National Monument to those Killed and Murdered in the East in Warsaw, Poland
Beginning point of the rail line leading out of Warsaw, Poland.
[Poland] Terror of the Soviet Union
This video will focus on the soviet terror in Poland. After the Polish-Soviet War the borders of the Second Polish Republic and the Soviet Union were established. In 1939 the nazis and the soviets signed the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact. According to this pact spheres of influence were decided. In September 1939 Nazi Germany invaded Poland from the west (operation Fall Weiss / Case White) and the Soviet Union marched in from the east. The two totalitarian states carved up the Second Polish Republic. Poland was no more since the eastern areas were annexed by the Stalins soviet republics: Lithuania, Belarus and Ukraine. Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin unleashed a mass scale purge on the newly acquired territories. Polish citizens were deported or shot. Many of them perished in the gulag. Most infamous was the Katyn Massacre where the soviet secret service, the NKVD, executed over 22.000 Polish army officers and intelligentsia. In June 1941 Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union (Operation Barbarossa). Another soviet crime committed were the NKVD prison massacres where the soviet secret service executed all prisoners before retreating. When the nazis were pushed back by the soviets the Poles suffered once again under the regime of their former occupier.
This history on location was filmed on 2nd of May 2018 in Warsaw, Poland. In front of the Monument to the Fallen and Murdered in the East (Pomnik Poległym i Pomordowanym
na Wschodzie).
Images from commons.wikimedia.org
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Poland Desecrates Monuments to Fallen Soldiers
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Our special correspondent Maxim Kiselev is now in Warsaw. He looked more attentively at the processes inside the exemplary country. At the legislative level, Poland is now destroying monuments dedicated to Soviet soldiers, who died on its territory in the fight against fascism. The Polish Sejm made the decision on June 22.
The Warsaw Uprising - The Unstoppable Spirit of the Polish Resistance - Extra History
Thanks to the Polish National Foundation for sponsoring this video.
The Polish are determined to make Poland matter on the world stage, and they will not wait for whatever mercies may come from the Russians. So the Home Army stages their own uprising to liberate Warsaw, and for some 60-odd days, their strongest members, the Grey Ranks, tragically held steadfast.
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Countdown
“Generations Remember 2016” Congress & Conference
17-19 September 2016, in Warsaw, Poland
The Kresy-Siberia Foundation invites you to its “Generations Remember 2016 Congress and Conference to be held in Warsaw, Poland on 17-19 September 2016.
The event marks the 75th anniversary of the World War II amnesty and release of Poles from Soviet captivity, and will be an opportunity to meet living witnesses of those events and descendants of “Sybiraks”, “Kresowians” and “Combatants-in-exile” from all over the world. World War II’s tragic events, in particular Soviet, German and nationalist Ukrainian forces, brought their families tragic fates – loss of property, arrests, massacres, deportations, exile, fighting in armed forces in exile – and then building a new life, uprooted from their lost homeland.
This year’s event is organized by the Kresy-Siberia Foundation, jointly with the Association of Siberian Deportees, the History Meeting House and the Katyn Museum, with the financial support of Poland’s Office for War Veterans and Victims of Oppression. The opening reception’s keynote speaker will be Polish Senator Anna Maria Anders, daughter of the Armed Forces-in-exile’s General Władysław Anders. The closing event will be a “Kresy” Dinner Feast with traditional music, food and drink.
Congress and conference participants will take part in:
• Commemorative masses;
• The “Generations Remember” March from the Monument of the Battle of Monte Cassino to ceremonies at the Monument of the Fallen and Murdered in the East;
• National Police Orchestra and a Kresy folklore group concerts;
• A visit to the new Katyn Museum in the Warsaw Citadel;
• Poland-Diaspora initiatives to preserve and promote our history;
• Presentations by speakers from Poland and around the world;
• Film, poetry and prose presentations by their creators.
Register at GenerationsRemember.org
We look forward to seeing you!
