Volgograd, Russia. Battle of Stalingrad Museum

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  • Опубликовано: 26 авг 2024

Комментарии • 68

  • @bazzakeegan2243
    @bazzakeegan2243 4 года назад +28

    I have to visit Volgograd before I die......the heroism shown by the 62nd army,will never be forgotten...long live Russia...!

    • @user-ul2fb6js7t
      @user-ul2fb6js7t 4 года назад

      Сейчас всё закрыто в связи с пандемией. Прогуляться можно, но посетить музеи, выставки не получится.

  • @lukeangelus962
    @lukeangelus962 4 года назад +22

    Glorious history! Russian courage at it's greatest!

  • @billlombard9911
    @billlombard9911 4 года назад +13

    No one will forget nothing is forgotten-
    никто не забудет, ничто не забыто

    • @billlombard9911
      @billlombard9911 2 года назад

      @Choo Suck 20+ million dead , they earned it . More Soviet soldiers died than any other.

  • @KristinaTravelina
    @KristinaTravelina 4 года назад +9

    I had been there in September and it was pretty hard for me to staying there.. every single thing reminds you of those terrible days and time which faced every Russian family

    • @KristinaTravelina
      @KristinaTravelina 4 года назад +1

      jetdude787 it’s sad but at least you got more motivated to visit it again 😉

  • @cleonicelopes464
    @cleonicelopes464 3 года назад +3

    Спасибо!

  • @kenhoneycutt2046
    @kenhoneycutt2046 4 года назад +6

    Visited the battle of Russia museum in Moscow. It was an experience I’ll never forget. Standing in the room with all the crystals hanging from the ceiling representing all the Russian people killed in the war while the guide asked for a moment of silence. Then his statement “so many deaths ...and for what?”

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  2 года назад

      I was in the same museum and remember being in that room of tears, I think it is called, very very somber…

  • @nicolaslamah9112
    @nicolaslamah9112 2 года назад

    J’ai visité ce musée à plusieurs reprises! C’est vraiment extraordinaire

  • @lostdutchman3495
    @lostdutchman3495 5 лет назад +6

    Going to visit next week... Really looking forwards to it!

    • @lostdutchman3495
      @lostdutchman3495 5 лет назад

      @@jetdude787 Thanks for your warning. I go with my girlfriend and she is Russian. So I think she will know how to behave there.

  • @francoiselesensuelite6884
    @francoiselesensuelite6884 3 года назад +2

    Just Beautiful! Thank you for sharing!

  • @Frank210210
    @Frank210210 4 года назад +3

    Thanks a lot, marvelous explanation, great video!!!

  • @user-fw3mq8yv9v
    @user-fw3mq8yv9v 4 года назад +3

    Wonderful! Thanks a lot!

  • @zackminkowski902
    @zackminkowski902 3 года назад +1

    Thank you for sharing, would love to visit those places, so full of history.

  • @floydvaughn836
    @floydvaughn836 2 года назад

    Nice. Would've liked more of the fountain. Yours is the only vid I've seen that even shows it. Except for wartime images of course.

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  2 года назад +1

      Thank you…
      I was looking for the fountain and was nowhere to be found, then I went to the train station and there it was! Later on I found out it is a copy, the original survived at the original site but later was destroyed or it was beyond restoring, not sure…

  • @francoiselesensuelite6884
    @francoiselesensuelite6884 2 года назад +1

    Great video! I did watch it before, but man, I really enjoy your videos....

  • @cleonicelopes464
    @cleonicelopes464 3 года назад +5

    Me emociona quando penso nas pessoas que caíram lutando por sua pátria!
    Meu mais profundo respeito aos heróis russos!

  • @floydvaughn836
    @floydvaughn836 2 года назад

    And there it is, the children's fountain. So glad they kept it!

  • @cleonicelopes464
    @cleonicelopes464 3 года назад +6

    Honra eterna ao patriotismo russo!

  • @IuriFiedoruk
    @IuriFiedoruk 3 года назад +2

    Very interesting. It is the first time someone tell about the concrete on the buildings.
    Ity amuses me this is not something told in documentaries about WWII.

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  3 года назад +1

      Indeed, I never knew this until my visit to the museum there; basically the bombing by the Germans instead of destroying completely the buildings created a mess of laberints thanks to the skeleton of the buildings that was made of rebar and concrete.

  • @shockwave5544
    @shockwave5544 4 года назад +5

    1:51 please everyone stand up

  • @RaviSingh-zt2os
    @RaviSingh-zt2os 3 года назад +1

    I want to see that....but I am not able to

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  3 года назад

      It’s not difficult to get there... maybe one day...

