The Last Nazi Trials: The Case Of Auschwitz Guard Reinhold Hanning | TIME

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  • Опубликовано: 6 июн 2018
  • The Last Nazi Trials follows the prosecution of a 94-year-old former SS guard, Reinhold Hanning, more than 70 years after the Holocaust. The film renews questions about how to assign blame for the Holocaust.
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    The Last Nazi Trials | TIME
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @kiranadam3765
    @kiranadam3765 5 лет назад +1841

    I'm still waiting for 'retired' soldiers of the Japanese Imperial Army to be charged for similar crimes against the Chinese.

    • @kingfinance1508
      @kingfinance1508 5 лет назад +38

      Light Ray Adam eyyyy ain’t that the truth!!

    • @peterrodby2786
      @peterrodby2786 5 лет назад +118

      Light Ray Adam-- do the Japanese even teach their school children about atrocities in se Asia?

    • @MyYuwono
      @MyYuwono 5 лет назад +109

      You won't get them as japan never admitted the crimes as for german they had admitted and taken the responsabilities.

    • @BratvaTV
      @BratvaTV 5 лет назад +105

      Or what about the Americans who dropped nukes and murdered 200K civilians. Indeed a war crime based on the laws made up after the war.

    • @peace-now
      @peace-now 5 лет назад +3

      The Japanese situation is different. Japan suffered from the Wall Street Crash of 1929. The Japanese have learnt from their mistakes, due to lack of experience.

  • @julienorfolk3880
    @julienorfolk3880 Год назад +102

    I agree with this survivor. Mass murder is a crime to be analyzed and learned from, not to be forgotten and covered up as if it didn’t happen.

  • @randyschaff8939
    @randyschaff8939 4 года назад +338

    If you forget the past you will keep repeating it. History must be remembered.

    • @heisenbergred
      @heisenbergred 4 года назад +2

      @Y Bshut up boy

    • @waverunner7063
      @waverunner7063 4 года назад +9

      What about Palestine then? Should we forget about their plight and struggle?

    • @heisenbergred
      @heisenbergred 4 года назад +2

      Gaza i think you mean? Israel pays them for electricity and other essential stuff

    • @dionlindsay2
      @dionlindsay2 3 года назад +3

      You will repeat it even if you remember it. Such is human nature.

    • @TheeBlueDutchess
      @TheeBlueDutchess 3 года назад +4

      @@guavaguy4397 then that's a conscious decision you'll reap the consequences for as life as shown many a time. You are not asked to be or feel guilty but to acknowledge, accept, and remember. That isn't hard.

  • @henrysmommy7
    @henrysmommy7 5 лет назад +626

    Anyone who says it's been too many years should really think. If your sister, mother, brother, father, etc was yanked away from you today and murdered in cold blood. How do you think you would feel about it in fifty years or sixty or seventy...
    Forgiveness, I think not .

    • @zwijntje3010
      @zwijntje3010 5 лет назад +14

      NEVER !!!!!!!

    • @NoName-vi3fq
      @NoName-vi3fq 4 года назад +20

      Would your feel better knowing that your murdered relative life was valued as 10 minutes or so prison time? 0 in practice as "everybody" knew someone of his age and health would not be actually jailed and probably would die before the legal formalities was sorted out.
      That's not justice nor revenge. Just a impotent show trial where the prosecutor knowing fully well that while he will get guilty verdict a punishment even remotely fitted to the charge will not be carried out. It's better to admitt that justice was not served to him and a great many other of his kind back in the days for one reason or another and that time have now run out for a rerun in a meaningfull way. Then stating that the proper punishment for him and others like him will be carried out post mortem.

    • @emiliospowerballer1441
      @emiliospowerballer1441 4 года назад +8

      so what, retaliate? if thats your answer, then obviously youre part of the problem. yes you forget and move on, thats what a mature person will do. my father was almost killed in the cypriot invasion of turkey, hes alive and well today but never did he ever mention his experiences in war, its over. you forget and move on

    • @SpaceCadet_12
      @SpaceCadet_12 4 года назад +9

      Emilios Powerballer So are we suppose to act like nothing happened? Despicable.

    • @bw2442
      @bw2442 4 года назад +3

      All wrongs or sins need to be forgiven, not for the sake of the abuser but for the sanity of the victim, or it will eat you alive, Gods help will be needed to do this. It is not humanly possible ..

  • @mrvarus8957
    @mrvarus8957 5 лет назад +901

    To all the young people.
    You cannot learn by forgetting.

    • @whatwhat3432523
      @whatwhat3432523 5 лет назад +34

      @John Sluder Great education you have, you think Communism was Jewish because of Lenin? Lord have mercy, I have seen so many misinformed idiots online it actually hurts my feelings that most of human kind is at your level.

    • @Aluunyax3
      @Aluunyax3 5 лет назад +18

      John Sluder Marx was a self hating half jew, he even wrote a book criticising them. Also his partner Friedrich Engels was pure european German. Communism is not a jewish ideology.

    • @tedstout7439
      @tedstout7439 4 года назад +10

      John Sluder Nazibot

    • @justenough730
      @justenough730 4 года назад +6

      @John Sluder yes Bolsheviks.

    • @kerriepaterson
      @kerriepaterson 4 года назад

      But you can through forgiveness! Sadly something missing in tech social media. It’s all we have to aid us in the path to redemption.

  • @edithcallaway4316
    @edithcallaway4316 Год назад +40

    The survivors are of strong character and very noble people.

    • @yannick245
      @yannick245 5 месяцев назад

      We still had trials in 2023!
      Some of these late-90s/centenarian SS men are actually put in front of juvenile courts, because they were under 18/21 while they were SS members/the holocaust took place.
      For them it was certainly better than to fight on the fronts. The years of 44/45, the _"final stand/Endkampf",_ took more casualties than the previous years combined _(where already millions had died)._ Especially among very young men. They often didn't even finish school, before being thrown at the front lines. After a shortened training. Although many had already somewhat of a pre-training. Being part of the Hitlerjugend and anti-aircraft defense _("Flakhelfer generation")._

    • @fillsbury8304
      @fillsbury8304 2 месяца назад

      @@yannick245Good. You shouldn't get to participate in something like this, without facing the consequences.

  • @wilsonip6529
    @wilsonip6529 4 года назад +77

    I feel so sad for this lady and her families, those horrible childhood memories became a forever scar in her life. I wish she will live happy and healthy for rest of her life.

  • @autumnhomer9786
    @autumnhomer9786 5 лет назад +224

    “Everyone had to do their part or it wouldn’t have worked.” Exactly, a group effort. That just makes it worse.

