My dad was a Partisan from Trieste, an officer. He told me after his squad was fired at by Nazis in the forest. They fled and he took one of his soldiers who had been injured to this hospital. It's great to see it here. 👍 (Lt. Alberto Kovacic (Covacio) 1925-2015)
@@fractaldreams1822 No sorry I got confused, I was asking if your grandfather had been attacked by the fascists or by the Nazis, but then rereading your comment, I saw that you wrote it. So your grandfather was Slovenian?
@@alexs7189 My dad ... His family has a Slovenian background. Trieste was a free port under Austria before the war. It was the way goods were imported into land locked territory for those countries. His family were living there when WW2 started.
My grandfather (Viktor Grželj 1925-2003) from Pivka was also wonded in battle with the Nazis and was taken to this hospital. It is awesome to hear all of this story's of soldiers helping soldiers.Cheers to Trieste
Hidden gem of Slovenia. I was here in the summer first time despite I have been visiting Slovenia few time every year since 1998. Nice and quiet place (may be due to COVID-VIRUS). Thank you BBC for this little documentary and my the best greetings to Slovenia.
@perifaldo gerinomi I never worship communist, you don't know me at all. I come from family which was persecuted including me during almost 40 years by them. And what about you my friend? You are silly when you are not able to percieve the nature as is.
What nobody seems to be mentioning is that a few years back during a big storm the whole complex nearly crashed down the mountain because of all the water. But it was repaired and is still standing :D
As an Italian, I am very sorry for the terrible things that we Italians did to you during the war, both to you Slovenes and to Croats. No more war between our peoples and between our nations.
Never nothing wrong with not knowing. Admiting you do not know is already a good part of learning. I hope noone judged you for this. No reason to feel insecure with your knowledge, just keep on exploring new things and visiting places so you can have wonderfull stories to tell. We got plenty of time now anyway.
Ka slovenac, ne ćudi me da nisi nikad čuo. Ima u Hrvata takve partizanske povjesti da I sami jedva znate. Sad posle 30 godina pranja glave oko novih nacionalizama, vama je još teže. Ali nemoj da zaboraviš, Hrvata je bilo u partizanima tri puta više nego je bilo svih Ustaša ikad živo.
well, I met a motorbiker from Switzerland in my village. Before saying his name, and his girlfriend was lying stretched on the bike, he told me I live in a paradise. I showed him where to hide from storm, that was comming. Then said, I know. You wont have any refugees in Switzerland, comming from Slovenia. We know what we have.
It's fabulous hearing about the people who made a difference that we have never heard of. Or according to google translate. Čudovito je slišati o ljudeh, ki so naredili spremembe, za katere še nismo slišali.
Many thanks BBC, it was a pleasure watching this short video. She was a marvelous person, we need more like her in the world today. Again, grateful thanks. 👍👍👍👍👍👍
I saw my grandads picture there, where he was healing from thyfus at 21 gge, back in in 44'. I'm 50 now. I belive my grandpa was Franja's lover. He was chosen to be her assistent, until one colonel came to pick him up. Looking back at his ww2 pictures, he looked better than, and alike Harrison Ford.
No. She was a fighter doctor. She got husseled by idiot officer after the war. Won her case at the end. Its when you tell upper brass to flox off, and that you as a doctor, wont give him priority... civilisation is based on military, and works on the system of privilages. It takes a true human, to set those privilages straight. Franja did. She is a ledgend of partisans in ww2.
I love this! There is so much ‘hidden’ history from europe I am just dying to know about or explore. These stories are rarely being told and especially coming from Western Europe these amazing things are just never told
Everyone of us, slovenian gen x, went there on a school trip, elementary school. I belive they stopped after breakup of Jugoslavia. But by that time, I was already done with high school.
@@joskojansa1235 dragi jožko, ni treba, da te je sram biti slovenec, sramujemo se lahko samo stvari, ki jih nekateri v našem imenu počnejo. pa lep dan želim :-)
@hr zr so you'd rather live under nazism then under communism?? Sorry, but no matter what you think of communism, you can't deny that it was 1000 times worse for us than communism
Yes, Franja hospital got destroyed in the floods few years back... took us a year to get it back to original. Guys repairing it after floods, even told me not to come, as they got all the helpers they can think of.
