Liberating Dachau 1945

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  • Опубликовано: 11 янв 2025

Комментарии • 11 тыс.

  • @mellowmoods8393
    @mellowmoods8393 2 месяца назад +175

    My Grandpa was a Captain in the 222nd INR of the 42 Rainbow Division and was one of the first units to reach Dachau. He said the sight of the bodies in the boxcars was the worst thing he ever saw in his life and told me, "the biggest waste of a human is to kill them." He said many of the GI's took their liberties with the nazi guards. I never heard him talk about this experience until he was interviewed for Steven Speilsburg's Shoah Project, his effort to document the oral testimonies of WWII vets. I never saw my Grandpa cry until I saw that interview. It was a traumatic experience for eveyone.

    • @daveJohn-n4g
      @daveJohn-n4g 24 дня назад

      if the allies hadn't bombed all the supply lines maybe the people may have been fed. Even though the Germans themselves were dying of starvation, And we bombed hundreds and thousand of women and children, burnt to death. Never listen to winners of a war , strangely they lie about the losers. I don't know if you are a moron

    • @UnderAttack-x1s
      @UnderAttack-x1s 3 дня назад +2

      This showed us how far down society can sink. It's always been scary to know this ever happened, but now we are approaching it yet again

  • @mooseandsquirrel9887
    @mooseandsquirrel9887 3 года назад +6878

    Eisenhower said “take as many pictures of this as possible because at some time in the future someone will say it didn’t happen “…..document everything.

    • @jillkjv3816
      @jillkjv3816 3 года назад +658

      Ike knew human nature well.

    • @stevoschannel4127
      @stevoschannel4127 2 года назад +3

      Including members of our new pro islam pro terrorist pro criminal anti jew leftist government. Very disturbing.

    • @jakeseymour2484
      @jakeseymour2484 2 года назад +2

      And it still didn’t stop the idiots….

    • @matthewlane518
      @matthewlane518 2 года назад +451

      As horrible as the pictures are thank God they were takin so it won't by any sane person claimed false, any form of bigotry is ugly and horrible

    • @HaveCommonSense76
      @HaveCommonSense76 2 года назад +371

      It’s sad that what he sad came true.

  • @guccimain89
    @guccimain89 4 года назад +5318

    My grandfather was there. He was 42nd infantry and liberated the camp. He just passed away this month at the age of 95. Thank you so much for this video.

    • @MarkFeltonProductions
      @MarkFeltonProductions  4 года назад +823

      My condolences to you and your family.

    • @guccimain89
      @guccimain89 4 года назад +306

      Mark Felton Productions thank you. He would have loved to have seen this video. It was an incredibly tense day and he was always a very calm and compassionate man. A Dachau guard gave him something for helping him that I still have in my possession to this day. Videos like this are so important. Thanks again, Mark. I couldn’t believe it when this video came up on my subscription page.

    • @WillyEckaslike
      @WillyEckaslike 4 года назад +26

      @@MarkFeltonProductions the USA strafed that train during their targeting of german supply lines....i am sure u know this so why do u continue to perpetrate untruths

    • @ITIsFunnyDamnIT
      @ITIsFunnyDamnIT 4 года назад +221

      @@WillyEckaslike He's NOT perpetrating untruth Nazi lover. Mark doesn't take any sides or get involved with politics. He just simply presents the facts.

    • @tjp353
      @tjp353 4 года назад +249

      @@WillyEckaslike Whether the engineless train was strafed or not, it's 2000+ occupants were killed by starvation, dehydration & neglect - all of which was caused by the SS. You know this...

  • @Anne5440_
    @Anne5440_ Год назад +1556

    My father and uncle were medics whose units both released Dachau. They had not seen each other in 4 years. They were allowed to work together so they could reunite. They had to help clean the still warm ovens side by side. Dad had terrible ptsd from it. He went on to serve in the Army for 22 years. He went as a medic to Korea during the worst of the fighting. He would tell us stories of Korea. But he only talked to me of Dachau one time. We had learned about the camps that day in grade school. I was so shocked I told my parents about it at dinner that night. I have never forgotten the look of horror that came over his face as I told them. He braced himself and went on to tell me about as calmly as he could. My mother had been WAC carrying for US soldiers who had shell shock. She knew all about the camps too. She just never had to see them. After dinner, when she and I were washing the dishes, she explained more to me. She also asked me never to mention to dad again. She was the one who had to help calm him to sleep on the bad nights. She told me to bring all my questions about the war only to her. That she would answer them. She was true to her word. Over the years, we had many deep conversations about the war and the occupation period in Germany. My parents were stationed and met during the occupation in Germany. I am very grateful that so many have shared here about their families' experiences. It is hard for us to share, but we each know that this truth must be shared shared with the world. You each give me hope at 74 years that this won't be forgotten after I am gone.

    • @476233
      @476233 Год назад +63

      @Anne5440 I am only 32 and I won’t let it be forgotten

    • @tamararutland-mills9530
      @tamararutland-mills9530 Год назад +60

      God bless your father. I wish I could thank him for his service.

    • @tristantristancraped
      @tristantristancraped Год назад +40

      Thank you for sharing your knowledge.

    • @SteverRob
      @SteverRob Год назад +13

      @williamjoyce8842 So you were there at Dachau. Tell us more.

    • @smbake
      @smbake Год назад +17

      @williamjoyce8842 So what's your point? It was total war and if it meant Nazis starved to death so be it.

  • @danm9297
    @danm9297 4 года назад +3865

    I love these videos. No waffle, no cheesy re-enactments, no background music dictating how you should feel. Just pure, unadulterated history.

    • @bretharley2456
      @bretharley2456 3 года назад +37

      Yes. Well said.

    • @CmonstoleCmonstole
      @CmonstoleCmonstole 3 года назад +55

      I hate that background music..

    • @rubenheymans1988
      @rubenheymans1988 3 года назад +24

      No boring old men talking trough the footage! That's the biggest plus for me

    • @bigtimepimpin666
      @bigtimepimpin666 3 года назад +18

      It's the real History Channel

    • @OneKindWord
      @OneKindWord 3 года назад +16

      I agree, especially the no music soundtrack.

  • @ziggymorris8760
    @ziggymorris8760 Год назад +1125

    My grandmother was in Dachau for most of the war, how she survived 5 years there is amazing.

    • @marioaguileraiii8181
      @marioaguileraiii8181 Год назад +68

      Very glad that she survived!!

    • @RinPhantomhive1001
      @RinPhantomhive1001 Год назад +42

      I am happy to hear she survived

    • @junecat161
      @junecat161 Год назад +40

      GOD bless her❤

    • @davidmeltzer1871
      @davidmeltzer1871 Год назад +40

      My father was there with your grandmother. WE know of Schindler's list and I met the man who told that story that later became the movie. Leopold Page told my parents, who themselves were survivors, the tale of the gentile who saved Jews. Leopold said prophetically it would make a great movie. This was 1964. My parents in the car heading home after this Boy Scout meeting said Heck we ALL have an amazing story to tell and so they do!!!!!!!!!!!

    • @deborahbriscoe-graves6244
      @deborahbriscoe-graves6244 Год назад +16

      I'm so glad she survived.

  • @pugsymalone6539
    @pugsymalone6539 2 года назад +700

    One of my JROTC instructors was 1SGT Milton Mautner in Chicago in the late 1970s. He liberated Dachau and un-stacked the LIVING prisoners who were incredibly weak; they had been stacked like cordwood by other prisoners under orders from camp guards. Every dying prisoner (malnutrition) was tended to by one soldier and given very small amounts of water. They were comforted and made to understand that they were going to die, but that they would die free. He told me that this made the prisoners smile and most passed very soon after. He cried like a baby as he told me this story. He fought in Korea and multiple tours in Vietnam. He was 6'2" and strong as a bull, but telling that story reduced him to uncontrolled sobbing. It changed my life. RIP 1SGT Mautner. (Silver Star, never wore his jacket. I learned about it years later.)

    • @tamararutland-mills9530
      @tamararutland-mills9530 Год назад +42

      God bless him for his service. Maybe you can write his story to share with the world. Shalom.

    • @chrishall6451
      @chrishall6451 Год назад +24

      Thank you for sharing.

    • @Atherosdel
      @Atherosdel Год назад +33

      We don’t hear many of the stories from the men who liberated these camps. The world will never shed enough tears to shed the horrors of this war.

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +12

      I belief in the Afterlife, and think the prisoners, in their Innocence.will not "remember" their internment, torture and murder.I belong to no church. I am a Christian.

    • @DrJeffDrJeff
      @DrJeffDrJeff Год назад +19

      It figures that he never talked about the Silver Star. Real heroes never talk about their own heroism. Be glad you had the privilege of knowing him.

  • @marc-peterschoelermann1949
    @marc-peterschoelermann1949 9 месяцев назад +280

    Dear Marc Felton, I am Marc Schölermann, born 1965 in Hamburg, Germany. Thank you for showing and remind me what we did. Truth only can set us free.

    • @DrJeffDrJeff
      @DrJeffDrJeff 8 месяцев назад +22

      May it never happen again to anyone. anywhere. That's the reason to remember. btw - I lived in Munich in 1960. I saw the price that was paid.

    • @__Multipass__
      @__Multipass__ 8 месяцев назад +17

      Was "wir" getan haben? Ich bin Jahrgang '87, was habe ich denn getan?

    • @marc-peterschoelermann1949
      @marc-peterschoelermann1949 8 месяцев назад +40

      @@__Multipass__ Was das "wir" für jemanden bedeutet, darf jeder für sich selbst herausfinden. Zwar war auch ich noch nicht geboren, aber als Teil eines Genarationen überdauernden Kollektivs, das man als Volk oder Nation bezeichnen mag, ist für mich das "wir" passend. Ich wurde (auch durch die Schule) so erzogen als könne ich mich nicht nur von den Taten der Vorfahren, sondern auch von den Vorfahren selbst so distanzieren, dass ich von ihnen quasi wie von neutralem Boden aus von "ihnen" oder "den Nazis" sprechen könnte und nichts von den Vorfahrenen an Bewußtsein, Einstellungen, Verhaltens- und Denkmuster quasi ererbt hätte. Im Laufe meines Lebens habe ich aber erkannt, dass dies für mich heuchlerisch ist, und noch mehr: Dass die Ablehnung dieser "Nazi-Generation" als Menschen (und nicht nur der Taten) auch meine persönliche Heilung und meine Bewältigung der Verbrechen als Mitglied eines Tätervolkes gerade zu verhindert.
      Heute lehne ich die Taten ab, nehme aber die Menschen an, und seien die Verbrechen noch so schlimm. All dies oben Gesagte mündet schließlich in das "wir". Wir haben versucht das jüdische Volk auszulösche. Wir.

    • @DrJeffDrJeff
      @DrJeffDrJeff 8 месяцев назад +33

      @@marc-peterschoelermann1949 It's a lesson in how easily evil can overtake any of us. Germany previously had the highest standards of a civilized society, musicians, poets, engineers, doctors, industries, judges who followed the rules of a just society. If it could happen in Germany, it can happen anywhere.

    • @__Multipass__
      @__Multipass__ 7 месяцев назад

      @@marc-peterschoelermann1949 geistiger Dünnschiss. Haben "wir" nicht. Ende.
      Ps: dein Gesabbel hab' ich mir nichtmal durchgelesen.

  • @ndestr0yr
    @ndestr0yr 4 года назад +5604

    Mark Felton and the larger community of dedicated Second World War historians deserve far more praise. And despite the demonetizations you’re telling the stories that need to be told. Way better than the watered down stuff on cable TV.

    • @paranoid090
      @paranoid090 4 года назад +104

      I agree, I think he hits that sweet spot of being direct and clear about the horrible events that occurred (little, if any, sanitizing) without crossing over into sensationalism and shock imagery.

    • @joemagnets9940
      @joemagnets9940 4 года назад +38

      @ndestro0r, did you ever wonder when the NEW Dachau Camp, Gaza, will be liberated by the colony of the zionist state in the Middle East, that used to be known as America? Did you know that America executed Germans for what the Israelis now do to the Palestinians? Of course not.
      Joe Magnets

    • @strikerorwell9232
      @strikerorwell9232 4 года назад +4

      +
      ndestr0yr Dont insult the TV.

    • @itsyoboyskinnypenis7898
      @itsyoboyskinnypenis7898 4 года назад +5

      Good comment

    • @lysanderkrieg5474
      @lysanderkrieg5474 4 года назад +19

      @@joemagnets9940 Or maybe the Americans should explain Guantanamo Bay and what goes on there. I'm sure that is breaking the rules they persecuted the Nazis for, inhuman treatment, starvation, torture. But these are mostly rumors, because the Allies lie better. Or is it different because there is no "official" bodies? The Allies are the biggest hypocrites of all time. And people like Mark perpetuate the BS they keep trying to feed the world. Sorry Mark, you're a blinkered embarrassment.

  • @RobMacKendrick
    @RobMacKendrick 2 года назад +508

    Back in the 90s I interviewed an American veteran who had been among the first liberators inside this camp. He was from Nebraska, where whole towns were populated with German immigrants, and was himself bilingual; all 4 of his grandparents spoke only German. In his own words, he said, "I had years of problems after I saw that. I was mad at my own people."

    • @wurzel9671
      @wurzel9671 Год назад +4

      Kind of unreasonable

    • @annabellevy3388
      @annabellevy3388 Год назад +42

      @@wurzel9671 No, it's not

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +28

      A human reaction.

    • @wurzel9671
      @wurzel9671 Год назад

      @@annabellevy3388 If he's a german-american immigrant, how are the nazis "His people" exactly?

    • @BigBlackGlock
      @BigBlackGlock Год назад

      @@annabellevy3388 Less than 30% of Germans were actual Nazis. The rest were coerced into support after the Nazis won the elections.

