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Name the movie (solved as Schindler's List)

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Raaike

Monique, hetgeen je in je jeugd geleerd hebt, vergeet je toch niet zo snel.
Fijn dat je nog veel herinneringen hebt van Vlaanderen ! :-)))

starlord

Zie je wel dat het nog lukt, Monique :-)

monique27

Ik was geboren in Ronse en leefde daar mijn 24 eerste jaren. Ik heb in Connecticut gewoond sinds 1972 (februari 29th). Een schrikkel jaar.

Raaike

Dat vind ik ook Starlord. :-))
Monique, hier zijn nog vlaamse jigidi mensen. :-)))
Vertel ons eens hoe lang je hier in België gewoond hebt.

starlord

Ronse? I was mistaken and thought you were from the east of Flanders (Limburg). But it's in East-Flanders indeed
De hoogste tijd dat je nog es wat Nederlands gaat spreken en schrijven :-)

monique27

The town's name is Ronse and we are know as the Ronsische zotten. Very proud of that! lol I have nobody to talk to in het algemeen beschaafd nederlands, so I am very rusty in 't vlaams en frans

starlord

East Flanders, Monique? That's where I live :-) The province of Limburg
It's a small world. Where were you born? So you still speak Dutch?

monique27

Starlord, I was born in East-Flanders, and also have heard firsthand tales, of the nazis by my parents. I now live in Connecticut.

starlord

Unfortunately 99% of my books are in Dutch, Libsmith, as I live in the Dutch speaking part of Belgium (Flanders). And I do hope you'll be able to visit Auschwitz one day. It'll change your life, let me tell you that. I began digging into the camp history after a visit to Breendonk, a transit camp in Belgium. Let me see what English books I have in my collection :-)
Thanks for sharing my interest in this historical matter.

Libsmith66

I hope I don't sound morbid to say I would like to go one day-I BELIEVE it all happened, but I want to see where it happened. I want to cry and pray for the innocent souls that were tortured and died just because of who they were born to be. I want to walk where they walked. I would love to visit the museums I have read about-I don't think a person can really grasp the true reality until they have been there-I don't think I'll ever understand, I don't want to-that would make me as crazy as he was! But the enormity of the massacre, the fear-I want to stand there, where they did, see the gas chambers-we have had it too easy, to protected-maybe I do want to understand. I wish I couuld access your book collection-they were such a brave people. I can honestly say I do not think I would last one day.

I would like to know how the cruelty and disregard for human suffering spread so easily among the Nazis. Gas chambers, crematorias, the so called medical experiments-it was like one person would come up with a new form of torture, mass murder, and everyone else jumped right in without question and did it-they seemed to enjoy it or they could have stopped it as there were more of them than the leaders.

That goes back to a question I have had since childhood-how can you hate someone you don't even know? Question 2, how could you torture and kill other human beinsg one time, much less thousands to millions of times, and look yourseslf in the mirror, much less not cut your own throat for being a devil. Nazis then, Isis now, I don't understand any of it. But, I degress.

You have peaked my curiosity starlord. I have not "studied" in years, and I think I want to learn even more on Nazi Germany and Hiitler's attempted purge of the Jews. Thank you for sharing this-I've been looking for something new to delve into, you have given me my new journey-even if it will prove to be an unpleasant one. I also think it is time to watch Schindler's List again, while I'm studying I may watch it several times!

If you have any suggestions of good books to get started with, email me please at libsmith66@yahoo.com (I've never given that out on here, you truly have fired up my desire to learn more about this dark period of history. I thank you!)

monique27

Thanks for the oscar, Starlord. It is also one of my favorite movies.

starlord

I have to admit it is my favourite movie of all times, Libsmith and I watch it at least once a year. I got about 600 books on concentration camps and I visited Auschwitz and Auschwitz II (Birkenau) some 20 years ago.
Walking around on the very same spot where it all happened is so much more overwhelming than seeing it on TV. The barracks, the latrines, the gas chamber, the crematoria...
That memory still sticks to one's soul and will never fade. I saw people crying, praying. Very emotional that was.

Libsmith66

I do believe so, one of the best-yet saddest movies of all times. The first time I watched it I sat there crying in horror, yet so amazed at what one man accomplished in saving so many people. Without him there would have been many, many more than the reported 6 million Jews (not counting the other "inferiors" Hitler tried to exterminate as well). I have a copy of this movie and at times I will watchh it again-especially when I want to give up because I am only one person and feel I can't make a difference-sometimes the power of 1 is mighter than the power of an army (or at least the mad leader of an army!).

starlord

Indeed it is, Monique :-)
You won today's oscar, well done

monique27

Is it Schindler's list

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