A Croatian and a great admirer of Slovenia and Slovenians here. During WWII, a large part of Slovenia was simply annexed to the Third Reich. The rest was occupied by Mussolini 's Italy. That did not stop Slovenians from forming the Osvobodilna Frontal (roughly: the Liberation Front), a very strong and dedicated patriotic resistance movement. The OF was made up of people of a variety of political beliefs and persuasions. They all got together and united around the common goal: liberate Slovenia. The OF was a most valuable part of Josip Broz Tito's partisans, the guerilla anti fascist freedom fighters. Anyway, some time in early 1942 the Slovene partisans realized that fighting the ski-equipped Nazis in wintertime snow-covered Slovenia was impossible. A swift action was taken. A couple of prewar Slovenian ski jumpers and alpine skiers, all sympathetic to the Osvobodilna cause, organized production of skies in the woods of Gorenjska, intended for Slovenian partisans to be able to fight the Nazis on a more equal footing. The Nazis could never find out the whereabouts of the ski making "facility", regardless of whatever atrocities they tried. It was only after the end of WWII and the liberation that the ski-making operation was made public. It was turned into a peace-time sporting goods production facility. Over the years, it became one of the highest quality winter sporting goods manufacturers. And certainly the most innovative. You may even have heard about it. It is called ELAN.
@@joffrey.ph_ it's normal for slovenians to go on a field trip there... Slovenia is so small u need less than 2 hours to get from one side of the country to the other 😁
Everybody in Slovenia knows about Franja and her efforts as well as there are about 60% of female doctors compared to 40% of male doctors in Slovenia. So don't bring your silly western identity politics if you have no idea what you are talking about.
Not only its not a feminist issue, but Franja would kick your ass, for you to even suggest it. She took all that was thrown at her. And when it was political. Back in late 40's, you paied your words with death if wrong. She wasnt. Franja was a true hero.
My arabic friend from Abu Dhabi does. Just before he fells a sleep in his rent-a-car, that I'm driving the same day he comes, just before he drops to sleep, he says to me, you cant see it what it looks like from google earth.
@@semki6819 Yes, I did. 46°09'14.14" N 14°01'43.67" E It's difficult to see the roofs through the trees, but if you step back in time the photos from some years show it better.
BBC started, a long time ago now. This is so very special, others will come like crazy, to shoot their episode. Us slovenians, know what we have. And hospital Franja, was just one of 250 makeshift, forrest covered, battlefield active, permanent hospitals for slovenian Tito's partisans, fighting in ww2.
My parents fled from that area late in the war, wandered around Europe (always hiding) for a couple of years before ending up in Genoa where they jumped a boat for Australia.... the rest is history.
My half of the grand parents was true blood first partisans. Meaning fighting from 6.th April 1941 until the end. The other half was Wehrmacht artillery colonel, flown from Stalingrad as heavilly wounded. They ended up in Argentina, colonel half alive. He managed to take out his whole family to Argentina, before the end. His children came back every year, since late 70's, at great costs to them. We loved them all, and did everything we could for them. Its really, really, really, a sad story. But like you said... the rest is history. Its up to us now, to remember our own history.
The father of one of our Slovene family friends was a partisan, and one of his many duties was to make sure the Nazis never found the hospital, often with distraction attacks, even murdering possible collaborators. Only two out of every five of our parents' Slovene friends survived WW2.
Slovenia was a hotspot of resistance movement. Thats where Germany took massive beatings. This hospital was never found because of the ingeniosity of its founders and not because of its insignificance.
Germany never took massive beatings in Slovenia, the Slovenes even had a massive pro Nazi movement called the domobranci(home guard). The only place where the Germans took actual beatings was Serbia because it was the only part of Yugoslavia that was under direct German occupation. Also it is the place where the biggest guerilla battles were fought. No discredit to the Slovenians though.
@@davidjokic2851 Ма знам пријатељу, делим твоје мишљење у потпуности. Ја сам узео чињенице из стварности и окренуо у супротност јер видим да овде људи тако размишљају и приписују неки отпор народу који нема везе са борбом против окупатора. Ако су већ хтели да пишу о Словенцима који су се борили против окупатора могли су да узму неког Словенца из ЈВуО јер су сигурно репрезентативнији пример од Словенаца партизана.