Contact:
Stefan Wiśniowski, President, Kresy-Siberia Foundation
Foundation@Kresy-Syberia.org. Tel +48 (22) 211 8888
CZAS UCIEKA – ZAPRASZAMY! PamięćPokoleń.org
The Volyn Tragedy. The Poles Still Weep
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Poland celebrates the National Remembrance Day of the Volyn tragedy victims for the first time at the state level. On July 11, 1943 the detachments of Ukrainian nationalists attacked 150 Polish villages at once in Volyn, massacring 100,000 people. A year ago, the Polish Sejm called the Volyn massacre a genocide and urged Kiev not to turn the killing squads into heroes. Verkhovnaya Rada criticized this decision. Memorial actions under the slogan Stop, Bandera! are taking place these days throughout Poland. Marina Naumova has the details.
Warsaw 2008
This is some of the footage that I collected for my film Sights and Sounds of the Mysterious Side of Myself. My father and I spent two full days in Warszawa and this is some of the footage I collected.
Western Poland (#12): Raclawice Panorama
Wroclaw (German: Breslau) is the chief city of the historical region of Silesia in southwestern Poland, situated on the Oder (Polish: Odra) river. Over the centuries, the city has been part of Poland, Bohemia, Austria, Prussia, and Germany. According to official population figures for 2006, its population is 635,280, making it the fourth largest city in Poland.
For most of World War II, the fighting did not affect Breslau. As the war lengthened, refugees from bombed-out German cities, and later refugees from farther east, swelled the population to nearly one million. In February 1945, the Soviet Red Army approached the city. Gauleiter Karl Hanke declared the city a Festung (fortress) to be held at all costs. Hanke finally lifted a ban on the evacuation of women and children when it was almost too late. During his poorly organized evacuation in early March 1945, 18,000 people froze to death in icy snowstorms and -20°C weather. By the end of the Siege of Breslau, half the city had been destroyed. An estimated 40,000 civilians lay dead in the ruins of homes and factories. After a siege of nearly three months, Fortress Breslau surrendered on 7 May 1945, just before the end of the war.
Along with almost all of Lower Silesia, Breslau nominally became part of Poland under the terms of the Potsdam Conference. Between 1945 and 1949, most remaining native German inhabitants fled or were forcibly expelled from Wroclaw. Most of them arrived in one of the Allied Occupation Zones in Germany. A considerable German presence remained until the late 1950s; the city's last German school closed in 1963. The population was dramatically increased by government resettlement of Poles during postwar population transfers (75%) as well as during the forced deportations from Polish lands annexed by the Soviet Union in the east region.
The Raclawice Panorama (Polish: Panorama Raclawicka) is a monumental (15 × 120 meter) panoramic painting depicting the Battle of Raclawice, during the Kosciuszko Uprising. It is currently located in Wroclaw, Poland. The painting is one of only a few preserved relics of a genre of 19th century mass culture, and the oldest in Poland. The panorama stands in a circular fashion and, with the viewer in the center, presents different scenes at various viewing angles. A special kind of perspective used in the painting and additional effects (lighting, artificial terrain) create a feeling of reality.
History ... The idea came from the painter Jan Styka (1858 -- 1925) in Lwów (Lvov) who invited the renowned battle-painter Wojciech Kossak (1857 -- 1942) to participate in the project. They were assisted by Ludwik Boller, Tadeusz Popiel, Zygmunt Rozwadowski, Teodor Axentowicz, Wlodzimierz Tetmajer, Wincenty Wodzinowski and Michal Sozanski.
The project was conceived as a patriotic manifestation commemorating the 100th anniversary of the victorious Battle of Raclawice, a famous episode of the Kosciuszko Insurrection, a heroic but in the end fallen attempt to defend Polish independence.
The battle was fought on April 4, 1794 between the insurrectionist force of regulars and peasant volunteers (awesome scythe-bearers) under Kosciuszko (1746 -- 1817) himself and the Russian army commanded by General Alexander Tormasov. For the nation which had lost its independence, the memory of this glorious victory was particularly important.
Campaigners hope to restore destroyed Stalin monument
(19 Oct 2018) LEADIN
A full size monument to Stalin might soon appear in a small town in the middle of Russia.
Local activists are determined to restore it using fragments of the original found in a local pond.
STORYLINE
The watery resting place of Joseph Stalin's shattered statue, in the Russian town of Kusa.
But if one resident has his way, Kusa might once more have the monument to the former Soviet leader standing tall in public like it used to do 70 years ago.
Remains of the statue were found back in August as repair works to a local dam caused the water levels in the city's pond to shrink by three meters.
As a result, three fragments of the statue were found. It's thought they might have been in the water for some 50 years.