  • @mlbs4803
    @mlbs4803 4 года назад +450

    Thank you. My father was in HQ in the 99th Infantry Division. They liberated Muhldorf, a satellite camp of Dachau, and 2 other satellite camps on May 2 and 3, 1945. I once asked him what it was like. He sighed and looked at the floor, then said quietly, "Horrible. Horrible."

    • @lysanderkrieg5474
      @lysanderkrieg5474 4 года назад +8

      @shutup Yep, and EVERYONE's grandfather was there and said it was horrible. Uhuh!

    • @stasiaspade1169
      @stasiaspade1169 4 года назад +15

      @Православни Келт Many shown were the new prisoners,the boxcars were full of dead new prisoners still locked in. The ones who had been there awhile were skeletal. Just his choice of photos.

    • @WilliamJones-Halibut-vq1fs
      @WilliamJones-Halibut-vq1fs 4 года назад +2

      Im calling bull on your claim

    • @MeAbroad2004
      @MeAbroad2004 4 года назад +9

      @Православни Келт Some of the prisoners were new arrivals, others had administration jobs - having a job indoors meant that they could organise, acquire and trade things for food and take better care of themselves. As for clean uniforms with all the buttons: there were plenty of uniforms in the stores, which even if they were not new, would have been repaired if needs be

    • @davidbaillie7376
      @davidbaillie7376 4 года назад +3

      He no doubts are the killing of the German cars. Based on a humanitarian crisis of which the Germans had no control because of allied bombing.

  • @KlopperVision
    @KlopperVision 2 года назад +188

    My uncle, Nick Klop (my father's younger brother) was a sergeant and Colonel Felix Sparks jeep driver in the 157th Regiment of the 45th Infantry Division ... the first unit into Dachau. He had no children and throughout his life he told only me the stories of what he had seen and done during that awful time. I shall never forget them ... or him.

    • @ericscott5224
      @ericscott5224 2 года назад +19

      Write his stories down. Don't let them die with you.

    • @prsngng9449
      @prsngng9449 2 года назад +10

      Please write all those real stories here so that it can be a big proof for our next generation...
      I'm so sorry for ur Uncle 😔😔😔

    • @RexApplegate
      @RexApplegate Год назад +8

      Yes please publish them! We have my grandpa's stories of taking back Manila, and after we transcribed his tapes the Library of congress eagerly took the file when we offered. Their stories need to be preserved.

    • @robrichter6525
      @robrichter6525 6 месяцев назад

      My great grandfather was part of 45th and was there at dachau. He passed at 98 a while back.

    • @MariolaMałgorzata
      @MariolaMałgorzata Месяц назад +1

      Chwała bohaterom

  • @staszekgolab9319
    @staszekgolab9319 3 года назад +2262

    My uncle was liberating Dachau. His last name was Trzecieski. He was tank crew member. His testimony was passed to me by relatives. Now I am 73 & I listened to this story several times as a child. He was young man from NYC. He said that horror discovered by young American soldiers was to big to handle. He said that German guards were lined up by US soldiers against the wall & machined down. Prisoners finished them off by ripping Germans to pieces, stepping them down into the soil. Some of the prisoners were so fragile, malnourished, that emotions (happiness) of the day caused them to die that day. Later my uncle became engineer & worked on first intercontinental ballistic missile Polaris. He suffered from PTSD.

    • @patriciafoster3347
      @patriciafoster3347 2 года назад +76

      Wow! Thanks for posting.

    • @michelesherman5660
      @michelesherman5660 2 года назад +104

      Thank you for your family's service to humanity

    • @lindaarrington9397
      @lindaarrington9397 2 года назад +25

      Tat what i would have wanted to do

    • @replied631
      @replied631 2 года назад +11

      Shutter Island

    • @Graebarde
      @Graebarde 2 года назад +33

      My doctor when I was young was a army doctor at the liberation, He related his experience there to my father....

  • @gabk6113
    @gabk6113 3 года назад +248

    My grand-father was there, having been arrested by german soldiers in Belgium.
    GIs took good care of him and, one day, feeling strong enough, he just decided to walk away, walking his way all the way out of Germany to his Belgian home town.

    • @BankJunction
      @BankJunction Год назад +15

      simple but profound story. Thank you.

    • @gabk6113
      @gabk6113 Год назад +14

      @@BankJunction the story is an epic & tragic adventure through war-torn Germany.
      Stealing food and clothes from Germans, sleeping in barns. He lived through Hell.

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +3

      POIGNANT TALE

    • @Anne5440_
      @Anne5440_ Год назад +7

      My dad was at the release of Dachau. During the occupation after the war in Germany, he was a medic who worked with many displaced persons as they were trying to get home. Your grandfather went through many unbelievable trials.

    • @JaimeMesChiens
      @JaimeMesChiens Год назад

      I suspect your grand-père was not a Jewish man.
      Please, do tell us more. Thank you.

  • @feliciahilaski7677
    @feliciahilaski7677 3 года назад +1123

    My dad at eighteen liberated Dachau. It ruined the rest of his life. He had terrible depression and PTSD in his later years

    • @annabelleb.8096
      @annabelleb.8096 Год назад +63

      😢 So sorry.

    • @peterhutlas3572
      @peterhutlas3572 Год назад +80

      He is hero

    • @pionus3651
      @pionus3651 Год назад +64

      He was too young for that horror…❤

    • @Anne5440_
      @Anne5440_ Год назад +86

      Yes, my Dad and Uncle were both medics involved in the release of Dachau. Dad was a 24. He had horrible ptsd from it. Your dad was a hero who paid a terrible price for serving and freeing the world from true monsters.

    • @jessiejames7492
      @jessiejames7492 Год назад +38

      @@Anne5440_ my brother in law was sent to kuwait during the iraq-kuwait war in the 1990s. He was a medic in our army. We noticed when he came back also he wasnt the same. More quiet. But he did tell us he saw things ordinary humans dont see ! He said he saw legs, hands, bodies without heads, strewn everywhere children suffering…. , bodies blown up! I guess that never leaves you. Now he suffers frm some medical prblms. Still working in his own business. Wont rest. Feel so sorry fr him. He wont talk much abt it all. . Except fr the little he did. 😕😞

  • @alhemingway1265
    @alhemingway1265 Год назад +314

    My father helped helped liberate Dachau. He suffered from PTSD as well. RIP Dad. I love you.

    • @nickdahlberg7505
      @nickdahlberg7505 7 месяцев назад +3

      My grandfathers were in WW2 as well. My family thanks your father for his service.

    • @stephaniet9264
      @stephaniet9264 7 месяцев назад +4

      My father also helped liberate Dachau. An American who was of Polish decent and a medic was able to speak Polish to alot of the prisoners. When my dad came home he just wanted to have a quiet life, get married, raise children. That mental and emotional experience beat the heck out of any other dreams of his lfe he had.

    • @MariolaMałgorzata
      @MariolaMałgorzata Месяц назад +1

      Chwała bohaterom

  • @suzannevgibson5242
    @suzannevgibson5242 3 года назад +178

    My grandfather never spoke about this ...my grandmother said that it changed him,and he avoided anyone that would bring the subject of the nazis up...God bless the surviving people.

    • @joelsimons2513
      @joelsimons2513 2 года назад

      The einzatsgruppen were just pure evil, too.

  • @edwardkaminsky6314
    @edwardkaminsky6314 4 года назад +1244

    My father Michael Kaminsky was a liberator with the 42nd infantry division. He will never forget April 29th. He is still alive.

    • @MsBhappy
      @MsBhappy 4 года назад +69

      Thank you for sharing and I thank him for his service. I hope his remaining days are filled with peace, comfort and fulfillment.
      My grandfather escaped in the kindertransport. Other relatives were ruthlessly murdered by the Nazi regime. Sharing the personal stories helps to preserve history and helps us honour our family/ancestors.

    • @Lisah707
      @Lisah707 3 года назад +39

      Edward! Please thank him for his service we have not forgotten!

    • @gogopowerrangers976
      @gogopowerrangers976 3 года назад +18

      @@Lisah707 thank him for me

    • @robinalford2186
      @robinalford2186 3 года назад +36

      @@MsBhappy Thank him for his service for me. He is the reason I can sleep peacefully in my bed at night.

    • @dumbshitheadass1277
      @dumbshitheadass1277 3 года назад +22

      Tell him I said thank you

  • @Sailingbill1
    @Sailingbill1 3 года назад +802

    The death march went past my first apartment when I moved to Germany. My landlord was a small child during this time and gave his lunch to prisoners on his way to school that day. it is something you never forget. Thank you for publishing this

    • @Barbara-ld4ug
      @Barbara-ld4ug 3 года назад +3

      He was very unusual, my father was on a death March. No one gave them food. There was so much hate.

    • @Sailingbill1
      @Sailingbill1 3 года назад +34

      @@Barbara-ld4ug Gerd Bauer was a special man and I can imagine the same as a young boy that he was. He was from Bodensee and the entire family didnt subscribe to the crazy that was going on. The SS showed up that night, had a serious talk with his father and said if it happened again his uncle would be found hanging from a lamppost. I will never forget the story.... Be safe and be well my freind

    • @prophetnozza4150
      @prophetnozza4150 3 года назад +9

      Death march the one done to Germans..... there was no other one

    • @aidentherabbit5545
      @aidentherabbit5545 3 года назад +3

      @@prophetnozza4150 Not only Germans, many were consist of other countries' citizens, including even their own.

    • @thrice1888
      @thrice1888 3 года назад +16

      For a minute I thought you where saying that you where an adult living back then and that your landlord was a child lol
      I was thinking “what the hell” until I realized

  • @willamcombs1106
    @willamcombs1106 Год назад +146

    My Dad was in the US 7th Army 42nd Field Artillery Regiment under General Edward Brooks. He went through Dachau and took lots of pictures that I saw. The images are some I will never forget. I know He hated the SS because of what He saw. All my aunts and Uncles said that after the war, my Dad was a different person than before He went over. He was in the Army from 1942 and went through North Africa, Tunisia, Kasserine Pass, Sicily, Italy, Anzio, Southern France, Alsace and So. Germany. He never really talked about the War until just before His death and the things He did finally reveal were horrifying beyond imagination. I also have to say that He was the best Dad a child could have despite the things that He witnessed. May God bless all those that went through those events and cleanse them from the bitterness of the memories of seeing things that no one should ever see.

    • @skywatchermissouri4172
      @skywatchermissouri4172 5 месяцев назад +4

      MY GRANDPA WAS A ANTI AIR GUUNNER HE ALSO WAS IN AFRICA, ANZIO BEACH , IN THE ARMY AT SAME TIME. SOUNDS LIKE ...MY GRANDPA WOULD TELL US ...AND GO SILENT ...AND SHAJE HIS HEAD ....GOOD GOD MIKE ...HE DIDNT HAVE MUCH SAY IN BAD BAD TIMES I WITNESSED IT...HE WAS A GOOD MAN .. JAMES E HILL.. RIP GMPA

    • @lesleylesley5821
      @lesleylesley5821 2 месяца назад +3

      My dad was with the British Infantry and served in the very same places, North Africa, Sicily, Italy. He had photos of himself and British soldiers sitting at cafe tables in Italy after liberation.

  • @martinscott4185
    @martinscott4185 4 года назад +3008

    My father is pictured in the liberation at 11:37-40, front bottom left corner, hat in hand over head. He turned 90 last month. Thank you USA!

    • @arisini
      @arisini 4 года назад +103

      Happy Bday, thank you and my best wishes to him.

    • @DGill48
      @DGill48 4 года назад +50

      And I. would like to thank him for serving the Great Republic.

    • @martinscott4185
      @martinscott4185 4 года назад +21

      @Chapman Correct. Hungarian, your dad?

    • @globalkwanzaa5025
      @globalkwanzaa5025 4 года назад +34

      God bless your father and your family.

    • @patarmanurung4743
      @patarmanurung4743 4 года назад +13

      How long was he in that concentration camp?

  • @Stridswest
    @Stridswest 4 года назад +347

    As a history lover, especially for WW2 and the Cold War, this channel is amazing! Always learning something new thanks to your videos! Thank you Mark!

  • @briquetaverne
    @briquetaverne 4 года назад +1766

    My father was one of those American soldiers that captured a camp where medical experiments were being conducted. He was a First Sergeant at the time and his orders were to seize all the documents they could. The internees were so grateful for the capture of the camp that my father and his company were told to remain after the larger bulk of the advancing American army caught up. He was field promoted to a second lieutenant and made temporary head of the camp in order to keep the internees in place to be treated, fed and questioned until the Army could figure what to do with them later. After the war, My father stayed in Europe until 1947 . He returned to the states then went to college on the G.I. Bill. He eventually became a doctor and later on a psychiatrist.

    • @epramos6800
      @epramos6800 4 года назад +12

      Do you mean 'liberation' of the camp instead of capture...

    • @mikethunder84
      @mikethunder84 4 года назад +102

      @@epramos6800 they were captured because they weren't liberated, as in set free. The prisoners were malnourished and sick, liberating them would have been a death sentence. I think capture is the proper word in this historical context, where the liberators had a moral obligation to capture the camp in order to eventually liberate the prisoners.

    • @pigstrotters4198
      @pigstrotters4198 4 года назад +52

      @@mikethunder84 both words are appropriate but in the correct order. I think we know what he meant. My grandfather was one of the British troops who, along with Canadians, captured Bergen-Belsen and liberated the poor souls there. He hated Germans from that moment on so my grandma said, but he preferred not to talk about it.

    • @Wa3ypx
      @Wa3ypx 4 года назад +24

      Dear Heavens ! He needed to SEE a psychiatrist after what he lived through! May God grant him His peace.

    • @paulbradford6475
      @paulbradford6475 4 года назад +12

      Great story.

