tv [untitled] November 5, 2010 8:30pm-9:00pm EDT
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one. and would never die nothing seemed within arm's reach. they are not to lists they are researchers. and few more so online. in deep water. more news today violence is once again flared up. these are the images the world has been seeing from the streets of canada. china corporations are today. in taiwan the multis available in the land destroyed be a photo of golden toilet peed the wood poles are told toi be sure to tell it be hoto otoh loyal show his the groom her to the show with her son will do this to toy
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p. hoto to the show photo slim hotel resort evergreen told her total at the grand victoria hotel gloria prince hoto oil gold springs resort and school tie to the hotel royal she planned most of the job. the western toys the evergreen clothes a hotel in thailand tell you learned this hotel to an ambassador might be otoh the points. i would print certainly be splendid hotel in touch with a hotel in touch your girl the photo a good girl how would international flood to change every green lol he told in total. but again this is all see they have. also called the latest find scandal in georgia
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a political process a placing people accused of secretly working for russia an innocent victims of a stunt by president saakashvili attention seeking before a nato summit. and overseen iraq forces locals to take desperate measures to make a new thing and some have resorted to smuggling alcohol into neighboring iran risking down across the border in a country where families destroyed give them that. move and the british high point in his claims of systematic torture by the british soldiers from noise representing of the two hundred iraqis that is taking to the red planet as they declare secretary's decision turkey's a public inquiry into massive use on occasions in iraq between two thousand and three and just today. as the headlines now sixty five years since the end a while will to well hear from those who managed to survive the nazi death camps report is coming up next.
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pissed off. pitch. it was a spring like many of those in europe looks cherries and nightingales. but those who fold their way across the continent liberating town after town and village after village remember it differently than one thousand. the cherries on the women seemed even to the full. of people and
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jeeps dumped by a maid and a russian officer chain opportunity he started a syrian he said to your ally v.a. but there was a dead man decent only before we found you and the national the party the stimulus bloke and its liberators including soviet soldiers and their rebuilt national ami's with bread and milk flowers and the woman braces. rushed to me and hugged me so hard. i was so happy when she finally let go just. a everybody shot from any kind of weapon signal pistols to machine don't see fit right into the air. to welcome the liberates us millions of civilians who died in concentration camps and occupied. some soldiers that missed the victory day but those who had not lived to see the spring of nine hundred forty five women more realized and some still to this day.
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the spring of one nine hundred forty four still a year to go before the end of the second world war the red army has freed soviet territory from nazi occupation and is now pushing across the county here mountains the soldiers struggle through the snow bound passes on the saffir great in bucharest past vienna and prague. by the germans i'm still waiting for the liberation. of a check you was waiting for the liberating soldiers she was fifteen years old and living in tatters in it was called a town but it was actually more of a concentration camp. one of one hundred forty thousand people waiting for the decision to see in their fate more often than not people were sent to auschwitz to face execution meanwhile terrorism's children were not allowed to read draw
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pictures all saying. that. at our health sector. excuse me. nothing he read has the lot of bright the case and also the requiem with us in a basic basement and the s.s. men like to say the juice in a requiem for themselves thank you. this is how the secret music lessons were held in tatters and. these drawings belong to martha's friend. she slept in the adjacent bed elder enjoyed her sketching everything around her but keeping it hidden their images paint a vivid picture of life in terror is it. that they began this is where we washed the thought that there was no bathroom just a tub and water the only cold water and even that was spotty.
