The Spielberg Jewish Film Archive - Jewish Life in Lvov
Вставка
- Опубліковано 24 бер 2010
- Name: Jewish Life in Lvov
Year: 1939
Duration: 00:10:07
Language: English
Abstract: Jewish life in Lvov, Poland, on the eve of World War II.
The Spielberg Jewish Film Archive -
The 500 films, selected for the virtual cinema, reflect the vast scope of documentary material collected in the Spielberg Archive. The films range from 1911 to the present and include home movies, short films and full length features.
שם: חיים יהודיים בלבוב
שנה: 1939
אורך: 00:10:07
שפה: אנגלית
תקציר: החיים היהודיים בלבוב ערב מלחמת העולם השנייה.
ארכיון הסרטים היהודיים על שם סטיבן שפילברג -
חמש מאות הסרטים שנבחרו עבור הקולנוע הווירטואלי משקפים את ההיקף הנרחב של החומר התיעודי בארכיון שפילברג. באתר ישנם סרטים משנת 1911 ועד ימינו אלה ביתיים, קצרים ובאורך מלא.
כל הזכויות שמורות לארכיון הסרטים היהודיים על שם סטיבן שפילברג ולאוניברסיטה העברית בירושלים 2010; דף הבית; www.spielbergfilmarchive.org.il
multimedia.huji.ac.il/
Lwów, beautiful vibrant Polish city of my grandfather's birth. Poignant film.
Thank you for showing the rich culture of Jews in Lvov. It must have been a wonderful city to live in. Acrobats, gefilte fish, and musicians in the street! And how forward thinking, the curvas were licensed! I would love to visit one day and reminisce
I was recently in Lviv and can tell you that there is a Jewish community. There is only one synagogue of the 45 mentioned in the film that is currently functioning.
A few years ago, I spent one week in this very interesting city: multicultural and An attractive mix of Italian, Austrian and Slavic architecture! Nowadays, you can find evaral churches of different religions: my favourite is thé Armenian church!
Before 1939, there was a large Jewish community!: 45 synagogues , a Jewish theater and even a large Jewish hospital.
Golden Rosen synagogue is a ruïne now, but you can eat Kosher dishes in thé Golden Rose restaurant, which is very cosy!
On this moment, thé Lauder foundation try to relieve thé Jewish life again: kindergarten and primary school and even secundary school!
Before thé war, this city was Polish and after it became Ukrainian! ch. Jacobi ( many greetings from Antwerp- Belgium)
9:39 - ,,...in this spring of 1939"... Sounds creepy.
I am in Lvov now (Aug 2013) and not able to find any of these same sights now that there is no longer a Jewish community here. Strange how completely erased it feels here...
I was also there, 2015, and there is something jewish - the active community building, restaurant, former jewish hospital from 5:07, places (ruins) of synagogues and souvenirs. Here's jewish tour in Lwow today: ua-cam.com/video/vf7h-Vk4hUY/v-deo.html
And I wonder how the Palestinians feel when these same ppl massacred villages
Lwow was a polish city xxi 14 th to 18 c. and then from 1918 to 1939
It should be polish actually. But as I noticed, Ukrainians there nowdays like everything polish and western ;)
@@byzantineemperor6459 The population is very Ukrainian. While most Ukrainians I know like Poles, they're proud of their distinctions.
Wonderful! Lvov in happier days
Beis Aharon V'Yisrael Synagogue is a functioning synagogue in Lviv.
A great film, but I really can not understand how a jew can live in Lemberg/Lvov after Shoah and after 30 years past the liberation from comunism. Estern Europe is the biggest jewish cemetery in the hole world.
A dark history in Lviv 1941 !
My great grandmother and her daughter, my grandmother, came to America from Lvov in 1913. It was in the Austro-hungarian empire then.
Lemberg, Austria at the time. Lwow Polish name, Lviv Ukrainian name, Lvov Russian name
Which one?
A Wonderful City for everyone to enjoy.
Lwów semper fidelis-piękne ujęcia z kwitnącego wówczas miasta tak zniszczone później przez totalitaryzmy i nacjonalizmy.
אבא שלי מלבוב הגיע אחרי מלחמת העולם השניה...
lwow, jescze ciebie pamientam, jak ciebie lubie teraz.