The statue's made of concrete, with some metal inside. It was originally painted white on the outside.
Stanislav Stafeev, from Essence of Time, is keen to restore the statue to its former glory. The Essence of Time movement was founded in 2011. Its ideology is a mixture of Russian patriotism and communism.
The only missing part of the statue is Stalin's arm, but Stafeev believes it won't be a problem to restore it, as the rest of the parts are in good shape.
However, he's had to keep the statue under lock and key, worried that the local authorities might claim it.
When all three parts were transferred to a private territory, local authorities began to claim them. In order to get them up, they invited the police department, invited the local newspaper Life of the Region, started putting pressure on me through this newspaper, invited up deputies of the Regional Assembly, who began to express the opinion that I must pass these fragments to the city, that is, the confrontation began, he says.
The local authorities believe the Stalin statue belongs to the state, as Viktor Penyagin, Head of Kusa municipal region explains: The citizen Stafeev took the initiative, I believe that he did it illegally, since everything that stood on the territory of the region, on the territory of the state, and there is a fact that it was put up by the state and belonged to the state before, although there are no documents on this, then later it should be used by the state too.
The statue is typical of the kind that that once stood in almost every Soviet city, during Stalin's reign of terror from 1924 until his death in 1953.
In 1956 Nikita Khruschev denounced the personality cult of Stalin, which led to the mass destruction of such statues.
Rostovtseva explains that most likely the Kusa monument was also destroyed under the cover of the night: In the museum funds there are no documents confirming the dismantling, but presumably in the year between 1956 and 1958, when the monument was located at the shore in the city park, during night time the monument was dismantled and thrown into the city pond, into the ice hole.
The local authorities say they are now happy for the monument to be restored and possibly returned to the city park, where it would have originally stood.
It's a move that some locals aren't happy about.
Yevgeny Zubov, says I am telling you straight away that my view is very negative about it, let it lie about there, and don't you even pull it out (of the pond).
While Lina Mityusheva, disagrees: It's history, and it is not a bad history. Some say, well, older generation say that there was discipline, young generation, of course, think completely differently about it now. I think it's worth it, I am for the restoration.
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Polish nationalists oppose closer ties to Ukraine
(7 Jul 2016) As the Polish capital of Warsaw prepares to host a NATO summit for the first time since the country joined the military alliance in 1999, nationalists have taken to the streets to oppose ever-closer ties to Ukraine.
On the eve of the summit, a group of nationalist protesters marched past the Presidential Palace carrying the Polish flag and banners.
Warsaw supports Ukraine's pro-democracy and pro-European forces, and the summit will host a meeting regarding forging closer ties alongside Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko.
Others have taken to shooting ranges in the aftermath of Russia's annexation of Ukraine's Crimean Peninsula in 2014 and its subsequent backing of separatists in the country's east.
Poland and the Baltic states of Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia - former Soviet republics now in NATO - worried they could be next.
Robert Mikrut, a board member of the United Shooting Club in Warsaw, said people began appearing in mass numbers since then.
We see that whole families come, parents bring children, couples come, we have more and more women shooters.
Many feel that the summit marks a turning point for Poland, not only due to the clout that comes with hosting the summit, but more importantly because the alliance will finalise plans to deploy four reinforced multinational battalions to Poland and the Baltic states.
NATO is planning the deployments to counter what it sees as mounting Russian aggression.
Poland has a long, tortured history with Russia.
Three years after a war against Russia in 1792, Poland was partitioned by Russia, Austria and Prussia and wiped off the map for the next 123 years.
Poland regained its independence after World War I, but this was short-lived, as the country was conquered and divided again in 1939, this time by Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union.
After the war, Poland ended up a Soviet satellite state until 1989.
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EKSKLUZIVNO ZA HELMCAST - Rodoljub Roki Vulović: Moramo sačuvati Republiku Srpsku! (ENG SUB)
Gost u našoj novoj emisiji je bio Rodoljub Roki Vulović, muzičar i tekstopisac iz Bijeljine, muzička ratna legenda devedesetih, koji je proslavio Vojsku Republike Srpske, Gardu Pantere i brojne druge aktere odbrambeno-otadžbinskog rata u BiH.
Ovo je prvi dugometražni intervju sa njim, na srpskom jeziku, a za njegove fanove širom sveta obezbeđeni su engleski titlovi.
