The kidnapping campaign of Nazi Germany | DW Documentary

2020 ж. 10 Нау.
4 444 716 Рет қаралды

On orders from Heinrich Himmler, the Nazis abducted children from Poland for forced Germanization. Hermann Lüdeking, Jozef Sowa and Alodia Witaszek have never met, but they shared the same fate.
Tears still come to Jozef Sowa’s eyes when he talks about his life. His parents were murdered by Wehrmacht soldiers in Poland in 1943, and he and his four siblings were taken to Germany. Four of them managed to return to Poland. But his younger sister Janina was given up for adoption - as a supposedly German child. She still lives in Germany today. This kidnapping was planned. In 1941, Himmler, who headed the Nazi SS, gave the order to "gather young children who are especially racially suitable from Polish families and for us to raise them in special modestly-sized kindergartens and children’s homes."
Professor Isabel Heinemann explains, "By so doing, he aimed to build up the German race." For years, the historian has been researching the fates of the estimated 50 thousand children in Europe who were snatched. The largest group comes from Poland. Without their biological parents to protect them, the children were given to German families by the "SS Race and Resettlement Main Office." Their names and dates of birth were changed to obscure their true identity.
After the war ended, those whose origins could be traced returned to their homelands. But their native countries had often become foreign to them and being singled out as a German "Hitler child" made reintegration difficult. Those responsible for the kidnapping were never brought to justice.
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Пікірлер
  • History is filled with untold stories. Thanks for shining a light on this story.

    @chinoodin4735@chinoodin47354 жыл бұрын
    • Yes it is, EDP445. mono is no joke man....

      @matthewwalden3460@matthewwalden34604 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah just like the story´s about the boljevics and communism.

      @Wazztheweasel@Wazztheweasel4 жыл бұрын
    • @Cognac Warrior 46 he didnt say they didnt...

      @33bb33bb@33bb33bb4 жыл бұрын
    • Watch full ten-part series of most forbidden documentary ever published: "Europa The Last Battle" at archive-dot-org. Pulled down from TheirTube countless times since 2017 release.

      @Ronnie-Jones@Ronnie-Jones4 жыл бұрын
    • Now that we have more access to non mainstream media...ie podcasts...you tube...ect we can know more of the stories and news in context ...and have more access to the truth.

      @velvet2406@velvet24064 жыл бұрын
  • My father was one of those kids. He told me how he was taken from his family when he was 9 years old. He had no idea where he was taken. I can't imagine what he went through. My dad is gone but I remember every story he told about his life in time of war. I love you and miss you dad so much. ❤

    @TheStarandAriShow@TheStarandAriShow4 жыл бұрын
    • im sorry

      @sheracarlton4969@sheracarlton49694 жыл бұрын
    • I remember every story he told about his life in time of war, I hope you have written the stories down for future generations. The stories will not be told the same if you don't. Sorry for the anguish your father had to endure, may He rest in Peace.

      @sharonwhite4847@sharonwhite48474 жыл бұрын
    • @Damiencg you aren't gonna change a religious person's neural pathways with just a single comment, this is what I've learned throughout 4 years of debating theists on the internet....if you are truly passionate on changing theists then make a youtube video about atheism and biblical hypocrisy, extremely convincing emotionally charged arguments with powerful music in the background...... just saying :)

      @SignificantPressure100@SignificantPressure1004 жыл бұрын
    • May he rest in peace and be reunited with his family 😢❤

      @natahliasmith9533@natahliasmith95334 жыл бұрын
    • @yasminezahra5568@yasminezahra55684 жыл бұрын
  • I can’t help but cry when the man at the beginning told his story. Watching that would destroy a child. His parents were so brave and should be honored as heroes. She was 6 or 7 months pregnant being stabbed over and over with a pitchfork, in front of her small children. And yet she still refused to give up the location of the people hiding. How horrible it must have been to see them still be killed in front of her once the nazi soldiers found them. And his father watching all of this as well as his head is bashed in??? And also not give up the hiding location ?!? Amazing heroes. They deserve utmost respect.

    @allilee2523@allilee25232 жыл бұрын
    • He's nothing but an old polish wino looking for money. Poland is 3rd world and their elderly only receive about $100 a month. I believe nothing that comes out of anyone in this documentary.

      @EIPepe305@EIPepe305 Жыл бұрын
    • I haven't gotten to this part yet, but I'm already crying. How tragic. I cannot fathom this ever happening. I want to hug this man.

      @Witchofthewoods.@Witchofthewoods. Жыл бұрын
    • Well said I couldn’t agree more- I hope they have been inducted in the hall of heroes in Israel

      @januarymooney1811@januarymooney1811 Жыл бұрын
    • @@Witchofthewoods. it was the first story in the very beginning

      @januarymooney1811@januarymooney1811 Жыл бұрын
    • Truly amazing!!! May they Rest in glory!!!

      @ugoibeawuchi28@ugoibeawuchi28 Жыл бұрын
  • My father was loaded into a truck bound for a concentration camp. The driver suddenly refused to drive & he told all of the children to jump off the truck & run home. As children growing up , we heard all the horrific stories of war in Poland. From being shot at by Nazis to having to watch a 4th grade student being beaten to death by a German teacher. My Mom has stories that are just as horrible. History always repeats itself, this is no exception. We will destroy ourselves. I can understand everything he said in Polish. A little gets lost in translation. The poor man. These are similar memories that my parents hold & now I do too.

    @lucyterrier7905@lucyterrier79052 жыл бұрын
    • The international hyenas are doing to America right now what they did to germany. They will probaby use the chinese and rogue third world nations under the U.N. They have already infiltrated D.C. 60 minutes did an hour long segment back in 1989 about the growing israeli influence i n D.C. The truth is out now about 911 so yeah in a sense history is indeed repeating itself. If you havent heard the 9/11 news its twisted. Larry Silverstien needs brought in for interogation along with BUSH.

      @karatekid6026@karatekid6026 Жыл бұрын
    • And the crime is just as relevant today as it was then. Because Russia is doing to the same thing to Ukraine.

      @williamyoung9401@williamyoung9401 Жыл бұрын
    • ​@@williamyoung9401What nonsense. Russia is not ethnically cleansing anyone.

      @user-dp5nr5mk5c@user-dp5nr5mk5cАй бұрын
  • My dad was also one of these stolen children. This crime was so wrong on so many levels. Rest in Peace dad. Love from Australia.

    @barbaralara-watson6935@barbaralara-watson69356 ай бұрын
  • What a horrible ordeal for the man at the beginning of the documentary. To see his parents being slaughtered like that. Horrible traumatic experience. Very very sad.

    @peterenola2265@peterenola22654 жыл бұрын
    • And then they expect him to embrace Germany after he witnessed them brutally murder his parents.

      @ThatGirlJD@ThatGirlJD4 жыл бұрын
    • Absolutely awful!👍🏻💐

      @helencoven@helencoven4 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, indeed.

      @EWAMILENAP@EWAMILENAP4 жыл бұрын
    • 'war is sanctioned murder'....just sad

      @lintran3211@lintran32114 жыл бұрын
    • And for that also, you could understand the sister embracing what represented then her parents killers. After seeing what they did she learnt very quickly to meekly comply, erase and survive. Maybe her adopted parents also treated her well.

      @kimberleyb1239@kimberleyb12394 жыл бұрын
  • So sad. It breaks me seeing him crying when he talked about his mother getting stabbed with a pitchfork.

    @yaneizaperez2190@yaneizaperez21903 жыл бұрын
    • Stabbed in the stomach when she was six months pregnant. Bastards.

      @EchoBravo370@EchoBravo3703 жыл бұрын
    • Imagine being the one doing it! How cold and evil can humans possibly be? Yet they had full armies of these yes men. It boggles the mind.

      @sonofhibbs4425@sonofhibbs44253 жыл бұрын
    • This is so horrible, I was taught about the Nazi's in my history class.i renember my teacher always told us this could happen again renember this so this will not happen again. I am scare to death what is happening today in America. Trump is a molester just like Hitler

      @barbarahendricks2967@barbarahendricks29673 жыл бұрын
    • @@barbarahendricks2967 already did with Native American children and happens with North Koreans kidnapping South Koreans children

      @tiffanye9403@tiffanye94033 жыл бұрын
    • I'm Polish and it is so horrific! Look up the Rape of Nanking in China where similar horrific things happened by the Japanese!

      @juliaj7939@juliaj79393 жыл бұрын
  • My grandma was 12 when they took her from family home in Poland. She saw her family beaten to death and separated. She was enslaved and forced to work in German Guesthouse, for German family. She was not paid for her hard daily work, she however received food and shelter. She considered herself lucky. Lucky... and given all the stories we learned in polish school, many witnesses heard over years, I can also consider her lucky... in all that tragedies. After the war she was kicked into the train and came back to Poland alone...

