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We'll Meet Again In Heaven

  Рет қаралды 29,641

Prairie Public

Prairie Public

Күн бұрын

This thirty minute documentary is a searing chronicle of a forgotten genocide and a lost people, whose "... misery screams to the heavens." The lost people are the ethnic German minority living in Soviet Ukraine, who wrote their American relatives about the starvation, forced labor, and execution that were almost daily fare in Soviet Ukraine during this period, 1928‑1938.
We'll Meet Again in Heaven is part detective‑story, part historical research, and part travelogue. Narrator and scholar Ron Vossler guides the viewer from the small North Dakota town where he found the first letter, down the "blood‑dark corridor of ethnic history" to former German villages in Ukraine and Moldova that were the source of numerous immigrants to the American prairie frontier.
Based on a decade of research, including on‑location footage in Ukraine and Moldova, this film draws upon hundreds of personal letters, written from German villages in Ukraine to the Dakotas, and brought to public attention for the first time. These wrenching personal letters, along with compelling survivor interviews, detail an odyssey of hunger and destruction in Soviet Ukraine. Noted historian Robert Conquest, author of Harvest of Sorrow, has called these letters "...virtually the only absolutely contemporary first‑hand testimony from those actually suffering the famine as they wrote."
Villagers weep " ... hundreds of thousands of gallons of tears, tears, tears." People kill themselves; forced into cattle cars for almost certain death in Siberia, their children taken from them, parents tear the hair from their heads in grief. At night, the regime's secret police gather victims. During the day, collective leaders threaten villagers with starvation and execution if grain quotas aren't met.
This documentary, with its focus on the treatment of the ethnic German minority, helps clarify the Soviet regime's intent to solve aspects of its nationalities problem with depopulation and ethnic cleansing, and also to punish with starvation and forced labor the small landholders in Ukraine for resisting collectivization.
Major funding by the Germans from Russia Heritage Collection, North Dakota State University Libraries, Fargo, North Dakota.
The documentary was produced in partnership with Roadshow Productions and premiered in 2006.

