Captured Soviet Female Soldiers - How Did the Germans Treat Them?

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  • Опубликовано: 1 фев 2025

Комментарии • 16 тыс.

  • @ryanfranklinbrown8790
    @ryanfranklinbrown8790 3 года назад +4090

    As a historian myself this channel I cannot stress enough how he teaches history that never gets mention. I've learned more from this channel than any book or classroom. Keep up the amazing work.

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 3 года назад +12

      Comment on the video, not just the uploader.

    • @mrobermind
      @mrobermind 3 года назад +40

      @@DrJones20 Make an original comment. Not just copying and pasting the same comment.

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 3 года назад +3

      @@mrobermind I already have. Why make a unique one for every reply.

    • @wolfmauler
      @wolfmauler 3 года назад +24

      @@roberttelarket4934 You took the words out of my mouth lol...Yes, forget books, forget the classroom; Watch Mark Felton Productions and you're an Historian!

    • @sabrinanova949
      @sabrinanova949 3 года назад +1

      @@wolfmauler
      what can make you a ww2 historian then?
      Reading Germany history books?

  • @chrisozzy56
    @chrisozzy56 2 года назад +5315

    My Grandma fought for the Russian army as an 19 year old in 1942 , and was wounded and luckily survived the war before coming to the USA in 1956 . As a curious high school student , I did an interview with her about her childhood and the war years , and she stated they were advised to shoot themselves rather than taken prisoner of the German army . She had witnessed so much cruelty , that she had no fear of death . She always thanked God for being able to come to America . A remarkable woman .

    • @thephotoandthestory
      @thephotoandthestory 2 года назад +114

      Thank you for sharing. How was she able to emigrate? Did she come to the states for schooling? Always curious how people living in USSR were able to leave. Was it easier after Stalin died?

    • @chrisozzy56
      @chrisozzy56 2 года назад +292

      My Grandma was able to come to America through marriage to my Grandpa , who incidentally was a partisan fighter in Poland . How that all came about , I do not know , but they settled in Wisconsin after being sponsored by a relative . My oldest brother is in possession of two medals my Grandma earned , but unfortunately she passed in 1985 so her story will never be known completely .

    • @thephotoandthestory
      @thephotoandthestory 2 года назад +73

      @@chrisozzy56 thank you for sharing. Such crazy times for Europe, and I suppose unfortunately once again. Glad that she could make the U.S. her home.

    • @johac7637
      @johac7637 2 года назад +110

      My Mom was born 1928, in Chernovitz Romania, her plight was horrible, as a displaced person along with her Dad, Mom 2 brothers were constantly on the move, they were forced to leave because they didn't have Slavic names.
      Mo said the Russian soldiers were much more "swine" in their treatment of their victims, as compared to the German soldiers, she suffered, she wasn't blessed with being ugly, is how she put it.
      She was very forgiving all her life, but used her story to try raise us kids.

    • @jefferyball7672
      @jefferyball7672 2 года назад +21

      @@chrisozzy56 many people were able to come to USA after the war

  • @joshuabb2
    @joshuabb2 3 года назад +6498

    i like how you keep reiterating that it was the regular german army, many people think it was just the SS which did horrible things but that wasn't the case. good job!

    • @thegunslinger1363
      @thegunslinger1363 3 года назад +222

      Crazy that people still believe. The "Clean German Army" myth.

    • @PikeBishop1
      @PikeBishop1 3 года назад +356

      War is hell and makes all men do things they wouldn't other wise. 'Lucifer effect' and all that.

    • @AudieHolland
      @AudieHolland 3 года назад +94

      I read that the violent rape scene in "A Clockwork Orange" was actually inspired by an event that happened to the author and his wife during the war, in Great Britain.
      Their home was invaded, he was beaten senseless and his wife raped.
      The perpetrators: awol American GIs.

    • @MarkFeltonProductions
      @MarkFeltonProductions  3 года назад +1712

      People are always surprised to learn that many of the army officers involved in the bomb plot against Hitler had blood on their hands from atrocities they had overseen, particularly on the Eastern Front.

    • @chiliring7082
      @chiliring7082 3 года назад +107

      Crazy how people glance over what Stalin did to his people. Damn Commie's

  • @TheHunterGracchus
    @TheHunterGracchus Год назад +898

    I recently read the memoirs of the great Soviet sniper Lyudmila Pavlichenko. The fate of female snipers who fell into German hands was well known. In addition to her sniper rifle, she carried a pistol and always made sure she had one round left, for herself if she captured.

    • @MrZombayu
      @MrZombayu Год назад +76

      Yes, the Ukrainian sniper Lyudmila Pavlichenko. Who died in 1974.

    • @ludmilawheeler2001
      @ludmilawheeler2001 Год назад +113

      @@MrZombayuRussians and Ukrainians are pretty much the same ,

    • @MrZombayu
      @MrZombayu Год назад +140

      @@ludmilawheeler2001 Yes. So are the French and English. :/

    • @MrZombayu
      @MrZombayu Год назад +12

      @vyhozshu who, what?

    • @greatwhite3676
      @greatwhite3676 Год назад

      A filthy jew communist. Unreal how you people think the communists were somehow on the side of good.

  • @jbarrer2196
    @jbarrer2196 3 года назад +4391

    My mother-in-law joined the Red army in 1941 and was made commander of an anti-aircraft battery in Leningrad. She survived the siege for 2-1/2 years because they fed the soldiers slightly more than the civilian population. My wife was born in 1964.

    • @tehdreamer
      @tehdreamer 3 года назад +374

      Eternal memory ! My great grandmother survived Leningrad siege because her mother gave her rations to her when she was a baby. Her mother didn't make it.

    • @philipp4631
      @philipp4631 3 года назад +45

      it was not slightly more it was way more.

    • @aidankirby8412
      @aidankirby8412 3 года назад +41

      Kill a Commie for Mommy.

    • @DidivsIvlianvs
      @DidivsIvlianvs 3 года назад +17

      I think I'm most impressed by the 23-year hiatus.

    • @Mancada100
      @Mancada100 3 года назад +141

      @@aidankirby8412 Go to sleep kid, your parents will be pissed off if they caught you surfing youtube without their permission.

  • @ROOKTABULA
    @ROOKTABULA 3 года назад +5127

    I'm a history major and spent many years introducing students to myriad topics. Would have been great if your videos had existed back then as they'd make excellent intro's to a topic.

    • @quillmaurer6563
      @quillmaurer6563 3 года назад +70

      I've always thought that if I were a history teacher, or somehow ended up in front of a history classroom (such as when I was working as a substitute teacher a year and a half ago) I'd put on either a Mark Felton or History Guy video about something relevant to what the class is studying, we'd then discuss the content of the video. Never had such a chance though.

    • @htobler3
      @htobler3 3 года назад +38

      @@quillmaurer6563 Lots of luck remaining a regular or substitute teacher after showing some of the videos. Public school administrators and some parents would see to that!

    • @theplanetofgames
      @theplanetofgames 3 года назад +31

      Do you have records of gulag victims of USSR? How many people might be dead from 1929 to 1991? Any guess?

    • @resnonverba137
      @resnonverba137 3 года назад +2

      Intros.

    • @Adiscretefirm
      @Adiscretefirm 3 года назад +50

      @@theplanetofgames I have a guess this is a lead-in to somehow defending or diminishing Nazi actions since the USSR was also led by psychopaths. Close?

  • @marcofava
    @marcofava 3 года назад +2433

    Dr. Mark Felton, always coming up with answers to the questions no amateur historian asked him/herself but needs an answer to.

    • @terraspent
      @terraspent 3 года назад +12

      i also enjoy Mr Feltons style and topics chosen

    • @oilersridersbluejays
      @oilersridersbluejays 3 года назад +20

      I often have asked these questions, but they usually went unanswered until this channel came around haha.

    • @marcofava
      @marcofava 3 года назад +4

      @@oilersridersbluejays 110% with you

    • @j.peters1222
      @j.peters1222 3 года назад +5

      I find myself saying, "I've never thought about that before but I really want an answer."

    • @infinitenames6635
      @infinitenames6635 3 года назад +8

      You don’t have to say “him/herself”.

  • @tonywalton1052
    @tonywalton1052 Год назад +58

    my Grandmother was a nurse for Tahitian army during the war. She was stationed first in Tahiti and then in Bora Bora. She spoke of her experience sometimes. She was trained on how to use a nurse kit and a doctor thermostat. She is my hero.

  • @janfiedler5584
    @janfiedler5584 2 года назад +1220

    As a formal Czechoslovak my great grandfather was taken to Germany and executed he was Austrian born and fluent German speaker it was his native language and Czech was second ...Gestapo did him a favor because otherwise he would ended up in the camp....You are welcomed to light up candle if you visit Prague main train station on 1st platform is a memorial ...his name was Josef Fiedler ...railroads worker and underground resistance fighter .......most of his mates survived WWII and visited my great grand mother .....they were helping her because they know he did not give up their names ....

    • @joepetto9488
      @joepetto9488 2 года назад +27

      dang that sucks bro. hopefully you and germany can be allies in the next war

    • @jakeg3733
      @jakeg3733 2 года назад +124

      @@joepetto9488 How about let's not have a "next war". Sound good?

    • @joepetto9488
      @joepetto9488 2 года назад +24

      @@jakeg3733 Ok, if your side wants to surrender and accept exile/execution without a fight, that is fine with me.

    • @jakeg3733
      @jakeg3733 2 года назад +1

      @@joepetto9488 Sorry, what? Surrender to whom and exile where? My "side" has at this time the strongest military power in the world. Now if you'd like to surrender go right ahead. Or maybe we should all chill out instead of trying our hardest to destroy everything and kill everyone

    • @masterofreality926
      @masterofreality926 2 года назад +18

      @@joepetto9488 Agaist Evil Empire across the sea ?

  • @MIB_63
    @MIB_63 2 года назад +829

    It's almost impossible for post WWII generations to understand the immense suffering of millions of people during that war. My own grandfather was sent to the Buchenwalde concentration camp in Germany and barely survived several years of captivity.

    • @Lenevor
      @Lenevor 2 года назад

      If only your father was German and was sent to a us pow camp

    • @dharmdaskamble2268
      @dharmdaskamble2268 2 года назад

      Other

    • @ibrahimsued4906
      @ibrahimsued4906 2 года назад +7

      Each of my four grandparents has lost half his sibblings to the war. One of those was shot dead in the last day of the war

    • @brucekliewer2623
      @brucekliewer2623 2 года назад

      Not really. Just look how Russians are treating Ukrainians.

    • @MIB_63
      @MIB_63 2 года назад +13

      @@brucekliewer2623 And vice versa. I watched a video where Ukrainian soldiers had cruficied a Russian POW after which they set him on fire. War always brings out the worst in people.

  • @Pados_music
    @Pados_music 3 года назад +2649

    Svetlana Alexievich in her book "The unwomanly face of war" writes the memoirs of soviet women from the war. Many were decorated as heroines of the Soviet people but when the war was over they were treated like potential sluts because of the contact they had with men away from their home. It is so sad, and war is for sure the worst thing that happens to humanity.