@@davidjokic2851 Slovenia was under direct German and Italian occupation. Domobranci were not massive movement by any means but were masacred after war and thats why its still controversial topic. Actualy Slovene partisans(and Montenegrin i think) were indeed the most effective in ex yu but its true that they only used guerila tactics and there were no big battles as you said.
@@alpineanubis what does most effective mean, that they most fiercely opposed the occupation forces which is false, is it that they inflicted the most damage upon the enemy which is also false, did they maybe liberate themselves from the enemy, also not the case. The most effectively carried out resistance was within Serbia and they did everything I just mentioned.
@@mrv1271 Nah, not really. A very simplified look. Also yugoslavia was not a dream of Tito. Perhaps you need to do a more objective an inclusive reading of history from around 1800s onwards. Taking certaing chapters in history without any cause and effect and building your own narrative is quite damaging to the profession. Please in the future avoid doing that. :) We have enough amateur historians already.
Why can’t they incorporate this into school studies? We learn how suffering Europe was under the German regime But, partisans? How, as a community, many were proactive and despite the horrors, functioned way above the “norms”.
Primorska is basically the sea region of slovenia, the translation would be pri=by, morska=the sea, so the correct translation would be either coastal region or by the sea, or littoral in one word like you mentioned above
Fun fact: the Nazis couldn't wipe out this secret rebel hospital :) - but a flood a few years ago did wipe it out, along with many historical artifacts and buildings. Okay, maybe not such a *fun* fact after all :(
@@Atomy111 Many of the original artifacts were washed away. Better not think about it too much and just pretend those things that are there now are the same as before.
Excellent story, it’s just a pity it cuts out abruptly at the other.
Interesting and lovely to hear Slovenian being spoken 🥰 on the BBC without someone speaking English over the top.
i love it :)
Well then hello to you chap, good day to you from Slovenia.
@@jankorosec7 hvala lepa enako 😊
@Hector's Kmetija lep dan še naprej
Bas sam upravo to i ja pomislila. Pozdrav iz Beograda! ❤️
My dad was a Partisan from Trieste, an officer. He told me after his squad was fired at by Nazis in the forest. They fled and he took one of his soldiers who had been injured to this hospital. It's great to see it here. 👍 (Lt. Alberto Kovacic (Covacio) 1925-2015)
@@alexs7189
Are you saying the Nazis and the Fascists were being helped at the hospital? 🤷🏻♀️
@@fractaldreams1822 No sorry I got confused, I was asking if your grandfather had been attacked by the fascists or by the Nazis, but then rereading your comment, I saw that you wrote it.
So your grandfather was Slovenian?
@@alexs7189
My dad ... His family has a Slovenian background. Trieste was a free port under Austria before the war. It was the way goods were imported into land locked territory for those countries. His family were living there when WW2 started.
My grandfather (Viktor Grželj 1925-2003) from Pivka was also wonded in battle with the Nazis and was taken to this hospital. It is awesome to hear all of this story's of soldiers helping soldiers.Cheers to Trieste
@@d3vjak Hi, are you part of the Slovenian minority in Italy?
Hidden gem of Slovenia. I was here in the summer first time despite I have been visiting Slovenia few time every year since 1998. Nice and quiet place (may be due to COVID-VIRUS). Thank you BBC for this little documentary and my the best greetings to Slovenia.
Nah...it's always quiet.
A communist "gem"
@@VendPrekmurec Yep, but nature is not a communist.
@@VendPrekmurec these people fought against the Nazis...wtf is wrong with you?
@perifaldo gerinomi I never worship communist, you don't know me at all. I come from family which was persecuted including me during almost 40 years by them. And what about you my friend? You are silly when you are not able to percieve the nature as is.
What? This ended so abruptly! I need more of her story!
What nobody seems to be mentioning is that a few years back during a big storm the whole complex nearly crashed down the mountain because of all the water. But it was repaired and is still standing :D
Not what the video was about so makes sense it wasnt mentioned.
Repaired in under a month, and still free to visit. Franja hospital is at its core, whats good in us slovenians. And we'll keep it that way.
I'm Slovenian and I visited it last year. It's amazing.
Me too.