    @alice1026@alice10262 жыл бұрын
    • My granddad was not that lucky. He had to watch their family be beaten, tortured and raped by Russians who entered his house near Lviv (today Ukraine, back in 1939 Poland). He was 10. He was put on the train on the way to Nazi camp with Judes and Gypsies. On the way he managed to jump out (near Czestochowa) and received help and shelter from monks (There is famous polish Monastery there). After war he searched for his family for many years...

      @alice1026@alice10262 жыл бұрын
  • i just can't imagine how much pain and grief in Josef's heart. if he's still alive today, he's probably on his 90s yet still crying and missing the warmth of his mother and father's care like how it shows in this video. the atrocity far beyond evil. heart wrenching to hear such horrific testimony. may the souls of these innocent victims now rest in peace, blessed the hearts of those who are left in mourn and grief.

    @morosso1968@morosso19682 жыл бұрын
  • I hate to say it, but they should all have their DNA tested and then whatever family is left they can be placed in touch with them. It's heartbreaking to think after all these years people are still looking for family members.

    @lhead7226@lhead72264 жыл бұрын
    • There are DNA tests available, but the good ones can be quite expensive, and you would also need to have samples from the family that you are trying to unite with. The DNA kits that you see advertized are not really that specific; they can tell you that you are generally European but not whether you are Polish, German, English, Swedish or whatever.

      @sudoku1966@sudoku19664 жыл бұрын
    • @@Sisterlisk Yes, and if you're male you can find out in a lot of cases which exact village you're from with LivingDNA. It costs about £149.00. I'm female and they can't find that information through female DNA, so I'm disappointed as all my immediate male family are dead now. I've paid for 3 companies, just to see if they say the same thing, and they do. But I thought I was specifically English, but I'm only 4% English. My DNA is Scottish. I am however 4% Neanderthal, which is really exciting. A third cousin who I found on the list of relatives they sent is 6% Neanderthal, the highest you can get. But yes, these tests can give a lot of info and it would be invaluable to these people in the video. So many clues are thrown up 👍

      @vmm5163@vmm51634 жыл бұрын
    • @@vmm5163 Hopefully by now, the old man (Herman?) has been helped by some nice person who knew about DNA kits.

      @Sisterlisk@Sisterlisk4 жыл бұрын
    • @@Sisterlisk Yes, his story is out there so I do hope someone offers him help 👍👍

      @vmm5163@vmm51634 жыл бұрын
    • I was thinking the same. There are many people who lived through the Holocaust who found family members through an Ancestry test, all these years later. A DNA test might help these people in the same way.

      @carma91@carma914 жыл бұрын
  • This is why history is important. I don't know why US children are being 'sheltered' from these truths. These things need to be remembered. Edit: Started new world war in the comments section. 😂

    @writing_monkey6215@writing_monkey62152 жыл бұрын
    • US children should be taught. All children should be tought. To understand history it can prevent it from repeating itself. Us children ( your exampleI) Also because this was EXACTLY the process in the genocide of native americans. After occupying their land, extreme violence against them, vast massmurders and the surving population stripped of every part of human and civil rights.. They were put in camps, isolated. Children then were Kidnapped from their remaining families, brainwashed and separated , schooled to forget their culture, language and background. The mechanisms of genocide, racism always follow the same patterns. This went on way into the 1920s. ..It is very uneducated to think that only Nazis commited these crimes agains people in the name of made up " superiority" and on the platform of extremely evil racism. We all have a background to learn from. To prevent it from happening again.THAT is important.

      @lovelyvividly@lovelyvividly2 жыл бұрын
    • They barely touch on this subject or any other topic of genocide here in the United States. They want us to forget. To feel righteous. To not understand that not knowing our past and world history means, that we're all doomed to repeat it. I'm Germanic European, Scandinavian, and Irish. I had to study these atrocities myself as an adult so I could teach my own children. :(

      @TheMeldanny@TheMeldanny2 жыл бұрын
    • Probably bc Nazi still live amongst us and control education, and the world.

      @Goldrefinedthrufire@Goldrefinedthrufire2 жыл бұрын
    • And there are people here, in these United States, that idolize the Nazis!

      @judithsmith9582@judithsmith95822 жыл бұрын
    • They can't undo it no matter how they try. It happened and erasing it from the history books does not change the facts.

      @cecoya@cecoya2 жыл бұрын
  • I can’t imagine being stolen from my parents and given a new identity to grow up as an adult not knowing my parents, family or even my real birthday. The Nazis did all they could to ERASE an entire generation. I just want to embrace the victims and hold them. I cry for them :(

    @Hank760@Hank7602 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah they tired but didn't work .

      @jenniferfields1084@jenniferfields10842 жыл бұрын
  • Our history teacher's grandma was in a concentration camp. He shared her stories with his class. He told of how Jewish babies were just thrown aside and left to die. These stories are heartbreaking. Humans can be so hatefilled and evil.

    @robindew9072@robindew9072 Жыл бұрын
    • I never ever ever thought why no babies now that I think back on all the pictures I had seen.

      @chaserofthelight1737@chaserofthelight1737 Жыл бұрын
    • It's sad some of those who suffer grew ùp to contribute to other suffering in palestine

      @matzbr5tw@matzbr5tw2 ай бұрын
  • Hearing that part of the boys mother being stabbed in the stomach 3 whole times with a pitchfork while she was 6-7 months pregnant made me so sad 😞

    @nickyy_6021@nickyy_60213 жыл бұрын
    • It was a absolutely horrific.

      @linaklus8440@linaklus84403 жыл бұрын
    • How does anybody recover from that memory.

      @aliasmarg8ta127@aliasmarg8ta1273 жыл бұрын
    • Alias Marg8ta you just keeping moving forward because life never stops passing by.

      @KP-ej7gc@KP-ej7gc3 жыл бұрын
    • @@aliasmarg8ta127 He will on the day of reckoning when the killer will reap his reward being strung naked on the wheel of fire rolling thru the Lake of Fire !!! See NYSTV Midnight Ride.

      @hearmichaelsavage@hearmichaelsavage3 жыл бұрын
    • @@hearmichaelsavage what?

      @HateTheIRS@HateTheIRS3 жыл бұрын
  • I feel bad for that man, his sister that beyond brainwashed and in willing naiveness and denial about being really Polish and not at all in blood or born German, to the point where she refuses to acknowledge their real Polish parents/family is truly heartbreaking.

    @cassandramalfoy@cassandramalfoy3 жыл бұрын
    • To accept that is to accept the horrific reality of wat happened…something some people can’t handle

      @carmencapa6945@carmencapa69452 жыл бұрын
    • @@carmencapa6945 exactly. I was looking for this comment because it’s so easy for people to judge this woman without thinking of what trauma she went through. Seeing your parents brutally murdered and then forced to live a completely different life. No wonder she doesn’t like to think about it, much less talk about it. She did what she had to do to survive. She was indoctrinated and is still living with that every day. We may not like the fact that she’s so closed off to learning the history of her family and her culture but that’s for her to decide.

      @taylors445@taylors4452 жыл бұрын
    • @@taylors445 This reminds me of the shutter island movie where leo says "live as a monster or die as a good man" when she was young she had to decide between living as a monster (indoctrination) or possible murder (although it sounds extreme not accepting indoctrination would mean she had no one and would prob be isolated f0r being "weird". as an adult the question was whether to accept the hard fact her real parents were killed and that her life had been destroyed or forget the painful past and continue to live life as a "german' where none of that happened

      @carmencapa6945@carmencapa69452 жыл бұрын
    • @@taylors445 I agree that it is for her to decide, no one denies her that, but as a polish person myself i cant help but feel a little bit hurt, even offended. She denies being polish, she was born in Poland to polish parents. For her to deny her bloor relations and say ''i will not take from german people because i am german'' is probably very hurtful to the kidnapped children and their families too. We dont need to agree but we have a right to feel what we feel.

      @kropka8259@kropka82592 жыл бұрын
    • @@kropka8259 she has Stockholm syndrome. She has never received any treatment for it. She probably doesn’t even know she has it.

      @ArleyKing82@ArleyKing822 жыл бұрын
  • I just clicked this just so I can play something. I ended up watching the entire documentary attentively. It was overwhelming to watch. Thank you for this documentary.

    @iou8182@iou81822 жыл бұрын
    • Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment!

      @DWDocumentary@DWDocumentary2 жыл бұрын
  • That first man’s story was so heartbreaking. I can’t even wrap my mind around that.

    @jaydehall5117@jaydehall51172 жыл бұрын
  • I had to pause for a moment when he said his mother was stabbed. Poor kids witnessing that, so terribly sad. This whole story is heartbreaking.