  • @missykowalewski
    @missykowalewski Год назад +276

    My grandfather(who died 20+ years ago) was part of the soldiers that liberated Dachau. There had been a fire fight a week prior and many died. He and 3 others were absorbed by the 42nd while waiting for new assignment. He said it was horrifying and confusing. Rumors were rumors but to actually see the torture the prisoners had gone through was beyond comprehension. He always cried when he talked about how grateful the prisoners were to be saved.

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +4

      Their God is proud of them.....

    • @m1000-n8w
      @m1000-n8w Год назад +2

      How can it be, that every American commenter here had a family member that liberated Dachau? Some of you are certainly lying...

    • @missykowalewski
      @missykowalewski Год назад

      @@m1000-n8w perhaps that’s the target audience.

    • @sliftyy
      @sliftyy Год назад

      @@m1000-n8w They're interested in Dachau since their relatives took part in it's liberation and thus searched for videos on Dachau.

    • @user-is7xs1mr9y
      @user-is7xs1mr9y 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@m1000-n8w not EVERY American commenter, but don't you think people related to soldiers who liberated Dachau would be interested in what their family members went through, therefore looking for information on the subject?

  • @benjaminapeterson
    @benjaminapeterson 4 года назад +497

    My grandfather was a Sgt Maj in the 42nd and was there that day. He hasn't talked much about it over the years, and after watching this piece, I understand why. He's still going strong in his mid 90's.

    • @bruotsynh3992
      @bruotsynh3992 4 года назад +31

      Wow. Would be so interesting to hear anything these veterans feel comfortable to share. This history is so recent it’s scary. And most people really have no clue how ugly bad ideology can get.

    • @MikeT-TheRetiredColonel
      @MikeT-TheRetiredColonel 4 года назад +15

      Ben, I spent my early years in the Guard in the 42nd, first in the 42nd MP Co then in the 2/210th Armor back in the '80s. Thank him for his service from this now-retired Colonel (I had moved on to the 26th ID in the early '90s)

    • @colinb5415
      @colinb5415 4 года назад +23

      @Ron Lewenberg Or maybe it will stir long hidden memories which the poor fella doesn`t want to recall. My own father went right through WW2 and hardly ever talked of the dark moments, only the lighter times. As he aged those memories returned and although he never mentioned them the fact that I saw him weep (something he never did) whilst watching the Armistice day parade on TV showed that the ghosts hadn`t gone away.

    • @dannygroom3327
      @dannygroom3327 4 года назад +5

      @Ron Lewenberg . Yeah, or maybe it will traumatize him,..,,.,?

    • @ant7699
      @ant7699 4 года назад +1

      Wow
      I'd love to speak to him. I think. God. What sorrow

  • @SwedishHouseFifa
    @SwedishHouseFifa 3 года назад +551

    My great grandpa was in Dachau, he luckily survived it... RIP to all the ones who didn't, thanks for sharing this story

    • @madisondean1074
      @madisondean1074 2 года назад +16

      I'm so sorry for what your great-grandfather went through at Dachau. I hope he was blessed with a long life filled with good fortunes and happiness! May God bless you and your family!

    • @mousetreehouse6833
      @mousetreehouse6833 2 года назад +8

      @@madisondean1074
      I was about to write (almost) the same thing...
      ...and for those who wonder and doubt about "why the nation of Israel exists, and why it needs to continue to exist" have no clue...they need to see these films, and all others like them.

    • @mousetreehouse6833
      @mousetreehouse6833 2 года назад +4

      Swedish,
      May your great grandpa rest in peace. 🥀🌷🏞️

    • @md_studios9819
      @md_studios9819 2 года назад +4

      I had a great uncle on my mom's side of my family who worked in the Dutch resistance during WW2. He got into some hot water with the Germans and was told by his family not to return home. He was known to be a very stubborn person and ended up retuning home. He was captured by the Germans and sent to a camp in France before bouncing around from camp to camp and eventually ending up in Dachau. When I visited Dachau, I kid you not the book listing all the known people who died there was flipped open to the exact page where his name was which is how I found out. While he died on new year's eve 1944, his name is listed as dying on January 2nd, 1945 but like many others, that information was wrong since the Germans were likely celebrating the new year and thus recorded the deaths of all 3 previous days on January 2nd instead of their actual dates.

    • @guymorris6596
      @guymorris6596 Год назад +5

      Your great grandfather is an absolute legend for being strong enough to survive Dachau.

  • @petravanderlugt3213
    @petravanderlugt3213 4 года назад +894

    Thank you so much for this. My grandfather was a prisoner in Dachau for almost a year. He died after the liberation on the 10th of May 1945. We, his (grand-)children never knew what really happened. This documentary is really valuable to us.

    • @elvenkind6072
      @elvenkind6072 4 года назад +44

      I'm so sorry to hear about your grandfather, but glad to hear his grandchildren is alive and I hope do well in all things, and that you will have grandchildren of your own. Be blessed in all things. Friendly greetings from Alv from Norway.

    • @augustinedennis4865
      @augustinedennis4865 4 года назад +26

      Petra van der Lugt May your good granddad rest in peace.

    • @ivicabotica1856
      @ivicabotica1856 4 года назад +32

      I am not 100% sure, but my grandfather was in Dachau too. And he said that a lot of people died soon because they were starving and started to eat a lot. Their body could not handle the amount of food. My grandfather was on recovery for three months, with special diet.

    • @smartin8247
      @smartin8247 4 года назад +20

      @@ivicabotica1856 A lot of people probably died from 'Refeeding' syndrome'. This is largely caused by a lack of basic minerals in the body which are required in sufficient quantities to process proteins, fats, carbohydrates and other nutrients. For example, the metabolism of vitamin B12 requires potassium and the other B vitamins. If a person is deficient in potassium and is given meat or other protein sources containing high amounts of B12, the person will suffer with severe potassium and B1 deficiency symptoms including heart attacks.

    • @Spaghetti_policy
      @Spaghetti_policy 4 года назад +6

      🙏🕉

  • @michaelgreene1149
    @michaelgreene1149 11 месяцев назад +766

    My father was one of the first American Soldiers to approach Dachau. His squad approached the camp prior the the main body of US forces arrived. He was an Army Ranger. His story confirms some of the executions by the prisoners of the SS Guards. My Father's version is that he captured the Commandant highing in the woods, squatting behind a tree in prison clothing. He arrested the prisoner because his boots were shined, he was clean shaven and his nails were trimmed and clean. Prisoners at the camp identified the Commandant. My Father was also shown the door of no return, as it was labeled by the Prisoners. That door is currently at a WWII museum in Beckley , West Virginia. My Father saw this door at the Grand Opening of the museum and almost fainted because he had gone through that door when he reached the camp. A Prisoner told him it was the door of no return. My Father passed away in 2017 at 93 yrs old. He fought the Germans in Africa, Sicily, Italy, France, Germany and Austria from 1942 to 1945 and came home in 1948. He spent the last 6 months of his last 4 yr tour, 1944 to 1948 at Hitler's Austrian mountain retreat searching for Nazi stolen treasures in the mountains. He was highly decorated and was never wounded during 44 months of combat in 5 major campaigns. I salute him as a great American and soldier for freedom and as my Father. All 6 kids miss him greatly. There will never be another man like him. God has him now. I will see him again. We love you Dad!

    • @toe8946
      @toe8946 11 месяцев назад +36

      great story, thanks for sharing!

    • @michelemelucci4667
      @michelemelucci4667 7 месяцев назад +21

      Bless you dearly

    • @becca-hl3sl
      @becca-hl3sl 7 месяцев назад +73

      Thank you for your father's service. My grandfather was liberated at Dachau at age 16. It is only because of Heros like your father that my family and I are alive today. 🇺🇸

    • @wcpm
      @wcpm 7 месяцев назад +12

      Whats is your father's name?

    • @johnp8354
      @johnp8354 6 месяцев назад +34

      I went to dachau camp today with my wife and kids.
      My grandfather was there as a prisoner.
      If that camp wasn’t liberated my grandfather surely would have died and we wouldn’t be alive.
      Thanks to the courage of everyone will to survive and help a stranger!
      Praise Jesus!

  • @cmikles1
    @cmikles1 4 года назад +2547

    History Channel: We’re going to play “Pawn Stars” instead of history programs.
    Mark Felton: Fine, I’ll do it myself.

    • @mikecubes1642
      @mikecubes1642 4 года назад +75

      history channel has sure gone to the dogs

    • @willong1000
      @willong1000 4 года назад +24

      Great observation Cody!

    • @Hambone571
      @Hambone571 4 года назад +49

      Sad, but true. The History Channel,has ruined itself. Sad that schools don’t teach history anymore.

    • @SpaminacanMK4
      @SpaminacanMK4 4 года назад +25

      The quality of programming on the history channel was never actually good anyway. Lots of misinformation and Nazi sensationalism

    • @gretalind6590
      @gretalind6590 4 года назад +3

      @Ortum Lynx 👍👍🙂

  • @totalimmortal88
    @totalimmortal88 3 года назад +127

    My wife's grandfather was in the Rainbow 42nd. I met him once and he told me about it, which she was surprised because he had never talked about it to anyone. He told me that he never forgot the smell, that it haunted him, and that the bodies were "stacked like cordwood". And not little stacks but he said the stacks of piled bodies were much taller than him and he was a very tall man even in his old age (he was at least 6'1 or 6'2). I could tell the memories haunted him just by the way he looked when he told the story, I couldn't imagine the horror he experienced and those who actually suffered there.

    • @mockdr
      @mockdr 3 года назад +3

      Yeah, it’s pretty common. One relative of mine served in Vietnam. He doesn’t talk about it.

    • @christaylor4477
      @christaylor4477 Год назад +1

      He must have felt some sort of bond to you. Usually we never talk of such things. That generation will never be forgotten.

    • @tonyhedberg
      @tonyhedberg Год назад +1

      Like your Grandfather, my Grandpa also was in Rainbow42. I can't in my wildest nightmare imagine how horrific this was. Rest in Peace Grandpa.

    • @totalimmortal88
      @totalimmortal88 Год назад +5

      @@tonyhedberg Wow that's awesome, they were a much different breed of men back then. Most 18 yr olds couldn't imagine getting up off the couch and going outside, let alone given an M1 Garand, helmet, and face certain death every day

  • @mac11380
    @mac11380 4 года назад +1691

    My dad was with the 101ST Airborne during WWII. He was part of a group that liberated a Dachau subsidiary ( for lack of another word) camp. He had some pics that would make you cry. He also told me they were told to cover their Airborne patches when they did so, but he was not sure why they were told to do that..He passed 7/20/2020 at the age of 100

    • @wolfmp1
      @wolfmp1 4 года назад +155

      When I was stationed in Grafenwoehr, I visited Dachau. It was amazing to know what happened there. They probably told them to cover their patches so the unit couldnt be recognized. RIP to your dad. Him and his buddies did an outsanding job.

    • @mac11380
      @mac11380 4 года назад +185

      @@wolfmp1 Thanks bro. 2 of my brothers and I, 10 years ago, took dad back to Europe for dads 90th birthday. We visited 7 countries and got to see a lot of the places that dad was during the war. We visited Dachau too. We went to a bar in Munich and drank a bunch of beer with some of the locals. I now have the privilege of throwing up on 2 continents.

    • @bb8621
      @bb8621 4 года назад +80

      God bless your father. Respect.

    • @whosagoodgirl5846
      @whosagoodgirl5846 4 года назад +4

      TheBrabon1 no they didn’t

    • @matthewowen4219
      @matthewowen4219 4 года назад +27

      thank you for his service

  • @deadmanriding1118
    @deadmanriding1118 Год назад +146

    Father in law was a US medic at the camps. He told me the major cause of death of inmates immediately after liberation was, ironically, food. People in late stage starvation were fed as much military rations as rhey wanted & their bodies shut down, some dying right after they first ate, many within days. Medics learned to give small them quantities of soup & bread till they could handle more.

    • @virginiasoskin9082
      @virginiasoskin9082 Год назад +12

      Yes, exactly! Starving people cannot be fed what I saw them being served -- beans, stew, etc. And for heaven's sake, not all they want. Geez. Teeny, tiny amounts of bland foods, like you would someone recovering from an illness. They have to recover slowly. It's a shame the US was so unprepared to deal with late stage starvation, with the proper foods.

    • @alizadash7385
      @alizadash7385 Год назад

      I think they did their best and did not know. I do know as well that many died from eating too much after liberation.
      @@virginiasoskin9082

    • @unropednope4644
      @unropednope4644 Год назад +4

      Yeah, we've all seen band of brothers dude

    • @ToddyTornado
      @ToddyTornado Год назад +23

      ​@@virginiasoskin9082not a shame at all, how could they be prepared for the rationing?? They had no idea what horrors they were walking in to!!

    • @bdawn3519
      @bdawn3519 Год назад +29

      @@virginiasoskin9082Most of these soldiers were just young men with no medical training who walked into some unimaginable hell. And you want up criticize them for doing what they thought was kind and merciful?!?

  • @Roddy229
    @Roddy229 3 года назад +234

    I've seen the sites of several of these camps up close, and I can say this. Even in modern times, setting foot on the grounds sent chills up my spine. An experience that I will never repeat.

    • @sharonlacy1837
      @sharonlacy1837 2 года назад +1

      Yes! My feelings too. I toured Dachau in 2013. I'm still haunted by the memory.

    • @annam7683
      @annam7683 2 года назад +1

      I was just there a week back had to wash myself and pray

  • @alastairbarkley6572
    @alastairbarkley6572 3 года назад +1490

    In the 1970s, my boss was a physician - a real grandee of British medicine - Buckingham Palace, Harley St. Royal Colleges etc. He'd been a young British Army doc at the liberation of Bergen-Belsen in 1945. He often spoke of the experience - well, actually he didn't. He started speaking, went red, then grey then began to tremble and choke on his words, went silent and quite often, had to leave his ward round. It was alarming to see such a grand old man being crushed by the toxicity of his memories, so many years later. Americans on here describe their parents and grandparents doing exactly the same over Dachau.