Nice kok slovencev je ta bbc video vildo
Same
As an Italian, I am very sorry for the terrible things that we Italians did to you during the war, both to you Slovenes and to Croats.
No more war between our peoples and between our nations.
@TILEN FABE Hi, thank you very much for your words.
🇸🇮❤️🇭🇷❤️🇮🇹
Oh, don't hurt yourself!
we have a common enemy nowdays. imperialism. capitalism. The rule of the rich that push us into war.
Im from croatia and didnt even know about this... always good to learn something new
Never nothing wrong with not knowing. Admiting you do not know is already a good part of learning. I hope noone judged you for this. No reason to feel insecure with your knowledge, just keep on exploring new things and visiting places so you can have wonderfull stories to tell. We got plenty of time now anyway.
Ka slovenac, ne ćudi me da nisi nikad čuo. Ima u Hrvata takve partizanske povjesti da I sami jedva znate. Sad posle 30 godina pranja glave oko novih nacionalizama, vama je još teže. Ali nemoj da zaboraviš, Hrvata je bilo u partizanima tri puta više nego je bilo svih Ustaša ikad živo.
To je naša domovina! Prelepa Slovenija ❤
lep komunizem in korupcija
Naprej od trojan ni slovenije vijolica
Ena najkoruptivnejsih drzav na svetu.
@Aleksej Brečko ja saj tam tam smo
@@MujoNovak govorim o domovini kot geografskem smislu. O vsem drugem je tukaj brezpredmetno komentirat.
24/02/2021 What a heroine this woman was. The people who built the hospital were also heroes, as well! Peace from the Land Downunder.
Yoooo my country is getting represented!! And I'm so glad they chose this amazing hospital to do it.
In vsem Slovencem ki berejo komentarje živjo!
Živijo tudi tebi!!
I'm from Belgium and this was super interesting ^^
Slovenia seems like a beautiful country with an amazing history.
Slovenia is a beautiful country.
well, I met a motorbiker from Switzerland in my village. Before saying his name, and his girlfriend was lying stretched on the bike, he told me I live in a paradise. I showed him where to hide from storm, that was comming. Then said, I know. You wont have any refugees in Switzerland, comming from Slovenia. We know what we have.
we are lucky to have such an amazing history in Slovenia... 🇸🇮💖
It's fabulous hearing about the people who made a difference that we have never heard of.
Or according to google translate.
Čudovito je slišati o ljudeh, ki so naredili spremembe, za katere še nismo slišali.
Respect from India and god blesd those doctor's souls
Vsa čast in Slava našim prednikom! Beautiful made video!
Many thanks BBC, it was a pleasure watching this short video.
She was a marvelous person, we need more like her in the world today.
Again, grateful thanks. 👍👍👍👍👍👍
As a slovenian i visited this hospital about 3 times and every time the pictures of the wounded spooked me
especially the one whos stomach exploded
is there anywhere where i can find the image?
I saw my grandads picture there, where he was healing from thyfus at 21 gge, back in in 44'. I'm 50 now. I belive my grandpa was Franja's lover. He was chosen to be her assistent, until one colonel came to pick him up. Looking back at his ww2 pictures, he looked better than, and alike Harrison Ford.
Respect from Italy, sorry for the war.
🇸🇮❤️🇮🇹
Thank you so much for this informative material!
I really enjoyed listening to the original interviews in Slovenian ♡
1:01 This woman has a look of determination and fire in her eyes that I could never have
I was there and it was amazing.
Awsome waterfalls everything!
Would recommend.
Goodbye.
I love how I don't need subtitles to understand
Titles.
@@ninacuk6815 yeah i meant titles lol
*rap
awesome
What a courageous woman, an inspiration 🧡🙏
Love from the Philippines.🇵🇭
Now THAT'S what I call a DOCTOR!!! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏 RESPECT!!!
And what a fascinating story, almost unbelievable, like a fantasy story! 😯
6:55 a truly professional cut, the best of video editing by BBC
Lol yes
lmao
Respect.