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the young girls quarters were here they were kept separate from their parents in the daytime goes worked in the fields in the evening they got together in a small room to read aloud to each other in a camp like this a book was a prized possession. they are five over five. that was my transport number. you dish me shells like these were in another great traction we paid for them in a brand teddy yes we can breath for them we put things under the mattress ace if we needed to sniff them out there was no irony that the top bunk was the best place to sleep true most of the bucks for them but at least nothing fellers you while you were asleep but on the isle of bunk all kinds of stuff telling you whenever they want to secure to people slept in the space and terrorising but as may as ten people shared the same space it in auschwitz. mother says taro's in was
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a result compared to auschwitz. to her brother and parents and her friend helga was sent to auschwitz in the autumn of one nine hundred forty four. while czech polish jewish gypsy children were being murdered in gas chambers german children live normal lives going to school learning to draw cans and sing the songs they sang were not charmed last. show of pneumonia mother this is a collection of songs sung by members of hitler you're going to the boys know that it was published in one thousand nine hundred thirty six one of the songs goes something like this one and we want to march on moscow over we want to be moscow or soon as we can let the bolsheviks feel all strength and let the wildrose has paved the way of hitler's men dating for russia with love. but by late one nine hundred forty four hardly anyone sang this song anymore. it is military chiefs had just won
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a touchdown teams to the red army launched an offensive on the frontline from the cop a few mountains to the black sea liberating european cities. romania became the first country to be released from its nazi nightmare. then something troops brought peace to bulgaria. conan suffered arabs the hardest did it history men were executed all set down as slaves women aged between fifteen and twenty five percent to brothels for very modest just old women were sent to factories gas chambers. he was the. one he was he was so he was sent here. for a. reason i told you i think that you have you had occasion to meet the president
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and. even the best guide in the world would be clueless about conditions here compared to a man who survived the ordeal for two years each day. he looked at the black smoke billowing from the crime of torreon chimneys inhaled the noisy aging sweet odor and waited for his turn. they were read out a list of people who was where he went to the gas chambers. there were only thirteen of us left. and the man who went to the guest chamber was the one who had occupied the bunk below me. he had been a teacher before. poland about how we died he said and went to the guest chamber. i was face was operated like a well oiled machine nothing was wasted trousers shoes spectacles even
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human teeth everything was put to use toys were sent to german children german women it was sold weeks made from the hair of the dead. from my block i could see the cam band playing on the plot cone through tween the crematorium and the. men in the service staff and occasionally the officers' wives in attendance. and the danger would be performance knowing full well that people were being burned in a crime a tory a myth. some might find it all the polish publishers have produced a comic book about the history of outfits its aim to get the message across to those not interested in either museums or history books added that. the editor tells me she has done it on purpose in order to attract more attention you know people read all the books and put them aside but they leaf through this book again
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and again the ground on the. penus if new the stories characters personally edward golinski was polish and millions in the town was a jewish woman the comic is called the romeo and juliet of auschwitz she was twenty six years old names trying to form. the fact they found love at the death factory as auschwitz was known it was remarkable that they could escape was incredible an s.s. officer had given at would a german uniform but his happiness with malia lasted just twelve days when they were then called. a couple of year huge edward was hanged in. if he also wanted to hang. but she didn't let them. she cut her veins with a piece of irony that happened to be at hand. when an s.s.
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man was about to put the noose around her neck she had him. own story is unique he was one of the first to arrive at auschwitz as inmate number one hundred twenty one and he was lucky enough to leave the camp alive on top of that each day he had to resist an excruciating temptation he was serving as the personal barber of the camp's commander rudolf hess for years people have wanted the answer to just one question. they say ok you service has always had a razor in your hands you might have taken him by the head and cut his throat. to that i respond yes i might have. been the result. they would have killed all my family in the camps people. these people survived the concentration camps but they still don't understand how they made it
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through. teachers help to educating youngsters in secret to try and retain their dignity. and most his friends helped by composing songs and making jokes but the humor was dark like this song written by children in terrorism. they see it in the national whole cold terrorising very with three quarters of the bread no one can win just to survive who can ask the more it stinks it's wild it's war. terrorism surviving children have vowed to wear butterfly pins on their jackets and dresses for as long as they live this is because they never sold out of lies in the concentration camps instead just fleas and bed bugs and even today when martha goes to a restaurant she old has a lot of food she has still not yet overcome her fear of hunger. but she certainly
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still has a sweet tooth. abbie please give me that. these are nice sassy i know for sure i'll take these two and just one. of the fifteen thousand children who went through tara's in an on to death camps only ninety eight survived to see liberation. a moment when the world has changed forever. thousands passed to nothingness. thousands wounded. nurse her hand doomed to suffer to the end. it was the first but probably not the last image areas of this weapon.
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commonly morning will be come. children common get on in the future. holidaymaker who wouldn't dare to swim so deep. a tourist would be scared of such cold water. and would never die if not within arm's reach. they are not to lists they are researchers. and feel worse on land than in deep water. belgrade in one nine hundred forty four it was you the salvias capital the country
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had already enjoyed three years of occupation yugoslav freedom fighters had been fiercely resisting the nazi regime and its collaborators from the inside. the germans often send their best divisions to overpower the freedom fighters who were under the command of marshall tito who fought back bitterly despite a lack of weapons or the most basic military technology. today the story of the resistance movement struggle is found in the open and military museum in central got a great. book i don't know why i know how you got lucky if you just elvia ended world war two with a few tanks it had bought from france when your best country was modernizing its weaponry at the time and always your. the locals could see and hear telltale signs of approaching soviet tanks girl first they had a deafening noise then they saw smoke and dust rising above the horizon. they saw the enormous monsters of his numbers and capability as well as any of the tanks
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that had appeared in the balkans before the serbs were simply stunned by the soviet tanks. forty four. troops and resistance fighters liberated belgrade street to street. attack to freedom. these veterans strolling through belgrade doctors recommended for their health but they enjoy it because it makes them feel through the streets where they used to fight the germans. are popular front street where there was a victorious uprising in one thousand nine hundred. eight changed. have no business changing names history shouldn't be changed. there are quite
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a few streets of belgrade bearing two names it so happens that one of the streets is officially known as. people still read the street to avoid confusion the authorities decided to put up signs bearing names. i hear a total eight thousand russians died in serbia. all the. troops were buried in a very large pit dug here between this monument this place that was two days after the liberation of belgrade. twenty four tanks went through the streets. there was a band playing at the front of the convoy. board .
