Berlin's Hated WW2 Memorial

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 23 авг 2024
  • Go to curiositystrea... and use code MARKFELTON to save 25% off today, that’s only $14.99 a year. Thanks to Curiosity Stream for sponsoring today’s video.
    The Soviet War Memorial stands in Berlin's Tiergarten, commemorating 5000 soldiers from the 1st Ukrainian and 1st Byelorussian Fronts killed capturing central Berlin, part of the wider 80,000 soldiers who died in the Berlin battle. Discover why it was built, what it represents, and why Berliners have had a difficult relationship with it since 1945.
    Dr. Mark Felton FRHistS, FRSA is a well-known British historian, the author of 22 non-fiction books, including bestsellers 'Zero Night' and 'Castle of the Eagles', both currently being developed into movies in Hollywood. In addition to writing, Mark also appears regularly in television documentaries around the world, including on The History Channel, Netflix, National Geographic, Quest, American Heroes Channel and RMC Decouverte. His books have formed the background to several TV and radio documentaries. More information about Mark can be found at: en.wikipedia.o...
    Visit my audio book channel 'War Stories with Mark Felton': • One Thousand Miles to ...
    Help support my channel:
    www.paypal.me/...
    / markfeltonproductions
    Disclaimer: All opinions and comments expressed in the 'Comments' section do not reflect the opinions of Mark Felton Productions. All opinions and comments should contribute to the dialogue. Mark Felton Productions does not condone written attacks, insults, racism, sexism, extremism, violence or otherwise questionable comments or material in the 'Comments' section, and reserves the right to delete any comment violating this rule or to block any poster from the channel.
    Credits: US National Archives; Library of Congress; astveten

Комментарии • 9 тыс.

  • @MarkFeltonProductions
    @MarkFeltonProductions  2 года назад +344

    Go to curiositystream.thld.co/markfelton_0822 and use code MARKFELTON to save 25% off today, that’s only $14.99 a year. Thanks to Curiosity Stream for sponsoring today’s video.

    • @Mr_Fancypants
      @Mr_Fancypants 2 года назад +21

      No thank you.

    • @stuartpenman6387
      @stuartpenman6387 2 года назад +9

      you are getting better at the subtle anti-Russian propaganda , the M.O.D will be impressed

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti 2 года назад +11

      @@Mr_Fancypants No one cares

    • @balabanasireti
      @balabanasireti 2 года назад +12

      @@stuartpenman6387 Cry less, bot

    • @stuartpenman6387
      @stuartpenman6387 2 года назад +1

      @@balabanasireti LOL thanks for the laugh kid

  • @Station7Jason
    @Station7Jason 2 года назад +6495

    I’ve spent the last 47 years studying WW2 and I can confidently say I still don’t know half as much as Dr. Felton, a true scholar.

    • @projektkobra2247
      @projektkobra2247 2 года назад +241

      I as well....and if theres one thing Ive learned beyond all doubt, is that you can NEVER know all there is to know about WW2.

    • @heyhoe168
      @heyhoe168 2 года назад +90

      @@projektkobra2247 yes. Also WW2 in fact is a tiny faction of the XX century history.

    • @timturple7880
      @timturple7880 2 года назад +16

      Check out Third Reich in ruins lads

    • @sakabula2357
      @sakabula2357 2 года назад +9

      @@timturple7880 on YT?

    • @RaiderLeo69
      @RaiderLeo69 2 года назад +9

      A gentleman and a scholar 🧐!!!

  • @ricahrdb
    @ricahrdb 2 года назад +3198

    The 1990 treaty apparently also includes a provision that arranges for the protection of German war graves in Russia. This may explain the German governments reluctance to change anything about this memorial or any other former Soviet Union memorial.
    edit: changed "Russian memorial" to "Soviet Union memorial". Thanks Marat.

    • @Caldera01
      @Caldera01 2 года назад +415

      Finally a resonable answer as to why this should remain.
      Has Russia upheld their end of the agreement?

    • @jakekaywell5972
      @jakekaywell5972 2 года назад +470

      @@Caldera01 To my knowledge, yes. An example is the Sologubovka Cemetery 43 miles southeast of St. Petersburg.

    • @raysmalley4725
      @raysmalley4725 2 года назад +281

      Pretty simple, seems like it should have been part of Marks narrative.

    • @91Redmist
      @91Redmist 2 года назад +206

      Now the whole thing makes sense to me. Reciprocity.

    • @stefanstruger9949
      @stefanstruger9949 2 года назад +145

      its also the right thing to do.

  • @predragmanov6341
    @predragmanov6341 Год назад +438

    Ukrainian, Belorussian etc. Fronts are just names. They consisted of people ethnicities and nationalities from all over USSR. It didnt mean that the soldiers from the Ukrainian front were only Ukrainian. Just in case if some people didn't know that, , which I highly doubt.

    • @KLblk88
      @KLblk88 6 месяцев назад +8

      So, did he say such a bullshit in his video?

    • @Sisko526
      @Sisko526 6 месяцев назад +47

      @@KLblk88 well this memorial is not hated so yeah the entire take is bullshit lol, most people here dont really know it exists because its the smallest one in the city and the one in treptower park is far more known and also a popular place to drink a beer enjoy the landscape or do some cardio training
      the one in the tiergarten is something rarely any one from berlin actually stumbles across because its a tourist area and apartments in the area are usually secondary homes to diplomats or rich people from all over the world

    • @yam2050
      @yam2050 6 месяцев назад +4

      ​@@Sisko526learned something new today.

    • @sazero01
      @sazero01 6 месяцев назад +3

      это значило местоположение фронта, в смысле просто названия?

    • @guldanjeraxus20
      @guldanjeraxus20 5 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@sazero01по его мнению солдаты армии Юг были коренными жителями Мюнхена)

  • @jasonkinzie8835
    @jasonkinzie8835 Год назад +893

    When I was in Berlin in 2011 I got lost and happened upon this memorial. It was surreal!

    • @seanmcmanus2777
      @seanmcmanus2777 Год назад +5

      Same

    • @perspectiveflip
      @perspectiveflip Год назад +8

      We have much more where that came from

    • @36erjunge
      @36erjunge Год назад +23

      bro how can u get lost its right next to Brandenburg gate xdd also east germany has a socialist history, you find such memorials in every town.

    • @bilboriches7216
      @bilboriches7216 Год назад +18

      The tomb of the unnamed grapist. Sounds about right.

    • @edguse5711
      @edguse5711 Год назад +3

      @@bilboriches7216there is some grape juice for you too

  • @nikolaysokolnikov2677
    @nikolaysokolnikov2677 2 года назад +2600

    I don't think saying that the Ukranian Front consisted of ukranians is exactly accurate. Soviet fronts were mainly named after the locations where they were originally formed, not the ethnicity of its soldiers. So it was formed not only from the conscripts of Ukraine (which was only like a half ethnically ukranian at the time) but also from old allready formed and reformed divisions that happend to be there at the time.

    • @Random-me6br
      @Random-me6br 2 года назад +323

      Yeah, my great grandfather was mobilized from Central Asia and his division was part of 2 Ukrainian Front.

    • @kirillsushkov1511
      @kirillsushkov1511 2 года назад

      Sadly nobody cares. For example, there is 4 ukranian fronts, but no Russian, however most soldiers in Red Army were ethnicly Russians.

    • @dvchel
      @dvchel 2 года назад +117

      Very true. There were special Red Army Battallions and Regiments etc. that were mainly about 80-100% composed of certain ethnic groups, such as Azeri's, Jews, Latvians, Yakutsk etc. The Fronts were composed of everything, of all Soviet nationalities and even continental Europe, like a French air brigade.

    • @somebuddy8940
      @somebuddy8940 2 года назад +234

      I am pretty sure the production group knew about it, but these days they give you information like that. German WW2 "media manager" would be proud of it.

    • @0bserver416
      @0bserver416 2 года назад +134

      Exactly, there were Belarusian Front also. This doesn't it was consisted mainly from ethnic Belarusians. The name was based on the location it based and fought further. But somehow these days, they try to twist the history.

  • @johngdoty
    @johngdoty 2 года назад +1461

    I was in Berlin right after the wall went down. Streets were being renamed and the telephone exchanges between East and West Berlin were still being connected.
    The main thing I noticed about the memorial was that it was just about the only thing that had not been spray painted with graffiti. There was so much graffiti, it looked as though some paint company had handed out thousands of cans of spray paint to everybody and told them to spray the city. The memorial was graffiti free.

    • @fasces_stronksticks2939
      @fasces_stronksticks2939 2 года назад +260

      what a shame

    • @cloroxbleach9222
      @cloroxbleach9222 2 года назад +1

      @@fasces_stronksticks2939 Just saying the Nazi German government pillaged and destroyed the Soviet states greater than the Soviets ever did to the Germans. Not saying it's a competition but to be fair it's either both sides deserve their memorials to be vandalized or we treat all memorials with respect.

    • @ZarTomato
      @ZarTomato 2 года назад +154

      thats a w

    • @dougler500
      @dougler500 2 года назад +75

      Probably out of the fear of Stasi bookmarking.

    • @atransarcticfox
      @atransarcticfox 2 года назад +282

      @@dougler500 The Stasi literally didn't exist at that point, the GDR was defunct.

  • @memesouls8653
    @memesouls8653 Год назад +278

    I love how since the very beginning when this channel was up and coming this man has not changed his format. I like it when RUclipsrs stick to what made them popular instead of trying to conform to trends and what not.

    • @chrispbacon4701
      @chrispbacon4701 Год назад

      He's not popular, he's paid and has a specific function- to continously go on about muh ebil nazis while conveniently skipping over the savage and hellish conditions of people in communist countries, effectively whitewashing over 100 years of slavery and torture for hundreds of millions, but no just look at this small minority whose reports cant even be corroborated or proven and many came out and said they were lying in the first place- people will start to ask questions and Mark Felton will be deployed to tell people what to think. Fun fact- A group people who were supposedly rounded up, killed with cockroach poison and thrown into continuously burning ovens that don't break down with constant fuelling while the perpatrators fight a war on two fronts and somehow able to keep furnaces running, planes fuelled, ships topped up and the country running with a magical infinite fuel supply, and deciding not to use the tonnes of sarin gas (of which a single drop can kill 10 men in the room), or starving them to death because their leader one day woke up and decided he wanted to kill them for no reason whatsoever and make lampshades out of their skin and discombobulate them with electric floors submerged in water

    • @ccf3294
      @ccf3294 8 месяцев назад +5

      It hard to change perfection I guess

    • @adamdodda3275
      @adamdodda3275 6 месяцев назад +1

      cough cough oversimplified

    • @HelalMoon235
      @HelalMoon235 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@adamdodda3275 coughing? You shall be taxed

  • @strateg1
    @strateg1 2 года назад +628

    The site for this memorial was not chosen randomly, as it was meant to be the main reference point from where all roads would start their path across the Third Reich, similar to the Column in Rome in the Forum, which designated the end/starting point of all roads in the Roman Empire. It's been a while since I read the memoirs of Albert Speer " Inside the Third Reich", where he describes in detail. I recommend this book to everyone who is interested in this topic.
    Overall, there are 3 Soviet Memorials with soldier burials in Berlin. This one in Tiergarten, another one in Treptower Park (The largest one), and in Pankow.

    • @davidr7872
      @davidr7872 2 года назад

      Read Albert Speer with caution. The two books, including his autobiography are self serving and not fully truthful. He most definitely knew of the death camps and the fate of European Jews and was responsible for the deaths of slave laborers in his factories. He deserved the death penalty at Nuremberg as much as anyone who received it.