From Manila, Philippines
Lovely story!! Franja was a beautiful soul and person
No. She was a fighter doctor. She got husseled by idiot officer after the war. Won her case at the end. Its when you tell upper brass to flox off, and that you as a doctor, wont give him priority... civilisation is based on military, and works on the system of privilages. It takes a true human, to set those privilages straight. Franja did. She is a ledgend of partisans in ww2.
i m happy to be slovenian
me to
I'm* but yeah same
@@DiamondMan321 grammar nazi smh
@@zmanro lmao😂
me too
I love Franja!!!!!! Its so pretty there. i was there few times. im Slovenian.
She was a very beautiful specimen of a human being- one that has both intelligence and conscience ,so to speak....
I love this! There is so much ‘hidden’ history from europe I am just dying to know about or explore. These stories are rarely being told and especially coming from Western Europe these amazing things are just never told
I was there with my school
Quando o caráter e a perseverança de alguém não pode ser medido por ser tão grande 👏🏻
Everyone in Slovenia has a schooltrip there, its quite an attraction I would say.
Mi nismo... Za edino "skrito" ka sn jaz vedo je tam pr treh kraljah ko je neki v gozdu not
Hahahahah, kvecjem noben.
Everyone of us, slovenian gen x, went there on a school trip, elementary school. I belive they stopped after breakup of Jugoslavia. But by that time, I was already done with high school.
this is wonderful memmory for our fight for freedom. I'm proud to be slovenian.
Then fight on, NOW! I freely admit, i'm ashamed to be slovenian today.
Respect from Italy, sorry for the war.
🇸🇮❤️🇮🇹
@@alexs7189 thanks . :-)
@@joskojansa1235 dragi jožko, ni treba, da te je sram biti slovenec, sramujemo se lahko samo stvari, ki jih nekateri v našem imenu počnejo. pa lep dan želim :-)
@hr zr so you'd rather live under nazism then under communism?? Sorry, but no matter what you think of communism, you can't deny that it was 1000 times worse for us than communism
As a kid I learned about this hospital in my elementary school all the way back in 1989.
1985 here. School trip.
Love and respect from India. 🇮🇳
Proud to live close near by and I often visit. They keep repairing it because of landslides and floods.
Yes, Franja hospital got destroyed in the floods few years back... took us a year to get it back to original. Guys repairing it after floods, even told me not to come, as they got all the helpers they can think of.
I love hearing these hidden gem stories from WW2! Great stuff!👌💯 These people were a huge part of the War!
A Croatian and a great admirer of Slovenia and Slovenians here.
During WWII, a large part of Slovenia was simply annexed to the Third Reich. The rest was occupied by Mussolini 's Italy.
That did not stop Slovenians from forming the Osvobodilna Frontal (roughly: the Liberation Front), a very strong and dedicated patriotic resistance movement. The OF was made up of people of a variety of political beliefs and persuasions. They all got together and united around the common goal: liberate Slovenia.
The OF was a most valuable part of Josip Broz Tito's partisans, the guerilla anti fascist freedom fighters.
Anyway, some time in early 1942 the Slovene partisans realized that fighting the ski-equipped Nazis in wintertime snow-covered Slovenia was impossible.
A swift action was taken. A couple of prewar Slovenian ski jumpers and alpine skiers, all sympathetic to the Osvobodilna cause, organized production of skies in the woods of Gorenjska, intended for Slovenian partisans to be able to fight the Nazis on a more equal footing.
The Nazis could never find out the whereabouts of the ski making "facility", regardless of whatever atrocities they tried.
It was only after the end of WWII and the liberation that the ski-making operation was made public.
It was turned into a peace-time sporting goods production facility. Over the years, it became one of the highest quality winter sporting goods manufacturers. And certainly the most innovative.
You may even have heard about it. It is called ELAN.
Planning to visit someday
I was there on a school field tripp, it's worth a visit
@@mancroblek3272 wow! Fortunate you are sir!
@@mancroblek3272 I'm wishing for my time to visit will come.
@@joffrey.ph_ it's normal for slovenians to go on a field trip there... Slovenia is so small u need less than 2 hours to get from one side of the country to the other 😁
@@Vini7034 wow! Lucky are those who are near to the place. Still wishing for my turn though. 😉
Mama je bila super, pa še lepotica je bila.
Commissar: we are equal tovariš, but *I* am more equal.
leaders being narcissistic like usual
@@miloshp7399 nah. Its just human behaviour and one of many proofs of why there will never be a utopia.