My beloved grandmother's hometown during her life there before the War. She took her Jewishness to the grave with her after surviving a slave labor camp. I found out through a DNA test! I wish I would have known this part of her and her life experience. I adore her.
Magnificent. nazi Germany would never have coped with such vitality.
Did tou believe in Holocaust? 😅
Did you take the vaccine? Jews say it save......😊🎉🎉🎉
Polace zavsze byli bardzo kulturalni i ulozone. I to vidac po panu.
My grandmother was put on a ship to NY by herself at age 19 to escape the 1918 pogrom in Lwow. Her parents stayed and disappeared during the Holocaust.
Unfortunately, nothing of jewish objects, except one restaurant, is renovated. There's no museum, nothing. It's much better in Czerniwci and, expecially, Krakow.
Могли б і на якіснішу копію розщедритися (а вона є)... бо це не копія-плівка, а стара шмата, чи як кажуть українці - митка :)
Стидуха.
:) - nice old documentary - but spoiled at least 50 times with wrong pronunciation - Russian (Львов, L'vov) - which appeared only in repressive Soviet after-WW2 times.
If authors wanted to use historically correct Polish one - it should be: [lvuf] ( Lwów,).
Yiddish would be: Lemberg - לעמבערג or Lemberik - לעמבעריק
Now - only one correct pronunciation is Ukrainian: L’viv (Львів) - meaning "city of Lev (lion)" - name of son of founder of city - King Danylo Galytskyi - founder of city.
During ww2, and before ww2, Lviv was a mixed city of Ukrainians, large number of Poles, and yes, 25 percent ethnic Russians. To avoid questions, the ethnic Russians of Lviv called themselves (Russian) Jews . In Lviv and most of the Baltic states, hundreds of Russian families which had lived in Lviv and Baltic states for centuries since 988 AD usually claimed to be Jews until about 75 years bac falsely. Many died because f this, as Local right wing men begged Hitler SS armies t decrease the Russian population of Ukraine and the Baltic kingdoms. After ww2, the local ethnic Russians gave their true faith as mostly Orthodox and Catholic and 5 percent Jewish Russians, saying their forefathers lied. The Nazis said they were misinformed and that the ethic Russians were not all Jews. Nazi POWs said they as ruling Nazi officials would not have massacred the Russians of Lviv. Ukrainians are indirectly grateful that the number of ethnic Russians came down during ww2 due to massacres by Nazi Germans. Nazis said Nazi massacres were a mistake in Lviv as these victims turned out to be ethnic local Russians.
Lviv/Lwow/Lemberg and the whole Galicia had been a really heterogeneous land since the time of the Habsburg Monarchy and even before. Stupid nationalism has destroyed everything
spielberg is big , lviv a big history , beautifull city pa pa
lwow Polish city
HI, Mr. Spielberg ,very nice film. I was born in Lviv. and the city was called in polish--Lvuv with spelling o-kryskovane, or ukrainian --Lviv. You name my city in russian pronunciation -Lvov,but in that time ,spring of 1939 they did not occupied yet my beautiful city. Only russian are calling my city -Lvov till now . It is not right.
It 's name LVIV.
Spielberg has nothing to do with it. This is a 1939 documentary, when it was part of the USSR (just before WWII), hence the pronunciation.
.
You missed the point This is a story about Jews and their life's
Lvov, Liviv, Lavov... who cares?
But you missed the point because you are blind, hypocrite. and ignorant.
Stupid chauvinist all in all.
@@ADAMSIXTIES Lviv(Lwow/Lemberg) was not apart of USSR at the spring of 1939 it was part of Poland West Ukraine and West Belarus was Polish at that time until the Nazis and Soviets invaded
interesting video of the history of the Jewish people.
я в захваті
And then - during WWII - barbaric ukrainian psychopaths from UPA and Nazis murdered with a bewildering bestiality Polish intelligentsia and Polish Jews and all that amazing culture is now lost and forgotten.
Lviv is not polish city. It was occupied by Poland for 7 years only.
You are an idiot. Lwów was always polish city.
until 1945 80% of non-Jewish population was Polish.
Have you studied this problem?
Recently it became part of the Ukraine. However Ukraine was never a sovereign country until recently. Ukrainians were just an ethnic group living in that region, and not an independent nation.
You are wrong, Vitaliy. Lwów was Austrian, Armenian, Lithuanian, Jewish, Polish and Ukrainian. It was for everyone and no nationalist could change it.