terror jakiego sobie nie możecie wyobrazić! Wyobrażam sobie Brytyjczykow w takiej sytuacji. To było piekło! 😢😮
@Cubus-zapasowy
@Cubus-zapasowy Ай бұрын
The casus beli was actually not getting rid of the Jews, but Pomorze. After World War 1 Pomorze was given to Poland, which divided Germany into two pieces. Hitler demanded that region and Poland said "no".
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
and it was like this: we were at the club for my brother's girlfriend's birthday... at first everything was great, and it was Saturday with music from the 80s!! well, it was really great! (I like old songs)...and...well actually...what were germans (real germans, not blacks) looking for in a Polish club? they have a lot of them in Berlin... but let's get to the point... it was great for a really long time... I was dancing close to my family and unfortunately a guy stuck to me, at first I danced with him, but then, well, he started to exaggerate, started ttalking to me in German and groping me, .. and I told him "stop", but it didn't help, so then I told him sharply in Polish, but that didn't help either... . my brother came and it started... ehhhh, I don't think need to tell you what happened next... they started fighting because they were drunk... I was terrified, now I want to laugh about it... the g erman had 3 friends. ... my 2 brothers and when other Poles heard that they were speaking german, they joined in... hahahahahahahahahahahh...... security guards came running, and then the police came, but we only got a warning../notice?
@tsubasahaneno
@tsubasahaneno Ай бұрын
I don't know how it looked in other schools and if this tradition still exist, but in last year of middle school every class in my school had a mandatory school trip to the Auschwitz Birkenau as well as the lesson when we watched and were talking about the movie "Pianist" (it traumatised me a lot to be honest. And from what I remember you couldn't really get out of thet school trip easily, I think there was some penalty if you did not go but it was longtime ago and I didn't really care about the penalty as I was going to the trip either way). I never was too keen on history, always had trouble remembering the dates but one thing that stuck with me for life was that school trip and the "Pianist" movie, making this history, that, for my still young brain, was very distant thing at that point, so much easier to imagine, or rather, engraved more in my brain, or at least engraved the enourmous sadness about what happend and fear of any type of war happening in the future. There are of course a lot of other memorial places, statues everywhere and a lot of talk in the literature classes, I believe as early as 4th year of primary school we started talking about some WWII literature, but the trip and the movie had the most impact on me personally.
@annaboczynska5601
@annaboczynska5601 Ай бұрын
History is knoking on our eastern doors. I have a feeling that you people from westen Europe dont realize how dangerous and unpredictible that situation is.
@zbigniewRabsztyn-nn9yk
@zbigniewRabsztyn-nn9yk Ай бұрын
Heinz Guderian and Semyon Krivoshein. Brest. Joint parade of the Wehrmacht and the Red Army 22/09/1939 en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Semyon_Krivoshein kzfaq.info/get/bejne/haqeprGkyKfZimw.html
@raytar75
@raytar75 Ай бұрын
On September 10, 2023, Pope Francis included the family of Józef and Wiktoria Ulma and their seven children, who were murdered on March 24, 1944 by the Germans for hiding Jews, among the blessed.
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
I'm telling you, it's not boring in Poland, there's always something interesting happening here ;)
@jerzygolec4953
@jerzygolec4953 Ай бұрын
My parents were taken by Germans from different parts of Poland to work as slaves in Germany, where they met. They returned to Poland after the war ended and got married. So I am the product of last war🙂. Greetings from Sydney.