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oh most. veterans say today's belgrade is very different from the city of nine hundred forty four. after the serbian capital was rebuilt like many other european cities but no other city in eastern europe suffered as much as. the polish capital was to be razed to the ground those instructions were carried out with cruise determination. today it's hard to imagine that here where these beautiful streets squares and restored castles now stand they used to be just broken people completely rebuilt their city stone by stone. if. he's deserted the germans are driving. bank of the river once
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again the city is being systematically destroyed street after street after house buildings are being blown up and burnt all. the c.d.'s being raised to the ground. trees of old buildings that had survived and blew them up in accordance with it's clear. they made a special point of destroying historical buildings and architectural landmarks as a matter of priority. prepared a special register just for this purpose. the entire all castle was in ruins. that's the gist you nineteen forty five zero three and then some small structural elements were left open and that. also is liberation was different from other cities in january nine hundred forty
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five the red army drove the occupiers out and entered warsaw but unlike elsewhere the local population didn't line the streets to welcome soviet soldiers the polish capital was a deserted city only a day after the german retreat the first refugees began returning to what was left of their capital poland suffered much more than any other european country it was also a keypad longer than others. and the second world war started when the nazis attacked on september the first nine hundred thirty nine but many historians onto the war began much. to shift the we're not proud there are shelters nobody wants to discuss your morning about my dominican breman for instance when it was dismembered way might well be considered an earlier starting to eat for the war god another old serenity of jade could be the one slows when
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a national socialist germany not swallowed up austria update. on march the thirteenth nine hundred thirty eight hitler triumphantly entered vienna but the and truce was not a civilized action it was a powerful military absorption. the war came to an end for many european towns in the spring of one thousand nine hundred five on april the thirteenth the germans surrendered in vienna the city is most often strauss was free again austria regained its independence people everywhere destroyed the traces of the anschluss welcomed the soviet liberating troops and dumped. in the town squares. the fighting continued in neighboring czechoslovakia all made a face people in prague staged an uprising they flew the national flag from windows and built barricades. radio prog called on the city's residents to stand up to the
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hardships of the wars last hours. of the time. was a seventeen year old. system and we were targeted even when we went out to pick up the wounded for example although we were wearing armbands with the red cross on them three living. when the un to collect some medicine for the wounded we found ourselves undefined. and there were many dead and wounded people that we had to. play with the final casualties of the war days german troops under the command of the experienced field marshal general gradually pulling back westwards as they continued fighting with the resistance gena knew that the red army was approaching and he had no desire to surrender to soviet
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troops. there were german troops in want to pee had to be three hospital trains. they were right here. they were mocked as hospital trains but in fact they were not but are now the germans had weapons with them. they were not going to surrender even though the war was over. they wanted to get to the americans at any cost they were scared of fresh troops. soviet troops entered prague and made the mines today's progs still dotted with small memorial marcus. like this hand raised to given a rose the inscription says we will stay committed they signify the resistance fighters died here. cemetery it's here the dreaded army soldiers who died liberating praga buried.
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in. i.c.u. late flowers is great. i first came here a long time ago a young nurse's beret here i don't even know if your relatives know that she lives here i simply put a flower in her grave and leave she was about twenty two years old i think. such a long way from how. many of those who lie here live just long enough to hear the word victory their ranks and even had a brief chance to celebrate but they were killed by german snipers who stayed behind after the wars and the remnants of the nazi war machine continued to slaughter soldiers weeks after the german surrender. but those who survived still get together. it's so nice to see your. former chacon
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soviet scientists meet up sometimes to celebrate public holidays well simply to talk. i'm going to check my dear it up yourself and i'll tell you please join in. where you know these men are let me give you the medal of czechoslovakia's legionnaires as a keepsake. i'm quite happy although i don't wear them you know. neither do i you can see everything we got one on. the show each other newspaper cuttings photos of their children their grandchildren and of course themselves. in these photos they're in their prime. looking at pleasure to do most of the. days of the
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day in such painstaking detail. today. we were given good food just imagine a regiment enjoying the siege of leningrad here the guys are given milk. there are so fresh you can squeeze them and they pop back to their original shape that's what i call a feast. we stuck to fire a german takes. the earth of my country and it's stuck to my lips. some. of. them they're always happy to. each of them. the veterans insists that the young. this one is for services to the country this one is for brotherhood and unity. by the yugoslav people's army. veterans tell young people the stories
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