    • @Wilhelm322
      @Wilhelm322 Год назад +24

      The Memorial was mostly Chosen Because the Fact that where it now stands used to stand Berlin’s most important Street the Siegesalle.
      The Siegesalle was a road in a Park which Honoured important Historical German Figures like Immanuel Kant, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Beethoven, Johan Sebastian Bach, Wilhelm I, Frederick the Great, Wilhelm II, Otto Von Bismarck etc. The Siegesalle and the Park it stood in was Burned down in the Bombing Raids over Berlin but the Statues luckily survived the Bombings, Though when the Soviets took Berlin they Destroyed the Siegesalle severally Damaging many of the Statues and nearly completely Destroying others, the Soviets then Erected the Tomb of the Unknown Rapist on the Place where the Siegesalle once lay, the Siegesalle stretched all the Way to Siegessäule and the Reichstag now there is a Road that runs exactly where the Siegesalle once lay. The Soviets placed the Memorial there to stop the Germans from ever rebuilding the Siegesalle.

    • @mikejames5743
      @mikejames5743 Год назад +20

      all should be pissed on and defaced with appropriate graffiti lmao

    • @Wilhelm322
      @Wilhelm322 Год назад +10

      @@mikejames5743 Agreed

    • @predragkardashian3730
      @predragkardashian3730 Год назад +8

      ​@@Wilhelm322 guess every nation has their "unknown rapist"...

  • @darkguard2986
    @darkguard2986 2 года назад +1205

    I think the T34/76 are veterans of the Battle of Berlin. One of the two tanks received two armor-piercing hits next to the bow machine gun and a presumed one hit by a Panzerfaust on the turret.

    • @richardc-ex7rt
      @richardc-ex7rt 2 года назад +14

      I can’t remember seeing damage when I visited the big memorial just down from the Brandenburg gate. Did they repair them?

    • @leemichael2154
      @leemichael2154 2 года назад

      Presumably by a teenage boy who had grown up knowing nothing but the Nazi's bullshit

    • @darkguard2986
      @darkguard2986 2 года назад +43

      @@richardc-ex7rt It's the tank on the left, turret number 200. I don't think the damage has been repaired.

    • @geemanbmw
      @geemanbmw 2 года назад +74

      I wouldn't repair it, it would take away the authenticity.

    • @wadejustanamerican1201
      @wadejustanamerican1201 2 года назад +3

      Thanks for the information!

  • @NOLAgenX
    @NOLAgenX 2 года назад +685

    I spent my teenage years in then West Berlin in the first half of the 80’s, as my father was in the USAF. It was possible to visit East Berlin as part of controlled groups, and one of the places was the large Soviet War Memorial that lies in the eastern part of current Berlin (am Treptower IIRC). So there are two Soviet War memorials that existed in Berlin in whole.
    There were also Soviet armed troops at Spandau Prison 3 months a year in West Berlin, since the 4 Allied powers rotated who guarded it. Additionally unarmed Soviets were occasionally seen in West Berlin as well. Legal spying. It applied to us also. It was called the Military Liaison Mission (MLM) and one of the members, Major Arthur Nicholson was shot and killed in East Germany. He lived just around the corner from me.

    • @AN-nt3uv
      @AN-nt3uv 2 года назад +63

      And still exist today, these days guarded by police to avoid any conflicts due to Russia‘s invasion into Ukraine. Still, one should not forget, that many who fought were from all former Soviet States, not Russia alone. But Russia tries to negate that.

    • @AbuHajarAlBugatti
      @AbuHajarAlBugatti 2 года назад

      @@AN-nt3uv instead our german monuments ripped teared down. Including the giant Kaiser Wilhelm Statue at the Cologne Rhine bridge is also coming down. Our own history is deleted

    • @redred222
      @redred222 2 года назад +27

      @@AN-nt3uv it should be taken down for what russia did during the cold war and what they are doing now

    • @ousarlxsfjsbvbg8588
      @ousarlxsfjsbvbg8588 2 года назад +6

      Was Nicholson killed for spying?

    • @redred222
      @redred222 2 года назад

      @Stefanos Dimop the usa is the reason the soviets didnt take over the world while the rest of you was scared of the country we where willing to wipe the whole dictatorship off the planet, remember without the usa Europe would have either fallen to the germans or the soviet union

  • @kentrosaurusboi3909
    @kentrosaurusboi3909 2 года назад +361

    Fun (or really not so fun) Fact: The location of the memorial is deliberate, it was built on the route of the former Siegesallee where the statues of German medieval and (modern) kings, rulers, and the like were built, going from the Tiergarten to the Konigsplatz in front of the Reichstag. With the monument in place, it was then impossible to rebuild the pathway.

    • @HerrKendys_Kulturkanal
      @HerrKendys_Kulturkanal 2 года назад +158

      Sucks..we should tear it down

    • @Sargassian
      @Sargassian Год назад +55

      @@HerrKendys_Kulturkanal renting a large bulldozer should do the trick

    • @greenbeepm
      @greenbeepm Год назад +37

      Lmao, thats pretty funny. they did a tad bit of trolling with the architecture I suppose.

    • @kentrosaurusboi3909
      @kentrosaurusboi3909 Год назад +2

      @@quintisalive That definitely works, but if I had it as interesting, it would no longer carry the opinion possessed on the "obstruction" on what was Siegesallee. By including the phrase "not so fun", it clears up how I personally feel without me having to explicitly say it in the comment.

    • @mr.crowgamer6250
      @mr.crowgamer6250 Год назад +17

      @@HerrKendys_Kulturkanal lol it’s still there you must be sad

  • @Dr.Fiendish
    @Dr.Fiendish Год назад +330

    Just imagine how beautiful Berlin would be today if it were not for the war.

    • @HSE331
      @HSE331 11 месяцев назад +148

      You can imagine how amazing Europe would be without both Brother Wars!

    • @TUBESPECIFIC1
      @TUBESPECIFIC1 10 месяцев назад +12

      I know. That's what I thought the whole week I spent there about 10 years ago. Frankfurt was another city heavily bombed out. I was stationed near Frankfurt in the 1990's with the US Army often going on Saturdays. The front of the Frankfurt main railway station survived which is Atlas holding the world. Frankfurt and Berlin were two of the grandest classical stone cities. Still really cool cities, but were ruined. The museums in Berlin were heavily bombed, but finally restored in the early 2000's though much of what used to be there is gone forever blowed to smithereens. You can see the fresh war damage on the Nefertiti head in Berlin like on it's right ear.

    • @Mana-xd2tp
      @Mana-xd2tp 7 месяцев назад +42

      Königsberg would still be a beautiful, thriving German city.

    • @jpip1382
      @jpip1382 7 месяцев назад +8

      @@HSE331exactly, how different would Europe be without two world wars?

    • @bassmaster1231
      @bassmaster1231 7 месяцев назад +21

      It would be beautiful no doubt but it also make you wonder? Would the EU exist would, would you still be able to freely travel Europe like today? Would France and Germany still be duking it out from time to time? Who knows!

  • @studiojakubka4753
    @studiojakubka4753 2 года назад +1196

    Ukrainien front was not composed by Ukrainians. It was called that for geographical reason but Mark knows it very well.

    • @somebuddy8940
      @somebuddy8940 2 года назад

      Mark also knows, that million of raped German women is a propaganda myth too. Pecunia non olet.

    • @jorgejustin461
      @jorgejustin461 2 года назад +37

      It mostly was, because most of the army aged men available right there where Ukrainian.

    • @studiojakubka4753
      @studiojakubka4753 2 года назад

      @@jorgejustin461 wow, this is BS not supported by any facts.

    • @UHKBU3UTOP3
      @UHKBU3UTOP3 2 года назад +259

      @@jorgejustin461 you are not right. There were a lot of other nationalities. It's hard to explain to someone who doesn't live here, but the names of the fronts were chosen geographically.

    • @sielentbrat4005
      @sielentbrat4005 2 года назад +83

      Ukrainians were 2nd biggest nation in USSR, 28M people, 17% of all soviet population in 1939. And you say "was not composed by Ukrainians"?
      Yeah, I know, acording to modern official russian position, only russians defeted Reich. But leave that "position" for russian state TV, ok?

  • @TheLoxxxton
    @TheLoxxxton 2 года назад +655

    I'm always amazed at how alliances change depending on the circumstances

    • @redred222
      @redred222 2 года назад

      we never should have helped russia during the war we should have let germany and russia destroy each other

    • @jerryjeromehawkins1712
      @jerryjeromehawkins1712 2 года назад +182

      exactly. the Soviets talking about "Fascist Invaders" is the ultimate in hypocrisy seeing as how they along with Germany invaded Poland in 1939.

    • @JoseFernandez-qt8hm
      @JoseFernandez-qt8hm 2 года назад +4

      it is called the "stately quadrille"...

    • @RonanTOC
      @RonanTOC 2 года назад +13

      The enemy of my enemy is my friend; as they say

    • @Sh4d891
      @Sh4d891 2 года назад +1

      Very cringe If you ask me

  • @josephweiss2271
    @josephweiss2271 Месяц назад +7

    Another German critical commentary about the memorial is that his arm is pointing down because it's weighed down by all the stolen wrist watches.

  • @d.d.5633
    @d.d.5633 Год назад +18

    I can’t thank you enough for not cropping the vintage video that you use in your content. I hate it when people do that.

  • @attilavidacs24
    @attilavidacs24 2 года назад +245

    Gallipoli in Turkey also has an Australian war memorial for when the Aussies landed in Gallipoli during WW1. There is a memorial service on ANAZAC day every year in Turkey that has now been going for over 100 years. The Turkish president Erdogan hates it and outright denounced it on camera.

    • @39mdg92
      @39mdg92 2 года назад

      He's just a total bastard that wants to destroy every last bit of Attatürks legacy

    • @rjames3981
      @rjames3981 2 года назад +38

      Amazing to think that UK PM Boris Johnson’s great grandfather Kemal Ali was a top politician and journalist who knew some of the Turkish commanders involved in defeating Winston Churchill’s plan.

    • @chickensprint
      @chickensprint 2 года назад +9

      @@rjames3981 His name is supposed to be Boris Kemal

    • @Alex462047
      @Alex462047 2 года назад +87

      Fortunately Ataturk was a much better statesman than Erdogan.

    • @Yanate1991
      @Yanate1991 2 года назад +1

      @Hold Fast good

  • @kovesp1
    @kovesp1 2 года назад +326

    It should be mentioned that pre-unification there was nothing extraordinary in having Soviet soldiers in the British sector. The four power agreement stipulated that all had the right to this as well as running patrols through the other sectors. Around 1986 I saw American patrols driving through East Berlin as well as Soviet patrols in West. They all insisted on exercising this right upto the end of the occupation in the early 1990-s.

    • @Narrowgaugefilms
      @Narrowgaugefilms 2 года назад +53

      True: My uncle (Former USMC, WW2, Pacific) was visiting West Berlin pre-unification and a young woman saw the Marine Corps insignia on his cane.
      She was from the Soviet Army and she sat down next to him. They had a long, friendly talk about their respective military services.

    • @3DArchery
      @3DArchery 2 года назад +28

      Those were not patrols. They were observers. The treaty you mentioned was not just for Berlin, but West Germany as well. When training at Graf and Hoenfels and such, we would see them from time to time. They had special license plates, that we had to learn.

    • @kovesp1
      @kovesp1 2 года назад +14

      @@3DArchery What is the difference between 'patrol' and 'observer' in this context? I see them as synonyms.

    • @chadwick8193
      @chadwick8193 2 года назад +9

      I had this old teacher that was a retired Air Force Major, IIRC. He was stationed in West Germany, and I remember him saying that soldiers would still salute officers from the west, and vice versa.