    @sulmerton2623@sulmerton26234 жыл бұрын
    • It really is. I feel heartbroken for him😢

      @PrincessAfrica3@PrincessAfrica33 жыл бұрын
    • I wanted to throw up at that part. it was horrible to just listen to.

      @bubblegum1948@bubblegum19483 жыл бұрын
    • And she was pregnant! I can’t imagine the horror

      @Cristina_504@Cristina_5043 жыл бұрын
    • Same!

      @TuizaLilia@TuizaLilia3 жыл бұрын
    • 💔

      @shaunamorrisonbogle7089@shaunamorrisonbogle70893 жыл бұрын
  • Makes me realize the childhood I had wasn’t so traumatic. This is a terrorizing childhood one could not imagine.

    @keepitallthewayfunky3448@keepitallthewayfunky34483 жыл бұрын
    • Makes us feel lucky how we weren’t targets of that time we were lucky to born in this time

      @kaylaskreations4973@kaylaskreations49732 жыл бұрын
    • Kids now get traumatized for not having more followers

      @thegoodrefugee8354@thegoodrefugee83542 жыл бұрын
    • @@thegoodrefugee8354 Ik I don’t even worry about that I only worry about my safety of who follows me

      @kaylaskreations4973@kaylaskreations49732 жыл бұрын
    • Trauma is trauma especially being a kid

      @flameroyal123@flameroyal1232 жыл бұрын
    • @@flameroyal123 exactly!! No one's trauma is bigger or smaller!!!

      @ishitamondal6140@ishitamondal61402 жыл бұрын
  • When you think you’ve hear it all about the Nazi, you find even more and more atrocious as all the stories are coming to light! Bless you all sharing your story, I thank you!

    @cathietonkin5577@cathietonkin55772 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you. I just adored those two Moms of little Alodia/Alice. In war, it takes two Moms to keep one child alive and well. Their story was just heart-warming and marvelous. Thank you very much.

    @borzix1997@borzix1997 Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment.

      @DWDocumentary@DWDocumentary Жыл бұрын
  • We always talk about war in a bigger picture, now this is how individual lives were misplaced through no fault of their own. Never forget and learn lessons...

    @Asiorek84@Asiorek844 жыл бұрын
    • It was done before, during the inquisition. They just try to make sure we don't know

      @syleiswiley4037@syleiswiley40374 жыл бұрын
    • majority of us learn. the greedy don't bother.

      @mbahmarijan789@mbahmarijan7894 жыл бұрын
    • There will always be war.

      @trishmcl9055@trishmcl90554 жыл бұрын
    • @@syleiswiley4037 u

      @kayleetailfeathers2178@kayleetailfeathers21783 жыл бұрын
    • I have learned ... I am an armed mother with an armed daughter (US) ... Europe is disappointing in that they won't arm the women.

      @aday9159@aday91593 жыл бұрын
  • Couldn't hold my tears hearing the story of the man at the beginning. Those kids would carry the trauma they experienced throughout the rest of their life. This generation should be made aware of all this to prevent something like this from happening again.

    @AnirbanDas21989@AnirbanDas219894 жыл бұрын
    • Same, this broke me down. Although I am 2nd generation and my parents are in their 80's, I have spent my entire life trying to understand my own sense of non-belonging. The trauma is passed down from generation to generation. It lives in every cell of our bodies.

      @khutzey8657@khutzey86573 жыл бұрын
    • America 2020 it’s happening

      @hoodlumjones9943@hoodlumjones99433 жыл бұрын
    • @Awkward Autistic If you’re a Christian, your prayers will war against the evil.

      @JMD621@JMD6213 жыл бұрын
    • @Michael Freed and yet you never mention the fact that refugee children are kidnapped daily. huh.

      @e-spy@e-spy3 жыл бұрын
    • @@khutzey8657 oh! sadly, that makes perfect sense. I am sorry!

      @e-spy@e-spy3 жыл бұрын
  • Im from Slovenia and here Natzis used to steal kids to "make them german". In middle school we were made to read absolutely wonderfully written book "Boy with two names" (Deček z dvema imenoma) by Anton Ingolić. It is about a boy and his family passing through Slovenian country side on their way to vaccation. He sees all the people working in the fields and he gets some strange memories of his family doing that. He slowly get from his family (really nice people) that he was abducted. He is lucky enough to meet his real family. It is written very well and was a great way to start the talk with us about ww2. I highly recoman it if you want to learn more

    @adqueen2548@adqueen2548 Жыл бұрын
  • There’s a special place in hell for people who commit atrocious crimes toward innocent people, including children.

    @mayrag1776@mayrag17762 жыл бұрын
  • I’m a Canadian age 65 and grew up in Toronto going first to school in 1960 with first generation children from WWII refugees from Poland, Ukraine, Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia. I grew up with these children and visited their homes. As I got older I tried to get the parents to tell me their stories from the war years. Most would not but some stories leaked out to me from my friends. I wanted to know what really happened as I didn’t trust what our schools were teaching us. There were 3 German families on our street. No one socialized with them. I was forbidden to play with those children because they were German and the parents remembered the war. I argued that these children did nothing wrong so I snuck around to still play with them. I was only 5 or 6. This was a fantastic documentary and I did not know about this topic. My heart has always been heavy for my childhood friends parents who suffered but survived despite the war. Thank you!

    @Canuck13@Canuck133 жыл бұрын
    • Interesting but we need remember that Estonia, Latvia ,Lithuania , Ukraine had specific type of collaboration with Germany - ideology collaboration !. It resulted from the ideological approximation of some domestic parties and political groups to the ideals of fascism or German Nazism. It was very danger collaboration. It was a "business" if the Germans won with the Soviets ... unfortunately Germany lost. I'm afraid that not all of them were "victims", but only refugees because the Germans lost the war. If we say about Poland is complete different history - it was no collaboration government , no ideology collaboration, etc. It was real (and just one in Europe) underground movement to fight against Germans Nazis during occupation Poland 1939- 1944 . Regards.

      @richardmazursky2796@richardmazursky27963 жыл бұрын
    • you are a kind soul. we need more of you!

      @e-spy@e-spy3 жыл бұрын
    • We played with like children in our B.C. village.

      @delmariecrandall9229@delmariecrandall92293 жыл бұрын
    • @@richardmazursky2796 sorry but what you can tell about Juzef Pilsudski? He was not fascist?

      @edvardasbalika5813@edvardasbalika58132 жыл бұрын
  • And the Polish woman with two mothers is such a heart warming story that ought to give some hope to anyone within a state of war that there is always hope.

    @peterwilson5528@peterwilson55283 жыл бұрын
    • I am also a part of such a story.... I lost my sister in Poland...and found her back.

      @Hleagh@Hleagh2 жыл бұрын
    • So many ather stories with out happy ending... so many...

      @ww5302@ww53022 жыл бұрын
  • I love watching documentaries like these, it puts everything into perspective. And I will be showing my children when they're older so they understand history that is sadly being forgotten

    @nataliegill4090@nataliegill40902 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks a lot for watching and for your positive feedback. We appreciate you taking the time to comment and are glad you like our content.

      @DWDocumentary@DWDocumentary2 жыл бұрын
    • What is that everything that it puts and what is that perspective?

      @dreamthedream8929@dreamthedream89293 ай бұрын
  • I feel so bad for Herman. He should be allowed to know who his parents are before he dies. He will know in heaven as for sure. ❤️

    @eileenrobbins8430@eileenrobbins8430 Жыл бұрын
  • I really feel sorry for Hermann. It must be extremely difficult to be in your mid-80s and not know what your real identity is. The other ones too went through extremely difficult times throughout their lives, although some were adopted by good families.

    @timsummers870@timsummers8703 жыл бұрын
    • "Good families" don't take someone else's child-stealing it from it's country and family

      @robertamcguffin3446@robertamcguffin34463 жыл бұрын
    • @@robertamcguffin3446 You haven't seen the documentary, do you.

      @lethfuil@lethfuil3 жыл бұрын
    • What about using a DNA company like Ancestry or 23andme?

      @charlienelson1946@charlienelson19462 жыл бұрын
    • @@charlienelson1946 There's still quite a few countries in Europe who do not allow genealogical DNA testing. There's fear that it will be used by fathers to learn their minor children aren't their own and abandon them. Some in those countries that Ancestry DNA and 23 & Me can't ship through will get tests sent to friends in other countries, but it's probably difficult for anyone elderly. Germany has finally started allowed Ancestry DNA to send tests there. Poland has limited testing allowed. There's no the type of advertising in Europe either so many are unaware it even exists or is reputable.

      @terrywhite6249@terrywhite62492 жыл бұрын
    • @@charlienelson1946 I was thinking the same. Maybe others that were stolen are looking for answers and he might find some relatives even if not the closest ones. That could help. 23&me does deliver to EU countries, not sure about Ancestry.