    • @MasonStrand
      @MasonStrand 5 лет назад +6

      You can do your part without having a choice; imagine how he feels knowing he was sentencing people to death but being unable to do anything about it? The death camps were top secret. When you got there and got your orders, you were stuck. If he left, he’d be shot. We’d have one leas witness of the atrocity than we do today. It’s sad to see a man prosecuted at this age, when instead we should be interviewing him- he should be telling his story so we don’t repeat ourselves, not being forced to go to jail for it.

    • @frederic5335
      @frederic5335 5 лет назад +7

      He could have declined serving in the concentratipn camps. The claim that he would have been shot had he not played his part is long established as a historical myth.

    • @David-ci1vn
      @David-ci1vn 4 года назад +2

      "all do their part", including highly funded lawyers, press ganged non "witnesses" and a compliant press.

    • @YN-oy4ks
      @YN-oy4ks 2 года назад

      @@MasonStrand he could have told his story from jail, the spineless coward was hiding in plain sight the whole time.

    • @BhlackBishop
      @BhlackBishop Год назад

      ​@@MasonStrand It’s not just because he was a part of it but that he also did nothing to help. He didn’t share his food or water with them, he didn’t say any kind words to them, he didn’t play their favorite music, he didn’t sneak in any chocolate or sweets, he didn’t empathize with them, he didn’t help any escape, he didn’t protect any from being picked, he didn’t speak out against it, he didn’t do anything to show that he doesn’t want to be here. He was simply along for the ride, one of those “sucks to suck but I'm just glad it’s not me” mentality. He did what he was told, he did his job efficiently day in and day out but never once paused to question the morality of it. And that’s why he’s being punished. Contrary to popular belief, looking the other way does make one complicit.

  • @trullyfreak
    @trullyfreak 5 лет назад +160

    I wonder if the lass with the baby would be saying „oh he’s old, it’s too late, leave him be” if were responsible for murder of her kid.

    • @beachsheri9684
      @beachsheri9684 4 года назад +14

      She's a ditz like so many youth of this time frame. My son is 21 but I have made sure he knows a lot about these things! He is wise, so wise

    • @rubys7064
      @rubys7064 4 года назад +22

      I've heard testimony of guards smashing babies against walls. How would she feel if that was her baby. A lot of the people dont want to talk about it and say let's move on. You can't move forward until you know where you have been.

    • @lauriemcdarby5368
      @lauriemcdarby5368 4 года назад +10

      So young with no life’s experiences.....or just plain heartless to these peoples sufferings. Sad....

    • @biancachi6435
      @biancachi6435 3 года назад +6

      Exactly. Insensitive troll she was.

    • @charlesmartella
      @charlesmartella 3 года назад

      Yes true but the poor young German girl has and her generation would have copped a lot of shit for what her forefathers had done but she has done nothing herself to deserve this.

  • @peace-now
    @peace-now 5 лет назад +259

    Irene Weiss is a true heroine. She is absolutely correct that the SS guards should be brought to trial, not for punishment, but to give testimony so we all can learn. Irene has never been vindictive towards the guards, who she just wants to listen to her and other survivors. It all helps.

    • @MSM4U2POM
      @MSM4U2POM 4 года назад +8

      @MVP Irrelevant. He was a member of the SS - a criminal organisation.

    • @hopemay9562
      @hopemay9562 4 года назад +1

      @MVP alleged?! Are you serious?!?!

    • @hopemay9562
      @hopemay9562 4 года назад +1

      @MVP the bodies of the victims arent proof enough?

    • @hopemay9562
      @hopemay9562 4 года назад +1

      @MVP I inhumane conditions they were forced to live in, isnt proof enough? Or how about the fact they were starved to death and experimented on medically???

    • @David-ci1vn
      @David-ci1vn 4 года назад +1

      @@MSM4U2POM Not until post ex facto law made it so; I just passed a law that made it illegal for Yuoutube posters to write "SS - a criminal organisation", fair?

  • @bluessoul1286
    @bluessoul1286 5 лет назад +498

    If only he was a scientist, like Wernher Von Braun, or how about the Japanese scientists that were given immunity for Unit 731.

    • @Bj-yf3im
      @Bj-yf3im 5 лет назад +16

      Daniel Ruelas The West did not prosecute any of the former 731 scientists. When one of them came to the US to make a formal apology, he only made out of his plane before being sent back to Japan by the police! Had he been allowed to speak, it would have been world news!

    • @Bj-yf3im
      @Bj-yf3im 5 лет назад +18

      Jordan Reynolds That's what leftists and SJWs apparently believe and that no other race except whites can do that.

    • @albundybudbundy3714
      @albundybudbundy3714 5 лет назад +7

      @@Bj-yf3im well said man.

    • @SouthPark333Gaming
      @SouthPark333Gaming 5 лет назад +21

      Yep, prosecuting a 94 year old man who was a tiny payer in a big game more than a lifetime ago just seems silly. The poor sod probably didn't know what was going on

    • @jgill3881
      @jgill3881 5 лет назад +3

      My people only make up less than 2% of the country after many genocides
      The last one being in the 80s.There were no camps they were purged on site :( things like this happened in Asia too

  • @TruckieLooks4Aliens
    @TruckieLooks4Aliens 4 года назад +273

    Why do people act like bc it’s a long time ago it shouldn’t matter now?

    • @flightenlightened3045
      @flightenlightened3045 4 года назад +17

      AMellon Keller Probably because he doesn’t pose a threat to the public anymore, since he is so old.

    • @zoesdada8923
      @zoesdada8923 4 года назад +11

      Okay what about the communists who murdered millions? Where is your anger for them?

    • @jeffmax2941
      @jeffmax2941 4 года назад +7

      Ur messed up dude it should be remember ever day

    • @camerong5513
      @camerong5513 4 года назад

      @@zoesdada8923 is the person supposed to list every ill act they ever heard of?

    • @basskickersoutdoors5594
      @basskickersoutdoors5594 4 года назад +4

      He should of been tried 40 years ago when all these officers and officials were being charged for there crimes. Yes he deserves to pay for what he did but at the same time someone who stood watch vrs someone who actually committed the acts in the camp at this point what is prison gonna do to a 90 year old man hes already enjoyed his golden years so at this point is kinda pointless to put him in prison when he could die at anything now.

  • @farmwife7944
    @farmwife7944 5 лет назад +52

    the young woman holding her baby: I have to believe that if that baby were to be torn from her arms and murdered, then she would have no ambivalence about the trial of the old guard. She is lucky enough to be far removed from such a possibility but she needs to learn empathy. It is what makes us human. Personally I would go the rest of my life, up to my death looking for justice for the people that made the atrocity happen.

    • @TT-Freak
      @TT-Freak 4 года назад +6

      True and well said.