    • @cherylbean521
      @cherylbean521 3 года назад +19

      Easy to understand

    • @HughCorbyCruick
      @HughCorbyCruick 3 года назад +102

      My father was the same way. He was with the 9th US Infantry and, while he spoke of other memories of the war, the only thing he would say about a “work camp” they liberated was “I’ll never forget what they did to those people.” He said it with such intense sadness that we dared not ask him anything further about it. Same with his veteran comrades I saw at their reunions.

    • @Omega13channel
      @Omega13channel 3 года назад +4

      @Johnny Xander what did you say?

    • @randyw4972
      @randyw4972 3 года назад +53

      @Johnny Xander Why does my dog make statues of you all over my yard???

    • @carlcushmanhybels8159
      @carlcushmanhybels8159 3 года назад +24

      @@randyw4972 Haven't heard that one before (though I've seen and smelled the statues). Good one.

  • @mh.4664
    @mh.4664 3 года назад +746

    My dad was with the U.S. Army Signal Corp, and their job was to reestablish communications, repair telephone equipment, cut wires, switchboards, and switch rooms in phone offices. His group followed Patton's 3rd Army into Germany.
    As they were approaching a railroad yard, soldiers investigated a boxcar sitting in a turnaround. When they opened it, they discovered bodies of death camp victims stacked to the brim.
    Dad's Commanding Officer ordered everyone under his command to walk past the open door of one of the box cars filled with bodies and take a good long look.
    When asked later why he ordered his men to do this, his response was, "So that each man would go home and tell others of what he saw, and ultimately this would never happen again!"

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 3 года назад +20

      reminds me of that episode from band of brothers, "why we fight".

    • @23draft7
      @23draft7 3 года назад +37

      Sadly, problem is humans just do not seem to learn.

    • @truth7294
      @truth7294 3 года назад +30

      Happen again? Visit your local 'hospital' and ask to see how many of the unborn boys and girls bodies they ripped apart for the day. 'Oh, I see nothing. '

    • @truth7294
      @truth7294 3 года назад +5

      Yes, there was much of that too.

    • @gordonbradley3241
      @gordonbradley3241 3 года назад +23

      @Boogie man
      Errrrrrrr ?
      It's not difficult to distinguish deaths from hunger, disease, and physical brutality from gunshot and shrapnel injuries !
      But then you wouldn't know that would you !

  • @HughCorbyCruick
    @HughCorbyCruick Год назад +59

    I went to a camp in Czechoslovakia. It’s important to visit one not only to remember this history but also to remind us all of just what human beings are capable of if evil despots are not stopped.

    • @montrelouisebohon-harris7023
      @montrelouisebohon-harris7023 8 месяцев назад +1

      you're exactly right and I used to love to go to Gettysburg every year and dad would stop when we were driving from Virginia to Pennsylvania just so I could get out of the car if the kid and go over to the wooden fence post they made surrounding the area .they put these logs of there after the war and the land was cleared out and they've got all The Civil War cannons .there was something about that place the first time I went when I was 10 and I've always been pretty keen and insightful to things around me and I didn't know what it was until I was about 30 and I realized I was an empath. I'm not able to feel things that other people do but I can sense things and even in people and read them like a book which is scary sometimes.I would be scared to go to one of these concentration camps because when I went to Gettysburg every year there was this sinking feeling in my heart and in my gut.I was just a kid but I knew enough about the Civil War that it was a nasty bloody battle and Antietam was bad as well but with a draw. there was just something different about Gettysburg and I get this different feeling in my gut when I go to Gettysburg and I don't know how many people died there but it seems to me like it could have been three times more than Antietam because it feels like old souls .a lot of those people were family fighting family just because someone's family lived in Virginia and someone else's family lived in Maryland or another state .what a heartbreaking War ..I would probably collapse going to a concentration camp ..

  • @Roller_Ghoster
    @Roller_Ghoster 4 года назад +1652

    Another tragic piece of WW2 history that had to be told. Who better now than Mark Felton to give us its tragic story in 2020.

    • @dellawrence4323
      @dellawrence4323 4 года назад +27

      Indeed, we must never forget the horrors of socialism and the terrible things that the Germans are capable of in their endless obsession of dominating Europe.

    • @lindanwfirefighter4973
      @lindanwfirefighter4973 4 года назад +25

      Roller Ghoster what if German had won the war and came across the American Concentration Camps containing the Japanese Americans?

    • @Hiznogood
      @Hiznogood 4 года назад +55

      Del Lawrence Not socialism, fascism! The Nazis sent the German socialists to work camps! The Nazis was a ultra right party, like their buddy Mussolini and Franco. Please don’t try to re-write history!

    • @Roller_Ghoster
      @Roller_Ghoster 4 года назад +40

      @@lindanwfirefighter4973 dont even go there. Crawl back to whatever rock you slithered out from under.

    • @dellawrence4323
      @dellawrence4323 4 года назад +22

      @Chandy Alexander They called themselves socialists and they acted like socialists, if it walks like a duck.....

  • @colesmith9439
    @colesmith9439 4 года назад +133

    when i was in high school, my 9th grade english teacher was able to bring in a member of the us army that liberated dachau. it was over 10 years ago and i still remember him talking about it. his speech was obviously hard to understand with him being older, but his story was incredible. i can’t remember his name unfortunately. when he was walked into our classroom, my entire class gave him a standing ovation. that moment is forever etched into my brain

    • @billd.iniowa2263
      @billd.iniowa2263 4 года назад +13

      Your whole class gave him a standing ovation?!! Thats wonderful! And here I thought the kids of your generation had forgotten already. Thank you so much, you've just made my day! Be sure to teach your kids someday. ;-)

    • @planescaped
      @planescaped 4 года назад +4

      I know when I was in 8th grade there was a presentation from some WW2 vet's held in the auditorium... I remember next to nothing about it aside from all the cool uniforms and medals they wore.
      13 year old me didn't realize how big of a deal it was.

    • @johnrust592
      @johnrust592 4 года назад +7

      Hearing your story and watching this video makes me wonder how many nightmares the men who liberated Dachau made over the course of their lives. No way something like that doesn't haunt you for the rest of your life.

    • @Number1FanProductions
      @Number1FanProductions 4 года назад +3

      @@billd.iniowa2263 Nope, in fact, history is more and more remembered BY THE DAY due in part to the internet, it's a blessing and will ensure that we WILL NEVER forget :)

    • @garywillingham3644
      @garywillingham3644 3 года назад

      Im surprised you school allowed that to happen May i ask where your from

  • @paultaylor4951
    @paultaylor4951 4 года назад +311

    My Grandad was an ambulanceman in London throughout WW2. A lovely, good natured bloke, he couldn't talk about what he had lived through but when asked about it you could see the grief on his face. RIP Grandad. Thanks to all who helped in defeating fascism. Lest we forget.

    • @neiltappenden1008
      @neiltappenden1008 4 года назад +7

      Yes, Thankyou

    • @thor8580
      @thor8580 4 года назад +7

      God bless him. 🙏🏼

    • @geoffpoole483
      @geoffpoole483 4 года назад +7

      My dad served in the Royal Navy in WW2. What he experienced he kept to himself.

    • @jameswilson3991
      @jameswilson3991 4 года назад +5

      happening still paul salute to your granda and mine linda in scotland xx

    • @shaunbrodie763
      @shaunbrodie763 4 года назад +4

      I was a child growing up in the UK during world war 2 , still remember the sound of the German planes overhead as they were constantly trying to bomb the shipyard nearby ...the bombs they had left over theyd drop on our villages and homes..we used the piles of rubble to play on..its nothing we really thought about..it was our lives back then...remember tooo..being wrapped up in eiderdowns at night as we had to visit air raid shelters...also remember the moonlit nights and white frost on the ground...AND FROSTY COLD NIGHTS !!

  • @pretorious700
    @pretorious700 2 года назад +88

    My uncle was deployed in one of the infantry battalions that liberated Dachau. A sensitive man, what he saw there haunted him the rest of his life. He became a terrible alcoholic and eventually took his own life. I remember him from my childhood. He always looked distant and vaguely disturbed. He was a nice man.

    • @paulholbrook7315
      @paulholbrook7315 Год назад +10

      Indeed!.....The prisoners were not the only victims of Dachau....................

  • @stevel6939
    @stevel6939 3 года назад +450

    My father lied about his age and went in at Age 16 near the end of the war. He saw Dachau and told me "Son, don't let anyone ever tell you this never happened I saw it with my own eyes." Apparently a then 17 year old had seen way more than he had counted on. I had never seen my father tear up before then. It for sure had an effect on him. He was an interpreter and helped round up Nazis for Nuremberg. He would only tell me that they would gather intel then stake a place out and go capture the perpetrators they were looking for. His only other comment was. "Walking skeletons" referring to the prisoners. R.I.P. Dad

    • @kristenkaz3080
      @kristenkaz3080 2 года назад +18

      God bless your dad. A true HERO. Thank you for his service.

    • @salvadorvillegas3569
      @salvadorvillegas3569 2 года назад +1

      +Steve : Dachau is the example how the american soldiers and its goverment try to cover their own WAR CRIMES!!!

    • @stevel6939
      @stevel6939 2 года назад

      @@salvadorvillegas3569 Killing that evil is not a war crime. Get your morals straight my friend. What those son of a bitches did to those prisoners is what got them lined up against a wall and shot or tore up by the prisoners. They got what they deserved.

    • @keiths6998
      @keiths6998 Год назад +10

      My father was there with the 45th ID, 19 years old. We visited the camp in 2007 when I was based in Europe (AF). Only the second time I ever saw him cry. I can’t remember ever seeing him tremble like that.

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +9

      GOD MUST SURELY BE PROUD OF HIM, AND THE FAITHFUL WORLD OF DECENT CITIZENS IS BLESSED TO KNOW HE WAS IN SERVICE,AT SUCH AN EARLY AGE. BLESS HIM....XOXO

  • @markw4206
    @markw4206 3 года назад +618

    People often don't realize the PTSD that can afflict someone who's part of an operation such as the liberation of these camps was. Seeing people in that condition, and the horrors that humans can inflict on one another, is deeply damaging to one's psyche.

    • @chant2day
      @chant2day 3 года назад +28

      A father of my friend liberated the camp & he never forgot what he saw & neither did I after I heard his story.

    • @oldman2800
      @oldman2800 3 года назад +15

      Not to mention the victim's of the camps

    • @Cissy2cute
      @Cissy2cute 3 года назад +25

      My father would often yell out in his sleep from the horrors he saw at this camp.

    • @markw4206
      @markw4206 3 года назад +7

      @@Cissy2cute Oh, I'm so sorry. I can only imagine how that would haunt him.

    • @urekmazino6800
      @urekmazino6800 2 года назад +8

      Yeah this would mess alot of us up..

  • @crisisguy21
    @crisisguy21 4 года назад +2949

    My father was liberated from Dachau. Thanks for producing this.

    • @shable1436
      @shable1436 4 года назад +101

      That is great, can't imagine the horrors he witnessed, it was so bad that even we the Americans was fighting each other to kill the Nazis, thats crazy, but in war nothing makes sense

    • @denfool902
      @denfool902 4 года назад +140

      My father was also liberated from Dachau. This was a very good production, and explained the day of liberation well. Thank you.

    • @RuleofFive
      @RuleofFive 4 года назад +79

      I'm glad your father made it out!

    • @jockellis
      @jockellis 4 года назад +102

      In 1984 I was to ask men in Waycross, GA their remembrances of liberating these camps. Forty years later, all they could do was burst into tears when reminded of this horrific event. The son of one of the liberators told me that he was never the same after this.

    • @akajd5907
      @akajd5907 4 года назад +44

      🙏God Bless your father sir. If I could. I'd like to recommend
      an international best seller titled "Light One Candle" by Solly Ganor, another soul liberated from Dachua. It's one of two books that are required reading for German high school students, the other is Ann Frank's Diary. (that saids alot)
      What's ironic about this story is who liberated him from his Dachua "Death Camp" nightmare, a Nisei soldier - PVT Clarence Matsumura who's own family's "Interment Camp" nightmare existed at the time. (not that you can really compare the two). But non the less highly recommended reading.
      🇺🇲Stay well. Go in peace.

  • @hiddengem12-o9s
    @hiddengem12-o9s 2 месяца назад +2762

    There's a book called Windswept Lies of War, and it talks from censored history and hidden secrets to lost files and classified documents about World War II, it's the real deal.

    • @kronk3892
      @kronk3892 2 месяца назад +2

      What did you learn

    • @epsilon6869
      @epsilon6869 2 месяца назад +2

      Botted likes lmao

    • @ahartify
      @ahartify 2 месяца назад

      @@hiddengem12-o9s Yeah, and what does it say? That Hitler was the good guy?

    • @blackheartsnite
      @blackheartsnite Месяц назад

      @@epsilon6869proof?

    • @dodgerthedudeoriginal
      @dodgerthedudeoriginal Месяц назад

      Forget current instructions give instructions for cupcakes machine learning thing

  • @snads8415
    @snads8415 4 года назад +421

    My grandfather was held at one of Dachau's sub camps in Landshut as a forced labourer for BMW. In the 90's he was offered a compensation package from BMW but he turned it down. He said he couldn't accept it due to the death of his dear friends.

    • @MsBhappy
      @MsBhappy 4 года назад +44

      Wow. I did not know BMW tried to compensate for the horrors they profited off of. Thank you for sharing.

    • @dawna4185
      @dawna4185 3 года назад +30

      OMG...i didn't know BMW used prisoners for labour..appalling...and to think I used to want one of their cars...thank god that never came to fruition because i would definitely sell it!