      @potocatepetl@potocatepetl2 жыл бұрын
  • My grandmother was kidnapped when she was 14 but miraculously managed to escape on her own back to Poland.

    @EM-sm9fo@EM-sm9fo2 жыл бұрын
    • I am looking for a Wanda lindner, estefania, and George

      @ricochua9978@ricochua9978 Жыл бұрын
  • Its kinda sad and scary about the fact all this happened only just over 75 years ago.

    @ehrichan6726@ehrichan67262 жыл бұрын
    • Still happening

      @aaishaaa76@aaishaaa769 ай бұрын
  • This need to be taught in school. But its restricted claiming it is too upsetting. But those who do not LEARN FROM HISTORY. are DOOMED TO REPEAT IT.

    @camillepalmer9337@camillepalmer93373 жыл бұрын
    • In Poland these stories were put on spotlight after the end of communism ( after 1989 ) . If you add all documentaries , numbers, witnesses, invastigations etc that were aired on Polish TV in the 90s, we in Poland , in Germany , in Russia are extremely well conscious about the period

      @joannasliwa8147@joannasliwa81473 жыл бұрын
    • There's no need to shout 😑

      @solomonreal1977@solomonreal19773 жыл бұрын
    • It did repeat itself. Hitler took inspiration from the American extermination and treatment of Native Americans.

      @lactoseintolerant8011@lactoseintolerant80113 жыл бұрын
    • In Virginia in the US, I teach all this. Anything I learn like this, I teach. There are no restrictions.

      @RussiaIsARiddle778@RussiaIsARiddle7783 жыл бұрын
    • Camille Palmer - This is why I’ll be voting for Trump. These stories need to be preserved and told.

      @betsyross9503@betsyross95033 жыл бұрын
  • omg, living underground for two years.... how did these people do it... omg. terribly frightening for those poor children

    @happytrails699@happytrails6993 жыл бұрын
    • My grandfather’s sisters lived underground in a dug out cavern. His father put them there because the invaders were routinely raping the young women.

      @sonofhibbs4425@sonofhibbs44253 жыл бұрын
    • That description reminded me of the scene in the Tarantino flick "Inglorious Basterds" with Christoph Waltz... the farmhouse where they were hiding Jews underneath the floorboards and were still found. Such a devastating scene.

      @JaJaM.C.@JaJaM.C.3 жыл бұрын
    • Act to stop 21st nazi china camp. Be human. Thank you.

      @21iseeit50@21iseeit502 жыл бұрын
    • My grandfather and 2 of his brothers were sent back to Germany for their education from Venezuela where my grgranddad had settled years before. They lived in the basement classroom of the school master’s home with rules of silence and darkness so not to be discovered. They lived there for 3 years, without being able to communicate w my grgranddad. Both young & old were terrified they may not see each other again. Thankfully the war ended and they were sent back home “ never to return to Germany.” At 21 granddad came to USA as a coffee bean trader, met my grma and married;

      @MaryCatherinevJ@MaryCatherinevJ2 жыл бұрын
    • Read the Diary of Anne Frank

      @LaurenSavitz@LaurenSavitz Жыл бұрын
  • It’s an atrocious story and occurring in Ukraine! I hope that the children of both of these wars will finally have peace in finding out who they truly are and find there ancestry! This is truly heart wrenching! It’s good that their story is told here in this documentary!🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼

    @LibertyStrength76@LibertyStrength76 Жыл бұрын
  • As I continue to watch these documentaries, I see a pattern of history repeating over and over. The next ten years will be even more horrific -everywhere in the world.

    @numberstimes@numberstimes2 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly what I beleive.the world has gotten evil,evil leaders.evil followers.!!!

      @marjoriepapczynski1952@marjoriepapczynski1952 Жыл бұрын
    • Can someone get my Popcorn .

      @musiau1898@musiau1898 Жыл бұрын
    • This happening in Ukraine!

      @dulkazizi@dulkazizi Жыл бұрын
  • The people of Poland are so strong and brave. They remember history and fight for their freedom.

    @grandmanancy4719@grandmanancy47193 жыл бұрын
    • How are they brave, it's their history and that all they can do to repay for the terror of their ancestors

      @edenpapich8259@edenpapich82593 жыл бұрын
    • @@edenpapich8259 Jews chose to collaborate with Germans on a missive scale.

      @mieszkoherburt354@mieszkoherburt3542 жыл бұрын
    • @@edenpapich8259 Google Polish contribution to the world war 2. Google rightous among the nations.

      @zepter00@zepter002 жыл бұрын
    • @@edenpapich8259 terror of their acestors? What are you on about?

      @kropka8259@kropka82592 жыл бұрын
    • doesnt mean that poland is a great country nowadays. they have some of the worst, most outdated laws in the EU, e.g. the abortion restictions.

      @beanceline@beanceline2 жыл бұрын
  • As sad as all of this is isn’t Alice’s story of having two mothers just such a happy outcome to her story. And I am so happy her mother was able to find her and have her daughter back in her life after serving a concentration camp

    @princessromanov@princessromanov3 жыл бұрын
    • A happy ending to a terrible story indeed

      @AnaMariaCratib@AnaMariaCratib2 жыл бұрын
    • An amazing happy ending. And how 2 women so loving that they gave an incredible gift of having 2 mothers, two motherlands, two families to their child. And became close friends. It is absolutely amazing! One of a kind story.

      @simplegirlslifestyle261@simplegirlslifestyle2612 жыл бұрын
    • Yes ❤️

      @sweet_cheeks2615@sweet_cheeks2615 Жыл бұрын
  • Feel so sad for Hermann ,not knowing where you come from and not knowing who your family were must be very painful ,he may have a large family who could give him all the information he needs plus a lot of family love 🥰

    @lorrainedrake6462@lorrainedrake64622 жыл бұрын
  • Through all the suffering and pain, his parents were so strong and surely full of love for other people. They didn't give up, they wouldn't tell the location. He can be proud to have such parents. It is so painfull, what his family had to go through, the suffering, his parents killed, his unborn sibling. May they be rewarded in the eternity for their good deeds.

    @JohannaNazareen1225@JohannaNazareen1225 Жыл бұрын
  • She was pregnant. When he said that.. can’t stop crying. Killing innocence like that. So horribly wrong, I hope history never repeats this. I pray their souls remained untouched; despite their body being so wrongly battered. It makes you wonder if you were in their position, would you try and protect Jewish people? Risk everything? I hope I would.

    @blinkie1114@blinkie11143 жыл бұрын
    • @2026-Tanvi Tyagi It’s beyond sadistic. History likes this makes me wonder if we didn’t have consequences in today’s society, would people choose to kill/molest/etc? The fact that the nazis felt justified in their actions just because someone told them so. What makes us different from animals if we don’t value human life? I think he stabbed her in the stomach purposefully to show how helpless she is to him, and in a sick way mocking the fact that she can’t even protect her children.

      @blinkie1114@blinkie11143 жыл бұрын
    • The Milgram Shock Experiment reminds us that normal people WILL hurt someone else if a person of authority orders them to.

      @blinkie1114@blinkie11143 жыл бұрын
    • @@blinkie1114 Yes many people will commit crimes against their fellow man merely if they are given orders to do so by a so called “authority.” If people don’t stand on truth and morality in their internal world, then they will easily fall for it. Happens every single day.

      @scottrgood@scottrgood3 жыл бұрын
    • @Haluun elgen Thats horrible. That’s just horrible. You’re right, it’s naive to think that this is in the past. You put it perfectly, the world doesn’t care about human life only economic growth and prosperity for the very few. If we truly valued life we would not allow this to happen. As one of the most powerful countries we have a responsibility to help during humanitarian crisis. How can we help if our country(USA) is just turning a bling eye? This is so wrong. I will start sending letting and emails to my representative to try and get them to address this, not just pretend like it isn’t happening or act like it’s not our business when families are being killed off. Thank you for raising my attention to this, I pray for you and for everyone who is suffering in southern Mongolia, and eastern Turkestan. It makes me sick that my nation is working with China in so many ways while they slaughter anyone who wishes for democracy.

      @blinkie1114@blinkie11143 жыл бұрын
    • @@scottrgood You’re absolutely right, this video forces you to face the atrocity but we don’t have to in our society, we don’t have to even acknowledge what is happening in the world and within our own boarders, there’s serious crimes against humanity happening and w collectively choose to look away. I agree, without moral values as our foundation in life, it sets many people up to not only not care for others but also choose to not care for their own life, and make bad decisions. Yet.. the best way to help the world begins with working on yourself, like the parent in the plane that is going down, you must first put the oxygen mask on yourself before trying to help someone else.