    • @teresahiggs4896
      @teresahiggs4896 2 года назад +6

      True and everyone has a choice. I am ex navy and if I were given an order that I believed was unlawful , like this guard was given , I would rather go to jail or even be killed my self than obey that order .
      Evey military person has the right to refuse to obey an unlawful order.
      And what is lawful about about first guarding the people so,they couldn’t sneak away, escape off the trains or to escape after they were unloaded at the camp……dividing families, sending some to the camp to be worked to death and others be killed immediately ,
      sending those children and infants to be gassed,
      then guarding the remainder in a camp, making sure that they don’t escape
      and then guarding them while they work and forcing them to work until they died from untreated disease and sickness, over work and malnutrition?
      What ,in ANY military ,is lawful about ordering someone to do those things?
      The guard is responsible because of this simple fact…if there had not been guards like this man, many of these people would have at least tried to escape. Who knows how many might have succeeded.
      Who,dealt wirh the people on a daily basis? Not the high officers, it was the guards, the enlisted ranks,. Of course the officers woukd check periodically, and they certainly signed off on the enlisted guards reports, maybe the officers supervised any special occurrences or punishments that happened. They supervised the off loading of the trains of people. But guards were still,present , when officers where there and when officers were absent. One or two officer wouldnt have been enough to stop a mass escape or a mass attack on the officers…so guards were absolutely ecsssary and vital to all aspects and operations ofmthe murder machines.
      So this murder machine that was the concentration camp required many people to make it work. If you remove one part it just doesn’t woek or doesn’t woek as well. And a guard was one of those parts that was absolutely necsssry.
      It’s a tradgedy that this guard was allowed to live a long , free, and happy life , somerhing he denied thousands of others. Justice wouid have been better served if he could have been caught and tried decades ago. But he needs to be convicted ,he needs to ad it his guilt and responsibility in the deaths of thousands and IMO he needs to be in prison for his last years.

    • @farmwife7944
      @farmwife7944 2 года назад +2

      @@teresahiggs4896 thank-you for your service.

    • @jennh2096
      @jennh2096 Год назад +6

      That woman is the exact reason this was allowed to happen in the first place. Complete ambivalence and then excusing actions by saying maybe that's just what they had to do.

    • @Ebc1129
      @Ebc1129 Год назад +2

      I'm happy to know I'm not the only one who disagrees with that woman's mindset.

  • @TopLob
    @TopLob 3 года назад +29

    The truth is that you can only forgive a genocide by never witnessing it in the first place. Once you've witnessed it, it is impossible to forgive. Through sheer ignorance people forgive perpetrators who would have treated them with utmost cruelty and no remorse.

    • @soavemusica
      @soavemusica Год назад +2

      Actually, a Christian must forgive. We may not all be going to prison for crimes, but before God us sinners cannot stand. MATTHEW 6: 14 -15 "For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you: But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses."

    • @daddyrabbit835
      @daddyrabbit835 Год назад

      This guy isn't even the same guy he was in his youth. This is a travesty and a waste of time.

    • @PauloPereira-jj4jv
      @PauloPereira-jj4jv Месяц назад

      The truth : yes , it's possible.

  • @kellycole4160
    @kellycole4160 Год назад +20

    i don’t think it should ever be forgotten no matter how long it has been we learn from our actions we owe it to the victims and their family keep history in the for front no matter how heinous it is so it won’t be repeated

    • @Desmondbrown73
      @Desmondbrown73 Год назад +1

      Who did you vote for in the last election? Let’s see how well you’ve learned ‘your lesson’…

  • @johngray9434
    @johngray9434 4 года назад +42

    Those who were not valued by the west were hung - whilst others with knowledge of building rockets were welcomed as U.S. citizens and lived a life of freedom where sadly the status of a war criminal depends on how useful they are to western governments

    • @PK-re3lu
      @PK-re3lu 3 года назад

      Very true.

    • @marcospark2803
      @marcospark2803 Год назад +4

      True but that applies to everyone not only Western. Soviet Union did the same thing.

    • @andrewjensen8189
      @andrewjensen8189 Год назад

      @@marcospark2803 Yep, basically just hypocrites in power. Even worse, when America originally started hearing rumors of the ethnic cleansing occuring in Germany, they were slow to react because America was overwhelmingly antisemetic during the 30s and 40s so they didn't really see it as a pressing issue. It was only when Pearl Harbour was attacked that the Jewish extermination became a worthy enough cause for America to join the war for.

    • @redwater4778
      @redwater4778 Год назад

      Germany's crime was taxing the US corporations that did business in Germany

    • @jennh2096
      @jennh2096 Год назад +2

      It makes me sick how the US hid so many of these people, and let many of the Japanese completely off the hook in agreement to exchange information.

  • @charlesbeloved7951
    @charlesbeloved7951 Год назад +23

    Those who abuse other human beings, who have committed crimes against other human beings should have ZERO MERCY when it comes to justice. It doesn’t matter how old they are.

  • @chrispennie5830
    @chrispennie5830 5 лет назад +21

    This is good and I'm glad this is happening, people say its pointless but it is an extremely important teaching moment.

    • @daddyrabbit835
      @daddyrabbit835 Год назад

      Nah, it's a waste of time. This guy isn't even the same person he was during the war.

  • @ClaraMarcela
    @ClaraMarcela 5 лет назад +186

    He died on May 30th, 2017, before going to prison.

    • @simonbennatan8257
      @simonbennatan8257 5 лет назад +53

      May his name and memory be erased.

    • @kNINER-tj6mq
      @kNINER-tj6mq 5 лет назад +32

      Well good. He's burning in hell now.

    • @zwijntje3010
      @zwijntje3010 5 лет назад +19

      The filthy bastard !!! 😤😤😤😤

    • @zwijntje3010
      @zwijntje3010 4 года назад +25

      @@danielprado3611 Are you crazy ?! This jerk deserved the death penalty !!!! 😠😠😠😠😝😝😝😝🖕🖕🖕🖕

    • @reenaranirosetty
      @reenaranirosetty 4 года назад +9

      He must be in hell now.

  • @David-ci1vn
    @David-ci1vn 5 лет назад +24

    When Simon Wiesenthal was on the trail of "Silberbauer", Ann Frank's arresting officer her father was calling for reconciliation, he was ignored. There's a Jewish saying that the zealot destroys their own house.

  • @belindahopkins9707
    @belindahopkins9707 5 лет назад +135

    He's lived a full life he was not entitled too

    • @dizzy3216
      @dizzy3216 4 года назад +4

      Belinda Hopkins you do not know that

    • @David-ci1vn
      @David-ci1vn 4 года назад +2

      How come Rudolph Hess was made to die in solitary confinement, for the same reson that Eichmann was murdered, to keep him quiet.