    • @damonmosier3651
      @damonmosier3651 2 года назад +20

      @@kovesp1 a patrol implies policing authority whereas an observer is not allowed to assert any authority. They are merely there to check in on the other side to make sure there are no shenanigans.

  • @marcellocolona4980
    @marcellocolona4980 7 месяцев назад +7

    I visited this “memorial” when I was a US naval officer. Typical brutish Soviet design. The locals called it something like the “Unknown Rapist Monument.” As a veteran I respect the sacrifices made by comrades in arms, but this trash should have been bulldozed and something more appropriate as a true war memorial, not this triumphal crap, built instead.

  • @VAMO_-tn9yv
    @VAMO_-tn9yv Год назад +12

    You can compare this monument with a Nazi war memorial. Both the Soviets and the Nazis were horrible. It would be better to turn that monument into a monument to all victims (civil and military) of the battle of berlin.

  • @3DArchery
    @3DArchery 2 года назад +567

    Visited this while in the US Army in 1983 with the 509th Airborne. The Russians refused to change guards while we were there. Our guide had the buses leave and hide around the corner and once they started the changing, we rushed back and got to see it.

    • @sgtmayhem7567
      @sgtmayhem7567 2 года назад +26

      I was with the 3/325 82nd Airborne in 1983, the 509th became the 4/325 and they rotated battalions. Thank you for your service brother.

    • @jackthorton10
      @jackthorton10 2 года назад +8

      Thank ya’ll for your service

    • @waterheaterservices
      @waterheaterservices 2 года назад +4

      Comrade Poltburist Sanders would have loved that

    • @DinoPimp
      @DinoPimp 2 года назад +8

      That's what we call a pro gamer move.
      Also, I love your videos. You inspired me to get a recurve, and I've been shooting the heck out of it. I enjoy it more than my firearms.

    • @3DArchery
      @3DArchery 2 года назад +5

      @@sgtmayhem7567
      I was there when It switched from the 1/509th to the 4/325.

  • @colonial6452
    @colonial6452 2 года назад +118

    When I was the management officer at the US Embassy Office in Berlin during the early 1990s, I had a chance to climb into a manhole in the Tiergarten and descend into both the autobahn and railway tunnels that are located under this monument. The Berlin city engineers were engaged on a program to rediscover the "lost" tunnels and bunkers under the city. It was an amazing experience.

    • @iamthelazerviking23
      @iamthelazerviking23 6 месяцев назад +1

      Having spent a lot of time in Berlin, this fascinates me on such a crazy level. Thank you for sharing!

  • @nev707
    @nev707 Год назад +36

    The remains of Germans found in Russia today are placed in war cemeteries without incident in Russia.
    There is also a large memorial in Russia listing the names of Germans killed in and around Stalingrad.
    Best for both sides to respect each others war dead from that war.

    • @user-xz8id3ob8x
      @user-xz8id3ob8x 6 месяцев назад +4

      Погибших нацистов ты призываешь уважать?

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 8 дней назад

      They can have a memorial, but get rid of the statue and weapons.

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 8 дней назад

      ​@@user-xz8id3ob8xWehrmacht were not Nazis.

  • @manolokonosko2868
    @manolokonosko2868 Год назад +5

    HATE THE MEMORIAL TO THE SOVIET SOLDIER? THEN YOU SHOULDN'T HAVE INVADED THEM. THEY LOST 26 MILLION PEOPLE IN THAT WAR. BE GRATEFUL YOU STILL HAVE A COUNTRY.

  • @MVProfits
    @MVProfits 2 года назад +392

    I'm certainly not pro-Soviet by any stretch, but it's a rare decent thing that the memorial has been preserved (probably so the German memorials in Russia/ex-Soviet republics are too, but still). What always boggles my mind though, is seeing all the cities in complete ruins at the end of WW2 all fully rebuilt, and now with 2022 technology the tiniest of maintenance work take forever

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 2 года назад +142

      They were rebuilt as cheaply as possible and decades later are ugly, architecturally irrelevant carbuncles which nobody would lament if they were destroyed in another war

    • @SigurdGR
      @SigurdGR 2 года назад +30

      @@visionist7 Unfortunately true.

    • @shingshongshamalama
      @shingshongshamalama 2 года назад +80

      The maintenance takes forever because taxes are being wasted on corporate subsidies instead of public works.

    • @marco0445
      @marco0445 2 года назад +4

      @@shingshongshamalama Hehe Andi Scheuer

    • @astramilitarum876
      @astramilitarum876 2 года назад +27

      It took more then 6 years just to clear debries from the streets of my city. My grandfather said that they were helping workers removing those broken bricks after school for several years.

  • @alan2mcgee441
    @alan2mcgee441 Год назад +16

    I was living in Berlin for over 5 years with German girlfriend and nobody complained about the soviet monuments at all

  • @NarraJoker12
    @NarraJoker12 2 года назад +120

    Suposedly, the two T-34 tanks were the first ones to enter Berlin (according to the tourist information displayed at the memorial)

    • @Scherzkeks123
      @Scherzkeks123 Год назад +42

      yeah sure, as if those survived :-)

    • @weisthor0815
      @weisthor0815 Год назад +18

      nonsense

    • @romanicempirium3083
      @romanicempirium3083 Год назад +25

      there is also a story about how when the brave hyper muscled and chiseled red army soldiers entered the city they were met by a horde of pale sickly german super duper nazis who were beaten to death by the red army saviours bare hands,after which of course tens of thousands of blonde maidens cheered and greeted their liberators!

    • @MONTANI12
      @MONTANI12 7 месяцев назад

      statement is sorta true, like most soviet tanks they were simply repaired and given to new crews, and of course countinusly rebuilt.@@Scherzkeks123

    • @TSD4027
      @TSD4027 7 месяцев назад

      That seems doubtful. There were very few T-34/76 left by the end of the war. The early T-34s were thoroughly obsolete by that point and its unlikely they would have been leading any charge.

  • @ssnydess6787
    @ssnydess6787 2 года назад +71

    I flew Air Force cadets into Tegal (French airport) in Berlin in the mid eighties while the wall was still up and visited this memorial as well as the massive grave for the 5000 soviet casualties and the tomb of the unknown patriot. You should show these as well for historical perspective. Even in the eighties, the comparison between East and Western Berlin was stark with battle damage still prominent in the Soviet sector.

    • @contingency9
      @contingency9 2 года назад

      Correction, the unknown rapist. I've been there too. Whatever Russia touches turns to rumble and misery.

    • @Acme1970
      @Acme1970 2 года назад +1

      I got that same impression too, the neighborhoods looked kinda run down and the some of the children had that street urchin look about them, one of them showed a little too much interest in my brothers camera and i had to warn him that the kid may try to grab it.

    • @bluetrue6062
      @bluetrue6062 2 года назад +2

      I was in East Berlin January 1978. Yes, in East Berlin there was still battle damage visible. I was 300 meters or so from Hitler's bunker but could not see it. I would have been apprehended if I tried.

    • @chetpomeroy1399
      @chetpomeroy1399 2 года назад +1

      @@bluetrue6062 Back in those days, I believe the _Fuhrerbunker_ was located in the Death Strip buried beneath a tall grassy knoll.

    • @BigBodyBiggolo
      @BigBodyBiggolo 2 года назад

      The difference between east and west was still apparent when i was there in 2010.
      Not as visible but there were far more deteriorated buildings and children playing in them during schooldays

  • @S.Fortunato
    @S.Fortunato 2 года назад +521

    By the way, Berlin was hit so hard by the war that it still has a lower population than it had in 1942.

    • @skylercook1812
      @skylercook1812 2 года назад

      was it the war, or was it the culling of people that lowered their population? lmao you make it seem like 35% of berlin wasnt removed by their own policies

    • @Hlvuuu
      @Hlvuuu 2 года назад

      Yeah and Russia struggled for whole century because we aint had enough menpower for producing food and goods. People were dying from sicknesses and hunger, whole country was drank alcohol to numb the pain, many children were left without parents, many people became thieves and bandits to feed themselves and their kids and this hell lasted till 2000. This war took over 27 million lives of soviet people

    • @hell_yeah0173
      @hell_yeah0173 2 года назад +236

      And who's fault would that be? Oh I don't know, perhaps a man with a silly mustache and the entirety of Germany but that's just me.

    • @endovelicvs
      @endovelicvs 2 года назад +246

      @@hell_yeah0173 its allies fault

    • @S.Fortunato
      @S.Fortunato 2 года назад +119

      @@hell_yeah0173 i Just pointed out a fact, the bombings were justified

  • @TomOkkaTom
    @TomOkkaTom 2 года назад +45

    I live in Berlin and I have never heard it called that until it spread in the last few weeks.

    • @DimHoff
      @DimHoff 2 года назад +28

      It never was. Felton just playing in mainstream game.

    • @TomOkkaTom
      @TomOkkaTom Год назад +4

      @@DimHoff Well things change. I wouldn't be surprised if everyone knew it by this name in 10 years or so.

    • @DimHoff
      @DimHoff Год назад

      @@TomOkkaTom nah. That toponyms are very long-timers. 10 years is a very small period

  • @jasperwinehouse9456
    @jasperwinehouse9456 7 месяцев назад +6

    First of all the french had no right to a piece of berlin, and second of all the russian statue should be taken down how embarassing.

    • @johncody2209
      @johncody2209 2 месяца назад

      No. The statue should be there until the Russians agree for it to be removed.

  • @wilhelmvillagracia9670
    @wilhelmvillagracia9670 2 года назад +278

    Dr. Mark Felton, the man, the historian and the legend is back...to grace us with another history lesson.

    • @kbanghart
      @kbanghart 2 года назад +2

      And we all know that I am the better historian

    • @wilhelmvillagracia9670
      @wilhelmvillagracia9670 2 года назад

      @@kbanghart lol 😆 😂 🤣

    • @hector7187
      @hector7187 6 месяцев назад

      Thanks Mrs felton😅😅

  • @slavvodkaman9359
    @slavvodkaman9359 2 года назад +517

    Hi Mark, I like your History channel, Your explanation is detailed and good

    • @whoaitstiger
      @whoaitstiger 2 года назад +5

      I could not help but read this in Tommy Wiseau's voice. 🤦

    • @liamcomam2787
      @liamcomam2787 2 года назад +5

      Don’t ask mark to talk about rape of Berlin or bombing of Dresden or any even which makes the Germans look like victims.

    • @pasteurmagnumwhitpotatos180
      @pasteurmagnumwhitpotatos180 2 года назад

      @@liamcomam2787 neat

    • @whoaitstiger
      @whoaitstiger 2 года назад +1

      @@Administrator_O-5 TV channels still exist? 😲

    • @jessecabassa
      @jessecabassa 2 года назад

      @@liamcomam2787 as they say, "war is hell". A lot of tragedies that are not brought up enough.

  • @beefchops1400
    @beefchops1400 Год назад +35

    Memorials are a reminder of past atrocious mistakes and must remain as to make sure it never happens again for future generations knowledge!

  • @roccozocco9630
    @roccozocco9630 Год назад +45

    A Memorial, as the name suggests, is there to remember the things of the past. It's not there to like them. If you remove the memorial, you remove the memory and with it the lessons of the past. In light of recent events one might argue if it is worth to remember soviet fallen Soldiers and the answer to that is yes. Why? Because the only thing we can draw from the past is a lesson. If we choose to forget then they truely died in vain.