This is the first long-running with Roki Vulović, recorded on Monday 6th of November, in Roki's apartment in Bjeljina.
English sub's are availabe.
Prevod i adaptacija - Sergej radan
Аутор и Водитељ Никола Јовић
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HelmCast - Helm Cast - Родољуб Роки Вуловић
Museum for Soviet Monuments: Kyiv administration finds new home for remainders of communist past
A museum for all of the taken-down Soviet monuments.
The statues and memorabilia that were removed from Kyiv streets will now be stored at one of the lots at Zhulyany international airport.
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POLAND: FEARS THAT BELZEC WWII NAZI DEATH CAMP MAYBE FORGOTTEN
German/Eng/Nat
The names Auschwitz and Birkenau are infamous as Nazi death camps, but there are fears that other less well-known sites are becoming forgotten.
In southeastern Poland, one camp, Belzec, has already fallen into decay, despite nearly one (m) million Jews having perished there.
Archaeologists and locals say that if something isn't done soon, one of the world's worst atrocities may become little more than a distant memory.
A simple metal gate with the dates 1942-1943 marks the entrance to what seems little more than an overgrown field.
But this is the site of the Belzec death camp where the Nazis first used gas chambers and where at least 600-thousand Jews were murdered.
Despite its historical significance, the camp has been left to rot.
For the past year a team of archaeologists and historians have been carrying out excavations and research at the site.
They believe Belzec has had less attention than better known camps like Auschwitz because of its remote location next to the Ukraine border.
SOUNDBITE: (English)
Belzec was in the middle of nowhere. No one came through Belzec. There were almost no visitors here unless someone had a special reason for coming. And slowly it just became totally forgotten.
SUPER CAPTION: Michael Tregenza, Amateur historian
The camp is unprotected by fences, and locals can bicycle across it, damaging what little remains.
The only real monument at the camp is a stern Soviet memorial that barely mentions what happened here.
But a few visitors do make the trip all the way to Belzec.
This man expected the camp to be run down, although he was still amazed by the degree of its decline.
SOUNDBITE: (German)
I was shocked by the current condition of the camp, but I also
expected it because I know the camp is not well-known. There are more famous camps and the lesser-known ones receive less care. So I was not surprised but still shaken.
SUPER CAPTION: Johannes Piskorz, Germany visitor
But this could soon change.
When the Polish Prime Minister, Jerzy Buzek was in Washington in early July he promised Jewish organisations a proper memorial would be set up.
The Polish government says avoiding talk of the Holocaust is an unfortunate legacy of Communism.
SOUNDBITE: (Polish)
For years in Communist Poland you couldn't speak about the
truth of what really happened in these camps. There was a different
philosophy about how to commemorate such places. It was guided by narrow political interests. Today this has changed. Today we can speak impartially and freely about these matters.
SUPER CAPTION: Andrzej Przewoznik, Government Memorial Council
And those who live in Belzec also welcome a new memorial at the camp.
Nearly everyone who lived here during the war was associated with the camp in one way or another.
Many were used as forced labourers, like 78-year old Bronislaw Czachur, a carpenter who helped make barracks at the camp.
He says the town should repair it.
SOUNDBITE: (Polish)
There should be a memorial to commemorate what happened there.
Now it is in ruins. Nothing is there to remind people what happened.
SUPER CAPTION: Bronislaw Czachur, Retired carpenter)
But for the time being, this grassy field is the final resting place for hundreds of thousands of victims of the Holocaust.
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Poland: ‘Red Army monument should be protected' says protester
M/S Anti-dismantling protester Jerzy Tyc standing on the monument
SOT Jerzy Tyc, anti-dismantling protester, (Polish): This is a monument for the soldiers who liberated my homeland, my country, my family, from fascism. Therefore it is obvious to me that we should protect it.
M/S Protester with banner
W/S Protester with banner
W/S Monument to Soviet soldiers being fenced off
M/S Monument to Soviet soldiers being fenced off
W/S Polish police
C/U Police police sign
SOT, Anti-monument protester (Polish): The fact that this sort of monument stands in the city centre offends the memory our victims. Victims of Siberia, victims of exile, [and] those murdered with a shot in the back of their head.