  • @imcavdb5465
    @imcavdb5465 4 года назад +20

    That's the only thing I would want to hear from a camp guard after such a long time: "I saw injustice and I am ashamed to say I didn't do anything about it. I'm sorry. I'm so sorry".

    • @HackersSun
      @HackersSun 4 года назад +8

      Yeah that's what most people were tho
      People are VERY quick to anger and I *understand* but this was years ago and it was a totalitarian regime here, he could have been FORCED to do it somehow like the conscripts towards the end of ww2 Germany
      The either-you're-with-us-or-youre-against-us state
      A guy who shot an ss officer had him, his family, and his VILLAGE burned to the ground
      .. Its.. Not so black and white

    • @billmitchell3329
      @billmitchell3329 4 года назад +1

      Imca vdB if you believe in God when you go before him in the end, that is what he’ll have to tell God. “ I saw injustice and didn’t do anything about it” Not a position anyone would want to be in. He not only did nothing about it, he aided and abetted it by being a guard insuring the process!

  • @avengernemesis7990
    @avengernemesis7990 4 года назад +57

    Why was this man not convicted after the war ?
    Or taken to court in the 1960's, 70's, 80's !
    Why let this man enjoy a life within his community , while others suffered such great losses.
    It's inconceivable to me why he wasn't
    prosecuted when they had the chance to do so while he was younger.
    He is an old man now and where is the justice in that!
    So very sorry for your loss...we shall remember them.🌿
    Australia...

    • @breather8758
      @breather8758 Год назад

      Corruption?

    • @user-hm9zw9jr4g
      @user-hm9zw9jr4g Год назад

      Exactly why

    • @James-rc6qq
      @James-rc6qq Год назад

      Because he never shared his experiences. He willingly spoke out in order to stop holocaust deniers from being able to have a point. It came at a price though. And the reason nothing happened until now, is because he played such an insignificant part of the process and no one cared to prosecute. However, when he was an old man and time had already passed, they wanted to prosecute. Explaining why it happened this way only some know, I certainly don't

    • @XSpamDragonX
      @XSpamDragonX Год назад

      @@hakuyuki6859 Dude literally started asking to be transferred out of the camp as soon as he got there, how anyone in these comments thinks he willfully participated in any part of the Holocaust are just emotional animals that refuse to act like humans.

    • @bocameron4507
      @bocameron4507 Год назад

      Because the top ranks would need to go down first…and then there would be a case to put a lot of top politicians today behind bars for similar war crimes

  • @firebyrd437
    @firebyrd437 Год назад +7

    I remember a documentary that included this man when he was younger, after the war he refused to talk about this to his family, then after many years he came forward to speak about him being a guard, he had no been there for a year and had asked to be get out of the camp, to be posted else where, he returned to active duty. When he finally talked about this he said I have to tell the story of my past and the terrible things that happened in our country, whether he finally had come to terms with the Holocaust and his part in it, only he knows

  • @greenbeancasserole6646
    @greenbeancasserole6646 5 лет назад +82

    Why did it take so long? This should have been done decades ago!

    • @HackersSun
      @HackersSun 4 года назад +3

      @@archdornan3339wasn't Germany under half and half ussr control until 1990?
      Hardly a time to drum up more when the Berlin wall is right there

    • @yurichtube1162
      @yurichtube1162 Год назад

      @@HackersSun that was 30 years ago

  • @angelofmusic477
    @angelofmusic477 3 года назад +11

    This old man is so lucky. He wasn't caught in his youth when he committed untold attrocities. Now an old and dying man facing trial...is a small comfort to his victims. Whatever, justice must be served....however old he maybe.

  • @alexlouis3289
    @alexlouis3289 6 лет назад +10

    kinda strange that the random people were asked if they would forgive him

  • @carys7417
    @carys7417 4 года назад +14

    Today in Germany there really is an air of 'hush up now it happened years ago we want to move on and not be associated with that time'. But this cannot happen until such trials and justice have occurred. It's called closure.

  • @jennh2096
    @jennh2096 Год назад +6

    It's not about punishment this late in their lives, it's about accountability, forcing these people who either committed atrocities or stood by quietly and turned a blind eye to them, forcing them to admit that what they were party to was horrible. They should have to sit and listen to the testimony of the victims they tried to destroy, just like domestic violence abusers have to listen to victim panels. They should not be allowed to die without at least having to face those that they wronged

    • @dianaverano7878
      @dianaverano7878 Год назад +1

      You are correct.
      These soldiers lost the war & hid themselves within public eye. What if they won the war?
      These soldiers at their prime were willing to kill people categorized
      " inferior" according to hitler the jerk.

  • @ItsRainingHippos
    @ItsRainingHippos 4 года назад +37

    People seem to not understand that this isn’t guilt by association. He was an active cog in the mass murder machine. He and many others like him witnessed crimes against humanity and did nothing to stop it.

    • @James-rc6qq
      @James-rc6qq Год назад +2

      Anyone in his exact position would do the same.

    • @ItsRainingHippos
      @ItsRainingHippos Год назад +2

      @@James-rc6qq No, they wouldn’t.

    • @James-rc6qq
      @James-rc6qq Год назад +3

      @@ItsRainingHippos Yes they would. If you were brought up surrounded by that propoganda, under the same authority, you and almost all other people IN THAT TIME would have done the exact same. You need to familiarise yourself with Milgrams experiment if you havent already. However, in this day and age, probably not. But at the time and under the same circumstances the vast majority of people would have followed orders and not spoken out. Ruling by fear is a very powerful tool

    • @ItsRainingHippos
      @ItsRainingHippos Год назад +2

      @@James-rc6qq You do not get to use the scapegoat of propaganda when you’re witnessing and enforcing - firsthand - horrors beyond imagination. People IN THAT TIME absolutely chose not to go along with those atrocities. They were not stupid. They did not lack critical thinking skills to understand that what they were apart of was wrong. You can only hide behind ignorance and fear for so long before you admit you’re either evil or cowardly. Familiarize yourself with that.

    • @chinesetaxevader
      @chinesetaxevader Год назад

      @@ItsRainingHippos "oh yeah let me just critizise Hitlers ideology and ask them if they could pls stop killing people im sure that wont get me killed right on the spot"

  • @froseo9
    @froseo9 4 года назад +51

    To be fair, he probably thought , nice i can just be a prison guard instead. That way i dont have to die on the Eastern front

    • @HackersSun
      @HackersSun 4 года назад

      Yeah, you get it
      I think of the horror of Normandy of basically ally vs ally killing each other out of fear for what the top might do at the same time gunning down your country men

    • @Yzzo1
      @Yzzo1 4 года назад +5

      to be fair, for the victims, he needed to be brought to justice.