    • @FangsOfTheNidhogg
      @FangsOfTheNidhogg 3 года назад +370

      It seems to have happened in America as well, albeit not with women serving directly. Women in America went from Rosie the Riveter, an essential part of the war economy in 1944, to then being expected to be docile, dainty housewives by 1946. They'd played a major part in sustaining the war effort, doing "men's jobs" in a war time economy of extreme pressure, and then their demonstrated ability was dismissed with the wave of a hand once the war was done, and everyone just pretended like it never happened. Did many women want to be housewives after the war ended? Certainly. Did some women want to keep honing the skills they'd developed during the war, and were shut out of those industries? Certainly.

    • @aesapronov
      @aesapronov 3 года назад +56

      There is another one from the author: "Last Witnesses. Unchildlike Stories" . Recommend, but be careful.

    • @jumeisa8423
      @jumeisa8423 3 года назад +24

      War is always great thing to push the history forward,

    • @МихаилИванов-ч6е1э
      @МихаилИванов-ч6е1э 3 года назад +20

      Βρύσης Παντελής, ты нас с французами перепутал.

    • @Pados_music
      @Pados_music 3 года назад +3

      @@МихаилИванов-ч6е1э английский

  • @glowgirl8171
    @glowgirl8171 Год назад +485

    My father, RIP, was 19 yrs.old when he was wounded and captured by the Germans in France in 1943. He and 1,900 other men were starved and tortured until Liberation. He had the heart not to tell his 8 children of his ordeal but he confided everything in his sister, my aunt. She told me what happened to him. It gave me a a much needed understanding of his PTSD, { they didn't have a name for it back then} The Germans were ruthless on an unimaginable scale. God bless those poor women.

    • @rockykrass7079
      @rockykrass7079 Год назад

      The German soldiers did not torture or rape like the worst people on this planet, the Russians, the Red Army, do you know what they did to German women after the war? read more and learn a little more and don't tell untruths because we don't need them

    • @racher4593
      @racher4593 Год назад +29

      Hats off to your father, sir. They did have a name for PTSD then. In WW1, it was called shell shock. In WW2, as the need for euphemism took hold in the country, the term was softened to battle fatigue. By the time the Vietnam Conflict came, the military brass decided to further sterilize the condition with the coinage of the phrase, post-traumatic stress disorder. George Carlin discusses the phenomenon in one of his books. Can't remember which one at the moment.

    • @glowgirl8171
      @glowgirl8171 Год назад +8

      @@racher4593 Yes, 'shell shock' was used when describing soldiers before Viet Nam. Then PTSD came in but no matter what it's called, it's hell. {PS , I'm a female "Glowgirl" not a "sir"😘}

    • @karllux-d6g
      @karllux-d6g Год назад +41

      Don'tworry, the reds were also beyond ruthless, even if they are depicted as saints, by the usual people.

    • @sbasu03
      @sbasu03 Год назад +21

      And the Russians, French and Brits were saints?

  • @kkelsey8811
    @kkelsey8811 3 года назад +247

    You have become my go-to for teaching my son about ww2. I used to teach him all from literature i have acquired growing up, but sadly have developed a neurological disorder which inhibits my ability to speak fluidly, im happy to let you speak for me on this subject. Thank you Mr. Felton

    • @josephstevens9888
      @josephstevens9888 3 года назад +10

      I think you found a great teacher in Mark Felton!

    • @jewyork718
      @jewyork718 3 года назад +18

      You're doing great work! A involved father every kid deserves.

    • @extra2ab
      @extra2ab 3 года назад +6

      ♥️👍

    • @grizzz6884
      @grizzz6884 3 года назад +1

      well i hope you are teaching him about the mid 1800s where all the wars fought and still to be fought were planed .

    • @boskonian
      @boskonian 3 года назад +11

      May God bless you.

  • @Scorch052
    @Scorch052 3 года назад +1561

    I wonder how many people you've inspired to study history with this channel. It's wonderful work and I appreciate it.

    • @JK360noscope
      @JK360noscope 3 года назад +6

      Filling in the giant hole left behind by the History channel. Filled the hole and overflowed with awesome content

    • @Hotaru-jp
      @Hotaru-jp 3 года назад +1

      [ISAC]Warning! An agent nearby has become rogue!

    • @mathiass1999
      @mathiass1999 3 года назад +1

      I sure am one of them.

    • @RSmith312
      @RSmith312 3 года назад +3

      Never considered I’d be looking at buying a subscription to a “history Netflix” but damn am I excited that I found this channel!

    • @dogrudiyosun
      @dogrudiyosun 3 года назад +7

      History is not ww2

  • @captainobvious9233
    @captainobvious9233 3 года назад +1281

    Officer : They allow Women to be put in harms way and see combat?! How sickening and barbaric!
    Soldier : So if we capture any, we should treat them with respect?
    Officer : No! Shoot them on sight! Torture them if you'd like first, I don't care.

    • @tarektechmarine8209
      @tarektechmarine8209 2 года назад +198

      The russians capturing you wouldn't be much different.

    • @cron1165
      @cron1165 2 года назад +230

      @@tarektechmarine8209 Yeah not different at all. The Eastern Front saw insane brutality from both sides

    • @TNT-km2eg
      @TNT-km2eg 2 года назад +1

      You come into my house , uninvited , with a gun , with intent to annihilate me and all people in the house , Bozo ? Maybe you like some caffee , dummy ?

    • @josevaconcelos8210
      @josevaconcelos8210 2 года назад +239

      @@cron1165 lol who were the invaders? Compared to what Germans did, Russians were soft.

    • @misterx6276
      @misterx6276 2 года назад +6

      Exactly right. Spot on post.

  • @universeconsciouscitizensc592
    @universeconsciouscitizensc592 2 года назад +28

    I wish they showed Mark Felton's series about WW2 in high school. Short, accurate, engaging, and not sensationalized, but conveying the true horror and utter depravity of it all.

  • @AeneasGemini
    @AeneasGemini 3 года назад +1389

    'Nightwitches' sounds far more badass than derogatory, if that's the nickname your enemies come up with for you that's high praise indeed

    • @youkiddinme6882
      @youkiddinme6882 3 года назад +96

      Derogatory term is "rifle broad".
      Night witches is said more out of fear.

    • @freddiefreihofer7716
      @freddiefreihofer7716 3 года назад +9

      There's a recent Soviet TV Miniseries featuring them on YT, if you do a little searching.

    • @georgemckenna462
      @georgemckenna462 3 года назад +38

      France had a particularly close relationship with Russia in WWII, that I think even holds over to today.
      The Night Witches were a division of French women in the Russian air force. The old bombers they used were too outdated for anything other than night use. For pin point accuracy they would cut the noisy aircraft engine and glide in low and slow over the target whisper quiet and drop their bomb load. Hopefully then restarting the engine...to return home. Obviously, an extremely dangerous maneuver.
      The history, uniforms, artifacts and the equipment of the Night Witches can be seen today at The National Air and Space Museum of France just outside Paris.

    • @milindpania
      @milindpania 3 года назад +96

      @@georgemckenna462 The Night Witches were not French. They were Soviet.

    • @haroldbenton979
      @haroldbenton979 3 года назад +32

      The 588 Bomber group or the Night Witches literally caused so much havoc in the German rear areas that it wasn't funny. They flew the Pe2 biplane that flew slower than the fighters sent up could fly without stalling and falling out of the ground. Then when they would go to bomb their targets they would either fly with engines off or at idle and flew about 30 missions nightly.

  • @JavierCR25
    @JavierCR25 3 года назад +439

    Considering the brutality and abuse most faced in the camps, getting shot might’ve been actually more “humane”… such are the horrors of war

    • @letter5330
      @letter5330 3 года назад +54

      Not to mention the captured soldier and civilians of the japanese that even the germans tell them to calmdown.

    • @theresurrection33
      @theresurrection33 3 года назад +37

      Gettjn rped everyday. U act like the soviets didnt do the same

    • @bernardobiritiki
      @bernardobiritiki 3 года назад +36

      @@theresurrection33 no they didnt kill tens of millions of germans

    • @Ninja-kl8do
      @Ninja-kl8do 3 года назад +67

      everytime a war crime gets brought up, it becomes a war crime contest «butttt da soviets didit so itss ssjustifiex!!!!!»

    • @jamescollins3647
      @jamescollins3647 3 года назад +56

      @@theresurrection33 The Soviets didn't start the war the Germans did. Never forget that.

  • @SpaceMonkeyBoi
    @SpaceMonkeyBoi 3 года назад +825

    **reads title**
    "RUclips, please have mercy on Mr. Felton's channel..."

    • @KoalaG888
      @KoalaG888 3 года назад +32

      @@kma3647 There's two adverts at the beginning of this video - So it seems YT hasn't demonetised it yet. Nearly all history videos (except those from Mainstream media) on YT have been demonetised, no matter what the topic is - It's why Mark Felton and others have to plug mobile games like Raid Shadow Legends or beg for patreon subscribers.

    • @ipadair7345
      @ipadair7345 3 года назад +19

      @@kma3647 no mate, RUclips would demonitize you even if you make non-controversial content if it's related to anything political or from a mordern or even a colonial war.

    • @nonautemrexchristus5637
      @nonautemrexchristus5637 3 года назад +19

      @@kma3647 female snipers were effective in combat during the war in the USSR, you make it sound like that hasn't been proven apparent by now.

    • @westhuizenarchives2614
      @westhuizenarchives2614 3 года назад +19

      You all are not getting his messaged. The Female Soviet POWs probably got creamed.

    • @s________________-.
      @s________________-. 3 года назад +12

      @@Tanks-In-Space Ah yes. Theft.

  • @michaelodonnell1861
    @michaelodonnell1861 Год назад +21

    I’ve read many books about the Eastern front over the years. I don’t recall this subject being discussed or mentioned? You hit another home run! Thanks again!

    • @anatoliypankevych4853
      @anatoliypankevych4853 9 месяцев назад

      Have you ever thought why it had miraculously been brought up now? And without any solid proofs

    • @jimbabwe6529
      @jimbabwe6529 9 месяцев назад +8

      ​@@anatoliypankevych4853put the trolling stick away

  • @MrRobster1234
    @MrRobster1234 2 года назад +1547

    A late friend of mine was a Canadian tanker in Italy. He was captured and imprisoned. Next door was a prison for Russian women. He said they really had it bad. One morning he awoke and saw something hanging on the barb wire. As the day got brighter they were able to make out the hide of a German Shepherd dog. The starving women had lured it inside, killed it and eaten it.

    • @lmupzz6864
      @lmupzz6864 2 года назад +59

      Damn

    • @DugeHick
      @DugeHick 2 года назад +1

      Dog is nothin, peoples ate each other in leningrad. I don't know, i dont feel much remorse whenever i feel obout rapings by soviets.

    • @davidthompson1529
      @davidthompson1529 2 года назад +126

      Wow...so Russians eat Shepherd Pie too! 😋

    • @johac7637
      @johac7637 2 года назад +61

      I met a lady that was on the run, and one nite in their travels, they were in a farmers yard, It looked abandoned, they were thinking of hiding in the barn over the next daylight hours, they traveled on foot at nite, one of the ladies went to use the outhouse, opened the door, there were snowed over tracks to it, when she opened the door, a human body was in there, hanging, had flesh cut off it, needless to say she said they kept on going.
      The brutality was insane, yet that's people at their worst.
      Y prayers are for Jesus to come, as I'm tired of the insanity, yet it's been our sad human history mostly, not many Desmond Doss kind of guys.