W/S Police standing by police car
W/S Police by police car and public passers by
C/U Woman singing
M/S Protesters singing
C/U Man singing
W/S Protesters against the monument
SCRIPT
Some 200 people protested in Nowy Sacz, Sunday to demand the removal of a monument dedicated to Soviet soldiers who fought against Nazi Germany during WWII. Another protester was seen with a Russian flag, calling for the preservation of the monument on the basis that it was Soviet soldiers who liberated Poland from the Nazis. The monument was fenced off and guarded by police over fears it could be attacked.
Jerzy Gwizdz, the deputy president of Nowy Sacz, took the decision to remove all Soviet symbols from the historic monument after consultations with the president and governor of Malopolska. The governor announced that the transfer of remains of the fallen Red Army soldiers is planned for spring 2015.
The bas-relief of Soviet soldiers is due to be removed from the main pedestal and the inscriptions on all four corners will be filled in. The removed Soviet symbols will be transferred to the District Museum in Nowy Sacz.
Poland: Police remove counter-protesters as nationalists march through Radom
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Polish nationalists marched through the city of Radom on Saturday on the anniversary of anti-communist rallies in 1976.
A group of counter-protesters attempted to block the march through a sit-down demonstration, but were removed by police officers.
After the march, the demonstrators laid flowers at a monument to events of June, 1976 and sang the Polish national anthem.
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Russia: Muscovites remember anniversary of Nazi invasion
Video ID: 20140622-015
W/S Soldiers marching with flowers
M/S Soldiers marching with flowers
M/S Eternal flame burning
C/U Eternal flame burning
W/S People watching ceremony, holding flowers
W/S Soldiers laying flower wreaths at Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
M/S Youth watching ceremony, holding flowers
M/S People laying flowers at Tomb of the Unknown Soldier
C/U Flowers, candles
M/S People waiting to be served food
M/S Man serving food
M/S Women eating
W/S People on top of T-34 tank
M/S People on top of T-34 tank
M/S People inside military vehicle
M/S Woman in military uniform
W/S Stage, couple dancing
M/S Couple dancing
M/S Child watching show
W/S People watching show
W/S Bolotnaya Embankment
SCRIPT
Around 2,000 people took part in the 20th Memory Watch: Eternal Flame patriotic event in Moscow on Sunday, to celebrate the victims of the Axis forces' invasion of the Soviet Union in World War II.
The ceremony took off from Bolotnaya Square on Saturday evening, where the atmosphere of the days preceding the 1941 invasion was recreated with dramatised performances. Participants then marched on Alexander Garden, where a recording of the war acknowledgement by Soviet radio announcer Yury Levitan was aired.
A minutes silence ensued, with veterans, city government representatives and members of public organisations laying flowers at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
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Germany: Berlin remembers V-Day at Soviet War Memorial
People gathered at the Soviet War Memorial in Berlin's Treptower Park on Wednesday to commemorate the 73rd anniversary of Victory Day.
Visitors laid flowers in the upper part of the memorial to commemorate the fallen soldiers and victims of World War II.
Victory Day marks the capitulation of Nazi Germany to the Soviet Union at the end of Second World War in 1945, known in Russia as the Great Patriotic War. Roughly 80,000 Red Army soldiers died in the Battle of Berlin.
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Changing of the guards by the Yizkor Candle at the Kotel, Yom Hazikaron 2013
A flame is lit and guarded throughout Yom Hazikaron, Israel's memorial day for fallen soldiers and those who were killed in terror attacks.
Ukraine wants communism
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UK PM May lays wreath at US cemetery
(27 Jan 2017) British Prime Minister Theresa May has laid a wreath at the Tomb of the Unknowns at Arlington National Cemetery ahead of her meeting with US President Donald Trump.
Dressed in black and flanked by a military honour guard, May walked along the broad avenue leading to the white marble tomb, accompanied by Major General Bradley Becker, the US military commander for Washington.
She laid a wreath of red poppies, then paused silently while a military bugler played Taps.
In a speech in Philadelphia on Thursday, May signalled she would be more reluctant than some of her predecessors to commit to foreign military engagements like the Iraq War.
The cemetery, across the Potomac River from Washington DC, is the final resting place of more than 400,000 US servicemen and women, as well as some Britons who fought alongside them.
May is due at the White House later on Friday for a meeting with Trump.
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