    • @larsord9139
      @larsord9139 7 месяцев назад

      @roccozocco9630 So true , just look at all the Civil War memorials here in the US that have been torn down because of so called counter culture. History is history and it's purpose is to try and remind us to not repeat our past FU's. Notice the word "try". We may to try but we don't seem to do very well at it. Example: Many of our so called leaders seem to have no understanding of the history of the 1st half of the 20th century. And, because of that, we are doomed to repeat it.

    • @brucenorman8904
      @brucenorman8904 7 месяцев назад +2

      A few years ago I read about what was done in one former Warsaw Pact country. The took all the memorials commenoratio9n the USSR or Soviet Generals and placed all of them in a history park. However the memorials to the soviet Frontline soldiers were left alone and are maintained and honored.

    • @mgonetwo
      @mgonetwo 6 месяцев назад

      Nice words!

    • @mgonetwo
      @mgonetwo 6 месяцев назад +9

      ​@ollie9486 Soviets lived through horrors to stop the Nazis who claimed they are better than anybody and thus have the right to exterminate Slavs, Jews, and others. The monument is placed there saying "who the f are you?".
      Germans are not the first to come to Russia with a conquering mindset, yet they are the only ones coming not for the land, but for the fact of existence. Hence the result.

    • @comradetiedanski6038
      @comradetiedanski6038 6 месяцев назад

      @ollie9486 you know, nazi germany was the one that kind of did the whole invasion and destroying part right? If anything the saying "What you wish upon others, you wish upon yourself" suits 1945 germany pretty well. Maybe don't be a Nazi in the future was the message as they are the ones who started all this.

  • @holgere.
    @holgere. 2 года назад +95

    When I lived in Berlin I also heard talk that building material from Goering's demolished residence 'Karinhall', outside of Berlin was used for the memorial.

    • @drschnaps8081
      @drschnaps8081 2 года назад +8

      I heard they used also materials from the New Kanzlerei

    • @steffenrosmus9177
      @steffenrosmus9177 2 года назад +2

      Yep, parts of castle "Lüg ins Land" were used.

    • @awr7169
      @awr7169 2 года назад +3

      @@drschnaps8081 And parts of it were used for a subway ( U-Bahn) station.

    • @drschnaps8081
      @drschnaps8081 2 года назад +1

      @@awr7169 yep you are right!! I saw the û-Bahn station

  • @zobby2000
    @zobby2000 2 года назад +570

    Whether it’s true or not it’s an interesting story. My father served in the grenadier guards during his national service in 1953-54 and was stationed in Berlin. The story went that these two tanks were involved in the battle for Berlin and were knocked out and the crew killed. He claimed that the Russians filled both tanks with concrete with the crew interred in them before placing them on this memorial. I could imagine it’s true but have no evidence. Good story/ myth though.

    • @simunooi5306
      @simunooi5306 2 года назад +29

      I'd imagine the Soviets would have used the T34 85mm version that late in the war instead of the 76mm displayed.

    • @w.p.958
      @w.p.958 2 года назад +18

      Probably would be worth investigating with ultrasound or some sort of imaging equipment. If anything, to prove it is rumor or truth.

    • @_gungrave_6802
      @_gungrave_6802 2 года назад +74

      @Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin Whether the concrete inside would crack or not is a tad irrelevant given the intended use of the tanks being turned into parts of a memorial.

    • @pffpffovich2398
      @pffpffovich2398 2 года назад +4

      @@simunooi5306 Well what's the point of keeping 34\76's in storage? They used everything that's old enough to be somewhat effective.

    • @BoostedPastime
      @BoostedPastime 2 года назад +16

      Considering that many bodies were built into dams and walls as well as under rail road tracks this is not surprising.

  • @ia388
    @ia388 Год назад +7

    “Tomb of an unknown rapist”.. what about the atrocities germans did to women and children during the war.

    • @heartsofiron4ever
      @heartsofiron4ever Год назад +3

      they have not been forgotten, not at all, this is the forgotten part

    • @waffelmeister9477
      @waffelmeister9477 Год назад +4

      Nothing. This “memorial“ has nothing to do with so called German war crimes but everything with Soviet war crimes. Cope somewhere else

    • @romanicempirium3083
      @romanicempirium3083 Год назад +1

      There is around 1 billion films about the 6 gorillion....Guess that's not enough

  • @PL-rf4hy
    @PL-rf4hy Год назад +12

    If this doesn’t show us that history is complicated, I don’t know what does.

  • @dimarusakov2209
    @dimarusakov2209 2 года назад +222

    “Fist Ukrainian front” doesn’t mean it was assembled from Ukrainians.
    The fronts names ( Ukrainian, Belarusian etc) established by direction and not by nationality.
    So the claim “including thousands of Ukrainians from Ukrainian front” is not even wrong - it’s is a pure shame for WW2 historian.

    • @torzhentorzhen344
      @torzhentorzhen344 2 года назад +14

      Rusnya trying not be in center of attention for 5 minutes (impossible). Stop slandering ukraineans will you?

    • @nowar7258
      @nowar7258 2 года назад

      @@torzhentorzhen344 You are wrong and he's right. Names of Soviet fronts were geographical.

    • @gandalfsanft1107
      @gandalfsanft1107 2 года назад +56

      @@torzhentorzhen344 if you think that this is what it is all about for any Russian, then you being wrong. This guy just mentioned a fact that's it. That the red army consisted of a pool of many nationalities that were located in the soviet union, this must be even a clear fact to you...

    • @someonesuspicious4444
      @someonesuspicious4444 2 года назад +2

      @@gandalfsanft1107 no, he didn't just mention the fact. He claimed that the entire front consisted of merely thousands of Ukrainians. Which is not true.
      Who is being wrong here?

    • @user-my9gt5ti7b
      @user-my9gt5ti7b 2 года назад +30

      @@torzhentorzhen344 5 minutes of Ukraine do not rewrite history for themselves - a trigger.

  • @tomduggan51
    @tomduggan51 2 года назад +139

    Mark,
    Thanks very much for this interesting and informative feature. I live in Berlin myself and have visited the Memorial on several occasions. I too find it well-kept and very interesting-as is its companion memorial at Treptower Park. Compliments on your channel and work.

    • @alanlashbrook6442
      @alanlashbrook6442 2 года назад

      I think it should have the materials they stole from the German People restored to their original form. Too bad more people weren't buried there. We fought the wrong side.

    • @danielw5850
      @danielw5850 2 года назад +2

      It should've been moved, stone-by-stone, to Treptower Park, as part of the 1990 agreement.

    • @snuffle2269
      @snuffle2269 2 года назад +1

      Just visited it via Google Earth. Very impressive. Thanks

    • @molon___labe
      @molon___labe 2 года назад +5

      As a young German man who lived near this memorial I think it's a disgrace to our people. A spit in the face to my ancestors who fought valiantly and died for Germany!

    • @HungryLoki
      @HungryLoki Год назад +3

      @@molon___labe Not really. The only thing that detracts from it is the Soviet Solder's penchant for rape and murder, but let's be real, the average german soldier back then was not that much better than the average soviet soldier.

  • @v1e1r1g1e1
    @v1e1r1g1e1 6 месяцев назад +16

    You've no idea how much the Hungarians hate the WWII memorial monument the Communists put up in Budapest.

    • @pablopeter3564
      @pablopeter3564 Месяц назад +1

      Nagy Magyarország. Greetings from Mexico City (an Hungarian descendant).

    • @ilyagric4143
      @ilyagric4143 16 дней назад

      There was no need to fight against the USSR!!

    • @v1e1r1g1e1
      @v1e1r1g1e1 16 дней назад

      @@ilyagric4143 The Hungarian participation in Operations Barbarossa and Blau were regrettable; foolish, even. But the USSR had no need to be so brutal in their invasion and conquest of Hungary in their procedure to destroy the Third Reich. Hungary was occupied by the Nazis and sought peace treaties with the USSR by late 1944. Romania had already deserted the Germans, and the Romanians killed more Russians than any Hungarian ever did! Yet, the Soviet Union was amazingly lenient with Romania; using it as a clearway access for its southeastern flank to attack Hungary and thence into Germany. The monstrous brutality of the Russians in their defeat of Hungary was the stuff of medieval barbarity. Vast numbers of historical records and independent studies at the time and since affirm this.

    • @ilyagric4143
      @ilyagric4143 16 дней назад

      @@v1e1r1g1e1 the atrocities of the Hungarians during the attack on the USSR were monstrous

    • @v1e1r1g1e1
      @v1e1r1g1e1 16 дней назад

      @@ilyagric4143 Yes. And...?

  • @erichstocker4173
    @erichstocker4173 Год назад +14

    Soviets did something similar in Vienna. The Austrians spent recently spent over a million euros to redo the monument. It maintenance was written into the State treaty giving Austria its independence in 1955.

    • @Hereward47
      @Hereward47 6 месяцев назад +10

      Insane

    • @mgonetwo
      @mgonetwo 6 месяцев назад +7

      @@Hereward47 insane? Are you nuts?

    • @iqmi_3
      @iqmi_3 6 месяцев назад

      ​@@Hereward47Those people who are depicted in the monument saved Europe from nazism

    • @lightcompanion9696
      @lightcompanion9696 6 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Hereward47 wtf. Why insane?

    • @Nico-iv3wr
      @Nico-iv3wr 6 месяцев назад

      I was visiting Vienna and I randomly ended up at this monument. It was truly fascinating. Also it had a Ukraine flag on the background, as it was 2022 when I visited it

  • @olgerdtmagpier5527
    @olgerdtmagpier5527 2 года назад +164

    In Soviet terms "Ukrainian front" doesnt stands for Ukrainian fighters, it means "front, located on Ukraine"

    • @MarkFeltonProductions
      @MarkFeltonProductions  2 года назад +131

      4.5 million Ukrainians served in the four Ukrainian Fronts, the 1st fighting in the Battle of Berlin. In fact, in 1944, 40% of the Red Army were Ukrainians!

    • @olgerdtmagpier5527
      @olgerdtmagpier5527 2 года назад +102

      @@MarkFeltonProductions Thats not exactly true. Eastern and southern part of modern Ukraine are vastly populated by ethnic Russians, speaking Russian language. Its obvious by Russian surnames. Even fighters of Ukrainian Armed Forces now in large numbers are ethnic Russians. Soviet Union tolerated all its nations and that wasnt a problem. By the way "Belorussian front" doesnt mean "front for belorussian fighters" also. It was just geographic location.

    • @egorsedov3773
      @egorsedov3773 2 года назад +55

      @@MarkFeltonProductions Thats why it is called red army or soviet army and not russian army. Second major ethics in USSR's population there Ukranians, therefore it is logical that in the army they would also make quite a big chunk. However , as previous comentator mentioned, there are some blurred lines between actually defining ones nationality. Especially back then it was as hard to differentiate a Ukranian from Russian as differentiating an Austrian and German.

    • @gozzy_gozzy4447
      @gozzy_gozzy4447 2 года назад +6

      @@olgerdtmagpier5527 Ethnic or non ethnic Russians. Looks more like the front was formed by people mostly living in Ukraine. same would be of a Belarusian front.

    • @olgerdtmagpier5527
      @olgerdtmagpier5527 2 года назад +45

      @@gozzy_gozzy4447 USSR was a solid state and Red Army was filled by all nationalities of the Union in direct proportion. Thats why there were Russians, Ukrainians, Belaruses, Jews, Kazakhs, Yakuts, Adygs, Chechens, Tartars and many many others despite on which front they fought.

  • @gw7477
    @gw7477 2 года назад +652

    Georgi Zhukov was right in 1945: "we liberated [Europe,] and they will never forgive us for this."