    • @rustyhowe3907
      @rustyhowe3907 2 года назад +43

      @@davidthompson1529 I'm going to Hell for laughing at this and moreso for the fact the pun is there for a *GERMAN* shepherd's pie.🥴

  • @lancecahill5486
    @lancecahill5486 3 года назад +842

    This channel addresses some of the most interesting, and often obscure, aspects of WWIi. Highly appreciated.

    • @borisbadenov651
      @borisbadenov651 3 года назад +10

      Does this channel have videos on how the Red Army soldiers behaved with German women after they occupied Berlin and East Germany? How they raped and murdered German females between the ages of 8 and 80 indiscriminately? Stalin murdered ten (10x) times more human beings than Hitler. Like Gen. Patton said: "We defeated the wrong enemy."

    • @ericsilver9401
      @ericsilver9401 3 года назад +9

      @@borisbadenov651 although it’s important for people to acknowledge facts like this, it’s absurd to be mad at the video itself. It is an analysis of a specific question, not a broad detailing of women in ww2. If he had to cover what you said, it would either force the video to be longer and oddly directed, or be much less descriptive on the actual topic at hand.

    • @borisbadenov651
      @borisbadenov651 3 года назад +5

      @@ericsilver9401 I am not "mad at the video." I am pointing out a simple fact: the emphasis is always on what Germany did while Russian and Chinese atrocities are nearly always ignored. The Solutions are very simple (and they do not have to be "final"): make an 8-10 minute video on what the Red Army did to and with German females; or make an 8-10 minute video on what Eisenhower did with the German POWs. The Truth is not always pleasant but it has the virtue of being True.

    • @joeneighbor
      @joeneighbor 3 года назад +3

      @@borisbadenov651 A lot of us that study WW2 history already know this AFAIK. There a lot of documentaries, or at least parts of other documentaries that cover it well. And although not directly related but similar, the atrocities committed by the Japanese upon the Chinese people; aka the "Nanjing Massacre", etc., (so YT doesn't censor this) too.

    • @joeneighbor
      @joeneighbor 3 года назад +6

      @@borisbadenov651 Also right I/we (many anyhow) know this. I've often brought this up of how somehow Hitler is the worst enemy ever. A popular subject as the ultimate "bad guy", etc., in movies. But then statistically there are much worst mass murders, evil people, in world history. Like you say Stalin is responsible for many more deaths than Hitler. Mostly his own people (Ukrainians anyhow) even. Stalin would have entire families killed, etc. Absolute terror and suffering for his own people. Mao Zedong tops the list at a reported *70 million* of his own people murdered. The moral of the story here is to not let a dictator, do not let communism/socialism take over your country.
      People kept letting themselves be fooled, and history of the last century or two has repeated itself many times over. We are under this assault here now in the USA. There is a good number of our population that actually believes socialism is a good thing and is a viable option to switch to.
      Books like the "The Gulag Archipelago" (at least one of the volumes) should be a required reading, yet apparently most college and high school students haven't even heard of the book.
      Not apologizing for Hitler of course. But people often reference him as the most evil person on the planet, not realizing there has been worsetoo. All of these murderous dictators were evil on their own level.

  • @charlessaint7926
    @charlessaint7926 2 года назад +796

    My Grandmother was a nurse for the Japanese Red Cross during the war. She was stationed first in Tokyo and then in Singapore. She spoke of her experience openly. Both she and the other nurses were trained on how to use a rifle and grenades. I'm trying to imagine this 5'0" woman trying to use a Type 99 rifle that was as big as she was. My Grandmother said that, while they were trained on how to use it, they had hospital guards to maintain order and security. The only time the nurses were ever expected to use their rifles is if the enemy was kicking in the front door of their hospital.

    • @johnwhorfin5150
      @johnwhorfin5150 2 года назад +1

      obviously a harder woman than the soft,plastic week as piss young people coming of age right as we speak charles

    • @Yoghurtslinger
      @Yoghurtslinger Год назад +3

      Personal question. Did you ask what her reaction was when she would have encountered american soldiers post ww2 ?

    • @KBT_Productions
      @KBT_Productions Год назад +18

      American soldiers never got to singapore.. it was a british colony lol

    • @spiralrose
      @spiralrose Год назад +42

      I read a book written by a POW who was captured by the Japanese.
      I wish I hadn’t because I will never get those visuals out of my mind.
      The things that the majority of Japanese guards and captors did would make the Nazis puke.
      And that’s not even touching on what the Japanese did to the Chinese and Koreans and Okinawa.
      You know it’s bad when the Nazis are less cruel than you.
      I wish our histories didn’t share these stains..our ancestors showed us how low humanity can take ourselves if we choose to and we must NEVER let ourselves forget!
      Maybe by remembering and preventing these atrocities from happening again, we can all atone for our ancestors’ shame.

    • @EperogiLimousine
      @EperogiLimousine Год назад +6

      @@spiralrose ok, this isn’t realky what this is about

  • @myvictory8294
    @myvictory8294 2 года назад +46

    Women in the USSR were not mobilized as men, most of them were volunteers who wanted to defend their motherland. A good example is described in the movie "Battle for Sevastopol ".

    • @echo-channel77
      @echo-channel77 Год назад +4

      In some places, but in other places they were conscripted for sure, especially as they lost massive amounts of territory to the west. They may have started behind the lines, but as the losses mounted, they mixed into the front lines. Most of it was out of desperation, like all other acts towards the end of war.

    • @artyomarty391
      @artyomarty391 7 месяцев назад +3

      The thing is, IF women were mobilized as men, USSR would never admit this. So the actual truth will always remain a mystery, but I'd wager there was not a single volunteer. As is today, women and others were probably just peer pressured and pressured by society into "volunteering"
      From the gov, it has always been the case of heavy propaganda. The gov basically makes it out as if you will become a hero, you will get paid, and that true happiness comes from defending your "motherland". I saw the same thing over and over when I was young, now when I'm an adult, and in my parents' stories. And only the poor actually go to the front lines. Anyone from a decent family stays home. So consider that all these women who served came from remote villages and poor families

    • @JoaoCosta-ly1sw
      @JoaoCosta-ly1sw 2 месяца назад +2

      There was no such thing as volunteering in Stalin’s regime. Stop coping.

  • @johnschultz2068
    @johnschultz2068 3 года назад +125

    Mark I so much appreciate you and your work. I congratulate you for consistently producing high quality, serious videos. Thank you for always keeping it real.

  • @Axemantitan
    @Axemantitan 3 года назад +391

    The movie "The Dawns Here Are Quiet" is about a Soviet female anti-aircraft artillery unit. There was a version made in 1972 and another in 2015. I've been told that the original Soviet film is the better of the two. The 2015 Russian version is available on RUclips with subtitles. It has nudity in it, so it is NSFW.

    • @abhindas
      @abhindas 3 года назад +6

      Can you share the link?

    • @ФилиппЛыков-д8е
      @ФилиппЛыков-д8е 3 года назад +20

      The 1972 version is available with English subtitles:
      part 1 ruclips.net/video/dfftHKf164E/видео.html
      part 2 ruclips.net/video/-5mf6tTBNq8/видео.html

    • @danstoye3902
      @danstoye3902 3 года назад +5

      @@abhindas ruclips.net/video/9v8v1GUjwLc/видео.html

    • @karoltakisobie6638
      @karoltakisobie6638 3 года назад +8

      Original is better because of better actors and great music score imho. Newer one has far better camera shots.

    • @dubfez_9256
      @dubfez_9256 3 года назад +8

      I didn't know there was an original, i found the 2015 version surprisingly enjoyable.

  • @lexiwilson9501
    @lexiwilson9501 3 года назад +330

    Dr Felton shines the torch of knowledge at the war's darkest moments. And his concise style is very welcome.

    • @barrydysert2974
      @barrydysert2974 3 года назад +3

      AGREED!:-) 🖖

    • @adyrip13
      @adyrip13 3 года назад +5

      Exactly, I hate to have to watch 1 hour of video with 10mins of real content. This is short and crisp, no bla bla

    • @InCountry6970
      @InCountry6970 3 года назад +2

      Well said . . .

    • @frunsebischkek1050
      @frunsebischkek1050 3 года назад +1

      The channel is a pure revenge on Germans. That is the only purpose.

    • @hilariousname6826
      @hilariousname6826 3 года назад +1

      @@frunsebischkek1050 Oh, well.

  • @rkrkrk8445
    @rkrkrk8445 Год назад +8

    My grandfather also died in a concentration camp 😞

    He felt down a watchtower as he was drunk

  • @justatiger6268
    @justatiger6268 3 года назад +186

    I truly appreciate the objective explanation of the context. High quality stuff!

  • @magnagermania9311
    @magnagermania9311 3 года назад +408

    So much of history is lost to time, thank you for reviving the memories of the past!

    • @johnkelly6236
      @johnkelly6236 3 года назад +11

      Unfortunately today the only history worth remembering is if it serves a political purpose, or it must be erased

    • @henryseidel5469
      @henryseidel5469 3 года назад +4

      @@johnkelly6236 You are absolutely right. History and historiography are two different issues. If politically wanted everything is remembered and preserved in a highly emotional sort of way. If not it is simply erased.
      History is a lying mixture of exaggerating and omitting.

    • @MasterHaloOne
      @MasterHaloOne 3 года назад +4

      HISTORY is a lie agreed upon. Napoleon Bonaparte.

    • @nedludd7622
      @nedludd7622 3 года назад +1

      As ABBA sang, "The history book on the shelf is always repeating itself."

    • @nedludd7622
      @nedludd7622 3 года назад +5

      @justsomeguyhere So you are just a misogynist fanatic. I guess no women will do you.

  • @danielantoszczyszyn2526
    @danielantoszczyszyn2526 3 года назад +147

    My wife's grandaunt was in the 1077th anti-aircraft unit in her early-20s. They used the artillery to shoot tanks attacking Stalingrad and was captured and never heard from again. Pretty incredible.

    • @Wolfen443
      @Wolfen443 3 года назад +18

      That was a brave last stand by them, it bought time for the defenders to rush in and prevented a quick capture of the city or losing most of it in the first day.

    • @velesrise2172
      @velesrise2172 3 года назад

      @@Wolfen443 Very brave to attack and destroy a foreign country, very brave ... yes ...

    • @Wolfen443
      @Wolfen443 3 года назад +9

      @@velesrise2172 , the comment was about the Russian Women that manned the the aa guns that slowed down the German advance, by the way Stalin had plans to attack Germany too in a few years. So Hitler just jumped the gun really anyway.

    • @velesrise2172
      @velesrise2172 3 года назад +1

      @@Wolfen443 And what was this German attack plan called, during what period was it created? What was the point for Stalin to attack Germany if the USSR had all the necessary resources and Germany supplied the USSR with all the necessary technological equipment for the development of the country?

    • @Wolfen443
      @Wolfen443 3 года назад +1

      @@velesrise2172 , the German plan was called Barbarossa, Stalin needed a few years to rebuilt his forces at least so there was no plan ready by Russia yet.

  • @ВалентинаБаранова-м3н

    Вечная память нашим воинам, бабушкам и дедушкам, погибшим за нашу Родину. 27 миллионов наших граждан, мы их помним. Граждан СССР.

    • @denabraunDDR
      @denabraunDDR 9 месяцев назад +10

      Только советский народ, вооружённый самой сильной идеологией в мире, мог победить самую сильную армию в мире.