      @blinkie1114@blinkie11143 жыл бұрын
  • I'm so happy so many people are interested in our history! And because of those kind of people, this history won't be forgotten

    @dagorad3723@dagorad37233 жыл бұрын
    • People are always interested in national socialism

      @corticallarvae@corticallarvae3 жыл бұрын
    • Sounds a lot like Chinese activities today, as well as Israel’s Political Zionism .

      @corticallarvae@corticallarvae3 жыл бұрын
    • Same thing is happening to Palestinians

      @JCY849@JCY8492 жыл бұрын
    • @@JCY849 no it is not, not even close, that is a political delusion popular with left wing activists who know little about the true situation other than popular theories.

      @alicemiller9304@alicemiller93042 жыл бұрын
    • I love Germany 🇩🇪 from 🇮🇳

      @therealissacnewton@therealissacnewton2 жыл бұрын
  • I live in Florida and very little history is taught in the schools. So supplement his knowledge by reading to him every night and expelining the parts of history that I learned about during shcool. I remember trying to teach my son about Elizabeth the first and how she changed the world. I tried to tell him about her good and bad qualities. He didn't seem to care at all. Then I told him how the queen allowed kids to be kidnapped. Kids were needed for plays and if the acting company needed a kid they just took them. Then they would leave town. The queen did not charge the kidnappers or even look for them. Then my son got interested. If it involves kids its interesting to him. I have started to teach him about world war II. He is interested in how all the kids were treated and what happened them them if they were separated from their parents. Now I can tell him this story as well.

    @hwlovell@hwlovell Жыл бұрын
    • Florida ranks very high for education! We've recently passed a few bills and executive orders raising teacher pay and giving bonuses for history and civics training for teachers (for every subject of teachers)! We've also scrapped the failed Common Core program. I hope you begin to feel those changes in classrooms.

      @FreeWaves9@FreeWaves9 Жыл бұрын
    • People want to scare their children traumitize them and then call it good cortical thinking you risk making a man super sensitive a psycho and it is not be free minded but an opionated unpleasent person

      @chachichachi3557@chachichachi3557 Жыл бұрын
    • You’re an amazing mother !! I’ll never forget my own mom telling my stories from history books about wwII before bed. (As I got a bit older to stand it) started my love of history very young. I’m sure your son will appreciate it ❤

      @renemccracken6319@renemccracken6319 Жыл бұрын
    • Zero history is taught in schools anymore. Much easier to repeat it if people don’t know about it

      @debbylou5729@debbylou5729 Жыл бұрын
  • So very tragic what happened to these families, but hearing that some of the children thought dead did survive. So many lost to starvation, disease, cold-blooded murder. I just will never be able to wrap my head around how so many Germans, and Nazi cronies, actively participated in the Holocaust. It’s unimaginable thinking that so many were capable of having such stone cold hearts.

    @cyberrasputen1718@cyberrasputen17182 жыл бұрын
    • The fact that humans can do such cruel evil things to another human it's so disgusting. Many lost their lives, many live their life carrying a big question mark on them, many suffered. Many dont even know about their roots. And the doer of these crimes showed no remorse what so ever.

      @inspired_girl_ari7263@inspired_girl_ari7263 Жыл бұрын
    • Germans are just evil.

      @chud-of4yb@chud-of4yb9 ай бұрын
  • My heart bleeds for the victim's.....the world must never be allowed to forget...

    @pauladowning5592@pauladowning55923 жыл бұрын
    • The world won’t forget, israel’s crimes keep reminding the world of the nazis’ ones.

      @raneenagbariah5565@raneenagbariah55653 жыл бұрын
    • This world is already repeating this

      @shereenkhan8952@shereenkhan89522 жыл бұрын
    • @@shereenkhan8952 It sadly never stopped....but keep learning and try, fellow human beings

      @lovelyvividly@lovelyvividly2 жыл бұрын
    • Do u remember not too long ago silly young people being taught in public schools that this Nazi's criminal behavior NEVER happened!

      @sallydeppe8575@sallydeppe85752 жыл бұрын
    • It seems to be repeating history today. These days we are in now is how it subtly began.

      @tinamiller2325@tinamiller23252 жыл бұрын
  • I was a post war baby given up for adoption. My birth mother wanted nothing to do with me when I found her. I feel for these people as the puzzle pieces are still missing. God holds the answers is what I live for.

    @user-un5cd3dp4o@user-un5cd3dp4o3 жыл бұрын
    • Wow. I am so sorry. What a journey it must have been to finally find her. Just know, you are amazing! Your life has blessed many through your journey and your willingness to share that. God does know the answers! We will get those answers soon enough. God bless you Kristine.

      @misskitty4431@misskitty44313 жыл бұрын
    • I suspect I was given up for adoption as a post war baby. I felt something was wrong when my father told me I am nothing like my parents. They were Jewish but many people we knew or even strangers said I look and act German or Scandinavian. I have for a long time wondered who my real parents were but I still don't know.

      @liz921@liz9213 жыл бұрын
    • @@liz921 lots of babies are put up for adoption because parents couldnt look after them but there is a prog on tv that helps people look for parents or parents look for children they had to give up ,

      @smallfeet4581@smallfeet45813 жыл бұрын
    • That must be horrible. I just cannot understand this. I wish I could be your mom, I would love you and take you in my home.

      @Saskia-uz4ds@Saskia-uz4ds3 жыл бұрын
    • It is hard for most of us to imagine. Me, certainly. Your mother gave you life. For that, we must all be grateful. She probably grew up in a society where her motherhood of you would cause scandal. Anyway, it sounds like you keep her in your prayers.

      @sunnywintermorning1941@sunnywintermorning19413 жыл бұрын
  • My father was taken from his family as well. This happened during the gulf war, when Iraq invaded Kuwait. My father, a Kuwaiti, was like 20 years old at that time. He was working at a government bakery to provide for all the people with no food. The Iraqi soldiers found out and took my father and placed him in jail. He was meant to be executed. My grandfather, his father, found out his son had been taken and came to the place where he was being held. He was crying. He was begging a general to let my dad go. For some reason, by chance, the general agreed and let my dad go. It’s so scary how close my dad was from being killed!!!!

    @Dandoon005@Dandoon0052 жыл бұрын
    • No. They don't let anyone go 😄😄 nice story though

      @whoasked9938@whoasked99382 жыл бұрын
    • @@whoasked9938 Good thing I don’t care what you say. The fact is, it happened, and my dad has the scars to show it. Have a nice day!!

      @Dandoon005@Dandoon0052 жыл бұрын
    • @@Dandoon005 keep lying 😄😄😄 you are likely a white boy in his mamas basement capping for clout 🤣

      @whoasked9938@whoasked99382 жыл бұрын
  • my oma was one of these people, She was taken from a village in holland when she was 7 and was put into a centre with 12 other girls, She tells me that there were fences all around and many soldiers she said she was kept there for two years before being ‘adopted’ by a a family that treated her as her own she stayed with the family until one year after the war when she found everything out she then came to Canada

    @lynn.williams1930@lynn.williams19302 жыл бұрын
  • Text book history doesn’t teach us the pain and suffering of the victims of the war,it’s really such a heart rending story! Thanks for the upload.

    @somamondal1913@somamondal19134 жыл бұрын
    • That's why museums like to accept private journals, diaries, and sketchbooks. The human perceptive shows so much more information and paints a bigger picture.

      @Skitdora2010@Skitdora20103 жыл бұрын
    • Learn on your own, dude. We would be in school for the rest of our lives if we had to learn all of human history.

      @jvldz90@jvldz903 жыл бұрын
    • You mean ranching, not rending

      @billgigolo7783@billgigolo77833 жыл бұрын
    • @@billgigolo7783 wrenching!!. Yeah

      @ra-z2806@ra-z28063 жыл бұрын
    • I never heard of it until that movie came out Something List . I was like what kind of person who do this . I always heard that hilter hated Jews then Black's or color. I ask why and what did he do to them. Now we in war again , 2022.

      @jenniferfields1084@jenniferfields10842 жыл бұрын
  • One of the forgotten tragedies of WW2. Thank you DW for this documentary! I hope that you will do more like this

    @percamihai-marco7157@percamihai-marco71574 жыл бұрын
  • DW...easiest one of the best public broadcast channels in the world (I love YLE as well). Thank you for all your content, the news, and great documentaries.

    @timokk3@timokk3 Жыл бұрын
  • I cried and cried and cried. What a documentary!

    @simplegirlslifestyle261@simplegirlslifestyle2612 жыл бұрын
  • My grandmother was a young child in London during the Blitz. She told stories of living through the bombings and being moved to the country to live with her war mother. She had a life long relationship with her and even went to see her on her death bed. The things this generation went through

    @partridgepimp3363@partridgepimp33632 жыл бұрын
  • I didn't know this tragic piece of history. Thank you for the film.