    • @kpl455
      @kpl455 2 года назад +270

      "liberated" yeah sure

    • @jakekaywell5972
      @jakekaywell5972 2 года назад +146

      @@kpl455 Yes, liberated. No ifs, ands, or buts about it.

    • @kpl455
      @kpl455 2 года назад +197

      @@jakekaywell5972 I guess eastern Europe thinks differently about this

    • @jakekaywell5972
      @jakekaywell5972 2 года назад +91

      @@kpl455 Literally my whole family is from the Hungarian People's Republic and some lived during that time. Liberated is definitely the right word here.

    • @corneliusmallard8132
      @corneliusmallard8132 Год назад +152

      @@jakekaywell5972 Yea, right. I'm sure the innumerable scores who fled or died trying to flee from life behind the iron curtain would certainly have something to say about that.

  • @EvilSmonker
    @EvilSmonker 3 месяца назад +1

    It makes me sad that we (Bulgarians) removed our Soviet war memorial in Sofia, where we’re still mostly fond of Russians, yet the Germans are respectful enough to keep theirs intact despite them not having the same link to them.

  • @vladislavvelizanin5057
    @vladislavvelizanin5057 Год назад +5

    Tear the soviet propaganda down and move it into a museum. The tanks and cannons can be safely scrapped. No need for this imperialist display.

  • @a3b36a04
    @a3b36a04 2 года назад +199

    Interestingly it feels totally different from Russian Soviet war memorials except for surplus military equipment placed there. It's concept, shape and writings are like from different culture.

    • @Graymenn
      @Graymenn 2 года назад +18

      like maybe a german culture?

    • @fernandomarques5166
      @fernandomarques5166 2 года назад +55

      Probably a conscious choice by the architect after taking reference from what was still around in the site's surroundings.
      We'll often do that, try and match architectural styles so a project doesnt feel like "it has been dropped by parachute" (aka sticking out like sore thumb).

    • @Sgt_ioiwsl
      @Sgt_ioiwsl 2 года назад +6

      Mark himself said it was inspired by greece

    • @sodinc
      @sodinc 2 года назад +10

      Interesting. For me it looks like a pretty normal soviet memorial. One of the bigger ones

    • @azgarogly
      @azgarogly 2 года назад +18

      @@fernandomarques5166 There is very much common between nazi Germany, Italian fascist and soviet monumental architecture. These are growing from the same roots culturally and are directed by similar ideology.
      All of them are gravitating to demonstration on strength, sturdiness, energy and heroic sacrifice. All of them are aesthetically based on antique elements reinterpreted by modern art of 1900-20s.

  • @generationclash5004
    @generationclash5004 2 года назад +30

    Please never change that intro music, Mr. Felton. Its perfect!
    On an unrelated note: I plan on buying your book The Fujita Plan as an early birthday gift!

    • @eviltux65
      @eviltux65 2 года назад

      i hate it. it's way to loud

    • @narcher91
      @narcher91 2 года назад +3

      @@eviltux65 Me and my friend both love it too.

    • @harridan.
      @harridan. 2 года назад +1

      the intro music really fits Larry The #10 Downing Street Cat

    • @paddington1670
      @paddington1670 2 года назад +5

      i hear they make speakers with volume control these days

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 2 года назад

      I liked the other music he used in his older videos. It was less grand and more frantic

  • @plays4gamer883
    @plays4gamer883 2 года назад +50

    I don't know who you are, but I'd like to see a source for the assumed hatred for this statue. I'm not a Berliner, but I know that Berlins local politian held debates and demands to remove this monument or parts of it more than once. Last time was a few months after the current war, when CDU politicians made such demand, but the party in charge for such questions, Die Linke, denied it to obviously not insult the fight over fascism, other parties on both sides joined in: so I don't see how it can be called sheerly hated, if it holds such support and protest. But to appease you, I shall tell, that someone (maeby the government) put two roses through the tank barrels to protest the war, and they are permenat.
    In East Germany it was a tradition for school classes to take their children to the other greater Soviet war memorial in the Treptow Park: those who have lived in this tradition often remember it fondly, as giving them a sense of history (with natural outlines) - for our modern children there would be no damage done in reviving such traditions.
    I also heard that every year people gather by those memorial, you guessed it, on the 9th March - Victory Day. I'm not only speaking of Russians living in Germany, especially the elder ones who place pictures and flowers for their fallen soldiers, but also former soldiers of Nazi Germany to remember their time on the eastern flank and to honor those on whom they or their army committed horrible atrocities. These people are of course leaving us as time matches on, but I heard that their children, at least some of them, are continuing this practice. Thankfully someone who tries to preserve at least some kind of tradition in Germany.
    And lastly I've heard that the Russians are keeping quit a lot of WW2 museums in former Stalingrad, especially houses in which the last German soldiers barecated themselfs and tried to hold through the last intense fighting. These house are supposed to be untouched leftovers from those times.

    • @plays4gamer883
      @plays4gamer883 2 года назад +1

      Here is one source to my claim in paragraph 3. It's in German only: Der Krieg in meines Vaters Bildern (der Freitag, Ausgabe 18/2022). Unfortunately it's lock behind an subscription.

    • @robertbrodie5183
      @robertbrodie5183 2 года назад +4

      having lived in berlin for 5 years and having had many berliner friends a universal distain and berliner humorous dislike of this memorial was very obvious

    • @todortodorov940
      @todortodorov940 2 года назад +7

      I live in Berlin not to far away from the statue. I don't like it. I don't like the faceless soldier looking down on me and projecting opression.

    • @plays4gamer883
      @plays4gamer883 2 года назад

      Well, if you say so than I guess it's true. But exemptions still exist as I showed, even if they seem, as you say, outnumbered. One can also see it for himself, by checking in on May 9th at the sowjet memorials.

    • @PsychoKillertheGame
      @PsychoKillertheGame Год назад +3

      The attempt to compare a population's hatred with the actions of politicians is laughable. The politicians would do whatever they wanted and claim whichever they wanted to their bases and to be quite honest they don't care in any event.

  • @kolper6799
    @kolper6799 2 года назад +33

    Maybe now Russia is not a global superstar who we all love, but men in ground dont know news. Men in ground only know how its important to remember, and never repeat.

  • @victortachiquin4965
    @victortachiquin4965 2 года назад +32

    Me everytime that Mark Felton intro music hits:
    🕺 🕺 🕺 🕺 🕺

  • @ronanrogers4127
    @ronanrogers4127 2 года назад +76

    Having lived in Berlin very recently (and 3 other German cities) the title is misleading - some people might hate the memorial but they are in the minority. Most people are somewhat indifferent, and a lot of people recognise this, and particularly Treptower Park, as important historical landmarks. Even in the former DDR there are dozens of monuments where major battles were fought and despite the region’s well known nationalist politics today there is little issue with these monuments. I’ve discussed this with my Ossie friends from different generations, and hatred is a word that’s too strong from my experience.

    • @visionist7
      @visionist7 2 года назад +17

      It's modest clickbait. The Dr is sadly not above such tactics which are mainly to draw in new viewers & grow his channel. Controversy helps videos get featured by the algorithm & clicks are king.

    • @mikeonly8554
      @mikeonly8554 2 года назад

      They simply cannot be frankly with you! Imagine a german (nazi) monument with 2 panzers in your own city and country!

    • @ldn5986
      @ldn5986 2 года назад +9

      Anglos will anglo

    • @henningbartels6245
      @henningbartels6245 2 года назад +1

      Its clickbaiting, for sure.
      @Roman: I wonder, what "well known nationalist politics in the former DDR" would be? I don't see any other politics than in the rest of Germany there - mainly nationalist politicians are in no governing position.

    • @sowie05355
      @sowie05355 7 месяцев назад

      Well said. It's a memorial which reminds us of tragic historical events. The hate is conjured by the ignorant who have been brainwashed into believing false political narratives.

  • @basyapupkin3444
    @basyapupkin3444 6 месяцев назад +12

    1:33 "Thousand of ukranians from Ukranian Front" XD Let's not forget about thousands of Southernians from Southern Front and Normans from Northern Front. Also there were a lot of Stalingradians and Leningradians from corresponding fronts. Thank god for all Secondanians from Second Front.

  • @PoppysGuitar
    @PoppysGuitar 7 месяцев назад +3

    I find this memorial to be an affront to the people of Berlin and to Germany in general. In my opinion the Soviets in many respects were no better than the Germans and in some ways worse. They had no problem occupying weaker countries such as Poland, the Balkans, Finland and Rumania. With the US and UK backing them they subjugated all of eastern Europe and raped and destroyed Germany. Make no mistake Germany started the war but remember that when Hitler protested to Molotov about the Soviets violating the Ribbentrop Molotov agreement, Molotov told Hitler to pound salt. Hitler rightly suspected the Soviets wouldn't stop their expansion into Europe but wrongly overestimated the Wehrmacht and underestimated the Red Army. Just look at the Soviets actions post WWII to understand how awful they could be.

    • @simonflower6356
      @simonflower6356 6 месяцев назад

      You shouldn’t have to say this, but so many of the comments here are by people who have been brainwashed into thinking the Russians played a heroic role in WW2, when in fact they were every bit as responsible for its outbreak as the Germans and they rampaged through any number of defenceless countries just as the Germans did. Furthermore, unlike the Germans, they continue to prey on weaker countries up to the present day.

    • @PaulBrower-bw4jw
      @PaulBrower-bw4jw 8 дней назад

      I don't. The Russians had good cause to distrust the German people who had fallen for Hitler. The memorial is in the BRITISH zone, and the British consented -- perhaps as a reminder to Germans to reject fascism and ethnic bigotry should there ever be hard times. The British knew that Nazism would never resurface in the Soviet sector because the SVIET Union would dictate much of the educational syllabus.

  • @MrPanzerDragoon
    @MrPanzerDragoon 2 года назад +88

    I've seen this memorial in person. It's a lonely memorial compared to the many tourists that flock to the Brandenburg Gate. Which is just a 10 minute walk away from this.

    • @jakekaywell5972
      @jakekaywell5972 2 года назад +15

      Shame. Regardless of who its remembering, I find this Soviet memorial much more tastefully designed.

    • @uptoolate2793
      @uptoolate2793 2 года назад

      @@jakekaywell5972 Yeah, that's a reason to maintain it. Atheistics.

    • @HighFlyingOwlOfMinerva
      @HighFlyingOwlOfMinerva 2 года назад +45

      Good. It's most likely unpopular for a reason - it's un-German. It's a miracle statues like this still exist in Europe at all, honestly.

    • @calypso
      @calypso 2 года назад +20

      @@HighFlyingOwlOfMinerva lol what a clown

    • @trentdawg2832
      @trentdawg2832 2 года назад

      I don’t think the German people give two fucks about the Soviet rapists…..

  • @guyfaux5010
    @guyfaux5010 2 года назад +211

    I LOVE Berlin. My favorite city in all of Germany. Especially former East Berlin. It's like a time capsule. Plus, the world famous museum island is in the east. Hell, all of the former DDR is filled with historical treasures of Germany's rich history. Leipzig, Weimar, Dresden and Eisenach, just to name a few. There is so much more to Germany than World War 2 and the Cold War. You should travel there and see for yourself.

    • @woodenseagull1899
      @woodenseagull1899 2 года назад +7

      It's contaminated with evil....Germany is not for me. Too much of the "Dark side ".
      Dr Felton you are at the top of your game. You must ' live ' in the Archives.?
      Exceptional reaserch; I do wonder if you feel an unease when you visit?

    • @willkrueger3857
      @willkrueger3857 2 года назад +42

      @@woodenseagull1899 Are you Jewish?

    • @kievbutcher
      @kievbutcher 2 года назад +63

      @@woodenseagull1899 mate it's been nearly a century, the country's moved on.