    • @kraken_dash
      @kraken_dash 8 месяцев назад +19

      ​​@@denabraunDDRwhat's that powerful ideology?? The failed communism and socialism?

    • @RandoBurner
      @RandoBurner 8 месяцев назад +13

      @@kraken_dash With tons of american and british trucks, tanks, airplans, not to mention material and resources lol.

    • @antoninoscro1834
      @antoninoscro1834 7 месяцев назад

      ONORE E GLORIA ETERNA AL POPOLO SOVIETICO!!!

    • @antoninoscro1834
      @antoninoscro1834 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@kraken_dashMa di cosa discute?

  • @quillmaurer6563
    @quillmaurer6563 3 года назад +1349

    Unlike the past two videos about dogs doing cool stuff, this was rather depressing. But history often is, and we shalt not hide that away.

    • @ottomeyer6928
      @ottomeyer6928 3 года назад +33

      War is depressing

    • @informitas0117
      @informitas0117 3 года назад +41

      War is hell.

    • @adammound1982
      @adammound1982 3 года назад +54

      @@ottomeyer6928 yep the only people who enjoy it, have never been in it.

    • @easy56wedge
      @easy56wedge 3 года назад +22

      But we are hiding history. Tearing down statues, rewriting history that has been taught in schools for a hundred years, “leaders” who believe the Holocaust didn’t happen, etc. If we can’t have our children learning true history, how can future generations learn from previous generations mistakes? History repeats…

    • @axeavier
      @axeavier 3 года назад +34

      Indeed, women had it rough. Whether it's as comfort women In Japan, or the german women that were raped in the masses by americans where then it was inappropriate to talk about after because of what Wehrmacht did, to even so much as not being allowed to fight if they wanted to.

  • @mrivera0546
    @mrivera0546 3 года назад +722

    History springs to life when conveyed through the words of Dr Felton. It's always enlightening when unknown aspects of history are brought to light.

    • @jozseftoth9368
      @jozseftoth9368 3 года назад +3

      "unknown aspects" - these are bloody nazi war crimes, either they are recognized by RUclips or not

    • @jozseftoth9368
      @jozseftoth9368 3 года назад +8

      @@HighlandLaddie well, if he shows up his sources in the description, its ok to cite some writings, isn't it?

    • @jozseftoth9368
      @jozseftoth9368 3 года назад +4

      @@HighlandLaddie well, you are right, the sources are not even shown in the description. Ironically, it says something like "credit to U.S. archives"
      Using the info what the U.S. has, about the Soviet-nazi war. Neither Soviet, nor german sources

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 3 года назад +3

      Comment on the video, not just the uploader.

    • @deftone1
      @deftone1 3 года назад +5

      @@HighlandLaddie Where’s your PHD and how many books have you published? Get the fk out of here.

  • @Republic3D
    @Republic3D 3 года назад +268

    I thought I knew quite a lot about the war, but you always seem to find new and interesting things.

    • @marcosegna2951
      @marcosegna2951 3 года назад +1

      Half of his story isn't the truth. So you can't hear this before this untruth history. Stalin was a comminist, Felton say this. Stalin was a mussmurder like Hitler and he killed millions long before Hitler it do. And look for 'Wlassow Army ' , which fight on german side against Stalin. This show that it isn't the truth, that the half of russian war prisoner died after they give up fighting. Over a million want fight against Stalin when they are war prisoners,but mussmurder Hitler only let nearly 100 000 fight as soldiers on german side, he was to stupid and so he do this by his ill way of thinking.

    • @Paid2Win
      @Paid2Win 3 года назад +5

      @@marcosegna2951 Why would the germans want to use labor camp prisoners, aka untrained civilians from a forgien country, in a war?
      This is foolish.

    • @soultraveller5027
      @soultraveller5027 3 года назад +3

      Stalin ordered mass executions of polish army officers numbers. Of 22.000 if believed. by the NKVD the ( Katyn massacre) 1940 .... (captured during German /Soviet invasion of Poland 1939 the Russians completely denied any involvement right up to the 1990s the Russians claimed the German army commited theses atrocities) ....... It is sometimes overlooked that both countries signed a agreement. Molctov- Ribbentrop pack basically a deal not to go to war against each other. The treaty also included a secret protocol which allowed both country's to redefine it's boarders (spheres of influence) across Poland Finland Lithuania Latvia Estonia so Stalin ordered the killings of polish officers to eliminate any possible uprisings against the Soviet take over of Poland after the battle of Britain Winston Churchill struck a deal with Stalin to releases all polish officers to help reform the polish army in the UK to help fight the Nazis Churchill at the time probably wasn't aware of the executions of polish prisoners. There you go think doc felton has covered this too

    • @m00tes
      @m00tes 3 года назад +7

      @@marcosegna2951 You are talking absolute nonsense.

    • @ronyay3586
      @ronyay3586 3 года назад

      Germans were so kind letting those women stay behind lines lol. 10/10

  • @nataliarukshina8311
    @nataliarukshina8311 9 месяцев назад +3

    My great grandmother's sister was captured by the Germans as a young girl in her village in central Ukraine, she was not more than 19 at the time. She was a "lucky one", as they sent her to some wealthy German family where she worked as a maid. I don't know details about how they treated her as she didn't like to remember that, she only told how they made her sing all the time while working in the garden or collecting eggs so she couldn't eat anything. She did return home after the war and lived a long life surrounded by family. Never got married though, she had a fiancee before the war but he was killed at the frontline. I've never met her as my grandparents took me to Ukraine for the first time when she already died, but her nieces told me a lot about her.

  • @romandybala
    @romandybala 3 года назад +1048

    My uncle fought in WW2 as a 17 year old. He said the Russians were incredibly cruel to German women as the soldiers moved towards Berlin. Im sure he was unaware at the time the atrocities heaped on these Rusiian women soldiers by the Germans. War has no winners.

    • @ricatoni2
      @ricatoni2 3 года назад +166

      Yes unfortunately it was in retaliation of whatthe germans did to russian well educated woman in combat ..sadly the civilian german woman who hadno clue of there countries atrocities had to pay forwhat there german army did to female russian soldiers

    • @jamdeacon
      @jamdeacon 3 года назад +116

      @Egorian I also read a german article of a contemporary witness that I trust and it described a german peasant coming to a soviet officer complaining about his daughter(s) being raped by a soviet soldier. The witness described how the officer beat the soldier to death while the peasant was standing next to the scene.
      Then I read a lot about young German women fleeing (regularly) to the woods, because otherwise they would have been raped (again) by soviet soldiers. Also contemporary witnesses, and for me also trustworthy.

    • @larmure1245
      @larmure1245 3 года назад +69

      ​@@jamdeacon to understand the whole picture we should read all evidences. 'Soldaten' by Soenke Naitzel, Harrald Welzer was written by the research of Fischer Ferlag who analysed records made by English intelligence of imprisoned German soldiers. They bragged of atrocities they had made not only in Russia but also in Europe. In one place transcriptor tired of their sharings about women and just ended 'Women... Women... Women...'. The war doesn't make an angel from a man. And I do not think it concerns only Germans or Nazi - there plenty of other evidences about any army. Even today's NATO groups.

    • @SenyorCapitàCollons
      @SenyorCapitàCollons 3 года назад +22

      @@jamdeacon The peasant+officer versus soldier is something I have heard too but with the officer killing the soldier by shooting him in the head.

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 3 года назад +76

      Not PC but true all the same; in Italy civilian women were told to stay away from British commonwealth troops from places like South Africa as they frequently raped local women. I've spoken to several elderly women here who witnessed such "heroic" behaviour

  • @drgonzo305
    @drgonzo305 3 года назад +191

    I've had this intro song stuck in my head for a week, people are starting to star while I'm humming it in line at the convenience store which just makes me pick up the volume and intensity. It's my mistake for falling asleep with this channel on auto play 😂

    • @michaeldicker4839
      @michaeldicker4839 3 года назад +5

      Treat yourself to the full package
      It's on RUclips
      Elijah Robert " Redemption's Last Chance "
      Read the comments, full of MF fanboys

    • @gthaughton5647
      @gthaughton5647 3 года назад +5

      The World At War series intro. music is another haunting orchestral tune.

    • @rascallyrabbit717
      @rascallyrabbit717 3 года назад

      Nice when they get the reference
      "Let's get this out on a tray."

    • @clavichord
      @clavichord 3 года назад +4

      @@gthaughton5647 "The Nazis: A lesson from history" BBC series fron 1997, has the haunting beginning of Brahms' A German Requiem at the start of each episode.

    • @gthaughton5647
      @gthaughton5647 3 года назад

      @@clavichord Thank you for referring Brahm. I can't read, write or compose music, but I can recognize and appreciate musical beauty when I hear it. The older that I become.. The more I find this orchestral music soothing and thought provoking allowing internal reflection.

  • @glenmartin2437
    @glenmartin2437 3 года назад +17

    Thank you.
    My uncle's brother was captured at the Casserine Pass in Tunisia, spending the rest of the war in POW camps. He told me of the Nazi atrocities against the Soviets. Sickening !

    • @glenmartin2437
      @glenmartin2437 3 года назад

      @God Bless you He was like an uncle to me.

    • @Ben-zr4ho
      @Ben-zr4ho Месяц назад

      You're uncles brother? You mean your dad or your uncle... Do you not know what an uncle is?

  • @tomw377
    @tomw377 Год назад +306

    So much for the myth of the "Clean Wehrmacht." For decades following the end of the Second World War, Wehrmacht veterans and other Germans maintained that atrocities and other war crimes were only committed by the SS, Gestapo and "Police Units." But as time passed and historians began more deeply studying the role of the Wehrmacht it became very obvious that many regular army soldiers had neither clean hands or clean consciences when it come to war crimes.

    • @stevesecret2515
      @stevesecret2515 Год назад

      Clean hands in a war? Not going to happen.

    • @doomset1231
      @doomset1231 Год назад +21

      The bigger crime is the amount that they just let loose and scattered all over North and South America 🤦🏻‍♂️

    • @enawikena
      @enawikena Год назад +29

      Is not true. There were death units for sure. The partisan war was a war without any mercy on both sides. Most German soldiers were clean and just normal people without heinous tendencies. My grandfather was one of them.

    • @remainprofane7732
      @remainprofane7732 Год назад

      Only total idiots ever believed the Wehrmacht wasn’t complicit in SS crimes. Idiots and people who love the taste of fascist boot polish.

    • @remainprofane7732
      @remainprofane7732 Год назад +30

      @@enawikenalmao your grandpa was a toilet cleaner for the army, that’s why. He would’ve done evil if they ever gave him a gun or trusted him with orders

  • @ellemmenn2930
    @ellemmenn2930 3 года назад +46

    Love this channel! I’ve learned so much about history that’s never spoken of in schools or college history classes

  • @lawrencestrabala6146
    @lawrencestrabala6146 3 года назад +152

    As always, Dr. Felton comes up with a gem. Well narrated as always.

  • @midimusicforever
    @midimusicforever 3 года назад +537

    Just telling history like it was. Mark, your contribution is valuable!

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 3 года назад +2

      Comment on the video, not just the uploader.

    • @d.b.1176
      @d.b.1176 3 года назад +3

      @@DrJones20 should I comment on the original comment or your comment?