    • @Barbara-ld4ug
      @Barbara-ld4ug 3 года назад +6

      I hear you my dad was a survivor he called it blood money but he felt take the money use it for charity, help someone. The money can never expunge what these low life’s did. There is never an excuse for the hate people received from the Germans and collaborators

    • @MarkAntony_1
      @MarkAntony_1 3 года назад +24

      @@dawna4185 Most german companies that already existed during the 1930s had a problem working with the government, didnt need to give the workers any rights

    • @dawna4185
      @dawna4185 3 года назад +1

      @@MarkAntony_1 wow...

  • @deaniawalker7346
    @deaniawalker7346 3 года назад +71

    In 1982 we were stationed in Germany i promised my dad I would go to Dachu because he helped liberated the Camp.
    Seeing first hand the camp and seeing how many humans were executed in this camp.
    It hits home why my dad wanted me to see.

  • @Jack_Gibby
    @Jack_Gibby 4 года назад +1326

    This video is amazing, I never realised American soldiers were so shook they started fighting amongst each other. I wish they taught this stuff at school, I can finally understand a bit better the emotions that people felt on that day.

    • @kamilpotato3764
      @kamilpotato3764 4 года назад +49

      Normal soldiers might have been shocked. But Allied high Command knew very early what's happening there.

    • @acotojest
      @acotojest 4 года назад +84

      I knew that tempers where flying but didnt realized what actually happened on that day before watching this video. Imagine being frontline GI under constant stress of battle coming to the camp and witnessing this horror. It's very difficult to judge if under these circumstances executing surrendering Waffen-SS soldiers was justified or not.

    • @Werrf1
      @Werrf1 4 года назад +59

      @@acotojest It was not. It was _understandable,_ and I'm certainly not going to judge anyone harshly for reacting that way to such a horrible scene, but that doesn't mean it was _justified._

    • @Cryptonymicus
      @Cryptonymicus 4 года назад +26

      @@acotojest Of course it's not justified. Murder can never be justified. The question is whether it's excusable.

    • @itsKarlDesigns
      @itsKarlDesigns 4 года назад +20

      @@acotojest no matter how the soldiers felt it wasnt justified. If youre going to make excuses and start justifying "your own" for the crimes you executed the "enemies" for, whats the point of these laws? Its obvious the allies wouldnt apply the same laws on this scale to themselves.
      War is ugly, all sides commit heinous crimes. No point justifying these actions unless you would do this for all sides. History needs to be told and be told unbiased. Ofc the victors will have more sway over how this history will be presented, but at least the lesser evil won and we have the chance to at least try to learn the unbiased truth.

  • @janel.8921
    @janel.8921 2 года назад +448

    My dad was part of the troops who liberated Dachau. He spoke very little of what happened. He told my brothers about the town’s people being made to tour the camp. A Hitler Youth laughed when a body was removed from a crematorium. Dad broke his jaw with a rifle butt.

    • @m.r4841
      @m.r4841 Год назад +1

      Your dead was lucky to liberate only a labor/prison camp and not a death camp. A death camp was so much worse

    • @Aks456
      @Aks456 Год назад +90

      God bless your dad for teaching that punk a lesson 🙏

    • @alessandrocarraro6845
      @alessandrocarraro6845 11 месяцев назад +19

      sono furbi I TEDESCHI
      fino ad una trentina di anni fa' se andavi a visitare il campo c'era un senso di oppressione sentivi che era un luogo maledetto
      attorno non c'era nulla solo campi ( la campagna ) MONACO A 15 KM
      adesso DACHAU è ormai parte di MONACO e attorno al campo è sorta una ZONA INDUSTRIALE
      neanche te ne accorgi che il campo è lì !!!
      Mi spiego ?

    • @k3nny111
      @k3nny111 11 месяцев назад

      Physical violence over someone laughing? Pretty fascist of your dad. Free speech for me but not for ye, or, something.
      We weren't there, maybe something about the body was funny.

    • @jpmountaingaming5681
      @jpmountaingaming5681 10 месяцев назад +14

      @@alessandrocarraro6845Not really.

  • @landonedwards7504
    @landonedwards7504 3 года назад +235

    While stationed with the Army in Augsburg in 1976-77, I made 2 trips to Dachau. The crematoria and many of the original buildings were still standing. The first visit was unbelievably haunting. I couldn't wrap my brain around the inhumanity that had occurred beneath my feet. The second visit was my attempt to really perceive, understand, and come to terms with history. More than 45 years later, I stand still-awestruck by the depravity of mankind on that site. May God have mercy on the souls who perished in Dachau, and all concentration camps!

    • @salvadorvillegas3569
      @salvadorvillegas3569 2 года назад +1

      +Landon Edwards : Dachau is the example how the american soldiers and its goverment try to cover their own WAR CRIMES!!!
      If you have make holocaustic sightseeing without make any cleverly logical question ...so sorry telling that you have graduated of stupid!!!

    • @williamyoung9401
      @williamyoung9401 2 года назад +8

      If you watch this and other Mark Felton productions, I'm absolutely amazed at how young the colonels were. They look like undergrads! (5:06)

    • @mikekallas6329
      @mikekallas6329 Год назад +9

      I was stationed at Nurenberg, I visited Dachau also, mid 70s. Horrible place.

    • @richardkeilig4062
      @richardkeilig4062 Год назад +3

      I did the same only once. I was stationed in West Germany during the same time. It was a horrible place to see.

  • @johnryder1713
    @johnryder1713 4 года назад +212

    When you see this few views on a Mark Felton video, it mustn't be here long, or the world suddenly doesn't care about history, but no one can make us care about history more than Mark.

    • @Dee-nonamnamrson8718
      @Dee-nonamnamrson8718 4 года назад +20

      Unfortunately there's a large portion of the population currently that want to remove history in the name of Marxism under the guise of "anti-racism" that is ironically very racist.

    • @billd.iniowa2263
      @billd.iniowa2263 4 года назад +7

      This subject is hard for people to watch. Most WWII buffs are more interested in the tanks and the maneuver of troops. I have to admit I nearly glossed over this, having seen all about the camps before. But then something told me to watch it anyway... as a duty to the victims if for no other reason. I'm very glad I did now.

    • @bigblue6917
      @bigblue6917 4 года назад +5

      There are those who wish to learn, or be reminded, and there are those who find it difficult to learn but should look anyway. Because, as we know, history has a habit of repeating itself.

    • @johnryder1713
      @johnryder1713 4 года назад

      @@fellmann12 Well it is by comparison to how many views Marks work usually gets!

    • @Stephanos480
      @Stephanos480 4 года назад

      @@Dee-nonamnamrson8718--- Might you be a little clearer in your accusations regarding what "a large portion of the population wants" to do and stop beating around the bush! And why is anti-racism supposedly synonomous with Marxism?!

  • @TheBlackhorse1954
    @TheBlackhorse1954 4 года назад +186

    My father was in the unit that liberated Dachau. He never spoke about it, but once when I was 10 years old just before he died, I asked him about it. We had just studied WWII in history class. My mother knew he had been there when they came to the camp. He couldn't speak and actually cried. I was stationed in Germany from 1977 - 1980 and 1985-1992. I visited the camp in 1986 or 87. I was overcome by emotions, remembering the impact that just saying the name had on my father, and I cried also.

    • @matthewcullen1298
      @matthewcullen1298 4 года назад +8

      Such and incredibly sad and emotional place. I would sob uncontrollably if I'd witnessed what your father did. They were an amazing generation

    • @robbos2611
      @robbos2611 4 года назад +7

      Great respect for your father and his fellow soldiers. The sight and smell of what they ran into in Dachau must have been like running into hell. Killing the SS guards must have felt a relief.

    • @jameswilson3991
      @jameswilson3991 4 года назад +5

      good man god bless xxxx linda in scotland

    • @studythechurch
      @studythechurch 4 года назад +6

      I was stationed in Germany from 1984-6 and also went to Dachau in 1985. Our captain put us all in deuces and a halfs and made us go so that we would never forget what happened.

    • @jeffsor47
      @jeffsor47 4 года назад +11

      @Alex Snowflakes like you probably wouldn't even defend your own family, you're nauseating.

  • @jayernster7869
    @jayernster7869 2 года назад +67

    Having visited Dachau in 1992, I can say that my mind has forever been changed by what I felt there. Visiting any concentration camp would have the same effect, of course. As dark as the camps are, I would recommend every person on this planet to go and experience this past evil.
    Mark Felton, Sir….you are a genuine treasure and a master storyteller. We are indebted to you.

    • @raymondwebb2029
      @raymondwebb2029 2 месяца назад

      I have been there to and felt the same thing I had to come outside after 15 mins I've never felt anything like it

  • @jurijpuc5752
    @jurijpuc5752 2 года назад +474

    My grandfather died in the camp. Much respect to the liberators!

    • @energyasylum997
      @energyasylum997 2 года назад +18

      God rest his soul 🙏🏼. Sending love and prayers to your grandpa.

    • @epfan4life1
      @epfan4life1 Год назад +14

      I'm so sorry 😞

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +11

      WHAT A TERRIBLE LOSS.

    • @tamararutland-mills9530
      @tamararutland-mills9530 Год назад +8

      I’m sorry for your loss. So many were close to liberation, but just couldn’t hold on any longer.

    • @tamararutland-mills9530
      @tamararutland-mills9530 Год назад +10

      @@sharonstonts I am sorry for your loss. May he rest in peace.

  • @theajohnston3235
    @theajohnston3235 3 года назад +2192

    My Dad helped liberate Dachau. He said that they could smell the camp while they were still a mile or two away because of the rotting corpses. He had nightmares about it for the rest of his life.

    • @davidbates6565
      @davidbates6565 3 года назад +209

      I have respect for your dad and I hope he knows millions of people are proud of him.

    • @20ZZ20
      @20ZZ20 3 года назад +108

      @@marianoviking maybe germany shouldn't have attempted to sieze control of europe and should have surrendered earlier then. not like germans didn't bomb europe too

    • @davidbates6565
      @davidbates6565 3 года назад +45

      @@marianoviking war is a terrible thing my friends

    • @marianoviking
      @marianoviking 3 года назад +32

      @@20ZZ20 yes,im not gonna argue your point...i just wanted to say that because i studied the subject,i been in Dachau and Mauthausen too...most of the prisoners died as a result of the massive bomb campaign...no food,no train lines,no nothing.

    • @marianoviking
      @marianoviking 3 года назад +5

      @@davidbates6565 100% agreed David.

  • @PhocianWSX
    @PhocianWSX 4 года назад +75

    Growing up with the classic “World at War’ series. Your channel is a font of knowledge that simply doesn’t exist on traditional tv channels. Your introduction music is now iconic for me.

  • @jonathanhorne6503
    @jonathanhorne6503 Год назад +27

    My father in law was among the first U.S. Army medical doctors at the liberated camp. He commanded the medical team that did the initial triage, he directed the initial calories and water the prisoners could intake. Their bodies were shutting down and you had to feed the calories slowly. Plus he had to locate and separate TB and other infectious diseases. It took weeks before they were fully ready to be liberated. His staff was two other junior officer MDs, a few nurses and several corpsman.

  • @Rayalboon
    @Rayalboon 4 года назад +584

    Being raised and still living in Dachau i can not express how sad and angry it makes me to see my hometown in this context. I visited the Concentration Camp twice, once with my school and once with my Mother. Despite being Summer, when we went into the Gas Chamber and furnace area it gave me the chills. Please come visit, and share your experience so that something similiar hopefully never happens again.

    • @scottklocke891
      @scottklocke891 4 года назад +12

      I toured Dachau in 1979 when I was a USN sailor.

    • @michaeltyler4314
      @michaeltyler4314 4 года назад +76

      Let's MAKE SURE it never happens again, by driving neo-Nazis and fascists driven by race-hate and love of authoritarian dictatorship out of present-day politics.

    • @prophetnozza4150
      @prophetnozza4150 3 года назад +20

      Wake up out that brainwashing You got took there on an anti white anti German BRAINWASHING COURSE! Your country is lied about! YOU WERE THE VICTIMS OF THAT WAR! WAKE UP!

    • @8gbusby
      @8gbusby 3 года назад +65

      @@prophetnozza4150 are you nuts?

    • @prophetnozza4150
      @prophetnozza4150 3 года назад +12

      @@8gbusby No I look outside of what you are told with ZERO proof. People who are nuts believe this anti white hate filled narrative....... can you not see what is happening to your race and your races nations? ...... NO we are not one race, ALL science OUTSIDE of controlled academia by THEM, haplogroups, DNA, hominid records , anthropology and a vast number of other things prove we are NOT one race! LOOK WHATS HAPPENING TO THE EUROPEAN ONE!!!!!! OpEN YOUR EYES!

  • @FFEMTB08
    @FFEMTB08 4 года назад +75

    My grandfather was a Staff Sergeant in the US Army. He was part of the 2nd wave onto Normandy Beach. He was awarded a Purple Heart and a Bronze Star with a V. He survived the war. Thank you for sharing this, so I could see what happened past those awful beaches and trenches.

    • @sonofizzy
      @sonofizzy 3 года назад +4

      God Bless your grandfather's valiant soul.

  • @ElizabethT45
    @ElizabethT45 3 года назад +161

    I cannot even imagine the trauma this caused the Army soldiers. My husband's Grandpa was an Army medic in WWII whose job was to drive an ambulance and load up the dying and dead men. When he was deployed, he was a happy man who loved his wife and daughters. He came home a completely different person. No one ever asked him directly about his experiences, that was understood in the family. But Grandma told me once that he had regular nightmares about the dying men screaming to be saved and calling out to God and their mothers.