    • @gbwildlifeuk8269
      @gbwildlifeuk8269 4 года назад

      @@HackersSun "ally vs ally killing each other" ? "Gunning down your countrymen"?
      1. It's ALLIE not ally! Ally is a unisex given name, nickname and surname. It is a variant of Allie and Ali. It is used as a diminutive nickname for the given names Alison or Alyssa (feminine) or Alister or Alan (masculine).
      2. The allies certainly didnt shoot each other knowingly, out of fear or otherwise!

    • @roluxism
      @roluxism 3 года назад

      @@HackersSun EASTERN FRONT normandy is western

    • @stephenosterberg8845
      @stephenosterberg8845 3 года назад

      @@HackersSun Garbage response.

  • @cherirutherford7435
    @cherirutherford7435 Год назад +4

    "I am ashamed that I saw Injustice and never did anything about it I am very very sorry"
    He knows what he did was wrong and he regrets every single part of it you can just tell from the way he described it the sad thing is even if he had did something about the Injustice he saw he likely would have faced the same fate is the very people who died in those camps so to keep himself alive he couldn't do anything he had to sit there and watch in horror knowing that if he did anything to stop it he would meet the same fate what he did was undoubtedly wrong but he regretted it and then you can tell after all he did have over seventy years to think it through

  • @chantaltestman6916
    @chantaltestman6916 5 лет назад +68

    karma has no deadline

  • @amritavalley8100
    @amritavalley8100 5 лет назад +159

    The old lady is so damn beautiful!

    • @David-ci1vn
      @David-ci1vn 4 года назад +2

      She's playing her part, that's all.

    • @gordonharper9126
      @gordonharper9126 4 года назад +1

      @@David-ci1vn What do you mean by that?

    • @David-ci1vn
      @David-ci1vn 4 года назад +3

      @@gordonharper9126 "I was asked if I would go", "I didn't look at his face but I was not required to", she's acting a part as required in a prosecution as a witness of someone she had never met. Look at how cursorily she points to the photograph while indicating herself, then compare that picture to the narrative of the moment, does it tally, is she being pressured to move, does she look even concerned, is she even the right age?
      This elderly lady has a legally promted platform and I daresay, and hope, that she is now comfortable at home, quite unlike another elderely lady Ursual Haverbeck who today the 8th November is passing it in Bielefeld prison because she "is not allowed to speak", it's disgusting.

    • @jamesb.9155
      @jamesb.9155 4 года назад +5

      @@David-ci1vn She said: 'I was not required to recognize his face'. That's wholly different and has nothing to do with how classy & even pretty she appears!

  • @gigiw.7650
    @gigiw.7650 4 года назад +8

    Forgiveness is one thing, justice is another.

  • @TheAlchaemist
    @TheAlchaemist Год назад +6

    According to what I have seen in different cases, from different genocides, in almost all cases those involved even being very old remained staunch believers in what they had done. That total lack of empathy, total lack of remorse, that level of arrogance is revolting. Is the confirmation that you can be 100 years old and still deserve prison and retribution.

  • @46danz
    @46danz 4 года назад +44

    You can’t sweep something like this under the carpet,lest we forget.

  • @btuesday
    @btuesday 6 лет назад +673

    This trial should have taken place 70 years ago. Now it is pointless

    • @squamish4244
      @squamish4244 5 лет назад +10

      It is because we allowed too many of the big players to get away with it that we are going after the bit players now. It's guilt over not doing enough, and also fear over the creeping fascism and similar forces in Europe today. Maybe going after a 96-year-old man who died one year later seems pointless, but perhaps the symbolism is what is important. There is a solid slippery-slope argument to be made, because that's how it all started before. "It's no big deal, let this go, let that go, okay, that too, now that, hey what where did this evil regime come from?!?"

    • @JackHY2K
      @JackHY2K 5 лет назад +5

      Hannah-Louise I agree with you wholeheartedly. And guards are often SS officers. Hanning was a sergeant, so a non-commissioned officer.

    • @jlcollins7673
      @jlcollins7673 5 лет назад +30

      So...if your child was murdered, and decades later, they found the person guilty of it, you wouldn't want them convicted and sentenced to prison? Because it would pointless?

    • @harrijarvis8494
      @harrijarvis8494 5 лет назад

      I agree

    • @Emilygulden
      @Emilygulden 5 лет назад +12

      History isn't pointless.

  • @bloodnightdiitonakakatakot808
    @bloodnightdiitonakakatakot808 Год назад +5

    To give and serve justice is also to forgive. A closure to the victims family.

  • @jak3589
    @jak3589 Год назад +6

    Irene is a beautiful lady she has done much to help other's after liberation. I am very happy she is a survivor & am very sorry she lost her family. We have know idea what they went through!

  • @misiasert1348
    @misiasert1348 3 года назад +21

    With the progress of forensics, many people that committed murder decades ago are caught.
    Prosecuting war criminals is no different. I have neither empathy or sympathy for this man. He had choices,which he chose to take, & every action provokes a reaction.
    He has the luck of being given justice rather than retribution ,& for that he ought to be grateful his accusers acknowledge his humanity, which is more than can be said about him.

  • @Courtsbelle
    @Courtsbelle 5 лет назад +22

    Everyone making excuses... “his boss told him to, so he HAD to” I’m sure those victims wish they had a choice to not be forcibly taken to those camps... I’m sure they wish they weren’t starved, beaten, murdered, tortured, and experimented on. You did the crime you serve the time, I don’t care if you’re almost dead, or it’s 70 years later. Those people deserve justice till the last person is prosecuted.

  • @alandela6330
    @alandela6330 5 лет назад +265

    Guilt by association is a weak legal principle that does not seek justice but vengeance.

    • @LindaWilliams-rb4jh
      @LindaWilliams-rb4jh 5 лет назад +8

      I disagree. And I doubt that he never killed any of them or participated in beatings that could lead to death. If the dead could talk...they would tell you, I'm sure, that he participated in murder.

    • @joelane9528
      @joelane9528 5 лет назад +17

      Linda Williams the dead can’t talk, and your certainty doesn’t hold up in court

    • @georgepapazov9275
      @georgepapazov9275 5 лет назад +2

      Alan Dela that’s what I’m thinking, he was a pawn

    • @juusohamalainen7507
      @juusohamalainen7507 5 лет назад +2

      You have a very weird view on justice.

    • @juusohamalainen7507
      @juusohamalainen7507 5 лет назад +3

      @@ceebee4750 You are absolutely right just as the court.

  • @lilyreyes6807
    @lilyreyes6807 4 года назад +31

    1:55 I really like to ask that lady if she would have the same opinion in case her grandparents or parents had been victims of this old man.

  • @MrTwotimess
    @MrTwotimess 5 лет назад +67

    If this man was part of a rocket research program, he would have been whisked off to the USA and given a job at NASA.

