Berlin - Jewish History Tour | Discover Germany
Berlin is one of the most popular destinations in Europe for city tours. It attracts a growing number of Israeli tourists, many coming to revisit the locations that define the city’s Jewish heritage.
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Berlin Berlin - German Documentary On Life In Berlin - Reel One (1930-1939)
Unused / unissued material - no paperwork - dates unclear or unknown.
Please note: this is duplicate item of documentary 'BERLIN' - see separate records.
(Note Music starts before pictures - see UN 50 T for reel 2)
Title reads: Berlin (A RVD Film - credits listed)
Berlin, Germany.
Lufthansa plane taxiing across airfield. Various destinations are shown on plaques. Passengers get on board. A different plane takes off. Shots of a very modern looking German railway. Passengers get on trains. Various shots of rail network and U-bahn (Underground). Street scenes. Children helped across roads. More street scenes. Man holds up poster publicising Adolf Hitler. Good shots of a newspaper stand with foreign newspapers. Man uses telephone booth. CU map showing roads and rivers of Berlin. Travel shots along Freidrich Strasse. Shots around Alexanderplatz. Shots of Freidrich Strasse. Shots of people walking around Potsdammer Platz. Views of Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church. View from the tower. Views of many boats on river. Barges carry goods. Shots of old Berlin. Map. Aerial views of Schloss on island. CU Statue of man on horse. More views of buildings. Views of Pergamon museum. Views of the exhibits in the museum. Views along Unter Den Linden. Shots of the Army Museum. CU Uniform worn by Freidrich The Great. War Memorial to German soldiers who fell in World War I. Views of Berlin University. Views of students - some of non-European origin. Shots of the State Library. CUs of books. Opera House. Internal view of Opera House. State Theatre. Pan along Unter Den Linden. CU Statue of Freidrich The Great. Travel shots along Unter Den Linden. Views of the Brandenberger Tor. - Brandenberg Gate
FILM ID:466.06
A VIDEO FROM BRITISH PATHÉ. EXPLORE OUR ONLINE CHANNEL, BRITISH PATHÉ TV. IT'S FULL OF GREAT DOCUMENTARIES, FASCINATING INTERVIEWS, AND CLASSIC MOVIES.
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British Pathé also represents the Reuters historical collection, which includes more than 136,000 items from the news agencies Gaumont Graphic (1910-1932), Empire News Bulletin (1926-1930), British Paramount (1931-1957), and Gaumont British (1934-1959), as well as Visnews content from 1957 to the end of 1984. All footage can be viewed on the British Pathé website.
BERLIN Free Walking Tour (VERY COLD!)
On our Berlin Free Walking Tour with Sandeman's we started at Brandenburg Gate, saw the Jewish holocaust memorial, the Reichstag Building, Checkpoint Charlie... ALL the must see places in Central Berlin. Come with us on this Berlin travel guide to see all the spots!
The Way Away is Josh and Ashley Brown, husband and wife world travelers. Our mission is to bring the world closer by showing the uniqueness of our cultures and promoting unity around the world. Subscribe to our channel to watch our daily travel vlogs.
Song: My Future by Artificial Music
Berlin Step (Original) by Jaime Tejon
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Leonard Barkan on Berlin for Jews
Leonard Barkan, professor at Princeton University, introduces his book, Berlin for Jews: A Twenty-First-Century Companion. Berlin's long Jewish heritage, despite the atrocities of the Nazi era, has left an inspiring imprint on the vibrant metropolis of today.
German-Jewish Heritage in the US | Arts.21
In our series Traces of the Past, Arts.21 reporters travel the globe searching for the legacy left in different countries by German Jews. This week takes us to the state of Montana in the US, where we pay a visit to a family who embarked on a search for their roots back in Berlin, the city where one set of grandparents were born.
Berlin, Germany: Reminders of a Troubled Past
More info about travel to Berlin: Berlin, Germany is dotted with memorials and reminders of its troubled 20th-century history, including the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe and the Topography of Terror.
At you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
Daniel Libeskind's Jewish Museum - Berlin
Video by Thomas McCormick, Adam Souhrada, & Aaron Yang
Tour Berlin after WWII with author Joseph Kanon
Learn more about Leaving Berlin at Join bestselling author Joseph Kanon on a tour of post World War II Berlin, as he reveals the setting of his new book, LEAVING BERLIN, a gripping tale of an American undercover agent in 1948 Berlin.