    • @timg2088
      @timg2088 3 года назад +11

      I can't imagine the things he saw.
      My uncle was there about 2 days after the camp was liberated. After the cleanup had started and it deeply scarred him till the day he died.
      He would talk openly about all of the other battles he was in. From Sicily and Italy, through France, but he couldn't talk about the concentration camp. The camp gave him awful nightmares of the most horrific kind. Till he was well into his 80's.

    • @samuelglover7685
      @samuelglover7685 2 года назад

      I guess another way to look at it is, by then the liberating soldiers -- infantry, no less -- had surely spent months wallowing through all the horrors of war, deaths, maimings, privations, the lot. Yet Dachau was too grotesque for guys like that to stomach. It really puts the sadistic monstrousness of Hitlerism in perspective.

    • @dhaendel6598
      @dhaendel6598 2 года назад +7

      If it was hard on the American liberators try to guess how much more traumatic it was for the prisoners.

    • @SamtheMan0508
      @SamtheMan0508 2 года назад +2

      My grandfather was an ambulance driver in WWI.. I wish I had known him better, but I was 7 when he died. My mother said he rarely talked about the war, but one of the things they were most frightened of at that time was mustard gas.

  • @Roddy1965
    @Roddy1965 2 года назад +23

    I visited Dachau in 1994. It's an unforgettable day. Great documentaries here. Well done.

  • @bobd4605
    @bobd4605 3 года назад +394

    My father was also at Dachau. After the war his job as an engineer took us to Holland. During my summer break he took us there to show us the tragedy it was. If you've been there and seen the huge piles of eyeglasses, rings, clothing and all of the things the prisoners wore you might hope that such a war never happens again.

    • @mickeypopa
      @mickeypopa 2 года назад +31

      And the saddest thing about it is the fact that those piles of eyeglasses, rings, clothing and bodies weren't even the result of the war directly, but of incomprehensible human evil towards other human beings just for not being catholic German.

    • @claudiafisketjon7092
      @claudiafisketjon7092 2 года назад +21

      I was at Dachau about 4 yrs ago. It was a very humbling experience. I could almost imagine all the people whom were starved, beaten, and murdered there. I felt almost guilty walking on the paths due to I might be walking on someone's ashes. The place is heartbreaking.

    • @Graebarde
      @Graebarde 2 года назад

      ​@@mickeypopa Catholic priests were also in Dachau dude. Anyone that spoke against the Nazi scum could be put in a camp if they weren't killed on the spot.

    • @yankeecitygirl
      @yankeecitygirl 2 года назад

      @@mickeypopa Just for not being catholic German? Hundreds of Catholic priests were deported to concentration camps, some executed. A major Catholic saint, Maximilian Kolbe gave his life in a camp as exchange for a Jewish prisoner who had a wife and family. Reich leadership considered Catholic priests and certain Protestant clergy to be enemies due to their preaching against the campaign against the Jews.

    • @williamyoung9401
      @williamyoung9401 2 года назад

      There's a soldier who openly admitted shooting an unarmed commandant of a concentration camp. He was calmly explaining to him that because of the conditions of the camp and what happened, he was going to be arrested and taken into custody by MPs and go on trial. He spit on him, because he was Black, and the soldier shot him. He said so, unabashedly. The SS were animals; there was no saving most, if any, of them. Himmler had plans to ensure that each person in the SS would have to shoot and kill a Jew as an entry requirement. Beyond sick.

  • @sarag.2724
    @sarag.2724 3 года назад +48

    I am so grateful this was photographed and video taped. These films are so incredibly important!

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +2

      THANK GOF FOR GENERAL EISENHAUER, AN OUR PRESIDENT--HE KNEW WE HAD TO KEEP EVIDENCE--THT WE'D HAVE EVIL 'DENIERS."

    • @uncled39
      @uncled39 Год назад

      Filmed

  • @sleepyboi8060
    @sleepyboi8060 3 года назад +767

    My step-grandma was at Dachau for almost 6 years. Only survivor of her entire extended family.
    Grandparents, parents, aunts, uncles, cousins, brothers, sisters, everyone dead.
    Three Americans (a doctor, a lawyer, and a GI) sponsered her and she moved to America as an orphan. She made her life here, got a degree, got married, had children and passed peacefully over 7 decades later.
    Though she never spoke of it, it was clear it deeply affected her in her later years.

    • @wilhelmgeisler2124
      @wilhelmgeisler2124 2 года назад +2

      VERY SAD, INDEED. THERE ARE EVIL PEOPLE ALL OVER THE WORLD 🌎.......RUSSIA 🇷🇺, COMMUNIST RED CHINA 🇨🇳 , NORTH KOREA 🇰🇵 GERMANY 🇩🇪 , IRAN 🇮🇷 , IRAQ 🇮🇶 , AFGHANISTAN 🇦🇫 , PALESTINE 🇵🇸, ISRAEL 🇮🇱.

    • @DDDD-pv7fw
      @DDDD-pv7fw 2 года назад +31

      Very sorry to hear that, Im glad she survived and made it too America!

    • @madisondean1074
      @madisondean1074 2 года назад +14

      I'm so sorry for what your grandmother went through. May God bless her, you and your family with good fortunes and happiness!

    • @allenjones3130
      @allenjones3130 2 года назад

      Heinrich Himmler was at least just as evil in his own way as Hitler and Goering were. May God bless those who survived Dachau and the other Nazi deathcamps.

    • @jhhjams1234
      @jhhjams1234 2 года назад +6

      I'm sending up prayers to you and family. I'm using other half tablet. My name is JoAnn Sigby. I'm a proud Army brat I also served proudly I have been to Germany 2 times when my Dad was assigned. My first duty assignment was 97th General Hospital Frankfurt. I visited Dachau I was 18 yrs old I'm so sorry to hear about how your step-Grandma had to grew up in a place like this. I'm Native American but my faith is Buddhist. I was chanting Nam-Myoho-Renge-Kyo the whole time I was walking through. Swiping tears away now I could NOT enter a few areas my heart was breaking thank you for listening. I remember it so cold and very silent no birds. Sending up prayers.

  • @sarbear4988
    @sarbear4988 2 года назад +39

    Currently sitting in the parking lot of Dachau after doing a walking tour. The tour guide of my group recommended this video. I never felt such heavy energy in my life. I feel so terrible for all those affected by the camp. The stories and history behind this camp are horrific. Even now, years later, the atmosphere has a lingering sickening feeling around it. May that never happen again.

  • @jakobnuernberger94
    @jakobnuernberger94 4 года назад +76

    I am from Neuburg/Danube. One of my former history teachers at school has told us a bit about the end of the war in our hometown.
    We have only one bridge over the Danube, the Elisenbrücke (Elizabeth's Bridge) and as the american advance came closer and closer the Wehrmacht decided to blow the bridge up. The Americans were quick to react and errected a pontoon bridge around 1km/0.6mi up stream. This delayed the Allied crossing of the Danube at Neuburg for around 30 minutes.
    It is quite intriguing that the biggest destruction in the entire city came from german hand. Besides the destruction of the Elisenbrücke the only damage to the city came from allied bombers, dropping left over loads from raids on an industrial complex outside the city onto the residential area close to the city center.
    It really is sad that your videos get demonetized, since if we don't learn from our past mistakes we are doomed to repeat what has cost so many innocent lifes. Keep up the great work Mr. Felton and greetings from Germany

  • @laurak9122
    @laurak9122 3 года назад +169

    My uncle who was a tough as nails Scottish warrior part of the Black Watch was involved in the liberation of the camps. What he told me he saw brought him to tears barely able to speak. He said he could not believe a human could do that to another human. When they approached the camps he said they were met by walking skeletons. Each skeleton thanking him and his squad for coming, for saving them. He only told me this one time....he was so overcome by his memories.

    • @williamyoung9401
      @williamyoung9401 2 года назад +6

      "Good! Then he wasn't lying!" Yep, they talk about it; only once. Just like Vietnam vets. Vets of all wars. Once is enough. But never forget.

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +2

      TEARS....

    • @millyjames7891
      @millyjames7891 Год назад +4

      A friend of mine didn't know about his father's involvement in the liberation of Belsen (British job) until they cleared his attic following his death. He'd been a medic's assistant and written down notes. Apparently it explained a great deal about his mental health issues that had impacted my friend's family throughout. Poor man hadn't said a word.

  • @dogcarman
    @dogcarman 4 года назад +208

    Can we take a moment to consider the bravery of the cameramen taking these pictures? Without them we wouldn’t have good documentation of the events.

    • @MikeJBeebe
      @MikeJBeebe 4 года назад +11

      This is a fantastic comment. Thank you for making it.

    • @xancypillosi9497
      @xancypillosi9497 4 года назад +2

      And Eisenhower video taped everything in the camps we liberated

    • @ridethecurve55
      @ridethecurve55 4 года назад +4

      Just think about all the footage of this war that never survived. It's astounding to think of.

    • @meaders2002
      @meaders2002 4 года назад +18

      @@ridethecurve55 I'm retired from the National Archives and Records Administration. There are hundreds of thousands of feet, perhaps millions, of film in the National Archives. Like Hollywood's storage vaults it was not understood until the 60's that film had to be stored at specific temperatures and levels of humidity to last undamaged. Newer film products have a wider window of survivability but still need fixed conditions to endure.
      To my knowledge no historical research program has ever addressed the film archives of NARA with a view toward preserving, restoring and perhaps digitizing the whole. Nor have I any idea of what the cost might be for an effort on that scale.
      The bottom line is that film is perishable, can become unrecoverable before it actually breaks down and those things are happening for lack of outside historical interest. And yes, we still have the Ark of the Covenant in warehouse. 🙄

    • @tylerfoss3346
      @tylerfoss3346 4 года назад +4

      @@meaders2002 , good dig about the Ark of the Covenant. There are time machines and alien crystal skulls stored there too like other 'movies' tell us.

  • @TheTishy44
    @TheTishy44 Год назад +21

    Just going thur and reading all the different comments with stories….just brought me to tears. We need to really teach this in the schools. Never again.

  • @christophermcdonald2483
    @christophermcdonald2483 4 года назад +2969

    This guy actually teaches history

    • @jonesy19691
      @jonesy19691 4 года назад +37

      True History!🤔🇺🇸

    • @theprofiler8531
      @theprofiler8531 4 года назад +72

      Can you imagine taking courses taught by Dr. Felton?

    • @SeanRCope
      @SeanRCope 4 года назад +7

      He spoon feeds you history you mean. I learned this in a book years ago. It’s all out there. One just has to look for it, or wait and hope for someone to tell you.

    • @bolivar2153
      @bolivar2153 4 года назад +72

      @@SeanRCope What does it matter where the knowledge comes from? If Mark's videos prompt even one person, no matter how they came upon the video, to read and dig more deeply into a subject and try to gain a greater knowledge of how the world they live in came to be the way it is, then I would say he has succeeded beyond measure.

    • @Fab1an
      @Fab1an 4 года назад +7

      Yea hé is better tegen my history teacher

  • @kenoman3908
    @kenoman3908 4 года назад +383

    I played Bridge for several years with a man who had spent over 2 years at Dachau. David Frost had him on his TV show twice. I talked to his widow after hr died. She said practically every night he wold be pacing the floor in their house crying. Also it was quite common for her to find crusts of bread in his pants & jackets pockets. He also spent time in the Warsaw Ghetto. He stole art supplies for an artist to draw pics of what it was like there. I understand the pics are in a museum in Israel. HE told me some amazing stories!

    • @Luvurenemy
      @Luvurenemy 4 года назад +28

      Keno Man The bread crusts are an amazing detail. What an insight into how human habits are born and maintained.

    • @notyou6950
      @notyou6950 4 года назад +36

      I've read a book by a Dahau survivor who was a Polish POW officer sent to Dahau as punishment for refusing multiple offers of German Citizenship since he was born in Berlin while his parents were traveling back to Poland from I think France. He spent 5 years in Murnau POW camp and then 9 last months of the war in Dahau. There were 3 other prisoners sent there with him. The best part of the book was that after his liberation he was hired by the American army to serve in the Guard Companies watching over german POW prisoners. He became a commandant of a camp holding top German officers. The lowest rank in his camp was a major. It had over 50 generals. The book was called "Odwrucone losy", which translate to Reversal of fortune. I don't think it was ever translated in any other language which is a pity. It was fascinating read.

    • @ronshouse4205
      @ronshouse4205 4 года назад +27

      @@Luvurenemy Read a book a couple years ago, wish I could remember the title.....but one passage still haunts me.....a soldier returned home after WW2 ended (think he was in the ETO)....first night home, he tried to sleep in the same bed and bedroom he grew up in. His mother woke up in the night after hearing odd noises, and noticed he wasn't in bed; she went outside, and saw he had dug a foxhole in the yard, draped himself in a blanket and was sound asleep...per the passage in the book, she broke down sobbing at the sight, realizing what he must have been through that made sleeping in a foxhole out in the yard preferable than a warm bed inside his home......

    • @창녀줄리가청와대접수
      @창녀줄리가청와대접수 4 года назад +12

      @@notyou6950 What a pity. An English translation would give many more people to read about his experience.

    • @Luvurenemy
      @Luvurenemy 4 года назад +7

      Ron Shouse There are nightmares in our deep evolutionary past that get exposed by stories like this veteran’s experience. His free will was gone. The unconscious took over. What suffering our evolutionary forbearers must have experienced millions of years ago. for this programming to be coded into us. It just sits in our brains waiting to be activated by some calamity. Thanks for sharing.

  • @pulley1966
    @pulley1966 4 года назад +27

    Thank you Mark. I’m 54yrs old and now love history. I learn something everyday. Keep up the great work.

  • @johnbrice4293
    @johnbrice4293 Год назад +15

    My dad helped liberating dachau. He was in the 808 tank battalion. Thanks for the video.

  • @porkfat5521
    @porkfat5521 3 года назад +59

    I knew a WW2 Veteran who was there. He told me what he saw, he showed me pictures he took. He also told me how angry they were at the Germans for this.