  • @sanduniindunadee4701
    @sanduniindunadee4701 2 года назад

    Superb

  • @justsomeguyonyoutube3258
    @justsomeguyonyoutube3258 2 года назад +1

    Great to see there is no barking dog in a historical museum video comment section.

  • @donaldkepple4927
    @donaldkepple4927 6 месяцев назад

    I want to see the stalingrad museum marmev kurgan the barricady museum

  • @giorgidzerzhinsky1635
    @giorgidzerzhinsky1635 2 года назад

    Beautiful! ❤

  • @johnbaker6572
    @johnbaker6572 4 года назад +2

    Remarkable!

  • @strfltcmnd.9925
    @strfltcmnd.9925 6 месяцев назад

    She's explaining how a big factor in victory was American lend -lease.

  • @user-wz1ms8yt7y
    @user-wz1ms8yt7y 3 года назад +1

    Do you know the fact that Volgograd is officially called Stalingrad six days a year? According to the law "hero-city - Stalingrad" adopted by the city Duma, our city is called on May 9-Victory Day, June 22 - the Day of Remembrance and Mourning, August 23-the Day of Remembrance of the victims of the bombing of Stalingrad by Nazi aircraft, September 2-the Day of the end of World War II and November 19-the day of the beginning of the counteroffensive of Soviet troops near Stalingrad.

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  3 года назад

      Hi! No, I did not know that, but now I do. Thank you very much for the information 🙏

    • @user-wz1ms8yt7y
      @user-wz1ms8yt7y 3 года назад

      @@jetdude787 😊

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  3 года назад +1

      @@user-wz1ms8yt7y I like the idea of honoring Stalingrad with its old name six days every year. Great idea!

    • @user-wz1ms8yt7y
      @user-wz1ms8yt7y 3 года назад +2

      @@jetdude787 I think it was a compromise. The veterans wanted the city to be renamed Stalingrad again. But the people whose relatives suffered from Stalin's repressions were against it.

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  3 года назад +2

      @@user-wz1ms8yt7y Totally agree, and I think it was the best option; a compromise.

  • @oliverkidd2741
    @oliverkidd2741 3 года назад +1

    Must be strange living in a place knowing more people died in combat there than anywhere else in human history.

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  3 года назад

      Yup, got your point entirely; when I lived in the island of Guam, in the Pacific, used to go jogging to this peaceful beach, and one day I read a plaque posted there, the island had been the site of fierce battles in WW 2 and in that beach alone, one day, one battle, 5000 Americans and about 33,000 Japanese died, right there.
      From that day I felt different about that beach....

    • @user-wz1ms8yt7y
      @user-wz1ms8yt7y 3 года назад +1

      In Volgograd, there are mainly descendants of those people who were born here, fought, and then restored the city from the ruins after the war. We are connected with this land by our roots.

  • @antonioacevedo5200
    @antonioacevedo5200 4 года назад +1

    Any explanation in the museum written in English?

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  4 года назад

      Antonio Acevedo Unfortunately not. Everything is in Russian and in this part of the country, unlike Moscow, or St. Petersburg, everything everything is Russian.

    • @antonioacevedo5200
      @antonioacevedo5200 4 года назад +1

      @@jetdude787 Thank You.

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  4 года назад

      Antonio Acevedo You are welcome

  • @deghihderaman3572
    @deghihderaman3572 2 года назад +1

    History still History. Sejarah tetap sejarah. German noob.

  • @mysecretpleasure
    @mysecretpleasure 2 года назад +1

    12:15

  • @user-iw1qw1ch5f
    @user-iw1qw1ch5f 4 года назад +1

    ئەیدایکتان بگێم

  • @jorgehumbertogonzalezbravo4949
    @jorgehumbertogonzalezbravo4949 3 года назад +1

    too bad the museum does not have those expositions in English

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  3 года назад

      I know! Especially traveling solo, I was affected because I didn’t understand them, still, they are soo well made that if you know a bit of history, it would be enough to get a point.

  • @kristianambrosio4141
    @kristianambrosio4141 3 года назад +1

    1:00 so disrespectful to laugh at that, за Сталину, за родину! Stalin was a great leader

    • @jetdude787
      @jetdude787  3 года назад +1

      The laughter you heard was part of the recording at the museum, and maybe scared screams and not laughter.
      Cheers 🙏

  • @andreypetryaev457
    @andreypetryaev457 Год назад

    Stalingrad masengrab.