Berlin, Germany: Brandenburg Gate and Museum Island
More info about travel to Berlin: While it's overseen plenty of war, the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin, Germany, was designed as an arch of peace. From here, we travel through Berlin's historic axis, along the Unter den Linden, to the riches of Museum Island.
At you'll find money-saving travel tips, small-group tours, guidebooks, TV shows, radio programs, podcasts, and more on this destination.
Culture - Discover Berlin's Jewish Museum
A closer look into Berlin's rich history and Jewish Museum. Courtesy of Viking River Cruises.
Visit rostad.com for more informaiton and to BOOK TODAY!
Discover Berlin's Jewish Museum
Designed by New York architect Daniel Libeskind, Berlin's Jewish Museum provides visitors an unforgettable journey of memory and hope. We invite you to experience some of the unique architecture and the complexity of Jewish German history offered by this wonderful museum.
For more information about visiting Europe please visit us at
Karine Hagen of Viking River Cruises is your host.
Berlin Free Walking Tour - Brandenburg Gate Reichstag Luftwaffe Holocaust Memorial
Amateur video of a Berlin Free Walking Tour by Sandemans - Brandenburg Gate, Reichstag Building, Luftwaffe Headquarters, Holocaust Memorial, Checkpoint Charlie.
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BERLIN FREE WALKING TOUR & Climbing the Bundestag Dome | Vlogtober 2019 Day 12
It's our second day in Berlin - we go on a free walking tour of Berlin with Sandemans New Europe and see some of the main Berlin sites like the Brandenburg Gate, the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Checkpoint Charlie and Gendarmenmarkt. We visit Museum Island briefly, then the Ampelmann shop and finally we visit the Bundestag, including climbing to the top of the Dome.
Thank you for watching!
ABOUT ME:
I'm Emma, a self confessed Disney parks nerd and previous Walt Disney World Cast Member living in South Wales. I post vlogs about trips to the Disney parks, UK days out and travels elsewhere around world. I post weekly (sometimes twice weekly!) videos of my travels, and I hope you'll subscribe to join in the fun.
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Germany’s World Heritage sites | Discover Germany
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Germany boasts 40 world heritage sites. Among them are the Museum Island in Berlin, Cologne Cathedral and the Wadden Sea. Experience landscapes and architecture rich in history and culture.
Walking in BERLIN / Germany - Long Tour in the Rain - 4K 60fps (UHD)
We picked rainy day in Berlin yet we manage to see several sights on this afternoon. Starting at the Museum Island there is first a little detour to the Gorki Theatre. Then main sights come into view towards Alexanderplatz with the iconic East Berlin TV tower.
We head back in more rain on the wide street Unter den Linden towards the most famous sight of Berlin: the Brandenburg Gate. Checking the nearby Reichstag we go towards Jewish Memorial followed by the Potsdamer Platz. We check the Topography of Terror exhibition along the old wall and end this walk at the famous Checkpoint Charlie which was the old border crossing between East and West Berlin.
Even with the rain there are tourists are on the street. Enjoy!