    • @ronluckenbach9492
      @ronluckenbach9492 2 года назад +9

      did..and I agree..after the fall of the wall.. many East Germans missed their every day ‘things’ ..their pickles etc..lol
      and amazingly their simple and austere live style

    • @hanswurst2110
      @hanswurst2110 2 года назад +17

      @@woodenseagull1899 being born in berlin: you will spend a tough time finding a more hospital and welcoming place than berlin. As a local I'm extremely annoyed by the place, but seriously.. No evil here. And it's quiet cheap. (Find a place where you get a beer for around 30 ct.) Atleast Berliners aren't capable of invading anyone die to hangover and big communities of our neighbouring countries :)

  • @inhocsignovinces1081
    @inhocsignovinces1081 Год назад +45

    As part of the USSR’s withdrawal, Helmut Kohl agreed in writing to maintain, protect Soviet war memorials. Now let’s talk about the Katyn Forest Massacre.

    • @pekkamustonen6654
      @pekkamustonen6654 7 месяцев назад +1

      Stalin statues, gobedlines and busts etc. are privately collected. Not so publicly displayed.

    • @KevinThomas-ok2ev
      @KevinThomas-ok2ev 7 месяцев назад +7

      Been there many times in my travels thru Berlin. Always struck me as odd as well. I’ve heard Berliner’s refer to this as “The Monument to the Unknown Rapist.” That sounds more fitting to me.

    • @Yoyërcompany
      @Yoyërcompany 6 месяцев назад +1

      RF admitted that long ago

    • @wander67
      @wander67 6 месяцев назад +4

      And how about we also talk about polish massacres of ukrainens? Or zaozolie? Or how poland was ready to ally with germany?

    • @KevinThomas-ok2ev
      @KevinThomas-ok2ev 6 месяцев назад

      @@wander67. Are you suggesting that Russian troops weren’t responsible for countless rapes and other abuses of German civilians following the fall of Berlin? And what of Leningrad? A horrific siege with millions of deaths, but what does that have to do with Russian behavior in Berlin? This is all very well documented by survivors and eye witness. But I suppose Katyn never happened either, right?

  • @alvaropulido5245
    @alvaropulido5245 7 месяцев назад +3

    Dr. F is a real one! I’ve learnt so much mane its help me with the history part of my GED test. Keep up the good work sir

  • @stevegay407
    @stevegay407 2 года назад +20

    Good for Berlin for maintaining this important and historic reminder.

    • @thebasedspectre3048
      @thebasedspectre3048 2 года назад +4

      Tear it down a new world shall begin

    • @rjames3981
      @rjames3981 2 года назад +4

      Yep! Up to 200,000 Poles fought with the Soviets in Berling’s army to liberate Berlin. Many died there too.

  • @gandalfsanft1107
    @gandalfsanft1107 2 года назад +123

    1:33 here i smell some sort of modern narrative ... its seems to be that important to talk about ukranians in that matter but in the same time not mentioning all other ethnicyties of wich the red army consisted and how many of them really died.... 4:22 same here ... for all the times i've visited Berlin never heard of such calling from elder locals ... doesnt mean it has never happened at that time , it certainly happened and in any war but like i mentioned before the stench of modern narrative, that "all russian and especially their history is about aggression and rape " and we should mention ukranians in all matters because they are "obviously" the victims in the modern conflict, is present. Lets not forget, that rus. and ukr. history share the same boat and amongst all the "raping soviets" were a lot ukranians too

    • @ALFA-sm2nm
      @ALFA-sm2nm 2 года назад +34

      he doesn't wanna piss off ukraine supporters lmao

    • @johnecoapollo7
      @johnecoapollo7 2 года назад +3

      I haven't heard people call it that so people probably don't call it that because I've obviously met every person in Berlin
      Solid argument my dude

    • @ilyamilyaev701
      @ilyamilyaev701 2 года назад +41

      He is typical Anglo-american historian. It is impossible to finish "try not to lie for 5 minutes" challenge for him.

    • @sethja8
      @sethja8 2 года назад +13

      @@ilyamilyaev701 ah yes and certainly not a coping or seething take from ilya milyaev of which origin is totally indecipherable

    • @ilyamilyaev701
      @ilyamilyaev701 2 года назад +14

      @@sethja8 It certainly doesn't look like you are seething at my comment, doesn't it? I might be hyperbolizing in my comment for humour but I am still not far from the truth about how popular Western historian operate. Tell me, were people who disliked Goebbels Nazi agitprop and expressed their disdain publicly just "coping and seething"?

  • @Rsama60
    @Rsama60 2 года назад +8

    The memorial is also a burial ground so leave it untouched. There are quite some cemeteries with fallen German soldier all over the former sovjet union. Those should not be touched either.

    • @Tugela60
      @Tugela60 8 дней назад

      Except they are being mined for souvenirs

  • @SA4LIFE
    @SA4LIFE Год назад +5

    This memorial is a disgrace for Germany

    • @columnedfox5508
      @columnedfox5508 Год назад +1

      100%... blow the damn thing up..

    • @michaelsalmon9832
      @michaelsalmon9832 Год назад +1

      germany should feel disgrace for what people had to go through to destroy it

  • @toprope_
    @toprope_ 2 года назад +82

    2 million subs vid suggestion: if you feel comfortable telling your audience, I know we’d love to hear your/your family’s experience during WWII.
    My grandpa never talked about his service much, but I do know he was in one of the units that took over Hitler’s villa in Bavaria. His service was extended to the Pacific Theater due to being a part of supplies corps, but he came home after a few weeks once the bombs dropped. My grandpa was maybe my age or a little older when the atomic age started, and never spoke much of his experiences.
    WWII feels increasingly distant as time goes on. My Grandpa passed a few years ago, and with him one of the only WWII vets I knew personally. Hearing your family’s experience or even what got you so interested in this period of history would be a great video!

    • @dixonpinfold2582
      @dixonpinfold2582 2 года назад +3

      In my view one should think long and hard before raising the subject of private or family matters with any stranger, and then not do it.
      Will he not say what he likes, when he likes, without any nudging? For my part, I like the creator-viewer arrangement on this channel as it is-fittingly impersonal, concerned only with things of historical significance.

    • @tyson211
      @tyson211 2 года назад +1

      @Cameron Montgomery I like your idea, sharing our grandparents experience in WWII is important since we’re the last generation that heard their stories firsthand. My grandfather was a pilot during the war and was about to be stationed at Pearl Harbor but it was attacked right before he was supposed to go.

  • @captainjoshuagleiberman2778
    @captainjoshuagleiberman2778 2 года назад +22

    Was in Berlin in 1990 after the fall of the Wall and was floored to see Soviet troops at the memorial. The statue on top was in much better shape then.

  • @heavierthanairfilms
    @heavierthanairfilms 2 года назад +4

    There remains a smaller but quite similar Soviet war memorial in Dresden, walking distance from the Bundeswehr Museum.

  • @arrturoarmas3268
    @arrturoarmas3268 Год назад +5

    What about the German soldiers who spilled there blood for the fatherland they deserve a memorial not all were nazis

    • @best0616
      @best0616 Год назад

      Remember history written by the victors neither do British acknowledged it's colonies sacrifice in both world wars .

    • @user-gk1mp1zk7n
      @user-gk1mp1zk7n Год назад

      @@best0616 dont really think so, you see memorials to British colonies everywhere

  • @themastersergeant5619
    @themastersergeant5619 2 года назад +61

    I actually visited this memorial a couple of weeks ago when I went to Europe on vacation. There was also a Ukraine war stand right across the street and lawn from the Reichstag when I was there.

    • @bogjesrbin484
      @bogjesrbin484 2 года назад

      Ukrainian neo nazis don’t like this monument

    • @BenDover-pr9gy
      @BenDover-pr9gy 2 года назад +4

      A good time to finally spit on it. Can't wait for my turn when I visit Berlin next summer.

    • @dimbasz
      @dimbasz 2 года назад +18

      @@BenDover-pr9gy wow, what a bold move, you are a true fighter.

    • @BenDover-pr9gy
      @BenDover-pr9gy 2 года назад +4

      @@dimbasz what? How am I supposed to "fight the Monument"???
      All I want to do is upkeep the tradition of what my grandmother would do whenever she passed by the memorial in Vienna - she was ra__d and lost her husband who died not in combat but as a POW in a soviet labour camp.

    • @wills2140
      @wills2140 2 года назад +3

      Ben Dover ,stooping to nationalist hate does not relieve any of the pain caused by WWII. Besides, grandfather would not be a POW if Germans were not in a war. There is a price to pay when you invade another country, a price the Russians are paying now for the terrible suffering caused by their invasion of Ukraine.

  • @morrisbuschmeier2047
    @morrisbuschmeier2047 2 года назад +48

    In Vienna there is one Soviet monument. It's gold and the sodier is smiling.
    There's a joke, that he's the only one who stayed in Vienna (Russians occupied Austria until 1955)

    • @kurtgodel5236
      @kurtgodel5236 2 года назад +12

      The USSR, or "the Russians", occupied _a part_ of Austria until 1955.

    • @PanaehaliTut
      @PanaehaliTut 2 года назад +9

      My grandad was a part of pincer strike that moved around the city and captured center of Vienna in 1945. Original plan was to disrupt German command and destroy/capture local SS HQ. But after they found all the treasures from Vienna museums carefully packed and ready to be shipped to Nazi Germany mission was aborted. And they had to hold on around 10 days to prevent that from happening. Before main Russian forces could catch up.

    • @stephengraham1153
      @stephengraham1153 2 года назад +3

      If you haven't watched it yet, get a copy of excellent movie " The Third Man" starring Orson Welles (amongst others). Ironically, an American was the baddie in the story.

    • @TaronTT
      @TaronTT 2 года назад

      'occupied', LOL.

    • @morrisbuschmeier2047
      @morrisbuschmeier2047 2 года назад

      Just like area from the Elbe to the Bug rivers and Baltic to Black seas beaches. Every European country with Soviet military bases was an occupied one with earlier exterminated elites and puppet governments installed. All this complicated machinery was greased with peoples' blood.
      So no "Lol".

  • @mwh3227
    @mwh3227 Год назад +4

    I can't believe that Berliners have left these memorials up! How about a memorial to the millions of German women ( and young girls) who were raped by the red army?

    • @theodorekell
      @theodorekell Год назад +6

      all this notion of "soviet rapists" is a pure propaganda. Goebbels spread this before soviets entered Germany, And then Americans and British hid these propaganda officers and made them work against USSR post war. Again, pure brainwash. You will hardly find 100 victims, let alone many thousands as they claim...

    • @tehdreamer
      @tehdreamer Год назад +8

      Yawn, this is false. Watch TIC video on the actual facts on atrocities of Whermacht vs Red Army.

  • @BlueSkyCountry
    @BlueSkyCountry Год назад +3

    Germany basically got Genghis Khan'd from 1944-1945. To this day they still have not really fully recovered.

  • @Acme1970
    @Acme1970 2 года назад +41

    When i was in Berlin with my brother & sister in 1987 i missed out on this memorial but i got to see the Soviet military cemetery with the big statue of the Russian soldier holding the child, i also remember some of the older people on the tour having a rather lively and often heated discussion with the East German tour guide who blamed the Soviet occupation on the western allies for not getting to Berlin first.