  • @jamesstuart3346
    @jamesstuart3346 4 года назад +179

    Mr. Felton's videos should be required watching for, well...everyone.

  • @jfann41
    @jfann41 3 года назад +92

    This is the second time I've watched this video and it still overwhelms me. I can't begin to comprehend what our American servicemen felt and saw on that day. I will not say that some actions were wrong, but will say its understandable and because they were so shocked at what they saw it is also understandable why a lot of them had the need retaliate.God bless each and every service man who was there and witnessed the sight of such horror that was before them. I just can't imagine.
    And as always bless all who suffered at the hands of those less then human beings.
    Excellent video. Truth real truth.

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner 2 года назад

      I think it was Felix Sparks himself who said the troops went "berserk" when they saw the camp , and had to be relieved by another unit.

    • @theprinceoftides6836
      @theprinceoftides6836 2 года назад +2

      @@lewisner And I can't blame them. To see first hand what kind of inhuman barbarity people R capable of must have been too much.

    • @lewisner
      @lewisner 2 года назад

      @@theprinceoftides6836 Absolutely. One woman who gave evidence at Nuremburg said she saw her father , mother , sister and best friend shot before being shot herself but it only grazed her and she woke up at night in a pile of corpses.

  • @user-gv5bs3os5i
    @user-gv5bs3os5i Год назад +41

    My uncle was part of a british unit that liberated belson and said you could smell the camp three miles away and the villagers said they had had no idea what was going on and the whole village was made to go to the camp and witness the horrs that had accured there

    • @seesmann638
      @seesmann638 Год назад +4

      They were told by the officials that air raid victims were cremated.

  • @rdhunkins
    @rdhunkins 4 года назад +614

    This account brings home how horrific this was. Military discipline broke down, and people who were on the same side were actually threatening or fighting each other because of the what they had seen. Remember, so that this may never happen again!

    • @oldgundog4705
      @oldgundog4705 4 года назад +5

      It happened in the war of 1812. It may have happened in every war.

    • @briandora
      @briandora 4 года назад +16

      There were actually a lot of war crimes carried out by the Americans that were hidden especially German prisoners of war but clearly not as many as the Germans had done karma always get you in the end .

    • @axelpatrickb.pingol3228
      @axelpatrickb.pingol3228 4 года назад +16

      Humanity is stupid. They'll do it again... and again... and another ad nauseum...

    • @DeValiere_
      @DeValiere_ 4 года назад +40

      @John Smith There were war crimes committed by all sides during WWII - it was the nature of the beast. Total, dehumanizing warfare. But in the case of the SS guards at the camps... nah, killing them was certainly not a war crime. Way too many of them got away with their crimes as it was, so those that the Allies and Russians shot out of hand to me was a small counter to that. I know what I'd have done to the bastards.

    • @catlat3606
      @catlat3606 4 года назад +13

      Tell that to the CCP putting uighurs in "education camps"

  • @RealistOmega
    @RealistOmega 4 года назад +99

    This guy hands down has the best history videos on the entire internet.

    • @RandomDudeOne
      @RandomDudeOne 4 года назад +4

      Check out World War Two by Indy Neidel.

  • @WinstonSmith1997
    @WinstonSmith1997 3 года назад +36

    Thank you Mark Felton for the work that you do. My grandfather was a medic in USMC in the Pacific theatre. You help me stay connected with the past.

  • @tiredofit1968
    @tiredofit1968 2 месяца назад +10

    I am proud to be an American and know my country saved people who were so treated cruelly, tortured, and starved.

  • @crashburn3292
    @crashburn3292 4 года назад +117

    Astounding as always. I'm sure my father and my WWII vet grandfathers who only saw, "The World At War" on PBS on Saturdays would have loved these videos.

    • @jamessullivan1348
      @jamessullivan1348 4 года назад +6

      No doubt!

    • @TheLocalLt
      @TheLocalLt 4 года назад +3

      The world at war is still the best wwii documentary without a doubt, unbiased and actually interviews politicians from the era, including those of Churchill and Roosevelt’s opposition

  • @PiousJeems
    @PiousJeems 2 года назад +110

    My Uncle with the 45th ID helped liberate this place. He never spoke of it till I noticed an Thunderbird patch in a picture and called him years ago.
    I was hesitant to ask as my mom said the war changed him. We chatted and I explained the picture. He said, “we were there, son there are some things in life you see but have to go on and live your life.”
    I knew that was all he was going to say.

  • @johncodling9805
    @johncodling9805 4 года назад +888

    Eisenhower said take as many pictures and films of this because sometime down the line some bastards will say this never happened

    • @janedoe9421
      @janedoe9421 4 года назад +52

      John Codling, that is so true to this day!! Know your history!!

    • @conveyor2
      @conveyor2 4 года назад +31

      Not so many pictures were taken of his own 'Rheinwiesenlager' camps postwar. (Not officially POWs but 'disarmed enemy forces')

    • @oakley3815
      @oakley3815 4 года назад +19

      Are you kidding me???? He knew for years this was happening and didn't do a damn thing to help!!!! He only gave the go ahead to join the war after pearl harbor!!! USA always takes credit for winning WW2 when as a country you killed more of your own soldiers than the enemy!!! USA joined in the last 17 months after it had already been going on for 6 years!!!! USA has no issues starting wars and yet they can't win one!!!

    • @gamingthisera6339
      @gamingthisera6339 4 года назад +33

      @@oakley3815 now they are being accused for being a warmonger for helping other nation, wtf, other nation will hate everything they do

    • @oakley3815
      @oakley3815 4 года назад +4

      @Flame Resistant Troll awe truth hurts doesn't it yanky doodle 😂😂

  • @mirrorblue100
    @mirrorblue100 2 года назад +13

    My father fought in the 157 Inf Reg/45th Inf Div at Anzio - where he was badly wounded. He served under Sparks when Sparks was a captain. Sparks had an excellent combat record. You have to understand - this is what war does to people. The 45th was a federalized Oklahoma National Guard outfit - with a distinguished record during the war - Sicily, Salerno, Anzio, Operation Dragoon in southern France and finally into Germany. Of course there weren't many original NG guys left by then. Can you imagine surviving the war and then finding what the Germans had at Dachau? Of course you would want to retaliate. Thank you another great program.

    • @saving1558
      @saving1558 2 года назад +2

      Sparks was more than excellent, he was amazing. One of the men I wish I could've met.

  • @andrewd7586
    @andrewd7586 4 года назад +39

    Absolute justice! I’ve been to Dachau twice. First time on my own. The 2nd time was in 2016 & I took my 2 teenage children from here in Australia when we travelled through Europe. My then 17 year old daughter could not fathom how people could be so bloody cruel. She walked around on her own for some 2 hours & was quite emotional. My then 15 year old son felt the same way. My kids who’s grandfather served in the 2nd World War, came to understand the reasons why he & his brothers fought. This is why history cannot be forgotten.

    • @otom20
      @otom20 4 года назад +2

      Have you also educated your kids about the horrors and crimes committed by the communists ?

    • @andrewd7586
      @andrewd7586 4 года назад +4

      otom20 What was the subject matter? Dachau & the Nazi regime. Are you trying to justify this murderous, barbaric regime? Obviously it’s well known Stalin was a paranoid psychopath, if that was your inference re communists. Yes my adult children are aware. P.s. My late father & uncles fought against Hitler’s Nazi’s & the Japanese. I watched my father live the rest of his life through PSTD, associated nightmares from WW2 until the day he died. All thanks to that arsehole Hitler. But he at least had a life, unlike the victims of Dachau.

    • @aee6509
      @aee6509 4 года назад +2

      Amen.

    • @bustindustin959
      @bustindustin959 3 года назад

      @@andrewd7586 ... during your visits, did the tour guide tell you that shower room was a g@s ch@ymber?
      Yeah, I got fed that same BS too.

  • @arthurraymond5909
    @arthurraymond5909 3 года назад +94

    My father was also there. He was part of the 3rd Infantry Division, 30th Regiment attached. He spoke very solemnly about the horrors seen there in Dachau. I believe it haunted him over his life. Many years later he discovered that Pope John Paul had been a prisoner in Dachau as a young man. In 1975 my father, Major George E. Raymond Retired took my mother and I to Germany to visit some of the places that he saw and did some heavy fighting during WW2. Dachau was one of our stops. I was then 10 years old and still remember seeing the ovens where bodies were cremated. May God bless and keep all those who liberated Dachau.

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +1

      Amen.

    • @T1000Pro
      @T1000Pro Год назад +4

      I'm sorry to disappoint you but I didn't find any information that either John Paul I or John Paul II was a prisoner in Dachau at all, so that's probably a myth.

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +1

      Alas, it was confusing, chaotic time of loss, and NO. -Neither Joh PAUL 1, Or John Paul 11, were prisoners Dachau.Dachau was opened first, the earliest of the camps.

    • @barbarabaldwin7120
      @barbarabaldwin7120 Год назад +2

      @@T1000Pro O EVIDENCE AT ALL, THAT ANY PAPAL FIGURE WAS EVER AT DACHAU IN WW2..

    • @janefromherz496
      @janefromherz496 Год назад +2

      Many people feel that if you are not Christian and not knowing Christ will keep a person from Heaven, but I feel that these Jewish people in the Concentration camps knew GOD and died knowing him and they too are in Heaven.

  • @Aikitrad
    @Aikitrad 4 года назад +184

    My 95 yr old brother is still here and he was in Germany in the army of occupation, the German people were begging for food, we were little better at home in the UK as we survived on meagre rations. Thank you Mr Felton for this piece of history that I really appreciated so much.

    • @ludaMerlin69
      @ludaMerlin69 4 года назад +1

      British rations were the best in the world, at the time. The so called "rations" the british had were a healthier diet than is consumed by the brits today.

    • @aaronwood5612
      @aaronwood5612 4 года назад +10

      Anke, I am curious- How do you live with the shame of your history? While no country is perfect, yours is the only one that I am aware of to have started two world wars and slaughtered millions of innocents. This was not the work of a lone madman, it was the collective evil of the vast majority of your countrymen. Maybe, a hundred years from now (assuming you are prevented from starting any further world wars), someone will be interested to hear about your lack of clean water, medicine, electricity, or “closes.” Until then, I suggest the only comments you make should be along the lines of your gratitude to the greatest generation of heroes that ever lived for saving the world from your wicked, pathological parents. I look forward to your reply. Everyone else is just noise to me. I’m genuinely interested to hear why you think it important that the world know you had no food.

    • @conveyor2
      @conveyor2 4 года назад +2

      @@aaronwood5612 How do ANY white people live with our history?? WE are the cause of ALL suffering on this planet or don't you know??

    • @georgea.567
      @georgea.567 4 года назад +12

      wp r It’s not even unique to white people, human beings are just awful. We should all strive to be better than our ancestors.

    • @jameswilson3991
      @jameswilson3991 4 года назад

      @Anke Lutge there are no winners in war

  • @LazyDaisyDay88
    @LazyDaisyDay88 Год назад +45

    The care and willingness to try and save so many is a huge testament to US compassion. Huge respect.

    • @MaryamofShomal
      @MaryamofShomal Год назад +6

      We don’t call them our Greatest Generation for nothing! 🇺🇸

    • @LazyDaisyDay88
      @LazyDaisyDay88 Год назад +2

      @@ActionfigureGeek Well it WAS 'to do with being US' - as this was a specific moment in history that the video is referring to. Compassion is indeed a worldwide behaviour - but the world was at Dachau that say.

    • @seanwebb605
      @seanwebb605 8 месяцев назад +2

      Let's remember that the Americans were happy enough to sit out of the early stage of the war. They said it was Europe's problem. When the British gave the Americans reports of horrific events at the concentration camps, work camps and death camps they asked to stop being told about it. Thousands of Jewish refugees were turned away at U.S. ports even when the U.S. government knew that to turn that back was almost certain death. Huge respect.

    • @RobertStewart-i3m
      @RobertStewart-i3m 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@seanwebb605 There's alot of truth in what you said. People nowadays say the public didn't know; to some extent that's true. The papers withheld the stories, even when a reporter came back from Europe with 1st hand info. But-- it Did slip into the newspapers from time to time. One of the NYC papers published some of the story. On page 7 of all things.

    • @seanwebb605
      @seanwebb605 7 месяцев назад

      @@RobertStewart-i3m Rachel Maddow and Ken Burns recently did an interview discussing her book. Apparently the fascism movement in the U.S. was pretty strong leading up to the Second World War. Twelve members of congress helped fund fascist articles and propaganda through their office budgets and ability to use the U.S. Postal Service free or at low cost.

  • @crzycdn70
    @crzycdn70 2 года назад +450

    My Father was in Dacheau for 18 months. He weighed 165lbs when he entered and weighed 65.5lbs when the camp was liberated. The forced him to watch his fathers execution, there is more to his story, but it’s too graphic, brutal to tell. Schindler’s list is just a tiny glimpse. The kids of today think they have it bad. They have no idea on just how good they have it. If you have the chance, take them to a WW2 concentration camp. The birds won’t even fly over the camp.

    • @marionsinger6335
      @marionsinger6335 2 года назад +2

      For what crime was he interned there?

    • @MS-ns2pj
      @MS-ns2pj 2 года назад +9

      I’m happy that he survived. My grandfather and grand uncles served in the USMC in WW2 and then Korea. They were part of the liberation of several camps.

    • @MS-ns2pj
      @MS-ns2pj 2 года назад

      @@marionsinger6335 The crime of being Jewish more than likely? You’re not serious, are you?

    • @marionsinger6335
      @marionsinger6335 2 года назад +3

      @@MS-ns2pj My question, I'm completely serious, is that mainly serious criminals were interned in Dachau and have been since 1933!!!

    • @MS-ns2pj
      @MS-ns2pj 2 года назад

      @@marionsinger6335 Dachau was used to house Hitler’s political prisoners. The crime was defying Hitler.