Пікірлер: 52
@pktucson
@pktucson 4 жыл бұрын
Shocked to see my grandfather and his brother interviewed in this documentary. Both are now dead. I never knew they were filmed! Very consistent with the stories I was told by these men, both of whom spent many years in Siberia and are among the few who survived.
@cindykammerzell3937
@cindykammerzell3937 Жыл бұрын
I probably found out within the last year, what happened to my people. I just couldn’t believe it. It was sure kept quiet. Blessings to you and your family. 🙏❤️
@cindykammerzell3937
@cindykammerzell3937 Жыл бұрын
By the way, I was raised Lutheran. At least as a child. It’s really nice to see the roots of my family. Very interesting that you saw your grandfather and his brother. 🙏❤️
@hartz1696
@hartz1696 4 жыл бұрын
My mother -in-law grew up and lived in Bessarabia. Their family ended up in Kazakstan until 1958. Now they/we live in Canada. She told me a lot, but not all. It was too painful, i guess. How cruel mankind can be. When will we fall on our knees and cry out to God? How soon all this is forgotten and the same mistakes are made. How soon we forget God for the "good times" we want to enjoy, the sins we want to enjoy. Please God, open our hearts and our minds so we see the light!
@AmericanWoman1964
@AmericanWoman1964 4 жыл бұрын
Gosh I feel like there is so much more to be told.. more stories.. as grateful I am for this treasure... I wish it was more in-depth. What a necessary part of international and domestic history.
@cindykammerzell3937
@cindykammerzell3937 Жыл бұрын
I’m a Volgan German. I recently found out what happened to my people. I wish I could talk to my grandparents about it. 🙏❤️
@colbychambers9638
@colbychambers9638 6 жыл бұрын
My great-grandparents immigrated to the Dakotas from the Black Sea/Ukraine area in 1889, with their parents, my great-grandfather Markus Imberi from Kleinliebental and my great-grandmother Katharina Streifel from Strassburg. They lived in Hillsview, SD and later Hosmer. Thank you and God bless you for preserving this history.
@nataliesablowski8513
@nataliesablowski8513 4 жыл бұрын
my grand grandfather was deported in September 1941 from Dnepropetrovsk to the Gulag Ivdal and died there in December the same year. His wife and my grandmother and grandfather were transported to Kazakhstan.
@kassymiller5683
@kassymiller5683 3 жыл бұрын
My grandfather was just taken at night by local authorities in 1933 and was killed with no court and my grandmother left at the age of 28 with 4 children alone. So many stories from my own family of suffer from the Soviet regime.. I was told that the ancestors were originally from Holland. They lived in Nikolayevka, Siberia, former Soviet Union.
@mdefeo
@mdefeo 4 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this moving tale. My Bessarabian grandmother moved to Canada, and I have no idea if she left cousins in the old country. Still, my heart weeps for them.
@GavinJGallagher
@GavinJGallagher 2 жыл бұрын
Terrific documentary - this story fascinates me because I am sure it is in some way connected to my wife’s grandmother whom I am trying to trace - she left her newborn baby daughter (born 1944) at the front door of the fathers Ukrainian parents with a note. They were living in Grigoriopol at the time which is a short distance from Glückstal and Neudorf. Her parents relationship remains a complete mystery to us because it was a forbidden love between a German woman and a Russian man during WW2. He was sent off the Berlin front in 1944 so didn’t know he even had a daughter until he returned to Grigoriopol in 1946. He never spoke of her mother again and we suspect it was for fear of being accused of being a spy for Germany whilst being a solder in the Red Army! Stalin at the time was not known for leniency around this kind of thing. So many of the people speaking in this documentary have surnames that show up in DNA matches.
@car-less-ness6770
@car-less-ness6770 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for sharing this true story about the fate of my ancestors. To know the truth helps us to understand the actions of the survivors in Canada and especially in the USA how these people suffered and survived. And, oh how the wrath of God will destroy the oppressors if not in this world but in the eternal world, for the cruelty they imposed on these innocent humans. The Natives in Canada did suffer but so did many others. Let us not forget.
@user-it5wt8sj5y
@user-it5wt8sj5y 7 ай бұрын
So beautifully written. My ancestors, German, came from Poland. My father fought on the Russian Front. They came to Canada (Saskatchewan) after the war and had me late in life. I was born in Canada....just turned 65. My father was a "Meister Schlosser" (blacksmith, machinists, master of). They acquired International Harvester Dealership. We spoke German, and I still do. Polish was also spoken. I just know how to cook and a few sentences. I find this documentary fascinating. Different area, yet very familiar. This war has made me research obsessively... about history. KZfaq is amazing. You have done an amazing job with this documentary. I have saved it. Thank you, and God bless you, and your family.❤
@KK-li1lw
@KK-li1lw 4 жыл бұрын
This was very well done, thank you for sharing. Helped me understand my ancestors better
@hollygrosshans3529
@hollygrosshans3529 2 жыл бұрын
My grandfather was born in Friedenstahl, Bessarabia (now Ukraine) and his family came to America in1910 because they could see what was coming. I thank God every day that they made that sacrifice (moving to an unknown place with nothing and new language and way of life) so their descendants would have a better life. So much suffering it’s unbearable. 😞
@sandrasharp2934
@sandrasharp2934 2 жыл бұрын
I feel the same way! Unbelievable that some had the insight/ foresight to emigrate. My ancestors came to U.S late 1800's and first decade of 1900. I always thought they were fortunate to have left before WWI, because they would have been drafted and sent to front lines. Now I listen to this and am made aware of the plight of those who stayed and survived that war. Lenin, Stalin and socialism are evil. Sent to Siberia to be worked and starved to death.. what tragedy man inflicts on his fellow men!
@mcc.o.4835
@mcc.o.4835 2 жыл бұрын
I give thanks to my ancestors for their sacrifice in coming to America.
@LisaNH934
@LisaNH934 Жыл бұрын
@boconnor401 yes they were
@joycieann1
@joycieann1 4 жыл бұрын
This is just soooo sad. It brought tears to my eyes. My heart aches for all these people.
@terrimcwilliams852
@terrimcwilliams852 3 жыл бұрын
My great grandparents came in 1908 from Neu freudental colony in Ukraine to North Dakota. Thank you for sharing.
@jessicafleck4700
@jessicafleck4700 Жыл бұрын
My family is from Odessa Ukraine and immigrated to Mandan, North Dakota. I will never fully understand the horrors of what they went through.
@mcc.o.4835
@mcc.o.4835 2 жыл бұрын
I'm a decendent of German Russians that settled in South Dakota in 1888. I am currently reading The Gulag Archipelago by Alexsandr Solzhenitsyn where he talks about the persecution of the German Russians under Stalin. I was completely shocked learning about this history. Almost by accident and not really knowing the historical significance I've have gotten involved in sending money to organizations in Ukraine these past weeks during Putin's war. To think my ancestors likely did something similar. This feels like Deja Vu.
@funsweed
@funsweed 4 жыл бұрын
That is where my Dad came from , settled in Alberta ,Canada , farmed
@williamb-b7440
@williamb-b7440 4 ай бұрын
my great great great grandparents were mennonite germans from dinpro ukraine. they were deported in 1941 to "limenda" witch refers to a specific type of labor in a camp in archengelsk. and my great great grandfather died in 1919 due to tb from forced farm work. such a sad sad history we share. i pray that with time the generantial curse the old homeland has brought us has healed and we can move on. in jesus name!
@fundsapache6816
@fundsapache6816 Жыл бұрын
All we can hope is that the faith-filled, courageous Germans from Russia are in Heaven, and Stalin is where all communists belong.
@monida55
@monida55 7 жыл бұрын
If possible, please add closed captions for the hearing impaired. Thank you.
@harrisonhaverly3516
@harrisonhaverly3516 4 жыл бұрын
Try using a video translation website (votch.tv or another one)
@LisaNH934
@LisaNH934 Жыл бұрын
Added 👍
@user-pp5ri9dq4y
@user-pp5ri9dq4y 7 ай бұрын
The song that the man is singing at the end of the video is an old rUSSIAN folk song, the ethnic Germans must have made their own lyrics, very interesting
@mrnarason
@mrnarason 2 жыл бұрын
RIP
@LisaNH934
@LisaNH934 Жыл бұрын
💙💛🙏💙💛
@gabryellopes1389
@gabryellopes1389 4 жыл бұрын
Please Subtitle this vídeo!
@Odo55
@Odo55 4 жыл бұрын
If it was so " prosperous " then why did they leave ?
@Odo55
@Odo55 4 жыл бұрын
@Eeee Gggg Thanks- that is a good response. Prosperous is how the narrator described their home country but it doesn't mean they were prosperous I reckon. I do alot of genealogy studies and surmise that's the motivating factor plus the frequent wars and conscription. Yes, they often saw what was coming and left if at all economically feasible.
@fundsapache6816
@fundsapache6816 Жыл бұрын
You skipped European history 101.
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