Filmed in March 2019
Camera: Osmo Pocket in 4K60
Mic: Zoom H1
#berlin #germany #walk
【K】Germany Travel-Berlin[독일 여행-베를린]유대인 박물관, 대학살의 현장/Jewish Museum/Holocaust
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[한국어 정보]
베를린 시내 한복판에 유대인과 관련한 박물관이 들어서 있다는 사실이 나는 무척 흥미로웠다. 건물 앞을 지키는 경찰도 눈에 띄었는데, 독일은 모든 유대인관련 건물을 경찰이 보호한다고 했다. 건물 안에서도 다른 박물관에 비해 훨씬 많은 수의 사람들이 곳곳에 배치되어 있었다. 이곳의 전시물은 이천년이 넘게 독일에서 살아온 유태인들의 흔적이었다. 유대인이 독일의 이방인이 아니라 독일 역사의 한 부분이었음을 역설하는 듯했다. 본관과 연결돼 있는 지하로 내려가자 여러 갈래로 나누어진 복도가 나왔다. 그 한 방향이 홀로코스트의 축이었다. 유태인대학살이 자행되었던 장소가 나란히 적혀있는 복도를 따라가다 검은 철문의 방에 이르게 되었다. 캄캄한 방의 위쪽에 한줄기 빛과 음산한 소리만이 들려왔다. 대부분의 관광객들은 이곳에서 오래 견디지 못한다고 한다. 그리고 그 바깥엔 그때 희생되었던 사람들의 소지품이 저마다의 사연과 함께 소개돼 있었다. 유태인의 탈출과정을 의미하는 유랑의 정원이라는 곳도 있었다. 마흔 아홉개의 콘크리트 기둥이 빼곡히 들어선 이곳은 사각형의 정원이다. 사람들은 이 정원을 걸으면서 삭막한 콘크리트 기둥에 둘러싸여 답답하고 막막한 느낌을 갖게 된다. 그리고 경사진 자갈길이 예상외로 힘들고 불편하다는 것을 깨닫게 된다. 팍팍하고 힘든 이 길에, 굶주린 배를 채워줄 올리브는 손이 닿지 않는 콘크리트 기둥위에 자라고 있었다. 평화와 안전의 상징인 올리브. 유태인들의 탈출이 그만큼 험난했다는 것을 말하고자 하는 것 같았다.
[English: Google Translator]
Lift is related to the fact that the Jewish Museum in Berlin, I was in the middle of downtown is very interesting. Police guarding the front of the building I also stood out, Germany was that the police protect all Jewish-related buildings. These people even in greater number than any other museum buildings were placed everywhere. It exhibits were traces of Jews lived in Germany for more than two thousand years. Jews, not Gentiles of the German seemed to have been a part of the paradox of German history. Let's go down to the basement corridor that linked the main building is divided into several branches it came out. That was the hole axis direction of the coast. Along the corridor, a place that was the Holocaust perpetrated appearing side-by-side led to the room of the black iron gates. Dark room, only the ray of light and sound dreary heard at the top. Most of the tourists are long mothandago stand here. And then there was that outer yen gotta sacrifice the belongings of those who had been introduced with the story of each one. Where there was a garden of Exile, which means that the process of escaping Jews. The concrete pillars forty-nine tightly entered here is the garden of the square. People are walking in the garden surrounded by stuffy and have a sense of bleak concrete pillars makmakhan. And realize that the sloping cobbled streets are unusually difficult and uncomfortable. Fak and tough on the road, fill a hungry tummy olives were grown on concrete pillars out of the reach. Olive, a symbol of peace and security. The escape of the Jews seemed to want to say that much was arduous.
[Information]
■클립명: 유럽080-독일03-08 유대인 박물관, 대학살의 현장/Jewish Museum/Holocaust
■여행, 촬영, 편집, 원고: 김기용 PD (travel, filming, editing, writing: KBS TV Producer)
■촬영일자: 2007년 5월 May
[Keywords]
유럽,Europe,유럽,독일,Germany,Deutschland,,김기용,2007,5월 May,베를린,Berlin,Berlin,
NEWS FEATURE Germany's biggest synagogue to reopen after being restored
SHOTLIST
31 August, 2007
1. Exterior shot of Synagogue Rykestrasse
2. Worshippers and media in courtyard
3. Reporter talking to Rita Rubinstein, who returned from Israel for the re-opening of the synagogue
4. SOUNDBITE: (German) Rita Rubinstein, returned for re-opening of synagogue:
I'm shaking a little bit. I'm excited. It is not so easy. One cannot imagine. I would never have thought that I would return here.
5. SOUNDBITE: (German) Ruth Wedel, used to visit synagogue as a child:
My grandparents came here, all of my relatives, so it is very moving for me.
6. Thora rolls being carried to altar in synagogue
7. Pan of synagogue
8. People watching as Thora rolls are put into shrine
9. Various of people inside synagogue
10. SOUNDBITE: (German) Rabbi Chaim Rozwaski, Rykestrasse synagogue:
It is a big wonder that us Jews are here in Berlin. A wonder of historical importance. It is part of our people's destiny, and a part of hope. For us to be here, and for me personally, it is an unbelievable experience personally as well as for Jewish history.