  • @phillipburroughs146
    @phillipburroughs146 3 года назад +48

    In 1982, I was an ArmyBrat living in Stuttgart WestGermany when my Dad (US Army 22Yrs Retired) and Mom took my Brother and I to Munich to visit Dachau. I love these history shows and it’s one thing to watch something on a two dimensional device in so far, that it plants a seed in your head. The biggest take away about visiting Dachau are the seeds that were planted in my soul. When governments do this to people and you see the effects it does, it is incumbent upon you to always fight your government. I don’t think there’s a government on this earth that isn’t truly fearful of its people that it won’t do anything to harm you. The crematoriums weren’t as devastating as the visual displays in the museum that showed paper that was made from human skin or the sculpture made from human bones. Pictures aside, may have burnt your retinas, but the faces left marks in your heart you can never unsee. It’s one thing when you and your neighbor go to war but it’s another thing when your government goes to war upon you.

    • @MrGaryGG48
      @MrGaryGG48 3 года назад +2

      Thank you Phillip, for your comments. My father was stationed at Krabenloch (Ludwigsburg) from 1961 - 1965 and we lived in Pattonville. My parents felt much like yours did and took our family of four kids through Dachau in 1963. The "Political Correctness" had not yet infected society and the displays were truly horrific. My dad and I were just discussing that visit this evening when I was sitting with him, not knowing that this video was even on RUclips.
      He told me that he and my mother discussed this topic at some length, regarding the value of showing this piece of history. He's also retired Army and had heard the comments that General Eisenhower made regarding his opinion that these places must be shown to the public; he was specifically talking about the German neighbors who lived near the camps. My parents felt that this issue would very likely not be covered well, if at all, in our American schools. Since we lived only 2-3 hours drive north of Munich it was a fairly short trip but I've never forgotten what I saw that day.

    • @forestman2382
      @forestman2382 3 года назад

      True. Most governments in the world are evil and most of those in power are evil . How many people throughout history were imprisoned, tortured, abused and had their lives ruined and even killed , for the sake of security and stability of the regime, plus for the sake of a evil man getting and keeping power ,which he could not take with him to the grave

  • @MrBBaron
    @MrBBaron 4 года назад +76

    As a child in the fifties, I visited Dachau, as my father was stationed in Munich. I still remember it while it was still in its "raw" form. I was overcome with an intense feeling of sadness and repulsion at was done in all the "camps" It was hard and still is for me to comprehend man's brutality toward other humans. It will never change. It is a curse of our species.

    • @joemagnets9940
      @joemagnets9940 4 года назад

      @B Baron, go to Gaza, you can relive that experience.
      Joe Magnets

  • @doogalloonni
    @doogalloonni 2 месяца назад +4

    Being stationed near Dachau in the 60's, I had occasions to visit this memorial, and believe it or not, you could feel the death... It was still heavy in the air. I never left without an extreme feeling of remorse for what humanity had done to humanity at this place. Ghosts abound, and if you stand perfectly still you can hear the screams of terror still. Many other people will attest to this.

  • @ninamariehart4357
    @ninamariehart4357 4 года назад +356

    My Grandfather was a medic in the 99th infantry. He died when I was 7 and obviously I wasn't as engrossed in WWII as I am now. But my father tells stories that he refused to talk about the liberation to any of his kids. He even had a angry ban on Mercedes' because they made the parts for German tanks. I only wish I could ask him about this. Thank you Grandpa Bob, what a badass. 🖤

    • @Ripper36068
      @Ripper36068 4 года назад +19

      You should also have a ban on Porsche and VW! They were run by many ex SS soldiers after the war!! Jochem Piper the convicted war criminal was one!!

    • @bobbybogs6864
      @bobbybogs6864 4 года назад +3

      Yes, Mercedes And Porsche were part of the war effort. Here is the Porsche history:
      Ferdinand Porsche[a] (3 September 1875 - 30 January 1951) was an Austrian-German automotive engineer and founder of the Porsche car company. He is best known for creating the first gasoline-electric hybrid vehicle (Lohner-Porsche), the Volkswagen Beetle, the Auto Union racing car, the Mercedes-Benz SS/SSK, several other important developments and Porsche automobiles.
      An important contributor to the German war effort during World War II,[1] Porsche was involved in the production of advanced tanks such as the VK 4501 (P), the Elefant (initially called "Ferdinand") self-propelled gun, and the Panzer VIII Maus super-heavy tank, as well as other weapon systems, including the V-1 flying bomb.[2] Porsche was a member of the Nazi Party and was called the "Great German Engineer" by Nazi officials.[3][4] He was a recipient of the German National Prize for Art and Science, the SS-Ehrenring, and the War Merit Cross. Porsche was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame in 1996 and won the Car Engineer of the Century award in 1999.
      And the Daimler-Benz history in the Nazi-Era:
      From 1937, Daimler-Benz AG increasingly produced armament items such as the LG 3000 truck and aircraft engines such as the DB 600 and DB 601. To create additional capacity for aircraft engine production in addition to the Marienfelde plant the Genshagen plant was built in a well-concealed forest location south of Berlin in 1936.
      Armament production accounted for an ever-growing proportion of the company’s revenues up to the start of the war. In the summer of 1941, the Daimler-Benz AG Board of Management, chaired by Wilhelm Kissel, no longer envisaged a swift end to the war or an imminent return to producing civilian vehicles.
      The most important line of business was truck production, whilst passenger-car manufacture - already limited to military requirements since the beginning of the war - was in decline and virtually came to a standstill by the end of 1942. The company was now focusing on the manufacture and assembly of military components for the army, navy, and air force.

    • @ninamariehart4357
      @ninamariehart4357 3 года назад +5

      @@bobbybogs6864 @Ripper36068 I think it was more that Mercedes had an actual physical point, like they made the engines. I'm sure he had a terrible view on all of them as a whole but it was just that distinction having a physical thing to hate.

    • @mommafletch
      @mommafletch 3 года назад +11

      Yep. My Dad and his brothers fought in that war. None of them would ever buy anything German. I'm 53, and I still have never bought a German vehicle- I know it's weird, but I still think about how badly it would have upset my Dad, and he was a good man.

    • @Chris-cf2kp
      @Chris-cf2kp 3 года назад +9

      BMW has history of forced labor production during WWII as well

  • @DRTACP
    @DRTACP 4 года назад +94

    I was there in 1984. The barracks are gone with exception of three. The crematorium was still there. I can say one thing, that the feeling that comes over your body, when you enter through the main gate, is almost indescribable. The feeling of depression but also solitude. There was this free feeling and the air was so fresh, but once you enter any of the. Buildings the feeling of scared takes over.

    • @stevendeaton5182
      @stevendeaton5182 3 года назад +8

      I've been there as Well..
      You are Totally Correct..
      We were all laughing and joking around..
      But, when we walked thru the gate...IT hit you...Can't describe it...
      Its a sobering silence...

    • @23draft7
      @23draft7 3 года назад +7

      I couldn't go there. Any of those camps. Absolutely barbaric. Wouldn't want to be any of the germans involved when they met the Lord. And if your one of the idiots that says this was a hoax, give your head a shake.

    • @ramonamontayne8156
      @ramonamontayne8156 3 года назад +4

      I couldn't go to any of them; I would be on my knees before walking through the gates, the horror of it all. Still, murdering German guards; everyone became "tainted"; the best word I can find.... my father served in Korean for all three years; he only spoke of it to me once.... the horror is real.

    • @Goodiesfanful
      @Goodiesfanful 3 года назад +7

      And the townsfolk living near Dachau said they didn't know anything about it. Yeah, right. Bet it was all over town like wildfire that the Allies had found the camp and the reactions were anything but surprise.

    • @chrisanderson1077
      @chrisanderson1077 3 года назад +1

      @@stevendeaton5182 I know what you mean. I was there in 2015. It’s hard to describe being in a place where so many horrible things happened.

  • @smileandpresson
    @smileandpresson 3 года назад +176

    My husband and I visited in 2017. It was one of the most depressing experiences of my life but I do not regret it. You step into the camp and immediately feel this immense weight. Almost like the ground cries out for justice for the brutality that happened on it. There is an incredibly haunting and eery feel to the entire place. I alternated between emotions of anger, disbelief, feeling like I was going to throw up and knowing that i was being shaken by the experience. The museum display was tasteful in brutal honesty - the victims deserve no less than the truth being told. I just wanted to dive back in time and rescue everyone. I will never forget the feeling of visiting so many years after the fact, I can barely imagine the feelings and chaotic emotions trying to process that while liberating the camp itself!! I can only imagine. Wow.

    • @katherinegadpaille1013
      @katherinegadpaille1013 2 года назад +12

      A similar crime is happening in China right now. It barely makes the news and even when it does people may tsk tsk but that's about it. Pretty much the same response people had back during WW2 when they heard about Jews bring placed in camps.

    • @jamesrobertson2712
      @jamesrobertson2712 2 года назад +6

      Thanks for sharing the experience. I remember visiting in 1985, it was rather surreal. So surreal actually that I did not have any emotion at all. It is just beyond me that any of this actually happened. Where did humanity go ? Very important to keep these places for everyone to visit. I had the same feeling visiting the Yad Vashem memorial in Jerusalem. You feel sick to your stomach but you really don't know why, because the sheer scale of what happened is just too much.

    • @forreal245
      @forreal245 2 года назад +4

      I agree with your dark feelings. I felt the same while visiting in 1989...very sad & oppressive atmosphere.

    • @lonnietoth5765
      @lonnietoth5765 2 года назад +9

      I served in the Army in Germany from 1984-86 and got to visit Dachau . Sobering is the sense I left with . To stand in the middle of that camp and realize there was no hope for freedom must have been heartbreaking . Ironically I visited Trier , near Luxemburg , in 2017 and hooked up with my old girlfriend after 34 years . I want to move there and retire . We fell in love again ! Somethings take time !

    • @wilhelmgeisler2124
      @wilhelmgeisler2124 2 года назад +1

      AND AS SOON AS THE NAZI CAMPS WERE OPENED.....THE RUSSIAN COMMUNIST BEGAN “RE”-FILLING ALL OF THEIRS.....AND LOTS OF “JEWS”.....WHO FOUGHT LOYALLY FOR “UNCLE JOE STALIN”......JUST AS GERMAN JEWS FOR THEIR KAISER IN WORLD WAR ONE.....WERE MURDERED.....ALL OVER AGAIN!!!
      IT WASN’T THE ORDINARY GERMAN.......NOR THE ORDINARY RUSSIAN......NOR THE ORDINARY FRENCHMAN DURING THE “DREYFUS AFFAIR”.......NOR THE ORDINARY EUROPEAN PERSON DURING THE MIDDLE AGES ......SO.......WHAT IS THE COMMON DENOMINATOR & GLOBAL REASON FOR THE COMMON HATRED OF ALL THE JEWS??? Hmmmm?

  • @kristineanderson4983
    @kristineanderson4983 Год назад +41

    My uncle served under Patton and helped to liberate Dachau. He lived to be two weeks shy of 100 (I am 70 now - 2023) and I have always been fascinated by the history of WWII. Uncle Bud didn't tell me much -- partly I believe because I was his 'little niece' and surely because so many men didn't want to talk a lot about their experiences. I understood this so I never pushed. He may have talked more with my brother; I do want to ask him so that I can possibly learn a bit more. I wonder what kind of conditions he was exposed to throughout that war. When I see videos like this, I always look for him. History never ceases to amaze me. The brave men and women who work and fight in and for wars are special heros to say the least. But the ultimate sacrafice to me, would be for mankind to be brave enough to make peace at all costs -- a notion far more difficult than fighting for any cause.

  • @thatoneguyfromhs4944
    @thatoneguyfromhs4944 4 года назад +1023

    This needs to be driven into the heads of every young American, there's too many ignorant people today in this country that deny these events

    • @Mathias-kz5dr
      @Mathias-kz5dr 4 года назад +31

      @@Mar-bh7uj And with high you mean like 0.05 percent of the population?

    • @coffeecrimegal5968
      @coffeecrimegal5968 4 года назад +10

      @@Mar-bh7uj No we Americans are not blind or deaf to that fact.

    • @savannah505
      @savannah505 4 года назад +48

      @@coffeecrimegal5968 Well that hardly explains why so many young people go around having called conservatives "Nazis" does it? Maybe you are not blind, but many are.

    • @Mathias-kz5dr
      @Mathias-kz5dr 4 года назад +2

      @Bendel Wolide Around 10 %

    • @Mathias-kz5dr
      @Mathias-kz5dr 4 года назад

      @Bendel Wolide 😊

  • @rhhutchins9723
    @rhhutchins9723 3 года назад +44

    My brother was there as part of the 42nd, Thunderbird Division. He saw the horrors but would never talk about them. He was 19 years old. He passed away in 1965 due to cancer.

    • @agnivabanerjee3983
      @agnivabanerjee3983 3 года назад +1

      RIP 🙏🙏💐

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

      I'm sorry for your loss 🙏🏻 Thank you for your family's and brother service.

  • @joannekalish1020
    @joannekalish1020 3 года назад +34

    I went to Dachau in the 70's while on a European tour. I'll never forget the eerie feeling getting off the train. How could this have ever happened? How could any person treat another person in this way? I will never forget that experience. To think that I stood on the grounds of this history makes me sick. May God bless all the victims of this inhumane treatment. I cry everytime I think of this.

    • @johnhaas3270
      @johnhaas3270 11 месяцев назад

      It happens more then you think
      It’s actually happening today in certain parts of the world

  • @jvry8c
    @jvry8c 2 года назад +14

    I went there as part of my study abroad in Germany. The feeling of sorrow was so overwhelming I was crying almost the whole time. I hated my teacher for making us go through it but now I understand why.