Same as now, dear gospod. Sam poglej si to falango kapitalistov in lopovov v vladi.
@@joskojansa1235 tih bod partizan
That's how socialism works. The people are the servants of the commisars when it should be the other way round.
Wow 🥺 Slovenia this is awesome
What a national hero....just wow
My full respect!
Respect.
Ingenious women as always. While they went uncredited as usual and shoved out of the medical profession, they brought the country forward.
Everybody in Slovenia knows about Franja and her efforts as well as there are about 60% of female doctors compared to 40% of male doctors in Slovenia. So don't bring your silly western identity politics if you have no idea what you are talking about.
No, its not a feminist issue.
Not only its not a feminist issue, but Franja would kick your ass, for you to even suggest it. She took all that was thrown at her. And when it was political. Back in late 40's, you paied your words with death if wrong. She wasnt. Franja was a true hero.
Who else goes straight to Google Earth to find it after watching something like this?
My arabic friend from Abu Dhabi does. Just before he fells a sleep in his rent-a-car, that I'm driving the same day he comes, just before he drops to sleep, he says to me, you cant see it what it looks like from google earth.
Did you find it ? :)
@@semki6819 Yes, I did. 46°09'14.14" N 14°01'43.67" E
It's difficult to see the roofs through the trees, but if you step back in time the photos from some years show it better.
I'm from Malaysia and this is an amazing story...what a woman she was, Franja.. 😘 would love to know more...☺️
Amazing woman/people, editing a bit crap at the end.
This is so cool!!!! Slovenian sounds so beautiful
Beautiful History!❤❤❤❤🙏🙏
I love how only us slovenians watch this.
Im serbian brother we love you guys!!(no homo)
@@kraljsrbije1974 that's nice. I have 2 serbian classmates
To ni točno!
Hello from Serbia 👋
The occasional Canadian, too!
Anywhere I can see the whole episode??
I'm riveted!
Riveted enough to go research and not just ask here?
@@cheezheadz3928 smartass
BBC started, a long time ago now. This is so very special, others will come like crazy, to shoot their episode. Us slovenians, know what we have. And hospital Franja, was just one of 250 makeshift, forrest covered, battlefield active, permanent hospitals for slovenian Tito's partisans, fighting in ww2.
What we missed the ending, incredible story
My parents fled from that area late in the war, wandered around Europe (always hiding) for a couple of years before ending up in Genoa where they jumped a boat for Australia.... the rest is history.
My half of the grand parents was true blood first partisans. Meaning fighting from 6.th April 1941 until the end. The other half was Wehrmacht artillery colonel, flown from Stalingrad as heavilly wounded. They ended up in Argentina, colonel half alive. He managed to take out his whole family to Argentina, before the end. His children came back every year, since late 70's, at great costs to them. We loved them all, and did everything we could for them. Its really, really, really, a sad story. But like you said... the rest is history.
Its up to us now, to remember our own history.
It was really nice until you cut him off in the middle of a word.
Wow, I’d love to know more! Such a short video.
Ask...
Wow, I learned about it at school but I never visited it.
The father of one of our Slovene family friends was a partisan, and one of his many duties was to make sure the Nazis never found the hospital, often with distraction attacks, even murdering possible collaborators. Only two out of every five of our parents' Slovene friends survived WW2.
To je bila Jugoslavija, moj dom, moja dusa! Pozdrav iz Srbije💖
This is not Serbia.
@@mrv1271 learn to read...
Da je bilo 🧠🧠 još je mogla biti YU....
@@davorlekenik9563 Steta...pozdrav🙌
@@mrv1271 Please, use history textbooks to learn something. Thank you!
🇸🇮❤️
Could you perhaps upload the rest of the story? 🙂
Slovenia was a hotspot of resistance movement. Thats where Germany took massive beatings. This hospital was never found because of the ingeniosity of its founders and not because of its insignificance.
Germany never took massive beatings in Slovenia, the Slovenes even had a massive pro Nazi movement called the domobranci(home guard). The only place where the Germans took actual beatings was Serbia because it was the only part of Yugoslavia that was under direct German occupation. Also it is the place where the biggest guerilla battles were fought. No discredit to the Slovenians though.
