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STRONGCOMMUNICATIONS uploaded a new video
(1 year ago)

Filmmakers note: This may be a hard pill to swallow but history is repea...
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Filmmakers note: This may be a hard pill to swallow but history is repeating itself. Sorry to say but after 20 plus years of research things are stacking up againist humanity....once again.
History is mythology recreated by each generation....Voltaire
As with all things it must be further researched. New/current research must be explored. With time truth may emerge. Read: "War is a Racket" by Gen. Smedley Butler. "Trading with the Enemy" by Charles Higham.
War is about greed. Follow the money for greater insight. Everything Rothschield. And history does repeat itself. In the US it is happening just like in pre-war Germany. Camps have already been built and staffed. Homeland Security and FEMA have NAZI like powers and conditioned human beings will walk into slave labor camps just as before.
I urge you all viewing this video to protect yourselves, family, friends and neighbors as best you can.
Please arm yourselves first with knowledge and.....
In the words of former First Lady Nancy Reagan........"Just say NO!"
RESIST
May peace, happiness and understanding find us all.
"The Liberation of KZ Dachau" chronicles the personal and intimate stories of the soldiers who first entered the concentration camp at Dachau on April 29, 1945.
"Executed with great eloquence, The Liberation of KZ Dachau is ninety-four gripping minutes of true-life drama disguised as a documentary.".........Wilson Library Bulletin
Highest rating. Highly recommended. Editor's choice. "The Liberation of KZ Dachau is a powerful testament from the men who entered the Nazi death camp." .........Video Librarian
"Recommended viewing" ..........Library Journal
To purchase a copy: http://www.amazon...
School/Library version with PPR available contact strongcomm@yahoo.com
The full rights worldwide for this feature length documentary are available. This includes camera originals.
Video Librarian **** Four Stars-Highest Rating "The scene there robbed the human mind of reason" says retired General Felix Sparks on what he saw on entering Dachau on April 29, 1945. Sparks had received a call that morning ordering him and his men to take and secure the prison camp of Dachau. They were given no idea of what to expect. James Kent Strong's maiden effort "The Liberation of KZ Dachau" is a powerful testament from the men who entered the Nazi death camp, and saw firsthand what had been rumors previously. William Walsh, John Lee, Howard Buechner, Ralph Fink, Hank Mills, Edwin Gorak, these interviewees and others describe the hell that they found at Dachau, where the first sight was a train loaded with 2,300 dead bodies. Although battle veterans, these men wept in rage and disbelief, and the word was passed through the troops: "take no prisoners". Both the inmates and the American soldiers shed blood that day, taking their vengeance on the German officers and enlisted men. Today, these men have mixed emotions about the additional violence they witnessed, some believing it was justified under the circumstances, others feeling it was wrong regardless. "The Liberation of KZ Dachau" is not a pleasant film to watch; intercut with the often painful recollections of the former soldiers are horrifying scenes shot at Dachau shortly after the liberation. Still, the film raises challenging ethical questions, and reminds us that in order to learn from history, it is sometimes necessary to look at the horror. Highly recommended. Editor's Choice.....Randy Pitman, Editor
Library Journal This program presents the personal side of combat- the reactions of soldiers to the horrors of the battlefield- and the effects of extraordinary mental and psychological stress on the subsequent lives of these World War II veterans. The effects are evident in "The Liberation of KZ Dachau", which focuses on that day in April 1945 the soldiers in Company I liberated the concentration camp. The men tell their own stories, with film clips of the camp interspersed to illustrate. They describe the train loaded with 2,300 corpses, the walking skeletons that were the inmates, the condition of the barracks, the piles of dead lying throughout the camp, the smell, the sounds, the scenes so beyond any horror they had seen in more than two years of battle. These interviews are edited so that the days events are retold in chronological order, from the first approach to the camp that morning to the return to the camp that night. This program adds another perspective to the Holocaust story and its concentration camps: the raw, gut-level scream of outrage and hate from the Allied soldiers who liberated them. The language and film clips require previewing before showing to children. Recommended viewing.....Doug Kranch, Ambassador College Library
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