@alh6255
@alh6255 Ай бұрын
The main reason for attacking Poland in September 1939 was that an undefeated Poland was too big and would prevent the Germans from implementing their plan to conquer Europe. The USSR would also have had problems with the conquest of Europe if Poland had remained free (contrary to Nazi-Soviet propaganda, the Polish army was not weak and was armed with quite modern weapons). Moreover, during the Polish-German war, the Poles put up much greater resistance than, for example, the French later, and the Germans had to fight heavy battles lasting many days. They lost over 120,000 soldiers and almost all their weapons during this campaign. This delayed Hitler's planned attack on France for several months because he had to produce new weapons). In 1939, it was also certain that independent Poland would help the attacked Allies. Germany and Russia divided their influence and areas to be conquered in Europe and from 1939 they implemented this plan. But first Poland had to disappear. Both countries attacked Poland and divided it between themselves. Then the USSR attacked the Baltic countries, Finland and Romania, and Germany France etc. Jews could have been the reason for the attack on Poland (or rather the fact that so many of them lived in Poland), but they didn't have to be the reason, or it was just a secondary reason. Especially since Poles helped them go to Palestine and planned to reduce the Jewish population in Poland by paying them to move out (this accelerated the construction of Jewish, Zionist settlements in Palestine in the 1930s). By the way, after winning the war campaign in the fall of 1939 in Poland, the Germans were not particularly interested in Polish Jews, they did not create ghettos and did not hunt them in the streets. First, they started eliminating Poles who could support the Polish nation in terms of education, promoting Polish identity or fighting the enemy. So they started by killing representatives of the Polish intelligentsia, e.g. in 1939 they sent all professors of the Jagiellonian University to concentration camps in Germany, mass murdered teachers, priests, social activists, politicians, writers, etc. It was only in 1940 that they started persecuting Jews. The Soviets did the same to Poles in the part of Poland occupied by the USSR - they hunted teachers, priests, politicians and, in addition, Polish entrepreneurs. At the same time, they sent above 2,5 million Polish peasants and their families to work in the Far East-North, starting actions to eliminate the Polish population in the areas occupied by the USSR. This action took place around Christmas in 1939. Poles traveled for weeks in 40-degree frost in crowded, unheated cattle wagons, with only a small amount of luggage that they were allowed to take with them. Half died on the way, many also died after arriving in Kazakhstan or Siberia in labor camps. Stalin hated Poles and was afraid of them. He hated them because he lost to the Poles in 1920 near Lviv and showed a lack of any command skills there). And he was afraid of the Poles, because even the Polish communists were mentally independent and were not as focused on Russia as the communists in France or Italy. Moreover, Polish society, incl. peasants and workers, was completely resistant to soviet propaganda.
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
Jesus, I knew it would be like this... I listened to it, saw photos of these poor, oppressed people and I really cried... (unfortunately, I get emotional and cry too often), my heart ached when I looked at these Poles....God
@ladycatherine1381
@ladycatherine1381 Ай бұрын
Rob, if you will be next time in Warsaw, go to Pollin Museum. Then you will have all information about Jews in Poland.
@Mega3iD
@Mega3iD Ай бұрын
yeah my grandmother told me that she used to work in factory for 12h a day and saw bags and other stuff for germans also she saw killing polish partisants as a young girl... hard life she had I hope germans understads what they done but russians don't
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
Rob, you really like an orderly, stable, safe life... then you feel happy, you don't like changes... you like to have control over your life... I'm not afraid that there will suddenly be no electricity or I will be poor. Either I will have to leave the country, and move to a foreign country.. Life is life, its unpredictable... and I know that there is always a way out of every situation, and God is with me,I'm not afraid of changes, life is an adventure....
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
Could you ever say "better butter?":) meaning in Polish "lepsze masło" :D:D..."comprehendable"(I don't think this word exist in english ,well done, you just invented a new word !:P gratulations!;d)rather it should be "comprehensible'' or "incomprehensible".....
@qmbaplstark7920
@qmbaplstark7920 Ай бұрын
I Think u would love to Watch „sensacje XX wieku” by Bogusław Wołoszański. He is guru figure in Poland in terms of History of the last century. It’s well directed with real actors and nice kind journalist plot twist.
@qmbaplstark7920
@qmbaplstark7920 Ай бұрын
By the way you would be FIRST foreigner who would have a reaction to it on you tube.
@SLAWXP1
@SLAWXP1 Ай бұрын
I'm not sure if coloring original films and photos from World War 2 will help make today's youth and future generations want to know more about these terrible times and cruel war, maybe mandatory trips from schools throughout Europe and other parts of the world to the Auswitz Birkenau concentration camp.