11. Various of service
30 August, 2007
12. Exterior shot of Jewish community centre
13. Pan of replica of Western Wall in Jerusalem inside centre
14. Various interior shots of synagogue
15. SOUNDBITE: (English) Rabbi Yehuda Teichtal, Jewish Community Centre:
We want to set the tone, that in the very same place where Hitler has tried to wipe out the Jews - in that place of darkness, in the essence of evil - once again, Jewish life will grow. We will react to darkness with light.
16. Tilt up interior of synagogue
STORYLINE
More than six decades after the end of the Third Reich, Rykestrasse Synagogue, Germany's biggest Jewish temple and an architectural and historic landmark, opened on Friday after being closed for more than a year for restoration work to recover its pre-war splendour.
The synagogue's beautiful interior, which seats up to 1,074, was allowed to deteriorate for decades because it was located in communist-run East Berlin, where the atheist government was unwilling to give scarce resources to maintaining places of worship.
Located in the now-trendy Prenzlauer Berg neighbourhood, the modest red brick facade hides a huge prayer hall which is revealed as one enters a courtyard behind the entrance building.
I'm shaking a little bit. I'm excited, said 85-year old Rita Rubinstein, who used to visit the synagogue as a child. She left Berlin in 1936 and has never been back until now.
One cannot imagine. I would never have thought that I would return here, Rubinstein said.
The synagogue, built in 1904, was set on fire during Kristallnacht, the Night of Broken Glass, when the Nazis attacked synagogues and Jewish businesses across the country on November 9, 1938.
But since it was in a densely populated neighbourhood, authorities quickly doused the flames.
Today, Berlin has the biggest Jewish community in Germany, with 12-thousand registered members and eight synagogues.
According to the Central Council of Jews in Germany, an estimated 250-thousand Jews now live in the country, with some 110-thousand of them registered as members of the Jewish community.
It is a big wonder that us Jews are here in Berlin. A wonder of historical importance. It is part of our people's destiny, and a part of hope, said Rabbi Chaim Rozwaski, who led a service inside the synagogue.
The numbers are still a far cry from Germany's flourishing Jewish community of 560,000 before Hitler and the Nazis came to power.
But in Berlin, there are strong signs of a Jewish resurgence.
As well as the Rykestrasse synagogue, the German capital's new 8.2 (m) million dollar Jewish community centre opens its doors on Sunday.
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Berlin - City walking tour narrative 11 Jul 18
** Warning - this is a narrative not a travel video, there are some shots of the city but mainly of the tour guide telling the story of historical locations **
I took a walking tour in Berlin which took me around a variety of historical locations - Checkpoint Charlie, the Berlin Wall, Brandenburg Gate and the Memorial to the murdered Jews of Europe.
The tour guide was very good and told the story so well that I asked his permission (Louis) to post the whole narrative here.
So here it is.
If you are in a major European city, try the tour company he works for -
Shot on a DJI Osmo
Exploring Jewish Berlin
Tour guide Jeremy Minsberg shows some of the less well-known spots where Germany has memorialized those murdered during the Holocaust.
Auschwitz: Drone video of Nazi concentration camp - BBC News
Drone video shows the Auschwitz-Birkenau concentration camp as it is today - 70 years after it was liberated by Soviet troops. The camp in Poland is now maintained as a World Heritage Site and is visited by thousands of tourists and survivors every year. Auschwitz was the largest camp established by the Germans during World War II. More than a million people - the vast majority of them Jews - died there between 1940, when it was built, and 1945, when it was liberated by the Soviet army.
Railway tracks into Auschwitz-Birkenau - Trains filled with victims from throughout occupied Europe arrived at the camp almost every day between 1942 and the summer of 1944.
Ruins of wooden huts at Birkenau - Birkenau (or Auschwitz II) was erected in 1941 solely as a death camp, the wooden huts are now in ruins with only brick fireplaces and chimneys remaining.
Entrance to Auschwitz I -The wrought-iron sign over the entrance bears the words Arbeit Macht Frei - Work sets you free.
Auschwitz I - The brick-built buildings were the former cavalry barracks of the Polish Army.
Courtyard between blocks 10 and 11 at Auschwitz I - Block 11 was called the Block of Death by prisoners. Executions took place between Block 10 and Block 11 and posts in the yard were used to string up prisoners by their wrists.
Auschwitz Birkenau is now a museum run by the Polish Culture Ministry, and a Unesco world heritage site.
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