    • @mattolds9068
      @mattolds9068 4 года назад

      Or russia

    • @waverunner7063
      @waverunner7063 4 года назад +2

      @@mattolds9068 They preferred the US, trust me. USSR stole them by force.

    • @mgcinimalinga7097
      @mgcinimalinga7097 3 года назад

      True Kkkkk US is blessed they focus in life not history

    • @marshaaoolie8474
      @marshaaoolie8474 3 года назад

      Were these scientists mass killers? I think not.

    • @AdvocatussDiabolii
      @AdvocatussDiabolii 12 дней назад

      @@marshaaoolie8474 Oh yes absolutely more than you think they were

  • @bitterwiththesweet4742
    @bitterwiththesweet4742 5 лет назад +5

    Its not a crime if you are forced

    • @camerong5513
      @camerong5513 4 года назад

      @Elba M the smart arse didnt actually say anything to disagree with

  • @daenerystargaryen5687
    @daenerystargaryen5687 4 года назад +39

    People like him should be put on trial no matter their age! As much as he did not show any mercy to the old people he killed 70 years ago. (P.S. Am i the only one annoyed by these german girls?)

    • @williamlopez8983
      @williamlopez8983 3 года назад +1

      Bro that bitch is fucking ignorant!!!

    • @lorraineforte9175
      @lorraineforte9175 3 года назад

      Your not the only one. That girl didn't lose anyone,so this doesn't matter to her,most of the young people today have never faced ha4dship in their lives,so they are desensitized to other people's problems m

  • @richardshiggins704
    @richardshiggins704 5 лет назад +28

    Such an elegant and articulate lady . However we have learnt little , Serbia- Bosnia , Pol Pot and the camps of the beloved Leader Kim .

    • @losonsrenoster
      @losonsrenoster 4 года назад +1

      If you can find it on the internet, read " The Aquariums of Pyongyang" by Kang Chol-wan & Pierre Rigoulot to get an account of what happened in a North Korean death camp. The author Kang was there.

  • @suzannereiser4720
    @suzannereiser4720 5 лет назад +23

    Never too late for justice ...

    • @uptonsinclair8215
      @uptonsinclair8215 5 лет назад +3

      You mean for the people of Palestine? Boycott...Divestment...Sanctions....

    • @SumanTiwariNamaste
      @SumanTiwariNamaste 5 лет назад

      Justice is Revenge you can't take by yourself. And if the people who wants revenge are dead and no longer in this world... It's no longer Justice.

    • @seattlewa8500
      @seattlewa8500 10 месяцев назад

      @@SumanTiwariNamaste But some still are alive.

  • @MrLeighman
    @MrLeighman 5 лет назад +15

    I think the lesson here for everyone living now in the present is to preserve your moral compass. If you work in "authority" then always be on guard as to weather you are acting or being ordered to act immorally - and preserve your integrity. dont just blindly follow orders you know are wrong! Question "authority"!

  • @pauld9561
    @pauld9561 4 года назад

    I came straight to the comments section and was not disappointed.

  • @federicamarchesini6207
    @federicamarchesini6207 5 лет назад +11

    I am glad that justice was finally made. His age doesn’t matter. His crimes are too big to be just waived off. This person needs to pay for what he did. I cannot believe they gave him only 5 years.

    • @briandelaney9710
      @briandelaney9710 Год назад +4

      They aren’t saying he committed crimes , he is being charged for just having been there as a guard which is problematic

  • @gordonbradley3241
    @gordonbradley3241 3 года назад +4

    There cannot be any limitations on the prosecution of such heinous crimes !
    The message must go out that no matter how long it takes, the people will come for you in the end !

  • @lindseymarie7923
    @lindseymarie7923 5 лет назад +19

    It doesn't matter how old he is he should still face up to what he did.

    • @cs-7
      @cs-7 5 лет назад +3

      What was that? Opening gates and being threatened by S.S. officers? Don't tell me you wouldn't do what your told when you have a machine gun in your face and German shepherds surrounding you.....

    • @David-ci1vn
      @David-ci1vn 4 года назад

      He did, he was a young guard, have the murderers of Lord Moyne been disintered from Mount Herzl, thought not.

    • @seattlewa8500
      @seattlewa8500 10 месяцев назад

      @@cs-7And you know this how? He led prisoners to the gas chambers. He knew exactly what he was doing.

  • @davidclaro152
    @davidclaro152 Год назад +1

    Only 5 years? Talk about a slap in the face. That’s nothing compared to what he did to thousands.

  • @billwhite1603
    @billwhite1603 Год назад +2

    I saw a longer special with her. I love hearing her talk.

  • @bhavykhatri2669
    @bhavykhatri2669 5 лет назад +6

    "Justice Delayed is Justice Denied".

    • @David-ci1vn
      @David-ci1vn 4 года назад

      This is law, not justice.

  • @dasikakn
    @dasikakn 5 лет назад +3

    “Today I must do what I am asked to do and not stop and cry because thats not what is required at the moment”. In case anyone was wondering what resilience looks like.

  • @fmj7.62xring8
    @fmj7.62xring8 6 лет назад +1

    When she says he doesn’t look up because he doesn’t want to look at the survivors, no no he’s 94 he’s wondering were the fucking pudding is

  • @bryansam650
    @bryansam650 Год назад +2

    People do sign up for training courses to be guards though. It was one hundred percent his choice. The woman with the baby should be realistic enough.

  • @marksill8020
    @marksill8020 5 лет назад +72

    In the end, God will judge.

    • @elmomussolini6847
      @elmomussolini6847 5 лет назад +2

      @@sirskeng6611 why reply 6 months later

    • @DevinNixonDavis
      @DevinNixonDavis 5 лет назад +2

      Why would god let all of this happen in the first place? "Mysterious" ways?

    • @EarthChickadee
      @EarthChickadee 5 лет назад +1

      ThiccBoi,
      Think again, sir
      God *IS* very *real*
      ruclips.net/video/YjrxHqNy5CQ/видео.html
      The *REAL* Mount Sinai in Saudi Arabia
      There are *many* archaeological *evidences* coming out in these last days to *prove* beyond any shadow of a doubt that GOD *IS* TRUE, and that the Biblical record is accurate recorded history.
      Actually, He is *more* real than you can even wrap your little mind around.
      He *IS*
      He *WAS*
      He *WILL BE*
      ~~ *THE ALMIGHTY* ~~
      Some years ago, I died (as in stone, cold dead. Kaput. Gone. Lifeless.) God is *LOVE*
      So very Vast and Eternal that even those words can not come close to aptly describing the *PURE LOVE* that God *IS*
      The. Words. Do. Not. Exist.
      *Repent*
      For the kingdom of God is indeed at hand.