    • @d.b.1176
      @d.b.1176 3 года назад +3

      @@DrJones20 or should you also comment on the video, not other people’s comments 🧐

    • @Dailygrind-vl7nn
      @Dailygrind-vl7nn 3 года назад

      More great content thank you

    • @d.b.1176
      @d.b.1176 3 года назад +1

      @B M can I comment on comments? What if I comment on a comment that’s not been commented on yet?

  • @ModernBarbarian187
    @ModernBarbarian187 Год назад +11

    That old lady struggling to get around in the grocery store with her Great Patriotic service pin is more badass than you'll ever be. Give her the respect she deserves and all her girlfriends who never made it home when the Russian people rallied to stop the Nazis.

    • @kersevvv
      @kersevvv 5 месяцев назад

      russian people but not russian government, hadnt it been for the soviets i bet germany and russia would be allies and that ussr wouldnt let 20 million of their own populatuon die to starvation

    • @joythought
      @joythought Месяц назад

      ​​@@kersevvv1941 Germany invaded the Soviet countries. Stalin was a monster but he wasn't responsible for breaking the lovefest he had with the Nazis over carving up and destroying Poland.

  • @Der_Komissar
    @Der_Komissar 3 года назад +193

    I was asking myself the same thing, some days ago, while reading about Lyudmila Pavlichenko. Thanks for exploring such interesting themes, with such depth, and also shedding a light into the Wermacht war crimes.

    • @jacobseed6537
      @jacobseed6537 3 года назад +9

      Let's not forget, all were guilty of horrific war crimes except the British

    • @andro7862
      @andro7862 3 года назад +33

      @@jacobseed6537 Irony check.

    • @maiidegeese5052
      @maiidegeese5052 3 года назад +16

      Germans were well aware of her apparently, and would threaten that if they ever captured her they'd cut her into 300 pieces, over all the men she killed during her service.

    • @visassess8607
      @visassess8607 3 года назад +6

      @@jacobseed6537 lol good joke

    • @erica8332
      @erica8332 3 года назад +29

      @Internet Research Agency by the logic Wehrmacht did not kill women just bolsheviks and commissars

  • @noonesperfect
    @noonesperfect 3 года назад +56

    It is fascinating to get every minute of unsung details of the war and how it shaped the world. Finest research and study for sure. This great catastrophic war indeed left many unanswered stories and questions life what it is all about while looking into humanity. Mr. Felton's video archive is treasure.

  • @galileus6116
    @galileus6116 3 года назад +294

    At 3:30, her name was Natalya Meklin, and was a commander in the 46th Guards Night Bomber Regiment, the “Night Witches.” She completed 980 combat missions. Successfully survived the war... And yes, she's VERY beatiful. Google and find her amazing pic in color... Thanks for the video, Mr. Felton. Good work!

    • @speechlessfeelings71
      @speechlessfeelings71 3 года назад +22

      Thanks 4 info.
      I found her more pics on google.
      Her full name is
      Guards Lieutenant Natalya Fedorovna Meklin,No doubt She's is the Hero of the Soviet Union.
      Lots of Respect for her
      From India 🇮🇳🌹❤🙏

    • @purselmer5931
      @purselmer5931 3 года назад +7

      @@domingodesantaclara1130 Boy is that true. Stalin tried so hard to destroy anything of beauty in Ukraine, but he missed some of the genes that created some very beautiful people.

    • @darugdawg2453
      @darugdawg2453 3 года назад +11

      Part of propaganda. Same as US snipers bullshit

    • @ravenpenguin8884
      @ravenpenguin8884 3 года назад +1

      I find it complete bollocks since no one could complete 980 combat missions from 1939 to 1945 especially in that length of time

    • @slacko1971
      @slacko1971 3 года назад +21

      @@ravenpenguin8884 Why couldn't they? 6 years is 2190 days so 1 mission every 2.2 days I would think is easily achievable.

  • @martintreptow8943
    @martintreptow8943 3 года назад +324

    Bad treatment of POWs is counter productive: the enemy will fight to death rather than be captured, raped or tortured. On the other hand, humane treatment softens the enemy’s resolve to fight and surrendering becomes a viable option. We saw this during the Gulf War when large groups of Iraqi soldiers surrendered to the Coalition Forces without fear of maltreatment.

    • @tellyintokyo
      @tellyintokyo 3 года назад +21

      We saw it during the 2nd Iraq War, the inevitable 2003 US led invasion of Iraq (known as Operation Iraq Freedom due to the passage of the Iraq Liberation Act of 1998, signed by Clinton) too. This included the much overrated Republican Guard.

    • @bsaintnyc
      @bsaintnyc 3 года назад +5

      brilliant comment martin

    • @impatientsamurai6202
      @impatientsamurai6202 3 года назад +54

      We also saw it in WW2- with armies actively trying to surrender to western units as opposed to soviet ones

    • @timontide6404
      @timontide6404 3 года назад +26

      And when the enemy gets the upper hand, they will likely take revenge.

    • @kazoolordhd6591
      @kazoolordhd6591 3 года назад +16

      Other than the obvious indoctrination towards hating the people of the Soviet union there was also the lack of resources to house and feed the POWs in a humane way. It's still no excuse for beatings and torture

  • @cactusproductions6531
    @cactusproductions6531 3 года назад +177

    A stark reminder of how brutal that war was

    • @dancancade7101
      @dancancade7101 3 года назад +13

      All wars are brutal.

    • @Gorge-890
      @Gorge-890 3 года назад +39

      @@dancancade7101 yea but in most wars, people aren't trying to exterminate another group of people, or in the case of ww2, dozens of groups.

    • @jozseftoth9368
      @jozseftoth9368 3 года назад +34

      @@dancancade7101 some wars were won by defeating the enemy armies, occupying territories. In ww2 the nazis tried to exterminate whole nations, killing men, women, and children alike. It was another level of dirt, the possible lowest point where people can sink

    • @I_Lemaire
      @I_Lemaire 3 года назад +14

      Cactus. What the hell. Only the Axis declared racial war and a war of annihilation. They got it for sure. 👍 Dresden and Hiroshima are testaments to their punishment.

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 3 года назад +5

      @@jozseftoth9368 then there's Pol pot

  • @tubeysr
    @tubeysr 3 года назад +72

    This truth is so sad... We humans never learn from our past.
    We willingly forget everything for our "gains"
    *Rest in peace brave women, salute*

    • @codieomeallain6635
      @codieomeallain6635 3 года назад +3

      I know. You would think that the obvious takeaway from “female soldiers who are captured get raped, duh” would be “do not put women in a place where they will be captured” but apparently some genius instead took away that actually *more* women on the battlefield is the way to go.

  • @markusklyver6277
    @markusklyver6277 2 года назад +24

    UNDETECTED, UNEXPECTED, WINGS OF GLORY, TELL THEIR STORY

    • @kingjizzard14
      @kingjizzard14 2 года назад +4

      AVIATION, DEVIATION, UNDETECTED, STEALTH PERFECTED

    • @markusklyver6277
      @markusklyver6277 2 года назад +2

      @@kingjizzard14 FROM THE DEPTHS OF HELL IN SILENCE

    • @ДиттероченьБолен
      @ДиттероченьБолен 2 года назад +1

      @@markusklyver6277 cast their spells explosive violence👊😡👊

    • @marcin8865
      @marcin8865 7 месяцев назад

      Sabaton mentioned 🗣️🗣️🗣️🔥🔥

  • @derin111
    @derin111 3 года назад +445

    P.S I am adding this to my post to clear up any confusion or any ambiguity:
    As others have kindly pointed out, Neuengamme itself is near Hamburg not Hannover. However, I meant that KZ-Limmer was near Hannover. Limmer is most definitely a suburb of Hannover. Also, KZ-Limmer was most definitely an Außenlager of Neuengamme. Also, the image referred to below was most definitely taken at KZ-Limmer.
    Finally, in making my post below it was in no way intended to be a criticism of Mark Felton’s excellent video (as they always are!) rather it was a small point that I noticed, having recognised that very photograph and knowing where it was taken. I therefore posted this information on the history of that photograph as I thought it might be of interest to other people genuinely interested in this type of history. I certainly did not do it to criticise Mark, nor did I expect it to draw some of the negative comments that it has done. I am sorry if me pointing out the specific location (Hannover-Limmer) and some of the history of that particular photograph has offended some people, as it appears to have done.
    A small point for Dr Mark Felton (in case he sees this).
    The photo of the group of women @ 8.03 is in fact not women at the KZ- Ravensbruck. It is an image taken at KZ - Limmer which was one of the Außenlager (satellite camps) to the bigger KZ-Neuengamme Concentration Camp near Hannover in northern Germany.
    Most of the women held there, working for the Continental rubber firm (who are even today one of Hannover’s biggest employers), were in fact former French and Polish Resistance fighters although there were some Soviet, Belgium, Italian and even Spanish women held there.
    There is a memorial stone to the women of this camp at that spot there today. A memorial meeting was held to remember this just this Sunday gone on the 19th September.

    • @fightback397
      @fightback397 3 года назад +14

      Thank you .

    • @I_Lemaire
      @I_Lemaire 3 года назад +10

      Thank you, Derin.

    • @82luft49
      @82luft49 3 года назад +8

      Another fact lost to history

    • @jordomayor5224
      @jordomayor5224 3 года назад +8

      And a small point for Mr .Prof. Derin, Neuengamme wasnt near Hannover but rather Hamburg.
      Neuengamme KZ, yeap where thousands of prisoners were forced to produce bricks for the Reich. Neuengamme where SS troops were imprisoned at the end of the war and were guarded by British troops. My Opa was one of the many SS-Men imprisoned.

    • @UTopia-eg7gm
      @UTopia-eg7gm 3 года назад +11

      Derin
      Indeed, lots of prisoners were forced to work in Germans industry. First was ‘mr’ Porsche, he started with using pow in his factories. And let them starf there. Pregnant women where put in an old, stinky appartment building, right after having given birth, they were send back to work. The babies were left unintended and died never getting any food. That was ‘mr’ Porsche…

  • @nepttune710
    @nepttune710 3 года назад +70

    I saw you on a Stalin documentary doctor. It was pretty cool that I actually knew who one of the guys they were interviewing was. You did a very good job.

    • @maria-melek
      @maria-melek 3 года назад +1

      What's the name of the documentary?

  • @shouryajitbhattacharya2900
    @shouryajitbhattacharya2900 3 года назад +125

    A topic that isn't talked about enough, thank you Mark for bringing this

    • @shouryajitbhattacharya2900
      @shouryajitbhattacharya2900 3 года назад +17

      @George Washington no need to be political here

    • @dante666jt
      @dante666jt 3 года назад +1

      @@shouryajitbhattacharya2900 dada apni daal bath kheye shuki thakun. Peace

    • @shouryajitbhattacharya2900
      @shouryajitbhattacharya2900 3 года назад +2

      @@dante666jtwhat, you wanna be political in a history vid? Anpnar ke political thakar ache to apni political video te jete paren, peace

    • @michaelkovacic2608
      @michaelkovacic2608 3 года назад +2

      @@shouryajitbhattacharya2900 only when leaving current politics out of the picture will you understand history.

    • @shouryajitbhattacharya2900
      @shouryajitbhattacharya2900 3 года назад +2

      @@michaelkovacic2608 yep, correct

  • @crawstuff
    @crawstuff Год назад +3

    Thanks!