    • @Muesli711
      @Muesli711 2 года назад +3

      Treptower Park

    • @aleksazunjic9672
      @aleksazunjic9672 2 года назад +36

      Never occurred to him that avoiding war with USSR would also prevent said occupation 😁

    • @timonsolus
      @timonsolus 2 года назад +8

      Irrelevant as the Western Allies and the Soviets had already reed on the occupation zones in Berlin and in Germany in September 1944, long before the Red Army reached Berlin. Look up the London Protocol of 1944. So it didn't matter who got to Berlin first, half of Berlin and half of Germany would be occupied by the Soviets anyway.

    • @asscheeks3212
      @asscheeks3212 2 года назад

      @@aleksazunjic9672 "they DESERVED to be r@ped, I dont differienate from government and civvies"

    • @Acme1970
      @Acme1970 2 года назад +1

      @@timonsolus Exactly, thats why Eisenhower decided against it, much to Montgomery's chagrin, he wanted to be the big hero that captured Berlin, plus can you imagine the Soviet anger if we snatched Berlin, their great prize right out from under them, WW3 would have started right there.

  • @clavichord
    @clavichord 2 года назад +56

    Apparently, since the invasion of Ukraine, it is now forbiden to fly the Russian flag in Berlin or anywhere in Germany. Correction: the Russian flag was banned, this year, during WWII commenorations in Berlin

    • @downhill-dirtjump-owl1484
      @downhill-dirtjump-owl1484 2 года назад +8

      Not true

    • @A.K.4.7
      @A.K.4.7 2 года назад +76

      I Wonder if the US flagg was banned in Germany during US invasion of Iraq, or the French and Brittish flaggs during invasion of Libya.

    • @horrifyinggelatinousblob
      @horrifyinggelatinousblob 2 года назад

      @@downhill-dirtjump-owl1484 people have been arrested simply for displaying banners with Z on them.

    • @clavichord
      @clavichord 2 года назад +9

      @@downhill-dirtjump-owl1484 Correction: the Russian flag was banned in Berlin, this year, during WWII commemorations

    • @humanbean392
      @humanbean392 2 года назад

      @@A.K.4.7 hypocrisy...But Now the pro ukraine crowd will call it 'whataboutism' it doesn't change the fact that they never cared for the civilians when those wars went on but expect the russians to over throw putin

  • @johnnyanderson2-roblox185
    @johnnyanderson2-roblox185 Год назад +26

    I'll never understand the thought process around;
    "LETS REMOVE THESE TANKS FROM A WAR MEMORIAL!"
    *Why? They're commemorating the sacrifice of soldiers in WW2.*
    "BECAUSE RUSSIA BAD!"
    *But these aren't Russian? They're Soviet tanks commemorating Soviet soldiers which also had Ukrainian men and women fighting for it.*
    "THEY'RE A SIGN OF RUSSIAN AGGRESSION AND PROVOCATION!"
    *In what timeline is a Soviet memorial housing 2 tanks in Berlin a symbol of Russian aggression? Have you no knowledge whatsoever of the events of WW2?*
    It honestly boggles my mind that some people can want to deface a monument of history based off the actions of an entity totally different and separate from the Soviet Union.

    • @brianmead7556
      @brianmead7556 Год назад +3

      The Soviet Union had more than 200 different peoples in it. As an example the man who raised the flag over the Reichstag was from Uzbekistan. Uzbek, a Turk descended Asian people.

    • @romanicempirium3083
      @romanicempirium3083 Год назад +2

      It boggles my mind how there is a Russian military group named after a German general,and founded and filled with neo-nazis fighting againt's another group with Neo-nazi symbolism(also filled by nazis) and both parties insult each other by calling one another ''Nazis''....both groups are filled with Slavs and one the rulers of the opposing nations is a Jew while the other one co-operates with Jews and is anti-Nationalism....I...I just can't....

    • @XS-03_Apollo
      @XS-03_Apollo Год назад +1

      @@brianmead7556 I think i read somewhere that he was Kazakh?

    • @apgaismiba
      @apgaismiba Год назад +3

      I could understand for Latvia why they removed it but Germany is insane because why would you want to tear it down that gives you "bad memories" when you had even started and done the same things to the soviets.
      it does not make sense.

    • @Wilhelm322
      @Wilhelm322 Год назад +2

      @@apgaismiba It stands In Berlins most important Site built during the German Empire and this Memorial is a very painful Memory for the German People, imagine walking by that Memorial to work every single day of your life, a Memorial which Glorifies and Celebrates Rapists and Murderers. Also are there any Memorials in Moscow which Celebrate the German Soldiers who died? No there aren’t. These Memorials where erected against the will of the German Population and as such are Memorials to which the Germans owe nothing. Imagine if a Country invades you, starts raping you’re women, killing innocent civilians, destroying you’re homes and looting from you cities, then after the war they erect Statues which Glorify Soldiers who caused you unimaginable harm. How would you feel?

  • @ICKXBerlin
    @ICKXBerlin 17 дней назад +1

    As a Berliner I can say that people here don't hate it.

  • @tinderbox218
    @tinderbox218 2 года назад +29

    Shocking to see the extensive damage in those old films to what must have been a beautiful city before all the insanity.

    • @jonathanscott7372
      @jonathanscott7372 2 года назад +2

      You can still see some of the damage on the Brandenburg Gate.

    • @MrSloika
      @MrSloika 2 года назад

      Um, people tend to forget the monstrous level of war crimes committed by Nazi Germany against the people of the USSR. Torture, rape, mass murder of civilians and POWs. All gleefully committed by German troops. Hitler openly and repeatedly stated that Germany's invasion of Russia was a war of conquest and extermination of the 'Untermenschen' of the East. Did the Russians retaliate? Yup. Can you blame them?

    • @riograndedosulball248
      @riograndedosulball248 2 года назад +17

      Most German cities used to be incredibly beautiful before, like Vienna and Prague. The War destroyed so much beautiful things...
      And modern architects made sure they wouldn't come back

    • @Mcree114
      @Mcree114 2 года назад

      If one of the many coup attempts by the military against Hitler had worked then they could've surrendered far sooner and spared these cities from USAAF air superiority and before Soviet tank/artillery zergs even reached the border. In WWI the Kaiser was right to surrender when the Allies reached Germany's border as they were toast at that point and there was no sense in destroying Germany itself delaying the inevitable. Hitler and his loyal party members were madmen hellbent of taking Germany down with them and subjecting German citizens to merciless U.S carpet bombing and vengeful bloodlusted Soviet troops.

    • @motmot8879
      @motmot8879 2 года назад +10

      @@riograndedosulball248 vienna and Prague aren't even German lol. ....

  • @mbox314
    @mbox314 2 года назад +10

    There is fort at sandy hook new jersey that has a memorial to foreign invaders. The British has a group of 13 men led by Lt Douglas Haliburton lost to exposure during the revolutionary War. A tomb and memorial was erected during the war and destroyed after the war (unclear if it was intentional or not) but the tomb was lost untill the early 1900's when it was found during construction tion of a rail line at the then fort Hancock seacoast defense fort. The hatred towards the British had cooled off and a new stone marker was erected at the site which still stands today.

    • @mbox314
      @mbox314 2 года назад +8

      @bruh bruhson nope, it was American territory, it just took a few years for them to figure that out.

    • @Nerthos
      @Nerthos 2 года назад +8

      That is a completely different situation though. Colonists in what would later be USA were, except for a few colonies, British subjects fighting to secede. They were all the same nation then, until the war ended in their separation.

    • @Nerthos
      @Nerthos 2 года назад

      @свевский the trigger for the eastern front was Stalin breaking the agreement on how far down poland each side could go though, the USSR started that fight. Germany wanted to stall that as much as possible to win the western front first and would have never made the first move.
      They launched a full campaign as soon as Stalin broke the agreement because they couldn't afford a long, slow war, it was either topple moscow in the first advance or lose.

    • @robertbrodie5183
      @robertbrodie5183 2 года назад

      funny stationed near sandy hook before being assigned to berlin

  • @user-pk2ff2cz6l
    @user-pk2ff2cz6l Год назад +4

    That monument is a natural heritage and if someone doesn't like it it, it means that they are supporters of Germany's Dark Nazi past. That monument represents the liberators of Berlin from its Nazi dark hand gripping the city in a deadlock.
    The monument. can't and mustn't be touched, cause any vandal act against it means support for the Nazis and the destruction of historic national heritage, same as Taliban terrorists did in the middle east and the same as Nazi Ukrainians did and are still doing to their monuments and sites of great national heritage and historic significance.

    • @JEJAK5396
      @JEJAK5396 Год назад +1

      Wait, what did the NSDAP do again that was evil? 🤨

    • @waffelmeister9477
      @waffelmeister9477 Год назад +1

      Historic significance my ass. A monument to rapists and child murderers has no business being in my country. By the way, don‘t you have a war to lose right now?

    • @theodorekell
      @theodorekell Год назад

      @@JEJAK5396 everything they did was evil

    • @theodorekell
      @theodorekell Год назад

      @@waffelmeister9477 all this notion of "soviet rapists" is a pure propaganda.

    • @romanicempirium3083
      @romanicempirium3083 Год назад

      @@theodorekell yea and 7 million ukranians vanished into thin air....guess the rapture came early huh?

  • @MT-cd7cs
    @MT-cd7cs 7 месяцев назад +1

    I visit the monument and the ajoining Soviet cemetery hedges every time I’m in Berlin. I can’t help but get chills every time.

  • @yaninaovcharenko8219
    @yaninaovcharenko8219 2 года назад +41

    It is a common misconception that Ukrainians only served in the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, and 4th Ukrainian Fronts. They were all over RKKA, just like all other nationalities of the Soviet Union.

    • @braxxian
      @braxxian 2 года назад +20

      Indeed. However a quarter million Ukrainians also sided with Hitler when he invaded the USSR in 1941. That's why the Russian-Ukrainian relationship is always so strained and no doubt led to todays war.

    • @tacomas9602
      @tacomas9602 2 года назад

      ​@@braxxian holy crap I didn't realize there were pro German Ukrainians back then! it's something I completely forgot about!

    • @theteuton9904
      @theteuton9904 2 года назад +7

      @@tacomas9602 Lots of Baltic men joined as well. Hell SS Charlemagne of France were some of the last defenders of the Reichstag. Lots of people joined up with the Reich because they were anti-communist. You can easily imagine some poor Ukrainian having family starve during the Holodomor and think these German guys must no be so bad. Not a good decision in hindsight but understandable at least.

    • @pffpffovich2398
      @pffpffovich2398 2 года назад

      @@braxxian Well they had only 1 choice really - die by starvation from idiotic collectivisation, or die fighting commies.

    • @yaninaovcharenko8219
      @yaninaovcharenko8219 2 года назад +4

      @@braxxian True enough. Same goes pretty much for every single nationality of the USSR, including the Russians. I was pointing out that Ukrainian fronts were not made up of Ukrainians, Byelorussian fronts of Byelorussians, etc. If this were the case, who would be manning Leningrad, Karelian, Voronezh, Stalingrad, North Caucasus, Western, South-Western, or Baltic fronts?

  • @TheDanzomanzo
    @TheDanzomanzo 2 года назад +26

    The 'hate' is rather illogical, when you consider there are graves of foreign military the world over. 80,000 Germans in Normandy, 1500 Allies in Yokohama, and yes, the 5000 Soviets here. There are even 54,000 Germans buried in Sologubovka with an ongoing effort to recover bodies to lay to rest.

    • @herbivorethecarnivore8447
      @herbivorethecarnivore8447 2 года назад

      It's not about there being a foreign war grave, it's about hate for the red army and the USSR for their actions

    • @SuperJohnny99999
      @SuperJohnny99999 2 года назад +9

      Graves and this are two different things.
      In my opinion these should be teared down.