    • @EarthChickadee
      @EarthChickadee 5 лет назад +1

      Devin Nixon~Davis,
      Out of mourning comes joy. Do you recall what happened directly *after* this horrific event?
      *Israel was a nation born in ONE day*
      Isaiah 66
      End time prophecy being *fulfilled* right before our very eyes.

    • @therofthew
      @therofthew 5 лет назад

      Mark Sill how can you possibly believe that there’s someone invisible living in the sky and call that someone or that thing god after watching and learning about all the atrocities that went on back then and continue happening around this putrid world today? How obtuse you have to be to fall for that story of an all powerful, all knowing and all loving god? Ain’t you embarrassed of being so stupid and publicly show off your lack of intelligence? What kind of moron are you idiot?

  • @VickiBee
    @VickiBee 5 лет назад +8

    I think what the family of the murdered want is more important than what the sanctimonious bleeps of the world demand "is the 'right' way to handle it."
    If we want the rest of the people responsible for killing him at work to be executed for their crimes and not let go on technicalities or at the pleading of people who care more about living in ideals than with human beings, then we should at least be listened to; not shut down on the basis that we don't feel like moral superiors when deciding what to do with the people who burned our loved one out of existence so effectively we've never received identification to match the DNA samples we gave to the authorities. We only got a confirmed death bc it was confirmed he worked there, confirmed he was "last seen leaving for work" and confirmed he'd worked there every day for 6 years. Otherwise we received a form that clearly shows there was no body nor evidence of earthly remains before the Death Certificate was issued.
    The problem is "we" (every 9/11 family) don't all want the same thing for the culprits & there are still 100s of 9/11 family & friends living. Unfortunately, one of the parents of a murdered 9/11 family is against execution and are actively trying to stop it. It's unfortunate because another parent of another murdered 9/11 victim is FOR capital sentencing.
    When you kill that many people, you make the ensuing trial a mess.
    I have a native German boyfriend, who's relatively young, and he's NEVER had that slovenly, lazy, almost "Well who cares that it happened? i didn't do it" attitude that SOME of these "people" have.
    Watch while someone in your family is murdered like a dog. See what you think, then. If you still have no feelings about it then you have a right to keep the attitude.

  • @epa316
    @epa316 7 месяцев назад +1

    Notice he and his defense team never said, “This is ridiculous, it never happened.” Which I would expect to be their number one defense, if it were true. But it’s not true. It did happen. Some “people” have a really hard time accepting this.

  • @N108funshow
    @N108funshow Год назад +2

    One minute 56 seconds: why would you make an old man stand trial? Is this actually a real question? Because it’s the right thing to do. What if somebody took your baby away? Wouldn’t you want justice?

  • @mencken8
    @mencken8 4 года назад +5

    What is going on in this video creates strong and very ambivalent feelings in me. I guess I agree with the people who said that this should have been done decades ago. That is perhaps the next question for Germany to examine.

  • @xDeAtHoMaTiCx
    @xDeAtHoMaTiCx Год назад +8

    The actions and crimes committed in these camps during that period should not ever be forgotten!! All responsible if still alive should be charged and convicted no matter their circumstances for the horror they done to those people and their loved ones!!

  • @gcqldrgirl
    @gcqldrgirl 5 лет назад +1

    No matter how old, no matter how frail, no matter what age you are, you should still have to face the war crime.

  • @loganavery4951
    @loganavery4951 6 лет назад +1

    Why wasn't this done 60 year ago? Imprisoning a 94 year old man for crimes he helplessly witnessed more than half a century ago? This is not justice.

    • @JackHY2K
      @JackHY2K 5 лет назад +3

      He was on the run for 65 years, something that his fellow colleague Jakob Wendel didn't do. He too was a guard (lower ranking than Hanning actually) but never had anything to hide. Turned himself in back in 1948, stood trial and served 5 years in prison. That's the way it's supposed to be.

  • @2horses4U
    @2horses4U 5 лет назад +15

    Every time I hear or read a testemony of a victim of the holocaust, I'm in tears. I try to imagine how these poor men, women - mothers, fathers, grandparents - and these innocent children must have felt, and ofcourse I cannot realy imagine it - it's too horrible to even begin to imagine how it was. I cannot imagine how a human being can be so cruel, so inhumane to abuse and torture these people, how to starve them, hurt them, guard them...murder them. What happens that they can do that? What happens in their mind to turn them in such evil beings? I can't wrap my mind around it. And then I ask myself... is it possible, when I was born in those times as a German...could I be turned into a monster? I would love to say 'no' ofcourse, but the truth is that I don't know. I truly hope that when the time should come to choose between right or wrong, I can choose right, no matter the consequences.
    Every war criminal must be punished and bear the consequences of his actions, no matter how old the crime already is. Only when justice is done to the victims, there can be forgivness.

    • @David-ci1vn
      @David-ci1vn 4 года назад

      "Every time I hear" you act as you are supposed to,it's great NLP.

  • @Hewhogreetswithfjre
    @Hewhogreetswithfjre 5 лет назад +4

    Not a word about the 400 years of slavery that is forgotten without a verdict.
    There is no justice in this world!!

    • @gregranger9440
      @gregranger9440 5 лет назад +3

      True, now let's make that trip to Africa and put the original salesmen on trial.

    • @jolenaagapisou3803
      @jolenaagapisou3803 4 года назад

      Greg Ranger - lol

  • @35lilix
    @35lilix 5 лет назад

    For you who are saying "He was just a guard" "He was just following orders", standing there and watching as people as young as infants were being murdered is the same as killing them, him being a guard there was his choice and if he chose to be there it means he believed in the ideology of Hitler that dehumanized anyone different from them. The mother carrying her baby and saying they should just forgive him and that its pointless now..if you lived at that time and had your baby taken from you to be murdered i dont think you would be saying the same thing.

  • @hanniballecter2513
    @hanniballecter2513 Год назад +1

    God bless you dear, thank you so much for telling your story, I am Jewish and proud so I want to learn all I can about my history

  • @michaelkurz9067
    @michaelkurz9067 4 года назад +13

    Never ask the younger generation about nothing their are so clueless

  • @bonnluedkie2717
    @bonnluedkie2717 5 лет назад +22

    How was he suppose to stand up against the rest of his unit and if no one else agreed with him? It is a hard place to be and an impossible situation to correct. None of those officers should have been killing the men, women and children.

    • @jeffmax2941
      @jeffmax2941 5 лет назад +3

      Y did he put himself in that situation

    • @lewistaylor2858
      @lewistaylor2858 4 года назад

      @@jeffmax2941 he didn't?!?!