@@davidjokic2851 Ма знам пријатељу, делим твоје мишљење у потпуности. Ја сам узео чињенице из стварности и окренуо у супротност јер видим да овде људи тако размишљају и приписују неки отпор народу који нема везе са борбом против окупатора. Ако су већ хтели да пишу о Словенцима који су се борили против окупатора могли су да узму неког Словенца из ЈВуО јер су сигурно репрезентативнији пример од Словенаца партизана.
@@davidjokic2851 italy too was under fascism but there was a big partisan movement, i think what they meant
@@davidjokic2851 Slovenia was under direct German and Italian occupation. Domobranci were not massive movement by any means but were masacred after war and thats why its still controversial topic. Actualy Slovene partisans(and Montenegrin i think) were indeed the most effective in ex yu but its true that they only used guerila tactics and there were no big battles as you said.
@@alpineanubis what does most effective mean, that they most fiercely opposed the occupation forces which is false, is it that they inflicted the most damage upon the enemy which is also false, did they maybe liberate themselves from the enemy, also not the case. The most effectively carried out resistance was within Serbia and they did everything I just mentioned.
I was there with my school!
Prelepa slovenija
Not just slovenian, it's yugoslavian 😉. Pozdravljam naše Slovence 😁
its in slovenia, it was slovenia even then , people considored themself slovenian even under yugoslavia. austro hungary and napoleon
Yugoslavia was but a dream for Marshal Tits-to. A nightmare actually.
From 1971 every republic in Yugoslavia was state in federal state - Yugoslavia.
Pozdrav v bosno. Smrt fasizmu!
@@mrv1271 Nah, not really. A very simplified look. Also yugoslavia was not a dream of Tito. Perhaps you need to do a more objective an inclusive reading of history from around 1800s onwards. Taking certaing chapters in history without any cause and effect and building your own narrative is quite damaging to the profession. Please in the future avoid doing that. :) We have enough amateur historians already.
Why this is incomplete?
Respect
Why can’t they incorporate this into school studies? We learn how suffering Europe was under the German regime But, partisans? How, as a community, many were proactive and despite the horrors, functioned way above the “norms”.
Because then they would also have to talk about all the genocides, of anyone that was against communism, that the partisans carried out after the war.
why cant they incorporate? Gledala si kako Jansa in njegovi sekundarni psihopati, degradirajo narod, gledala si to od 92 naprej... kaj si naredila?
@@Eennki that is just not true.
Interesting, from 🇨🇦
Very very interesting!!
I heard there is a book by Franja Bojc "No Endless Roads Exist; Letters to my Son", but I can't find it. Maybe there is no translation? Anybody knows?
Proud that my parents are partisans 💕✨
Ended abruptly
primorska translates to littoral
Primorska is basically the sea region of slovenia, the translation would be pri=by, morska=the sea, so the correct translation would be either coastal region or by the sea, or littoral in one word like you mentioned above
Why did it end so abrupty?
with great power comes great responsibility. the will power.
This is why im peoud of Slovenia.
beautiful time of tito
Fun fact: the Nazis couldn't wipe out this secret rebel hospital :) - but a flood a few years ago did wipe it out, along with many historical artifacts and buildings.
Okay, maybe not such a *fun* fact after all :(
They did fix and reopen it tho :D
@@Atomy111 Many of the original artifacts were washed away. Better not think about it too much and just pretend those things that are there now are the same as before.
Did you know that flood destroyed parts of Franja hospital during the war? For less than two weeks ;)
I smell a movie in the making.
I am to slovenian
Ok BBC u made me wanna go to a hospital in Slovenia. For fun
Insane
🏆👍👏
Trully Hidden Leaf Hospital
SF SN
And now something completely different. I think Borat 2 movie is a satire, not a comedy.
@@RedButtonTV1 Can't stop laughing, most of his people were working for Gestapo and guard nazi concentration camps, lol :)
@@RedButtonTV1 God help us all, and i was an atheist before i've seen that abomination.
Hitler: I thought we was smarter than this.
Nazi: perativetly not sir.
This from Spaceballs but I may mess words.
🌹👍👏
✌️
I visit this hospital in 5 6 7 and 8 grade with school
Samo slovenci smo tu ne?
Thanks we will know next time
To ja!
I was there and im from town Ajdovščina