  • @jorannielsen4213
    @jorannielsen4213 3 года назад +28

    Mark Felton should have a regular tv channel like History Channel. His work is excellent. The narrative is an example many that make videos in You Tube could learn from.

  • @Weesel71
    @Weesel71 2 года назад +49

    A disturbing story, but a necessary one. Thanks for bringing truth and clarity out of the dark.

  • @sellsjeeps
    @sellsjeeps 3 года назад +232

    Pure un-adulterated history. Knowledge in it's purest form. Thank you Dr. Felton. By far the best History channel on youtube!

    • @loonloon9365
      @loonloon9365 3 года назад +5

      You should see some of the comments, people losing their minds over this 'feminist communist propaganda.' They didn't watch the video, of course, only read the title and got triggered.

    • @TheCimbrianBull
      @TheCimbrianBull 3 года назад +1

      @@loonloon9365 true, true. RUclips comments are often a human cesspool.

    • @DrJones20
      @DrJones20 3 года назад +2

      Comment on the video, not just the uploader.

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 3 года назад +2

      Mark even has disclaimer on this video description lmao
      He knows what his comments usually devolve to, I've seen vids where the comment section is entirely disabled

  • @historiamowiosobie4515
    @historiamowiosobie4515 Год назад +38

    My great aunt was in Ravensbruck. Medical experiments were performed on her. After the liberation she had to emigrate to West Germany (the country that did this to her) because the Soviets conquered our country and they persecuted resistance fighters like her.

    • @practicalrussianwithtam4816
      @practicalrussianwithtam4816 Год назад +6

      Sorry to hear about your great aunt, but it isn't clear did she fight for Hitler? It looks that she fought for fascism, if I right? In other way why should Soviets persecute them?

    • @BigDaddy-yp4mi
      @BigDaddy-yp4mi Год назад +4

      @@practicalrussianwithtam4816 It's not that the Soviets persecute or prosecute or whatever word you want to use for the meaning of took into custody. No, it's not that they did. It's WHAT they did in the persecution. A 5 year prison sentence while treated humanely? Probably fair? History is so, so nuanced I don't feel comfortable saying for certain what would have been a just sentence for this case. But instead of a 5-year humane confinement, the Soviets....man....they brutally gang r**ed young ch***ren....and those were kids that they weren't even upset with. How do you think they treated enemy women with whom they were HIGHLY upset with, rightly or wrongly?

    • @doomset1231
      @doomset1231 Год назад

      @@BigDaddy-yp4miI can pull boogie man stories about Germans and children too. Difference is I got sources. Bigger difference is most Germans, Americans, British all got away with everything, but the soviets tracked their own war criminals all the way to the 60s. What westoid red scare dogma are you standing on?

    • @ryansusanne744
      @ryansusanne744 Год назад +1

      In the book 'Ravensbruck ' by Sarah Helm they were called the rabbits. women from Poland

    • @anatoliypankevych4853
      @anatoliypankevych4853 9 месяцев назад

      @@practicalrussianwithtam4816because russians do that without any reason

  • @bobmarvin7341
    @bobmarvin7341 3 года назад +735

    I feel like the Soviet female soldiers of WW2 are a missed opportunity of the movie industry to make realistic films with strong female characters, instead of just rebooting films with a female cast like ghost busters. Probably hasn't been touched on heavily due to the negative connotations of the Soviet Union though, which is unfortunate.

    • @honesty_-no9he
      @honesty_-no9he 3 года назад +46

      There are films awesome Russia films.

    • @sunrisings292
      @sunrisings292 3 года назад +96

      Russophobia (a kind of hate/fear against millions of people), is far stronger in Hollywood than its 'woke' fervor. It's something similar to 'classic' Racism and Anti Semitism. And equaly irrational and compulsive.

    • @magiorazkomarom9551
      @magiorazkomarom9551 3 года назад +104

      Please do not do it now because Russian women would be played by black actors today.

    • @VictorSilva-sc4hh
      @VictorSilva-sc4hh 3 года назад +29

      @@magiorazkomarom9551 I know Hollywood can be stupid, but hell they probably would respect history.
      Edit: I was wrong.

    • @scottwillie6389
      @scottwillie6389 3 года назад +33

      Don't encourage them please. Combat is not place for women and the Russian Federation rightly bars women from combat roles today.

  • @Glenn08CRF
    @Glenn08CRF 3 года назад +306

    Amazing. I never knew any of this, and for anyone out there that thinks this is too horrifying and it should be taken down then history will be doomed to repeat itself if we erase everything that makes us feel uncomfortable.

    • @scottwillie6389
      @scottwillie6389 3 года назад +14

      The US Senate passed a bill thru Committee just this month that would expand the draft to women. Same people who pushed the abomination of female soldiers in Russia are responsible. Far too late to save USA. In today's Christian Russia by contrast, women are strictly prohibited from combat.

    • @sunrisings292
      @sunrisings292 3 года назад +32

      @@scottwillie6389 ..." pushed the abomination of female soldiers in Russia ...".---LOL. The Soviet girls were very eager to fight back your Nazi pals. Especially when the German LEBENSRAUM and GENERALPLAN OST "policies" left 14-17 MILLION ordinary Civilians massacred, only in the Soviet Union. That included a lot of their sisters, moms, kids, granpas, etc., etc...

    • @sunrisings292
      @sunrisings292 3 года назад +23

      @@scottwillie6389 ..."in today's Christian Russia by contrast, women are strictly prohibited...".---There are some 100.000 women in the Russian Army today. Hardly a "small" number anywhere.

    • @jimreilly6933
      @jimreilly6933 3 года назад +13

      @@scottwillie6389 Women in Canada and America receive the same rights and privileges as men, so why should they not be expected to bear arms like men in time of war.

    • @sunrisings292
      @sunrisings292 3 года назад +5

      @Jake Johansson ..."not in combat ranks...".---They all go through the standard training and would be in close combat only for national defense (like the Soviets did). Russia is not facing a massive invasion to put the 100,000 in "combat ranks" today.

  • @SpanishAvenger
    @SpanishAvenger 3 года назад +366

    I love your emphasis on “this was done by the REGULAR German army”, as there’s a lot of people who claim that “only SS officers committed atrocities, regular army were actually good guys!!1!” when they committed atrocities like these too…

    • @walterbrunswick
      @walterbrunswick 3 года назад +36

      Any army invading a sovereign country, and brutally killing its peoples and burning down its land, is not "good." This includes up to present-day - I think you know who I'm referring to.

    • @Nairam10
      @Nairam10 3 года назад +26

      When the US entered Afghanistan, reports of rape of women and children have been made.
      When you kill people you some part of yourself dies as well, so you are more likely to do things that are outrageous for normal people.

    • @SpanishAvenger
      @SpanishAvenger 3 года назад +5

      @@Nairam10 Yeah, once someone has become too familiar with death, it is easy for them to find human life less valuable, specially that of “enemies”… war truly messes people up.

    • @ItachiUchiha-ns1il
      @ItachiUchiha-ns1il 3 года назад +20

      The soviets committed far more atrocities.

    • @mra5975
      @mra5975 3 года назад +5

      @@walterbrunswick who where the communists? Where they Russian? And what did they do to Russians? Such a sad world.

  • @HenryScott-d7g
    @HenryScott-d7g Год назад +11

    Excellent content, well delivered……LEST WE FORGET.

  • @Bradzerker-ed2dj
    @Bradzerker-ed2dj 3 года назад +354

    Dr. Felton: the history teacher we all wish he had back in high school.

    • @ThePhantom712
      @ThePhantom712 3 года назад +4

      History teachers have to be careful what they teach sometimes. The government does not like teachers that teach out of there approved materials.

    • @1badjesus
      @1badjesus 3 года назад +1

      @@ThePhantom712 ....where do you live? Beijing?

    • @1badjesus
      @1badjesus 3 года назад +2

      ...I had THAT History Teacher... Mr. Kneefsey San Pedro. Got A's BOTH times. He really brought it to life.

    • @NostalgicGamerRickOShay
      @NostalgicGamerRickOShay 3 года назад +1

      My US teachers messed up history. I personally had to correct them a few times, much to their disdain.

    • @Volgalist
      @Volgalist 3 года назад

      @@1badjesus most Asian country is

  • @AlexanderBlumenau
    @AlexanderBlumenau 3 года назад +714

    At times the fighting on the German/Soviet front was of unimaginable brutality at times in a spiral of hate, revenge and counterrevenge. I had the pleasure of having long casual conversations with eyewitnesses from those days, who did participate in the fighting between German units and Soviet all female units. Those stories would not make it into movies or history books as they were pure horror for both sides and not easy to digest. @Mark Felton Productions

    • @AlASokolov
      @AlASokolov 3 года назад +67

      "Brutality at times in a spiral of hate, revenge and counterrevenge" - you are traing to put a victims on the same level with agressors. Bosch! Skanley your nasty month! First, replete for millions of Russians killed by germans, and after reasoning about "suffering" of the germans people. Mudak!

    • @AlexanderBlumenau
      @AlexanderBlumenau 3 года назад +118

      @@AlASokolov , no, I am actually not trying to weight anything against anything here. Also I am not talking about the large scale or who is responsible for what on a political level. I am only referring to the hand to hand combat on the ground platoon agains platoon. And that was more cruel than any of us late born can imagine. That is why I talked to people who were actually there and suffered and committed atrocities.

    • @467-k1m
      @467-k1m 3 года назад +31

      You had the PLEASURE??? Very poor wording.

    • @SmotritelMayaka29
      @SmotritelMayaka29 3 года назад +80

      @@AlexanderBlumenau Now imagine that the majority of Russians from childhood had the opportunity to talk with witnesses of that war. That is why it is easier for Russians to discover outright lies about that war. At the same time, people in the West and in the United States are absolutely washed out by the Cold War propaganda.

    • @speggeri90
      @speggeri90 3 года назад +112

      The war between Nazi Germany and Soviet union was truly a battle of evil against evil. Massive numbers of people were caught in the midst of all the horror. God bless us for not having to live through anything like those people had to.

  • @MrNScatt
    @MrNScatt 3 года назад +52

    This is a brilliant and extremely important video. Thank you.

  • @tinahale9252
    @tinahale9252 Год назад +10

    I'm very grateful to you for uploading all this footage of the women and pow pits. It's simply heartbreaking. It speaks volumes as to what has driven the Russian people to be completely prepared militarily. It's a complex situation and I pray people see this

    • @m2heavyindustries378
      @m2heavyindustries378 11 месяцев назад

      Clearly they didn't prepare enough and are still losing...I'm sorry they don't get a pass from inflicting atrocities, just because they suffered them in the past. Complex situation my a**.

    • @anatoliypankevych4853
      @anatoliypankevych4853 9 месяцев назад

      Because throughout all their history they were pregnant with war? Because for hundreds of years they have been waging wars on every neighbor, people, territory and country possible? Because they brought Hitler to power and were allies with him and signed a treaty about dividing Europe in half? That’s why they were preparing intensively for war. Because they have started ww2 together with Hitler, capturing half the Poland, Baltic states, attacking Romania, Finland. That is a good reason to be prepared, when you are always in the state of war

  • @saimasiddiqui3853
    @saimasiddiqui3853 3 года назад +38

    One of my favorite RUclips channel. Thanks Dr Felton for making my day

    • @beautruex7012
      @beautruex7012 3 года назад +3

      It such a good channel I even pray for the limey that he doesn’t go to Hell like the rest of the Limey Euro Commies!