    • @oldegrunt
      @oldegrunt Год назад +2

      Hate is illogical? When we visited Berlin in 2004, my wife and I stayed at an older woman's guest house. She got very emotional when my wife asked her how it was during the War, she lapsed into broken English trying to describe the Russian occupation as a teen aged girl. Somehow I don't think she had a positive reaction to her experiences then.
      Regardless of what her countrymen did in Russia, what was done to the civilians of Berlin by the victorious Russians wasn't something that made them happy to be "liberated".

    • @simpsbelongtothegulags3702
      @simpsbelongtothegulags3702 Год назад

      @@oldegrunt its not liberation its invasion

    • @compatriot852
      @compatriot852 Год назад

      A grave is different from a statue. The soviets built tons of these to immpose their authority over their conquests.

  • @larryg.9187
    @larryg.9187 7 месяцев назад +1

    In the early '70's I was stationed in Bamberg and did frequent border duty from another base in Colberg. Both in Bavaria. Drove border patrol in jeeps. And did overnight duty in a shack next to the border. Both parts, while watching the fenced & mined border, and its guard towers with armed East German guards.
    This, plus training constantly at a couple of NATO sites was my assignment as a member of the
    2/2 Armored Cavalry Regiment's H Company as a gunner on an M60A1 Main Battle Tank ...
    .................. Toujours Pret ..................

  • @connycontainer9459
    @connycontainer9459 6 месяцев назад +2

    Didn't know it had such a bad reputation. Used to go there sometimes for a break from one of the many clubs nearby. Made quite the impression on the tourist girls as well.. felt more like an oasis of peace and solitude.

  • @Pablo668
    @Pablo668 2 года назад +11

    I've been there. Back in 1987. Seeing the wall, East and West Berlin, and Germany divided, it was quite sobering for a 17 year old.

  • @MrSlavaoat
    @MrSlavaoat 2 года назад +17

    Thank you, Mark. Just wanted to say, that names of the Soviet fronts have nothing to do with the nationality of soldiers fighting there. It pinpoints geographical position of any particular front. In the final stages of the war the names of the fronts pretty much stayed the same as they were named while still inside the USSR borders. In the beginning of the war and later the names were often changed, new fronts would appear. So, Ukrainians were fighting everywhere, starting from polar regions and down to the Black Sea. There wasn't any consideration of soldier's nationality, it was random. If there was a new unit forming, very much depended on where it was formed. Naturally, most soldiers in this unit would be locals.

    • @dirkvonriegen5267
      @dirkvonriegen5267 8 месяцев назад +1

      The special thing, which Mr. Felton will probably never understand, is that every Russian citizen may identify regionally by his ancestry, but will always say that he is a "Russian."
      So not only is his “Ukrainian front” wrong militarily,
      as well as culturally.
      Unfortunately, you can see that Mr. Felton from Russian society and
      Culture has very little idea, which is often the case with Anglo-Saxons...

  • @14MCDLXXXVIII88
    @14MCDLXXXVIII88 Год назад +4

    demolish that shameful memorial. it's incomprehensible why Germans still let it exist. think of it like this, a killer murders your grandfather and puts his own picture in a frame in his house. I think my German friends are aware of this but they are waiting for the right time to act. because Germany will erwacht someday, it's inevitable. until the day of the reckoning comes, Germans would choose to pick a low profile.

  • @junerobertson4389
    @junerobertson4389 7 месяцев назад +3

    It's okay for the Red Army to save everyone's arse but not to have a statue. Disgusting.

  • @Camm0Blue
    @Camm0Blue 2 года назад +79

    That has to be such an odd feeling having memorials to foreigners in your country.

    • @kostam.1113
      @kostam.1113 2 года назад +4

      Here in Serbia we have Yugoslav memorials, most of them have fallen to disrepair since there is no more Yugoslavia and no more Yugoslavs
      But in essence those are memorials to foreigners.

    • @continentalgin
      @continentalgin 2 года назад +50

      It's unfortunate. An intentional insult to the people. It should be in Moscow.

    • @riograndedosulball248
      @riograndedosulball248 2 года назад +9

      @@kostam.1113 yeah, but it was a country that you were a part of (and towards the end, pretty much a Serbian-run country, nonetheless) the situation in Berlin is different

    • @SparkyWaxAll
      @SparkyWaxAll 2 года назад +1

      Rapists and murderers; repeating in Ukraine

    • @billy5179
      @billy5179 2 года назад +28

      No it doesn't. These are memmorials of the men that freed us from Hitler and the Nazis. We in germany actually can apreciate that. And should!! Well, the educated part does at least.

  • @chulainn32
    @chulainn32 2 года назад +8

    I was at this memorial on my first visit to Berlin 15 years ago. I was genuinely baffled by it at the time. Very interesting to watch this today - like 100% of Mark Felton's content.

  • @lemonacidrounds7293
    @lemonacidrounds7293 6 месяцев назад +3

    This is history! Shouldn't be getting hate!

  • @JuanSanchez-jv4mc
    @JuanSanchez-jv4mc 7 месяцев назад +12

    The swastika is prohibited but the hammer and sickle is not, although they claimed many more victims.

    • @Spaibo
      @Spaibo 7 месяцев назад +4

      May the Red Star rise triumphant above your weak Black "sun".

    • @SpermDonorAnthonyGreenfield
      @SpermDonorAnthonyGreenfield 7 месяцев назад

      Indeed

    • @JuanSanchez-jv4mc
      @JuanSanchez-jv4mc 7 месяцев назад +3

      I don't follow any black sun, but I know that the swastika is millennia old, the hammer and sickle only lasted 70 years.
      Weak societies are those that adopt the hammer and sickle, which is why it only lasted 70 years.
      I hope you are happy in North Korea.@@Spaibo

    • @PSYCHOpaty4
      @PSYCHOpaty4 6 месяцев назад +1

      Exept they didn't

    • @user-ht9jw5mo4s
      @user-ht9jw5mo4s Месяц назад

      Good point.

  • @DerCent161
    @DerCent161 2 года назад +8

    As a Berliner, neither me or any people I know have a problem with the momorial.
    It represents the soviet struggle against fascism and should be remembered and honoured
    Tod dem Faschismus in jedem Land! ✊

    • @davetdowell
      @davetdowell 2 года назад +4

      As an ex-British Soldier who served in Berlin whilst the wall came down, I can confirm I never met any Berliner who seemed to be bothered by it. All seemed to view it as just another part of the history surrounding their city. If anything I'd say it being there was always more of an issue for the American political establishment, than for anyone else.

  • @monkas1833
    @monkas1833 2 года назад +30

    Perfect timing! Thanks Mark Felton for producing such interesting videos for us!

  • @kimvibk9242
    @kimvibk9242 2 года назад +18

    Thanks, Mark - I will be going to Berlin later this year and I will pay a visit to this monument if I get the chance. I may not like what it represents, but it is a historic war memorial all the same, and I do appreciate history.

    • @NiSiochainGanSaoirse
      @NiSiochainGanSaoirse 7 месяцев назад +5

      Nor do we have to agree with the memorials political nuances, but the men who lay there are true heroes.
      "No greater love hath man than this, to lay down his life for his Brothers."

  • @theodorekell
    @theodorekell Год назад +9

    "thousands of Ukrainians from Ukrainian front". Seriously? Fronts were not named because of ethnic composition of the army. It was named after location of the battles. Same front was named Voronezh when the fight was in the direction of Voronezh. When action moved to Ukraine it was renamed into Ukrainian. At the same time Ukrainians fought in other fronts.

  • @Hartholz
    @Hartholz 2 года назад +52

    I am from Berlin. This memorial is not hated. All facts you said are true. Viewers just have to be aware, that the majority of Berliners accept this memorial as part of history and the sights of Berlin. Moreover where can you see an original T-34 and a 152mm- howitzer so easily without any cost? And the suggestion to remove this military equipment because of Russias War on Ukraine 2022 was rejected by the vast majority of Germans.

    • @zjeee
      @zjeee 2 года назад +5

      You don't know much about your city then, removing the tanks has been hotly debated for almost 10 years now the only reason they were not removed is because we made a treaty in 1990 that we would preserve all Soviet monuments. The memorial itself people are fine with, the tanks however is another story.

    • @Hartholz
      @Hartholz 2 года назад +6

      @@zjeee there is a difference between demandings of some politicians or activists and a debate. Only in April 2022 there was a little discussion. Well no, in fact there wasn't. A politician demanded that. Berlin mayor said "no". Newspapers wrote about it. That was it. And no one said any word about the treaty ever.

    • @KretinoSantino
      @KretinoSantino 2 года назад +4

      @@zjeee Why? Those soldiers, many which died in those tanks did sacrifice their lives to achieve longest lasting peace period in Europe history.
      I have a simple quiz for you.
      Where did most people die in horrific death 2 weeks?
      1. Battle for Berlin
      2. In Leningrad of starvation
      3. At Babi Yar
      4. In German concentration camps
      5. In German POW camps
      6. In German labour camps

    • @BmorePatriot
      @BmorePatriot 2 года назад +7

      Also I think Germany is also pro Russia too. A lot do support Ukraine, but also according what I heard that there’s people that root for the Russians there too. And also as there was once a Germany that was socialist and had good ties with the Soviets (East Germany). Those statues definitely aren’t going anywhere.

    • @michaelwackers6475
      @michaelwackers6475 2 года назад +3

      @@BmorePatriot I'm a German and definitely support Russia!

  • @thegunslinger1363
    @thegunslinger1363 2 года назад +56

    I was at that memorial back in July. Berlin is an amazing city.

    • @morgoli2916
      @morgoli2916 2 года назад +28

      i was in berlin in july, and the city itself was very disgusting. Never seen such dirty and disgusting city.
      But the memorials and historical buildings were very beatiful.

    • @hendrikschuch
      @hendrikschuch 2 года назад +1

      @@morgoli2916 aha

    • @rwps3677
      @rwps3677 2 года назад

      Berlin is a shithole tbh

    • @der7tezwerg921
      @der7tezwerg921 2 года назад +7

      @@morgoli2916 Then you haven't seen many Cities, right !?

    • @DirtMerchant693
      @DirtMerchant693 2 года назад +7

      @@morgoli2916 it’s been 3 years since I’ve been, but I never remember being overtly dirty. I found cities in Italy to be the dirtiest. Regardless, they were all cleaner than some of the towns I’ve seen in America

  • @robertwilson214
    @robertwilson214 5 месяцев назад +2

    How not to be annoyed by the soviets. Dont conduct a war of annihilation in their country.

  • @Symboliic
    @Symboliic 7 месяцев назад +5

    The humiliation rituals against us will come to an end.

    • @bleekdreemer9166
      @bleekdreemer9166 7 месяцев назад +5

      You're not even german, what're you on about?

    • @Symboliic
      @Symboliic 7 месяцев назад +1

      @@bleekdreemer9166 I can trace my ancestry back almost a thousand years... und wer bist du.

    • @darth_nihilus_
      @darth_nihilus_ 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@SymboliicEhem sicher.

    • @Symboliic
      @Symboliic 7 месяцев назад +3

      @howardsontz983
      So, the rape and terror bombing of civilian population is justified in your mind? And are you saying the removal and ethnic cleansing of lands that had been German for hundreds of years is approved, and the Germans had no right to their own self-determination and defense of their folk?
      Do not have me conused though, I can not fault any nation for seeking its own self-interest first. But I am questioning why Germany has always had this double standard put upon her.
      And I'm putting this question to you: Has the West truly been better off with a week Germany? Why is this society so sick to the point of the average citizen feeling no purpose in life. It was Germany first, but all of Eroupe will fall to this liberal cancer eventually.
      Come back to God, brother. Love your family. Protect your folk.