    @SuzyEH@SuzyEH4 жыл бұрын
  • How could human beings be so utterly cruel....it is still so unbelievably gruesome

    @whyujin@whyujin Жыл бұрын
  • Now I have doubts about my neighbor, he was born in 1935, he said his ethnicity is Polish. But his name and surname are German. I hope I’m wrong, anyways… may he rest in peace. He was such a wonderful person. I always called him « dede » (« grandfather » in turkish). He really was like a member of my family, I will never forget him. His family and friends didn’t understood why his turkish neighbors cried for him at his funeral 😅

    @Cansulab@Cansulab Жыл бұрын
    • That's a wonderful memory shared. We need more people in the world with your outlook. Bless you and your family.

      @tessellatiaartilery8197@tessellatiaartilery8197 Жыл бұрын
  • Someone should buy that heartbroken man a dna test kit

    @natashawatkins5651@natashawatkins56514 жыл бұрын
    • Or a bio feedback to connect with some cousins

      @charlotteskiftun753@charlotteskiftun7534 жыл бұрын
    • Totally agree. He could have siblings who have already tested. Siblings who are also looking for their people. At the very least, he could find a first cousin or a niece or nephew which would lead him to biological siblings. Millions of people have DNA tested, and it costs so little these days.

      @pittmanfh@pittmanfh4 жыл бұрын
    • Lady Heart someone’s been watching too much infowars...

      @human151@human1514 жыл бұрын
    • Do you know how long DNA kit exist? Parents are long dead. Will you exhumate?

      @anmajoon@anmajoon4 жыл бұрын
    • What the hell for? A DNA test certainly can't solve his problems.

      @trishmcl9055@trishmcl90554 жыл бұрын
  • This is such an important story to share. Thanks for this documentary

    @MaximilianOOO491@MaximilianOOO4914 жыл бұрын
  • This is an excellent doc. The last part when the gentleman remembers his friend playing at a recital for the Nazis is so moving. And it really serves to sum up the story, to humanize the inhumanity of the social position of these people. I only want to add that it is a mistake to think the stupid pseudo-scientific racism of the Nazis was specific to the Nazis. Yes Nazi policy was incredibly thorough, but such ideas circulated in Europe and the US, as is shown at the beginning. The Nazis looked to Brits and Americans for legitimation of their racist BS, and they found it. Very thought provoking doc. Thanks DW.

    @geinikan1kan@geinikan1kan2 жыл бұрын
    • Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment!

      @DWDocumentary@DWDocumentary2 жыл бұрын
    • Racism and racial superiority is no more than a con job to seize power and wealth.

      @elizabethboothe2774@elizabethboothe27742 жыл бұрын
  • I never knew of this! Thank you for posting.

    @helloMerrMerr@helloMerrMerr2 жыл бұрын
  • What a quality channel DW is.... i spend hours watching their very well prepared documentries. DW is worth my monthly internet fee just by itself !

    @mariarice4916@mariarice49163 жыл бұрын
    • To the ignorant, DW documentaries seem valid. To those who research, they are obvious propaganda.

      @quantumsneak1773@quantumsneak17732 жыл бұрын
    • Funny how they don't cover communism that killed far more people. Don't you wonder why that is ? Go find out who the communists were, they weren't Russian.

      @quantumsneak1773@quantumsneak17732 жыл бұрын
    • @@quantumsneak1773 strange to comment this on a documentary about kids that had been taken by nazis in WWii .. propaganda of what exactly

      @kjoter@kjoter2 жыл бұрын
  • So sad for this old man who has so missed the love of his real and very brave parents.

    @susielankey5291@susielankey52913 жыл бұрын
  • My soul is crushed with sadness. I'm Indigenous from western Canada, the Gitxsan nation, Wolf tribe, House of Gwaaslhaam. I've studied what happened to the Jews in WWII, and, I've experienced and studied what the Canadian government, the RCMP, the Catholic church, the provincial government and the Royal Family did to me and my parents, my grandparents and great grandparents. The Canadian government created the Indian Act at the end of 1800's, and they created the RCMP to enforce the Indian Act across Canada. The RCMP systematically kidnapped indigenous children at gun point, the parents would be killed or put into prison if they tried to keep their children at home. The children were sent far far away from their family and lands for years and years. If their own family were in the same residential school, they would keep them apart. The children were raped, beaten, starved, forced to work, abused, and tortured. The indigenous girls would be taken out their beds by the nuns and brought to the priest's room, and he would rape the child, and the nun would bring her back to the dorm. If the girl got pregnant, the baby would be born, the priests and nuns would take the new born baby and burn the baby alive in a furnace or bury the baby alive in a grave to hide evidence of the rapes. Some residential schools made torture devices, like, an electric chair, they would use it to punish the children or use it as entertainment for Europeans visiting the school, they would put a child in the electric chair to entertain their European guest, they would all laugh as the child's arms and legs moved as he was being tortured. Children would die trying to run away from the schools in the winter. Children would commit suicide at the schools. They were beaten if they spoke their own language. When they murdered a child, they would get other children in the same school to bury the child in an unmarked grave. In 2021, in BC, a First Nation revealed over 200 unmarked graves at the residential school. Today, there are over 7,000 unmarked graves at the residential schools across Canada. All the survivors have PTSD for what happened to us at the residential schools and Indian Day schools. The ICC, the UN, the Candian government, the RCMP, the Catholic church, and the King of England will not help us deal with these Crimes Against Humanity, they will not help us bring our children home, back to their own reserve. For 100 years Canada has covered this up so the world wouldn't know, the CBC reporters and the Government, the pope(s) all knew what was happening, the Queen knew, the RCMP knew, the provincial governments knew, and they covered it up for a hundred years. Today we are still facing the same racism that we've experienced for over 100 years, nothing has changed. The Canadian society is anti-indigenous and racism is very much alive and doing well here. The RCMP are still doing what they were created to do against the indigenous population of Canada. Under the Indian Act, if we wanted to leave our reserve, we would have to get a Pass, showing the reason why we left the reserve, like "shopping for food" etc, and the RCMP would check if we had a Pass to get off our reserve and be in their city. We were not allowed to vote for a long time. We were not allowed to get a lawyer to fight the government in court, or any European for that matter. We were not allowed to make ourselves a business in a city, we had to get permission to make a business on reserve. Many reserves were, and many still are, in 3rd wold conditions, in a country like Canada that is so rich. The Canadian government, the RCMP consider Indigenous people protesting and fighting for their land rights and title as "terrorists". Hereditary Chiefs are considered a Terrorist if he fights for their land rights and title and if they protest about it - check out what is happening in BC with the RCMP and indigenous protestors. The RCMP are blocking Hereditary Chiefs and their house member from going on their own traditional territory to do hunting and food gathering etc, because the RCMP are protecting a pipeline - I see the RCMP and the Nazi SS Division, the Indian Act and the Nazi Race Laws, and the RCMP and the Nazi SS kidnapping of children and forcing them to go to these schools, and it all looks the same, only Canadians did all of this first, long before the Nazis did. Canadians started doing all of this in the late 1800's - I wonder if the Nazis heard about what the Canadians were doing to the indigenous people and decided to take that approach - to kidnap the children. Many Canadians are still trying to cover this up, some are denying that there are over 7,000 unmarked graves at the residential schools across Canada. Take care.

    @DarrellElvisHillChannel@DarrellElvisHillChannel Жыл бұрын
  • Poland was ruined, Warsaw put down to a ground, millions of Polish citizens lost their life’s and Germany didn’t pay for it at all. My grandpa was a prisoner in working camp in Germany. He was 13years old when he was kidnapped but was too old for being Germanised and adopted by some German family. He worked at the factory which produced ammunition, then he worked on a farm. On the end of the war he was placed at the factory where all Poles had a close contact with asbestos. I never met him. He died in age of 43 because of a cancer. Red Cross contact to my grandmother in early 80s. My family was offered 50german marks as a competition…

    @monikaskirzynska-podgorska4579@monikaskirzynska-podgorska4579 Жыл бұрын
    • Germany paid literally billions as reparations to Poland.

      @m.r4841@m.r4841 Жыл бұрын
  • I'm amazed how perfectly some of them can speak Polish, with no different accent, after all of this.

    @magdalenag7392@magdalenag73923 жыл бұрын
  • Maybe it's time to show Poland history during 2WW - as the only country in Europe that did not collaborate politically or ideologically with the Nazis. Maybe it's time to show that Poland had a unique resistance fighting movement in all Europe. Show a country that fought against several enemies at the same time. Against the Nazis and Communists. Show a country that, despite losing, never collapsed and fought to the end...for our freedom.