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 Ай бұрын
I think colourising just makes it more relatable. But yes, I agree certainly more trips to see these places
@piotrteper8852
@piotrteper8852 Ай бұрын
​@@RobReacts1Poznanie grozy niemiecko sowieckiej okupacji tylko przez pryzmat wycieczek do Auschwitz to relatywizowanie okupacji przez pryzmat zagłady Żydów i to jest ,,standart zachodni,,a wystarczy pojechać np .w okolice Kielc,Końskich ,Włoszczowej ,Bodzentyna ,Opoczna i ponad 800 polskich miejscowości i wsi spacyfikowanych przez niemców i austryjaków i wymordowania ich mieszkańców tylko dlatego że byli Polakami i przeciwstawiali się terrorowi organizując i pomagając walczącym ,do mordów Niemcy stworzyli specjalny 1 zmotoryzowany batalion żandarmerii SS złożony z byłych policjantów niemieckich i austriackich ...na zachodzie znają francuskie Oradur i czeskie Lidice a czy są w stanie wymienić choć nazwę jednej spacyfikowanie wsi w Polsce ,a byłyich setki a ofiary to setki tysięcy mężczyzn ,kobiet i dzieci .
@pawepiekarz4628
@pawepiekarz4628 Ай бұрын
Żeby sobie to wyobrazić wystarczy zapoznać się z historią rodziny Ulmów. 9 osób w tym nienarodzone dziecko zabici za pomoc i ukrywanie żydów. A to nie jest odosobniona historia. kzfaq.info/get/bejne/fap2n89esri6qoU.html
@agnieszka7231
@agnieszka7231 Ай бұрын
Adolf Hitler continued Bismark's policy towards Poland and Poles. Otto von Bismarck wrote about the Poles in 1861: "Beat the Poles until they lose faith in the meaning of life; I sympathize with their situation, but if we want to survive, we can do nothing else but exterminate them." He added some of his "ideas" there - German propaganda claimed that Slavs come from the word slave, so we are basically subhuman. After the outbreak of the war, all professors and researchers at universities were arrested and transported to camps. If it weren't for the international protests, everyone would probably have been shot. Poland suffered the greatest human losses in percentage terms. During World War II, 1/5 of the population died. My great-grandfather was shot by the Gestapo, my great-grandmother died in Auschwitz, my grandfather survived a German labor camp - Poles are a society that still has the trauma of World War II.
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
why did everyone always want to attack and destroy Poland? Why? what have we done so wrong? and why did everyone always betray Poland? and why, despite all this, are we still so hospitable and helpful to others?tell me
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
However, I am not as strong as I thought😥😰😢😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
Robciu, zaraz lato, idzie weekend, zapodaj coś śmiesznego,będziemy rozważać różne trudne rzeczy w jesień i zimę,a teraz ciesz się ze słońca tak jak ty to lubisz :)Robcio, summer is coming soon, the weekend is coming, tell us something funny, we will consider various difficult things in autumn and winter, now enjoy the sun the way you like it :)BECAUSE i know you really like the sun :-)
@flashlightbeam3487
@flashlightbeam3487 Ай бұрын
Rob, please give Us update - how is Your Wife, after vodka test?
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 Ай бұрын
Haha she was fine. She went straight to bed but no hangover
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
Im VERY sensitive ,I dont need to continue.......I can not look at this...
@erikajasinski4633
@erikajasinski4633 Ай бұрын
British what about the Polish air fighters that saved you and later you arrested them. Horrible nation .
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
Mam w dupie takie imprezy,już nigdzie nie chodzę,dupa....ehh
@erikajasinski4633
@erikajasinski4633 Ай бұрын
You as a nation should be embarrassed
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 Ай бұрын
Erm... Excuse me...
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
eeee eeeeee nice,..... "very nice Fletcher"-quote from the movie "liar liar" with jim carrey
@erikajasinski4633
@erikajasinski4633 Ай бұрын
Yes British and USA what you did to Poland
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 Ай бұрын
@@erikajasinski4633 should German children of today feel guilty for what their great grandparents did?
@maciekszymanski8340
@maciekszymanski8340 Ай бұрын
@@RobReacts1 11. Thee will ignore idiots.
@humandisorder3962
@humandisorder3962 Ай бұрын
Mr Rob. There is no need to dig this grave. We're ok with Germany. But we're not ok with ruSSia...
@RobReacts1
@RobReacts1 Ай бұрын
You are missing the point
@Evelyn_8888
@Evelyn_8888 Ай бұрын
you better go take an iq test
@radek888
@radek888 Ай бұрын
Hi Rob, for reference, in case you want to understand Gremans approach to Poles and other eastern Slaves (Nazi-german wording: untermenschen), pls look at German official document call 'Generalplan Ost' accepted by the office of Reich Chancellor in 1942... (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Generalplan_Ost)
@orlenc8142
@orlenc8142 Ай бұрын
My great-grandfather defended Westerplatte
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