  • @ComstockRoyalty
    @ComstockRoyalty 3 года назад +255

    This was an astonishing video Mark. Thank you for the history lesson.

  • @dfwSwiss
    @dfwSwiss 3 года назад +452

    Considering how the "Herrenmenschen" viewed slavic peoples in general, this really wasn't going to go any other way.

    • @ericfischer4458
      @ericfischer4458 3 года назад +102

      The Nazi-German viewed Slavic people as “Untermenschen”, that is why they allied themselves with Slavic nations like Croatia and Slovakia, why they recruited thousands into their armed forces, including the waffen-SS, why they followed a policy of Germanization of the Czechs and Poles, why Polish orphans with the right looks were adopted into Nazi families, why they had leaders amongst them with Slavic names like Globoknic, Skorzeny, Jeschonek, Bach-Zelewski, Kaminski, Nowotny(fighter Ace). Slavic and Germanic people have common origins. This hostility towards the Slavs is completely overrated and is more propaganda than reality.

    • @bernardobiritiki
      @bernardobiritiki 3 года назад +224

      @@ericfischer4458 so overated that they killed slavs by the tens millions, but hey they allied with a couple of slavs that played the nazi tune. What a dumb argument

    • @frankrenda2519
      @frankrenda2519 3 года назад +8

      the favor was repayed by the soviets

    • @ericfischer4458
      @ericfischer4458 3 года назад +79

      @@bernardobiritiki Anti-Slav sentiments were overrated. It was a war of ideology, not ethnicity, a war between National -Socialism and Bolshevism. The Bolsheviks massacred millions of fellow Slavs like the Ukrainians during the Holodomor and Poles at Katyn, it as a way of life for for them. Btw Many Germans then and now have Slavic last names.

    • @ericfischer4458
      @ericfischer4458 3 года назад +61

      @@frankrenda2519 The Soviets started this cycle of violence long before Hitler even came to power in 1933

  • @tugrulserhat
    @tugrulserhat Год назад +5

    may the world never see such horrible wars again...

  • @ImperialZorn686
    @ImperialZorn686 3 года назад +486

    This is the side of the whole female Soviet soldier story that no one talks about

    • @Farweasel
      @Farweasel 3 года назад +55

      Its the side of the whole Germany attrocities promulgated not only by Nazis as later propaganda encouraged the World to believe that no one talks about is more to the point.
      Stalin's Soviet Union was every bit as viscous and nasty, albeit manifest in slightly different ways, than Hitler's Third Reich.
      Even so.
      When you realise this was what happened, suddenly, Stalin's paranoia and visceral hatred of the West in general and the Germans in particular makes some sort of sense.

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 3 года назад +47

      @@Farweasel yeah that doesn't excuse killing peasants and burning villages bro
      If you hate communism then go for the head of the snake, the government

    • @comradekenobi6908
      @comradekenobi6908 3 года назад +24

      @@Farweasel not innocent civilians

    • @pja6476
      @pja6476 3 года назад +2

      @@comradekenobi6908 copy that

    • @stanleyrogouski
      @stanleyrogouski 3 года назад +56

      @@lurk7967 And yet the population of the Soviet Union and China increased in the 20th Century. It was only when Russia reverted to capitalism that the life expectancy fell. By contrast, there were 8 million people in Ireland in 1800. In 1900, there were 3 million. But we don't like to talk about how much better capitalism is at genocide than communism.

  • @markharrison543
    @markharrison543 3 года назад +77

    Would you, Mark, do a video on captured Soviet generals. Thank you.

  • @jerrycallison6125
    @jerrycallison6125 3 года назад +14

    Thank you for your willingness to share the difficult parts of history as well as the heroic and uplifting. We have no way to prevent such happening again without the knowledge of what has happened in the past. Unfortunately, little of this history is taught in our schools or acknowledged by our governments.

  • @technoviking9999
    @technoviking9999 Год назад +46

    It’s crazy to think we’re are once again sliding towards this madness with the recent events in the world.

    • @ilivdia
      @ilivdia 11 месяцев назад +8

      It's just how capitalism works: expanding, capturing new markets until it meets markets of other nation. If military powers behind competing nations are comparable, then it comes to war. When many people died, nations economic powers shrink and then can expand once again till next time. The best outcome for an intersted nation is to enter the war almost at it's end and not to lose too much, but to get most of the victory. That is just what USA did in WWI and WWII.

    • @SweetheartQuest
      @SweetheartQuest 9 месяцев назад

      @@ilivdia yeah its totally capitalism sure same people who started this all in ww2 and ww1 still around massacring people today but its capitalism gotcha

    • @dewdew80
      @dewdew80 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@ilivdia horseshit, WW2 happened because Hitler was a power hungry egomaniac who was willing to use scapegoats and hateful people to form his own empire. He wanted to be another Genghis Khan to feed his own ego. If this happens again it won't be because of competing markets, it will be because of ruthless autocrats with too much power and influence.

    • @artyomarty391
      @artyomarty391 7 месяцев назад

      Its crazy that USSR/Russia became the very enemy it once fought: fascist. Vast majority of Russians consider Europeans and Americans as subhuman. Millions of Russians go to bed every day dreaming of 2 things: 1) that USA will experience a nuclear fallout and 2) that they will win a green card

    • @artyomarty391
      @artyomarty391 7 месяцев назад

      @@ilivdia Yeas its just how socialist countries work I agree. Notice how all the aggressors in the modern world, all the tyrants, are all socialist countries. Back when Russia became capitalistic in the 90's, it was booming. It was booming well into the 2000's, but then it just started to become more and more socialist. First public speech was getting banned, then websites got banned, then protestors got jailed, then private businesses got taken by gov, etc. And the more socialist Russia was becoming, the more aggressive it became towards its neighbors. As Russia became more socialist, its military GDP ratio became one of the highest in the world, and then, surprise, it declared a war on another european power... This tendency to destroy is a direct result of going socialist. From Napoleon, to Hitler, to now Putin. And look at all the other similar socialist countris: North Korea, China, Iran, etc. They're all spending their budgets on military. People are extremely poor, but the leaders are very well armed. The greatest disparities in income is not between Jeff Bezos and you and I, but between the wealthy class in countries like Russia, and their very poor who make $100 a month working 80 hours a week

  • @didih3339
    @didih3339 3 года назад +129

    Natalya Kovshova
    On 14 August 1942, Kovshova's regiment was committed to the fighting near the village of Sutoki-Byakovo in the Novgorod Oblast. The machine gunners and snipers resisted the German offensive in trenches. The Soviet soldiers were killed one after another, until only Kovshova and Polivanova remained, both wounded. As being captured was not an option, Kovshova decided to pull the pin of her grenade, and wait to blow the German soldiers up when they reached the trench. When the Germans finally reached the trench, Kovshova detonated the grenades, killing herself, Polivanova and many German soldiers.

    • @didih3339
      @didih3339 3 года назад +14

      This video doesn’t mention: More than 1,000 of female pows in the concentration camps were sent to the Wehrmacht brothel.
      From:Do we know if the Nazis treated female Soviet Army POWs any differently than the majority of male Soviet POWs? On Reddit

    • @Romeroifly
      @Romeroifly 3 года назад +14

      Sadly this can't be true due to the fact that grenades don't work like in movies,she is prob the only one who died maybe injuring some germans nearby,many of the stories were soviet fabrications and exagerations.

    • @didih3339
      @didih3339 3 года назад +13

      @@Romeroifly Killed them all or injured some nearby,The point is there are so many stories in books and memories about them leaving a bullet for themselves or fighting to death and ending up with the Germans.
      《The voices from Stalingrad》and 《The Unwomanly Face》and more

    • @didih3339
      @didih3339 3 года назад +9

      @@Romeroifly The Germans left them with no choice. As mentioned in these books that I posted above,Gouged eyes out and sexual violence

    • @fifove
      @fifove 3 года назад +6

      Real Heroes and patriots of of their Homland, eternal memory and deep bow from all of us to whom we owe our seren life under peaceful sky, no one is forgotten, nothing is unforgoten.

  • @Barko-6
    @Barko-6 3 года назад +42

    Bro I love Mark Felton because he always surprises me with history I never knew existed. Thank you Mr. Felton

  • @luisramon8322
    @luisramon8322 3 года назад +455

    I really admired the courage and fighting spirit of those Soviet women against all the odds. God bless their souls.

    • @gabix7488
      @gabix7488 3 года назад +11

      Courage and fighting spirit ?
      I am pretty sure they have no choice , most probably forceed by the Communist regime to go and " fight"

    • @JazzFunk22
      @JazzFunk22 3 года назад +3

      Iam all for equal rights 👏👏

    • @luisramon8322
      @luisramon8322 3 года назад +9

      Killing those young beautiful Sovyyyiet women soldiers on the spot just for defending their Homeland were acts of barbarism and cowardise by the germans

    • @MrCshx
      @MrCshx 2 года назад +25

      @Gabi X
      With the exception of nurses, all women volunteered for the front line. Among them were a huge number strongly motivated personally by this war. Some ideologically (teachers, political officers, real communists, etc.), others simply lost friends, family, or in general everything thanks to the Nazis. On average, most of them were in their 20s. For example, by the end of the first stage of the Great Patriotic War (Between 1941-1943) - only 3% of the people born in 1920 remained in total.

    • @sharkonesega
      @sharkonesega 2 года назад

      There are many examples of volunteer

  • @akxeman
    @akxeman 8 месяцев назад

    So important the lessons of that time not be forgotten, as painful as it is to recall them. Good job on this.

  • @RCAvhstape
    @RCAvhstape 3 года назад +273

    "Rifle Broads" would make a good name for a punk band.

    • @daveyboy_
      @daveyboy_ 3 года назад +42

      The Night Witches

    • @RCAvhstape
      @RCAvhstape 3 года назад +3

      @@daveyboy_ also yes

    • @musicalneptunian
      @musicalneptunian 3 года назад +14

      There is a band called The Celibate Rifles. lol.

    • @firstnamesecondname852
      @firstnamesecondname852 3 года назад +5

      It's falsely translated. I think "wife" is correct. The similarity to German "Weib" is no coincidence.

    • @francoistombe
      @francoistombe 3 года назад +11

      According to Solzhenitsyn the Russians called female soldiers "field mattresses".

  • @Mankan569
    @Mankan569 3 года назад +14

    Calm factual informative voice that should never be silenced! These videos should be mandatory in all school teaching. Thank you for your commitment to informing about something that must never be forgotten.

  • @Stefan_Van_pellicom
    @Stefan_Van_pellicom 3 года назад +392

    This video told everything I expected from the title. The eastern front was brutal !

    • @jasonbell6234
      @jasonbell6234 3 года назад +10

      It was massive and brutal front.

    • @stefanomanferlotti1517
      @stefanomanferlotti1517 3 года назад +21

      War is always brutal. Every war. The human race at its worst. I know no exception to this.

    • @drake7345
      @drake7345 3 года назад +23

      @@stefanomanferlotti1517 Yes but never in the history of humanity has there been something so terrible and brutal than the eastern front in WW2. Untold amounts of suffering and hardship, by far the single most brutal and destructive front of any war in human history

    • @drake7345
      @drake7345 3 года назад +2

      @@stefanomanferlotti1517 And not quite true, there has been plenty of wars have with relatively little brutality.