    @richardmazursky2796@richardmazursky27963 жыл бұрын
    • Amen

      @viktoriiamatiieshyn7278@viktoriiamatiieshyn72783 жыл бұрын
    • @juliaj7939@juliaj79393 жыл бұрын
    • Maybe its time to show that Poland allowed millions of her citizens to go to Auschwitz including my father's entire family. Not blaming Polish citizens, just state..

      @TippySteinAuthor@TippySteinAuthor3 жыл бұрын
    • @@TippySteinAuthor How can you draw such a conclusion after watching and listening the documentary. What have you missed listening to the documentary, what don't you understand. What state are you referring to, don't you understand Polish citizens did not have a state and did not have any rights. Poland was occupied by Nazi Germany murdered by millions and Soviet Union who gathered 20 000 Polish citizens and executed with a single shot at the back of head and they kept on eliminating Polish resistance after the war as well. Only in Poland was a law, for helping, even giving a glass of water to a Polsh Jewish citizen all families, often the whole viigies were executed for helping Jews. Yet there were hundreds of thousands who were willing to give their life for people, often did not know; around 60000 were executed for helping Polish Jewish citizens, they saved 120000 Polish Jews. While in Frence, if I am not mistaken 1 person lost their life for saving Jewish French citizen. There was Polish organization called Zygota created to help hide Jews. Please tell me, would you be willing to save somebody, knowing you and your children, mother and father can be executed any time? Please learn history, not a story, as it is to important to remember. I wish you all the best

      @jolayolka9323@jolayolka93233 жыл бұрын
    • Yet you threatened your slavic brothers. It will haunt you forever, the betrayal you committed was a push to doom us all. Accomplice of this germany terror that you can take some credit for.

      @walkingsleeper9713@walkingsleeper97133 жыл бұрын
  • I worked for a Polish guy in the early 2000's. He was a resistance fighter in WWII, he didn't care much for Germans, the Nazis took his brothers!

    @loganmpe7559@loganmpe75592 жыл бұрын
  • I'm Polish I know history of Poland quite well, especially WW2. I think Sowa's children were 'extremely lucky' that they survived. The Ulma's were hiding Jews and their children died with their parents.

    @edjem195@edjem1952 жыл бұрын
  • The mental and emotional scars these people have had to live with for so many decades I'd never be able to endure

    @lestercharles8522@lestercharles85224 жыл бұрын
  • Children are invariably smarter than we realise, They have feelings, intuition and questions that answers don’t always make sense to them.

    @susielankey5291@susielankey52913 жыл бұрын
    • first thing the romans did when conquering Germany was.., to stop the sacrificial rites of the indigenous huns there.

      @lunafringe10@lunafringe103 жыл бұрын
    • Why Is us being smarter to you just having a functional brain? Children are living beings It should be obvious that we have emotions, intuition, questions etc we’re not dead Susie, this Is normal for any child that Is alive

      @Sarawarawara-@Sarawarawara-2 жыл бұрын
  • My grandfather's youngest brother, a teenager then, dissapeared in January/February of 1945 when the Wermacht was in retreat along northern Vistula river. The family signed Völksliste in 1940 to keep their farmland and avoid persecution, and like many my grandfather was enlisted and served in Wermacht. He was lucky to survive and returned home in 1946. Untill today no one knows what happened to the youngest of the brothers.

    @pliedtka@pliedtka2 жыл бұрын
  • Can't imagine what those children went through. Those innocent souls being tortured. I grief for them. My mother heart is just torn apart..

    @justbecauseican1410@justbecauseican14102 жыл бұрын
  • too much pain for kids that age :(

    @dianira57@dianira574 жыл бұрын
  • My great grandparents were 100% polish. Idk when they came to America.. My gpa did rather well for his family. Worked hard. And same goes for my father. I'm an "American mut"- Norwegian,Danish, German and Polish. growing up I felt such a connection to our people. My home away from home. Always felt an honor to be Polish. History shows their strength and ripples through in to the strong men I saw in my life. I wish I could go visit and learn more if my family's past. Did we have anyone go thru any of this horror? Or was the family line spared when coming here. I love ancestory and history. I respect these folks who are searching and speaking out. God bless

    @hanbanan365@hanbanan3653 жыл бұрын
    • Same, with a slightly broader mix. I am only here because a German soldier attacked my great grandmother's sister in Poland before the war started. After that, she was put on a boat to Ellis Island. She passed away the week I was born so I never got to hear the stories about our family in Poland. All I really know now is her name, and how to sing one Christmas song in Polish that my mother taught us sing to our grandmother every year. Not much online either, except her records from the ship that brought her to America.

      @giabarrone7422@giabarrone74223 жыл бұрын
    • @John Doe 💕💕💕💕

      @hanbanan365@hanbanan3653 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@Linda-qy1xv its not always as mysterious as (n.americans) might think. i live in germany, and i know that there are a few people from my fammily that went to america during the 19/18hunderts. a few people from around here went on an america roadtripp a few years ago. on this roadtripp, they visited a few people they know they where related to. shockingly enough, noone of these related americans knew they where they originally came from. also, not everyone who moved to america was being oppressed. i know that one of my relatives went to america in 32, because he had a bad breakup. without any oppression. anyways, if you WANT to find out where your family comes from, and you only know a broad region, or even a specific village, look if you can find a herritage-organization, or a family witha simmilar name, and contact them. you will probably find more info on these originall imigrants here in europe than you will ever in america.

      @jkr9594@jkr95942 жыл бұрын
    • You will be more than welcome in Poland, Hannah🇵🇱 It's August, 30th today which means that in 2 days we will be remember 82 th years since Nazi Germany invaded Poland and started WW2... It's always sad, but we have to remember... Always proud to be Polish 🥰💪🏻

      @klaudiasoliwoda7503@klaudiasoliwoda75032 жыл бұрын
    • @@jkr9594 There were plenty of gemans who left a nasi gemany to a cvlzd amerika i'm sure..

      @charliecruger8393@charliecruger83932 жыл бұрын
  • It's so sad that in America this is never discussed. The kidnappings and the forced labor of the Polish people. We only hear about the Jews. Never about the Slavic ppl and what they went through.

    @Mishkamoreland@Mishkamoreland10 ай бұрын
  • Thank you for this video. I watched a documentary about this on HBO many years ago.

    @reneedennis2011@reneedennis20112 жыл бұрын
  • To SUFFER SO MUCH, AND TO FEEL SO ALONE. I HAVE NO WORDS.

    @reneecatagnus2344@reneecatagnus23444 жыл бұрын
  • This is SO SAD Here he is 80 and NO clue who his family was Oh god love them

    @thatgardeninggirl2864@thatgardeninggirl28643 жыл бұрын
  • Omgosh!!! I'm overwhelmed with grief for this man.

    @tawnnope7196@tawnnope7196 Жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for sharing your stories - your resilience is remarkable!🧐🧐 Your messages and memories, will be remembered for many years by more, for participating in this video. We easily forget, that everyone has a story; most have suffered pain and others have witnessed such unimaginable atrocities- Yet still, in our community, we have elderly people who, in their past, gave everything for us, dying of loneliness - we are better than this! Be kind to each other- lest we forget ❤️

    @bethaniel841@bethaniel8412 жыл бұрын
  • Eisenhower said there would be a time when there will be some people that will claim that atrocities like these never happened. And there are those that wish they could say the same, but cant.

    @siggyretburns7523@siggyretburns75234 жыл бұрын
    • There is grand scale denial in the world today, but the sad truth is that these horrendous atrocities continue to this day at epidemic proportions. Some estimated 6 - 8 million children are currently being trafficked, sold, tortured, abused, enslaved and worse. It must end. 2020 is the beginning of the great awakening. There is so much healing to be done...

      @khutzey8657@khutzey86573 жыл бұрын
    • @Dayna Williams Works for me.

      @siggyretburns7523@siggyretburns75233 жыл бұрын
    • @Dayna Williamsyou're absolutely right. Wonder why ppl attribute that piece of history to Ike?

      @alicel3992@alicel39923 жыл бұрын
    • @@alicel3992 maybe because Ike was arguably the more famous of the two, the sentiment of the statement remains the same though, no matter who said it. Still best to attribute it to the correct person IMO

      @slyaspie4934@slyaspie49343 жыл бұрын
    • @@khutzey8657 Correct and most of the trafficking is here in the US, I understand.

      @bonniegirl5138@bonniegirl51383 жыл бұрын
  • I would love to understand the point of view of the sister of Yozef (and I mean this in a non-judgmental kind of way, because we never know how we would react in situations like those). Why won’t she accept the Polish side of her? Does it not matter because she doesn’t remember the way her parents were killed because she was small? If she does remember, is it her way of coping and blocking herself from it? Psychologically, it would be nice to understand what’s going through her mind.