  • @ryanjavierortega8513
    @ryanjavierortega8513 3 года назад +2

    Boy, whatever your opinion, it’s chilling to hear German citizens say that “It’s been so long, why now?”

    • @nextjaeger9271
      @nextjaeger9271 3 года назад

      No, we just go thru it in school over and over again so that we dont forget, but it is portrayed as if it was our fault (I'm 18) so it gets kinda anoying...

    • @gavin9737
      @gavin9737 2 года назад

      @@nextjaeger9271 bro your bloodline committed atrocious acts they all deserve to die in prison whichever ones are still alive

    • @nextjaeger9271
      @nextjaeger9271 2 года назад

      @@gavin9737 well so did the british with the aborigines or the americans with the indians. are they all supposed to die in prison as well?

  • @stojie7867
    @stojie7867 Год назад +1

    Irene Weiss what a class act. I would not be able to contain my hate, nor forgive the coward.

  • @luhole
    @luhole 5 лет назад +4

    Everything is forgivable, if only to bring yourself peace.

    • @harrynking777
      @harrynking777 3 года назад +1

      I don't think so.

    • @luhole
      @luhole 3 года назад

      @@harrynking777 OK, keep torturing yourself then.

  • @Eebens
    @Eebens 5 лет назад +13

    "Good soldiers follow orders"

  • @Zadorine1
    @Zadorine1 2 года назад +2

    The crime is so enormous, it's not a forgivable crime. She is soo right. It's not like I say sorry and the other person should forgive me, no, that's not the way.

  • @john9599
    @john9599 2 года назад

    So this man is guilty of NOT acting. This is a rabbit hole we would be ill advised to go down.

  • @janemaas4225
    @janemaas4225 4 года назад +5

    You can see that this man is ashamed of his actions and that he is suffering. Mass murder is a punishable crime no matter where you are in the chain of command. Mass murders are happening around the world at this time in the 21st Century.

    • @johnbrooks9508
      @johnbrooks9508 4 года назад +1

      Much has been made of the accused’s body language and keeping his down.
      I would suggest that this is more to do with his general state of health or else a specific medical condition.

  • @perugino25
    @perugino25 4 года назад +15

    Guard did not have a choice, really. He had a choice but he acted differently according to his own survival instinct.

    • @lizvlx
      @lizvlx 4 года назад +9

      Thats incorrect. Nobody was forced to be a guard in a camp. U could decline yr duties there anytime and be a regular soldier.

    • @pepper5128
      @pepper5128 4 года назад +4

      @@lizvlx he was wounded while fighting on the front line and was considered not fit for front line duty, thus he was assigned to be a guard.

    • @air2091
      @air2091 4 года назад +2

      Pepper no, if you are injured you are sent home

    • @nextjaeger9271
      @nextjaeger9271 3 года назад +1

      @@lizvlx where u would most likely have died so he is right

    • @kurt7842
      @kurt7842 3 года назад +1

      @@air2091 you really think they'd allow you to just be chilling at home?

  • @thebestofallworlds187
    @thebestofallworlds187 5 лет назад +1

    3:52 ... that's supposedly her? she just happened to get cut out of the photo?

  • @nunyabusiness4904
    @nunyabusiness4904 5 лет назад +1

    This brings the question of how far down the chain of command does responsibility go? If a private is guarding a military base where crimes against humanity are being committed by the top brass is he responsible? He has no say in what's happening on the base he just has his orders to guard the perimeter.

  • @MalakhiW
    @MalakhiW 4 года назад +3

    this is literally like me saying that i should be angry at white people for slavery and no matter how time has past i should still refuse to forgive. if everyone had the same mindset i think every person would be angry about something.

  • @gutenbird
    @gutenbird 5 лет назад +4

    After all those years, the loss is still felt.

  • @charlesbeaudelair8331
    @charlesbeaudelair8331 5 лет назад

    The subtitles at 2:30 are not exact. The girl doesn't say 'why do we have to go through this again' but: 'why do we have to go through this again and again'. So it means sth different.

  • @jessesnyder5426
    @jessesnyder5426 5 лет назад

    Hello hehe. Thanks!

  • @aprilwest1883
    @aprilwest1883 4 года назад +4

    He is very old ,. Jail sounds like a joke but at least he is exposed !!!

  • @bakaribrown9642
    @bakaribrown9642 5 лет назад +21

    Wow he’s so old though. I have a heart I actually almost cried. This is why we shouldn’t be evil to others, it will come back on us.

    • @growlinghands4696
      @growlinghands4696 5 лет назад +10

      The old man *is* what the young man has done. You can't reverse the harm you caused other people. You can repent and you can change as you grow older, but that doesn't erase the suffering.
      We will always be responsible for that.
      [But it's good you have empathy. That is such a beautiful, necessary human emotion.]

    • @jolenaagapisou3803
      @jolenaagapisou3803 4 года назад

      bakari brown - a true, idiotic liberal comment!!!

  • @awmzy8897
    @awmzy8897 2 года назад +1

    this poor man was a victim in ww2, he was forced to guard that facility otherwise he would have been hung. hitler may not have sent him to the chambers, but he would have gone there if he didn’t comply

  • @Cathee.M.
    @Cathee.M. 4 года назад +2

    I hope he found peace.

  • @ilzegrina1424
    @ilzegrina1424 5 лет назад +8

    It is easy to judge the guards, but this happened because the society was sleeping. What about all those people who saluted in solidarity with Hitler? Are they no guilty of ignorance and cowardess as well? We think we would all be heros in a situation of war or at least have the privilage of being not involved, but almost all of us would be cowards.

    • @marcospark2803
      @marcospark2803 Год назад +1

      I can salute him and not be aware of the mass execution or about the massacres. But a guard is a different story, he is seeing everyday how innocent people are being massacred, assassinated, sent to gas chambers, etc.

  • @davestover1584
    @davestover1584 5 лет назад +30

    Love this lady God bless you xx

  • @leofloppa
    @leofloppa 6 лет назад +2

    How was he supposed to "avoid" it?

  • @frederiksenhenrik
    @frederiksenhenrik Год назад +1

    No matter what justice must prevail

  • @Pexman-hu7zw
    @Pexman-hu7zw 5 лет назад +10

    Same my relatives back in the Philippines during Death March 🤬🤬🤬🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭🇵🇭😭😭😭😤😤😤

  • @ianmatiru4169
    @ianmatiru4169 Год назад +3

    I feel the pain. Thank God the survivors moved forward!

  • @therookiesplaybook
    @therookiesplaybook Год назад +1

    We just caught a serial killer, but he's 94. Let's not convict him, he's too old. WTF kind of thinking is that.

  • @chukchee
    @chukchee Год назад

    Forgiveness is a personal act, something that a person does for her or his own sake, so as not to continue to feel anger and hate against another person.