    • @mikesummers6880
      @mikesummers6880 3 года назад +29

      One german soldier was interviewed after the war by Max Hastings a war novelist, he said when he was moved from the Eastern front to fight on the Western front to fight Americans and British and commonwealth soldiers. He fought he was on holiday because that was the comparison between East and west .

  • @billcummins5801
    @billcummins5801 2 года назад +32

    That was very well put together Mark your awesome

  • @awol2019
    @awol2019 3 года назад +58

    Thank you Dr. Felton . For six years , the entire world , was at war . In the 75 yrs. since then, all we heard about women's contribution on any side is that of nurses and some female snipers. Your stories and videos , about the contribution of women to the war effort in WW2 on all sides , is a goldmine of information and new learning . Bravo SIR .

    • @grizzz6884
      @grizzz6884 3 года назад +3

      the whole world is at war now , world war 2 only ended on paper . the results never ended

    • @ulyssescsmith1794
      @ulyssescsmith1794 3 года назад +1

      Barbaric

    • @sunrisings292
      @sunrisings292 3 года назад +3

      The Russian female battalions go far back to WW1. Look for the Russian women's "Battalion of Death". Perhaps Mr. Felton will do a video about them.

  • @rh81454
    @rh81454 3 года назад +26

    This channel is simply the best channel in all of RUclips. Thank you sir for all your hard work in educating us. May people learn the lessons of war so we don't have to repeat them over and over again. God Bless!

    • @thomaswayneward
      @thomaswayneward 3 года назад +1

      If you want to learn the real history of WWII, read David Irvings books.

  • @steveneltringham1478
    @steveneltringham1478 3 года назад +110

    How welcome Dr. Felton's glimpses into this compelling period of history are. He doesn't glorify any aspect of what is man's greatest folly and disgrace. I often feel uncomfortable watching these mini-docs as I am obliged to face truths I don't want to face and invariably come away with respect for people I reviled previously and revulsion towards some I had hero-worshipped to that point. History isn't there to make us feel good, just enlightened, and Dr. Felton has a rare talent in that repect. I hope to learn more.

    • @dixonpinfold2582
      @dixonpinfold2582 3 года назад +2

      He strikes me as someone from the era of wars himself. I think he's got a great deal of 1910-1950 in him, which is exactly what I respond to. Human society and character left something to be desired at the time, to be sure, but now it's something people back then would've considered a nightmare. I like to spend idle moments and spare time there.

  • @epereyralucena
    @epereyralucena Год назад +7

    a good one is a soviet lady named Mariya Oktyabrskaya who lost husband at war, sent letter to stalin asking for a tank, and stalin gave her one, she went on to the front and took down many germans. died in her tank i think. Shes a hero of soviet union

    • @artyomarty391
      @artyomarty391 7 месяцев назад +2

      You have to take all these stories with a grain of salt, because USSR invested heavily in propaganda both during and after the war.
      My parents had saved newspapers back from that era and every story, every headline, was about some heroic Russian. Reading all these stories makes it seem like every Russian soldier can take out 100 germans. There were probably more stories about heroes, than actual soldiers
      You see something similar in todays China, where the only things that can be published are things that somehow make China seem in a positive light, even though in reality, Chinese people are some of the poorest people on the planet (over 500 million Chinese make less than 100$ per month)

    • @shxmana
      @shxmana 5 месяцев назад

      @@artyomarty391 cant forget they send millions into battle, I know its propaganda but a lot of these stories probably have some truth to them just made to seem a lot bigger than they are

  • @mohammedjelloo8023
    @mohammedjelloo8023 3 года назад +40

    I didn’t realise that the voice on these wonderful videos was actually Mark Felton’s.
    I honestly thought that it was a high quality text-to-speech-reader.
    Very clear unambiguous refined voice in my opinion, which is quite comforting to listen to.

    • @philandrews100
      @philandrews100 3 года назад +1

      Estuary English at its finest - not Stephen Hawking!

    • @ffjsb
      @ffjsb 3 года назад +1

      There's no such thing as "high quality text to speech", all the robo-voices suck.

    • @AllahDoesNotExist
      @AllahDoesNotExist 3 года назад

      Crazy how people flock to a channel with a good voice eh? Can you imagine this channel but with a thick eastern European accent and bad audio? Max 100 views.

  • @livingonparkavenueinmanhat775
    @livingonparkavenueinmanhat775 3 года назад +34

    My father brought from Germany - as a souvenir - 2 enormous suitcases, filled with the German
    Encyclopedia in German. BUT. I have never seen such refined quality of the cover, the pictures inside. Each
    volume was a masterpiece.

  • @14Teutonic
    @14Teutonic 3 года назад +20

    After discovering your channel I realised just how little I knew about WW2. Excellent work Dr.

  • @SetTheGoat23
    @SetTheGoat23 6 месяцев назад

    Just wanted to say im a huge fan of your work Mark always look forward to a new video!

  • @jaydoublebusy
    @jaydoublebusy 3 года назад +437

    "If we do not remember the past,we are doomed to repeat it in the future."

    • @beeragainsthumanity1420
      @beeragainsthumanity1420 3 года назад +21

      The reality is some see it as a horror never to be repeated...
      ....some see it as a game plan.

    • @Parasmunt
      @Parasmunt 3 года назад +15

      There are worse fates than a world war. Try slavery without the possibility of resistance. That is a much more realistic terrible fate for OUR world (especially as technology marches on).

    • @powerplay8355
      @powerplay8355 3 года назад +25

      Rubbish, it's repeated regardless

    • @danawilkes8322
      @danawilkes8322 3 года назад +11

      The libraries and museums are full of the past. Not only do they repeat them. The atrocities and wars are worse than ever before...

    • @jaydoublebusy
      @jaydoublebusy 3 года назад +8

      @@danawilkes8322 unfortunately the newer generations dont frequent museums and libraries.

  • @liviocarriles7775
    @liviocarriles7775 2 года назад +219

    My great-grandmother fought in the second world war but honestly I don't know where and what she really did, the only thing I have are some photos of her in uniform and her old rifle, the most incredible thing of all is that I got to know her when I was a child, when I was only 6, the only thing I remember is that it scared me because she was very tall 1.94 (6.2) and very skinny, she looked like a ghost with her long white hair and green eyes that seemed to glow in the dark, I didn't know this but it turns out that she also had a tattoo on her left shoulder of a red star, honestly the more I know the more it hurts me that I couldn't talk to her about her experiences

    • @АлександрПиров-п4б
      @АлександрПиров-п4б 2 года назад +4

      ...у каждого человека - 4 прабабушки, и 4 прадедушки....

    • @Aussie_Truth
      @Aussie_Truth 2 года назад +15

      Both my parents were in WW11 and Grandparents WW1. They didn't want to recite out-loud what they'd seen. If you can imagine witnessing the most horrific barbaric crimes against unarmed people over and over again it was impossible for them to say these out loud. By not repeating what they saw, they hoped the nightmares would eventually fade. If they talked about it all, the nightmares would never fade. They didn't realise that it didn't make any difference because right up until they died the nightmares never went away. That's why a few as they reached their 90's started talking about what went on.
      That's also why many returned service personnel today, turn to drugs and alcoholic and the military is the last one wanting to help, because then they'll have to admit the atrocities they force our service personnel to commit in the line of 'keeping the world safe'.

    • @Basedapple
      @Basedapple Год назад +12

      @@Aussie_Truth I didn't know there was a world war 11.

    • @Blox117
      @Blox117 Год назад

      dang i bet your grandma was a great lay. back in the day of course

    • @thommysides4616
      @thommysides4616 Год назад +2

      Your parents should have shared information about her.

  • @EnlightenedPatriot1
    @EnlightenedPatriot1 3 года назад +18

    Terrible times which I hope and pray will never be repeated. Thank you for covering WW2 stories I was never aware of.

    • @minnesotamarine9861
      @minnesotamarine9861 3 года назад

      LOL the death and destruction on the doorstep of the world will dwarf the death toll of the 20th century. All hale the great reset.

    • @thebeagles2025
      @thebeagles2025 3 года назад

      It's been repeated. Check out the Iran/Iraq war. I'm sure there were others.

    • @joshroberts3294
      @joshroberts3294 3 года назад

      While people believe in a Deity/ God/ Higher Spirit to justify their behaviour it WILL occur again and has done since WW2.

    • @livelife4928
      @livelife4928 3 года назад +1

      @@joshroberts3294 believing in a deity isn't what makes them justify that behavior. I believe in God and I don't think I'll be willing to commit any vicious acts at any point in my life.
      However, self righteousness does tend to result in such tragedies. Oddly enough, Religion is used by plenty of people to boost their self righteous beliefs so maybe there's some truth behind your words.

  • @frankdooley6451
    @frankdooley6451 Год назад +32

    Those poor girls and women, truly horrifying. In the photo you can see the sheer terror on their faces, God bless them.

    • @Vorname_Nachnahme
      @Vorname_Nachnahme 11 месяцев назад +4

      They delivered terror, they received terror.

    • @warbeatler618
      @warbeatler618 9 месяцев назад +13

      ​@@Vorname_Nachnahme Ohh look, I spotted an edgy wehrboo. Even got a german sounding username lol. Cry me ariver cause the germans lost both world wars L 😂😂😂

    • @UndertakerU2ber
      @UndertakerU2ber 9 месяцев назад

      @@warbeatler618
      The Russian men that got captured were executed, starved, and treated like collateral.
      As for the Russian women, all they had to do was bend frontwards and touch their toes to get taken for a ride of pain, but mostly pleasure. Mmmmm yes, they can't help but crave their womanly instincts of being placed into compromising positions, having foreign objects inserted into their bodies, and suffering in order to please the domineering man that's taken control of their hips 😘

    • @eotikurac
      @eotikurac 9 месяцев назад

      they were horse

    • @Z-FishInMyBreakfast
      @Z-FishInMyBreakfast 8 месяцев назад +4

      @@UndertakerU2ber wth ? Get therapy

  • @AdA-rl4eo
    @AdA-rl4eo 2 года назад +1

    I’m glad I watched this before going to bed, it was a real positive note to end the day on

  • @MartialLoreNZ
    @MartialLoreNZ 3 года назад +85

    For those interested in learning more about the experiences of female frontline Soviet soldiers, I recommend "The Unwomanly Face of War" by Svetlana Alexievich.

    • @larss337
      @larss337 3 года назад +8

      Yes, this book is a very good, if rather grim, description of the life of women in the red army.
      The unbelievable suffering of the Soviet people during WW2 is mind-boggling.

    • @nilerice9575
      @nilerice9575 3 года назад +3

      Came here to say this myself - truly exceptional book, and Alexievich has produced many other brilliant books on the Soviet experience from WWII to Chernobyl and Afghanistan to life after the collapse - she truly earned her Nobel Prize.

  • @charleshite7707
    @charleshite7707 3 года назад +124

    The man is on a tear this week. Weall rejoice!

  • @VIPER03100
    @VIPER03100 3 года назад +38

    Tank you for covering unknown and strage aspects of history sir.

  • @bahaprodz
    @bahaprodz 4 месяца назад

    Great video! I wish you could create another channel with French narration. My father loves World War II and would be very interested in this. Unfortunately, the French captions don’t make it as engaging or fun. Thanks!