    @DaniiCullen@DaniiCullen4 жыл бұрын
    • It's probably a coping mechanism. The subsequent governments didn't put much effort into reuniting them with their homes and to make the harrowing journey of tracing back her steps is too much mental anguish

      @hydrolifetech7911@hydrolifetech79114 жыл бұрын
    • How old was she when she was taken?

      @mindyschocolate@mindyschocolate4 жыл бұрын
    • It’s called adapt and survive. We couldn’t imagine the cruel doings they endured. Perhaps she settled the best way she could in Germany. Especially, her parents are now gone, maybe she doesn’t feel a need to revert back to the Polish life. Maybe found love over there& contempt. They all have been through a living nightmare now that it’s passed, she can finally be somewhat stable where she is. They are elderly folks now, you gotta enjoy what life you have after the horror they endured.

      @icequeen1439@icequeen14394 жыл бұрын
    • She was speaking Polish with her brother, so there was at least a spark left.

      @rabbi120348@rabbi1203484 жыл бұрын
    • @Trees Lakes as well as adults. Look at the USA! Entire country is brainwashed!

      @circlestrafe8355@circlestrafe83554 жыл бұрын
  • So heart wrenching, I hope he gets the information he seeks ❤️

    @browsbyzury7934@browsbyzury79342 жыл бұрын
  • It's so sad thinking about how one human being can do this to another one.

    @hotmoms6969@hotmoms69692 жыл бұрын
  • I am 61 years old and never heard this story it hurts my heart for these people. Thank you

    @cigarcityweymouth@cigarcityweymouth3 жыл бұрын
  • This documentary states that 20,000 came from Poland and 50,000 in total from all of Europe. Well, I don't know how accurate these numbers are. I have read many different reports that point to 200,000 Polish children that were abducted and that @50, 000 were from Ukraine. Both countries had and have a sizeable population of blonde-haired and blue-eyed children only behind a country like Norway.

    @peterj5083@peterj5083 Жыл бұрын
  • That was unbelievable so sad but very informative educational thank you for upload

    @jamesthackeray7421@jamesthackeray7421 Жыл бұрын
  • 200,000 in Poland alone is now believed to be the correct figure - 10x more than this documentary states

    @brendandmcmunniii269@brendandmcmunniii2693 жыл бұрын
  • I'm 66 years old, and this is the first that I've heard about this. 💔

    @bethlynadams9559@bethlynadams95593 жыл бұрын
    • I'm 76 and I've not heard this. Took history in the 60s..

      @janeiwasduncan8463@janeiwasduncan84633 жыл бұрын
    • Lol sorry I actually didn’t mean to leave that comment. Wrong post

      @niomisingh8871@niomisingh88713 жыл бұрын
    • I would be thankful for that because my entire family was murdered by Hitler, so I have heard all of those stories from the time I was a child. Horrible things that humans can do, and are about to do it again, if we don't succeed in stopping them

      @tippytalk@tippytalk3 жыл бұрын
    • During WWII thousand of Polish children was killed, in the most barbaric way, by Ukrainians. You Tube: Volhynian Bloody Sunday | One of the most horrific massacres of World War 2

      @mieszkoherburt354@mieszkoherburt3542 жыл бұрын
    • I remember and I'm 56 my parents told me my grandmother was Jewish and my dad Hungarian the stories they told was horrible my dad said so many children were taken and germinized that is the word my father used 2 use.

      @leewendy9947@leewendy99472 жыл бұрын
  • This is truly heartbreaking. It was, and still is, a cruel, inhumane act. I hope there is a very special place in heaven for these children, and a very special place in hell for those who made it happen.

    @susannaude8514@susannaude85142 жыл бұрын
  • This story is so sad. Germany needs to stop denying these people the information and compensation they deserve. Herman should do a DNA test to see if he can prove his ethnicity. By doing the test he may also be connected to other family members in Poland who have also done the test and could be looking for him. I was always told that I wasn't my father's child but four years after he passed away my DNA linked me with high probability to 294 family members in Jamaica and the UK. Since then I've connected with many of my paternal family. That was the sweetest vindication for me. I hope and pray Herman sees this, takes the test and wins his ongoing struggle with the German government.

    @ms.keyshawineglass7590@ms.keyshawineglass75902 жыл бұрын
  • I just realized that my grandpa was born in Germany, but wasn’t german .. i need to do some searching

    @laurecrp8751@laurecrp87514 жыл бұрын
    • I used to work with someone who was born in Germany about 5 years after WWII ended but she insisted she was Polish. I asked her to elaborate but she never really explained what had happened to her family.

      @joannemiddaugh122@joannemiddaugh1224 жыл бұрын
    • There are Germans? Its one big mix, in ex. Berlin originate from slavic settlement Bralin (Kopenick=Kopanica), Germans live in Scandinavia.

      @wyspy3079@wyspy30794 жыл бұрын
    • Don't Feel Bad. I was Born in America, but I'm not Pure Native American. People do get up on their Hind Legs & Migrate...

      @KermitFrazierdotcom@KermitFrazierdotcom4 жыл бұрын
    • People know alot, but not enough. The facts will come out later....when he is here, I love you Lord and I am thankful to know what they were trying to hide....our being human!

      @jonathanliberty7328@jonathanliberty73283 жыл бұрын
    • You do NOT want to know. Trust me. Knowing the truth is sometimes---horrible

      @billbrown1335@billbrown13353 жыл бұрын
  • I am an Indian, I never really acknowledged this before but I live in paradise. I used to be critical of my country but not anymore. I am privileged to be raised by two beautiful parents , wonderful grand mother. I am sorry that Europe had to see this kind of suffering. I know my country is not perfect that we have suffered a lot but. This changes my life's perspective.

    @simielizabetheaso2198@simielizabetheaso21984 жыл бұрын
    • British terrorize India as well

      @BrandonHilikus@BrandonHilikus2 жыл бұрын
    • My grandfather fought in WW2 ive always been really interested in its history. I see too much history repeating itself.

      @scarlett2x@scarlett2x2 жыл бұрын
  • Thanks for content that is both high quality and free of ads.

    @8vI@8vI Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for watching and taking the time to comment. Be sure to check out our channel for more content.

      @DWDocumentary@DWDocumentary Жыл бұрын
  • Excellent documentary. Thank you so much.

    @BlueSpruce60@BlueSpruce60 Жыл бұрын
  • It’s heartbreaking hearing the emotion in his voice, how much the trauma of his parents murder still affects him. I want to reach through the video and comfort him.

    @Lucarooroo@Lucarooroo3 жыл бұрын
    • I know. One can easily see why his younger sister insists she is German and does not want to bring up the past. Maybe mentally she cannot face it. If that happened to me I'd not want to remember and think about it either and I'd think of my adoptive parents with love and not delve into the tragic past.

      @catharinebevona6361@catharinebevona63612 жыл бұрын
    • P

      @annrafkin4700@annrafkin47002 жыл бұрын
  • DW documentaries are superb. I have watched so many now and they just keep getting better and better. One thing that is refreshing is the depth of truth.

    @peterwilson5528@peterwilson55283 жыл бұрын
    • Hi @Peter Wilson, Thanks for watching and the kind words. We really appreciate you taking the time to give us feedback on our content. Best, The DW Documentary Team

      @DWDocumentary@DWDocumentary3 жыл бұрын
    • You are very welcome. Balance and truth aginst propaganda and pressure always.

      @peterwilson5528@peterwilson55283 жыл бұрын
  • the polish and German mothers meeting and becoming close friends and seeing them photos is heart warming

    @AdamUKG@AdamUKG2 жыл бұрын
  • Thank you for this 🙏

    @AS-010o0@AS-010o02 жыл бұрын
  • 4:25 my father told me the story of how my grandfather was hiding in the straws as well (he was a Christian) and one of the soldiers would take a stick and pin it into the straws and by Gods grace they never found him

    @Please9111@Please91114 жыл бұрын
    • Why was he hidding?

      @kerryann6561@kerryann65614 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@kerryann6561 Because they wanted to kill him? If partisans successfully operated in a region Germans were doing "revenge runs" through some villages in the area and shooting all adult men to cause a freezing effect and make sure that locals won't help partisans with food or shelter. WWII was a large scale tragedy in the country and then it was sold to Soviets by allies.

      @pawelbialkowski2181@pawelbialkowski21814 жыл бұрын
    • My mother told the same story about my grandfather. He hid in the forest for 18 months before he made his way to the farm near the polish border where he found my mother and grandmother. My mother's job as a little kid was to stand watch out by the road. The Nazi's held a gun to my grandmother's head.

      @khutzey8657@khutzey86573 жыл бұрын
    • @@kerryann6561Christians helped Jews escape because they believed that everyone is made in the image of God, body, soul and spirit. So Nazis would kill Christians because Christians were hindering their efforts to create a master race. Nazism is an extremely racist ideology.

      @bonniegirl5138@bonniegirl51383 жыл бұрын
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