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I have been here, no birds can be heard here its void of all sound my wife just wept and that was before we experienced everything , young people need to touch these places to truly understand the horror of war. Its not like a game on a computer
I visited many years ago. A truly moving experience. As Roger says it's eerily silent. In the 5 minutes or so it took to walk back to the car nobody in our party spoke!
Try to make documentary about Kragujevac massacre in 1941. Brutal story of small town in Sebia unknown in west. Thank you for making this videos. NEVER FORGET
I visited this place with my wife and son in 1978. There was a sign I couldn't bring myself to translate for my wife as I couldn't speak. The silence and peace of the ruins can't obliterate the sense of horror of what was done to ordinary people.
As a Limoges resident I would like to say that this was superbly narrated and the respect shown to the subject is quite evident. The digitally reconstituted village was quite moving. Very well done and thank you for remembering.
You were a survivor of this massacre? How did you survive sorry I'm just curious since it sounded like the nazi soldiers left no stone unturned by even burning the village down. I am very curious about history and I never heard about this horrible incident and like to hear stories from those of the time if possible. Condolences for your losses!
"This is the village of Oradour-Sur-Glane. Nobody lives here anymore" -- literally the opening words of the MOST authoritative documentary series on WWII - "The World at War"
Yes, I remember that truly GREAT series. My father and I watched it every Sunday night. And I remember that section on Oradour. It was awful but World at War handled it magnificently.
@@Spudtron98 the allies killed 70k french civillians during the normandy bombing campaign, they need to keep this Little stories alive to keep the crimes of the Mass murderers under the rug.
@@Spudtron98 the allies killed 70k french civillians during the normandy bombing campaign, they need this type of Little stories alive to keep the crimes of the Mass murderers under the rug.
Thank you for reporting about this sad and often forgotten moment of history. I grew up in Limoges, not far from Oradour sur Glane, and I visited the place many times as part of school trips. But more tragically, my grand mother sister died in the church with her 7 year old son, while her husband was killed in the Milord Barn. The pain was still there until my grand mother passed away in 2004. I recommend to everyone to visit the site as it’s an eternal reminder of the horrors of war. There is a bunker, next to the preserved village, where artefacts from that terrible day are exposed, frozen in time, like bullet-riddled baby strollers, watches melted and frozen at the time of the massacre and many more personal and deeply emotional items. Let’s not forget. Peace everyone.
Thanks so much for sharing this - such horrible things to have carried through your family’s journey, through your own journey. Did the SS mistake the village for another?
@@peopleofconcience thank you Paul. Actually, it was bad luck. They first stopped at another village, Vigeois, but as the mayor was fluent in German, they moved on to Oradour… Anyway, they had already set they mind on annihilating a village as one of their officer was killed by the resistance. They started by hanging 98 men and one woman in Tulle. Sadly, as mentioned in this video, this happened all around Europe… War is evil.
I visited this village a few years ago. This documentary is outstanding in bringing it to life. I left the site with a few questions, you just answered them all. Thank you.
I really like that you bring up these awful things without making it a sensational thing about it, the story itself is so powerfull! I discovered your channel a couple month ago and really liked it, subscribed immidiately, then forgot about it, saw some clip that came up on my feed yesterday from you. Watched it and wanted to subscribe, because it was so well made and saw that I allready subscribed! Anyway you own me a night of sleep because I more or less watched all your videos which missed and got to sleep about 3:00... This clip is scary and really good, it is something that our schoolchildren ought to watch and understand what happened during WW2! Keep up the good work you're doing! 👍
I visited Oradour-sur-Glane a few years ago but I found this video enlightening. I didn't know that there were convictions of some of the surviving SS men. Thanks for taking the time to put this together.
In the fall of 2019, while staying in the French village of Bellac, we visited this site. It's interesting to visit and truly shows "man's inhumanity to man." I strongly encourage visiting this site, going through their displays, and then walking through the destroyed village.
It is still happening in every corner of the world. No body cares 😢. the only thing changed is the titles . Some in the name of terrorism some in the name of nationalism and in the name of democracy .
I stopped the video at the picture of kids and the mention of kills at the very start....I'll watch it later when I will be ready to hear all that.......... Kids death bleeds my heart....
Having visited this village around ten years ago was an incredibly sobering experience. Standing in the doorway to the church, I cried. I had my young son at my side, and I couldn't imagine the horror that befell these inhabitants.
I have visited Oradour-Sur-Glane. I arrived early on a Sunday morning, and found myself alone for quite some time, just wandering from house to house, street to street. There is a sign at the entrance that says "SILENCE." Oradour-Sur-Glane is one of the saddest places you will ever visit.
Thank you for this informative and very respectful film. I visited Oradour in the early 1970’s whilst on a touring holiday in France and it left an impression on me that lasts to this day. I managed the walk through the village,stopping respectfully at the varying sites of the barbaric murders, until I arrived at the cemetery. It was the fact that the dates of death on the gravestones were all the same just set me off and I shed many a tear over them.
I was born in Tulle, the town where the 99 men were hanged (one of the 100 escaped jumping into the Correze river but was shot), and I visited Oradour. in somtimes in the late 80s early 90s (did not rememeber, I must have been 6 or 7 years old, the town of tulle organized a reconstitution with mannequin of the hanged, I did not well understood but I still remember it. There is still a memory garden outside of the town, beautiful. My grand uncle fought in the battle of Tulle against the german garrison, and they fled when the SS Div came; he has told me a few time about this before his death. My grand ftaher was working in a field south of oradour the day before the massacre, and he has seen the vehicles passing, everyone hiding because nobody knew what they can do, and my great grandparents were hiding jews. What a sad period, books have been written, but I had already bring my children to visit Oradour after 10 years old, I think "Souviens Toi", remember, is the most important thing there
"Down this road on a summer day in 1944, the soldiers came. Nobody lives here now. They stayed only a few hours. When they had gone, the community, which had lived for a thousand years, was dead. This is Oradour-sur-Glane, in France." Laurence Olivier opening the first episode of "The World at War".
I am French and Oradour is still a painful memory for me, however I support the friendship with German peoples because they made a remarkable collective work on their past that should inspire other folks including French.
As it was,even after the war,Germans were bombing,still bombing elsewhere 2nd war may ended forUK but war hadnt ended,as history says tells,what went down,just as despicable,the others involved,dads great city,story untold truths not being told, &wasntGermans who assassinated my g.pa,nor who targeted my dad,forced exile just bc his titles,not bc done wrongs,the hidden stories,abuses still behind the scene,politics lies deceit.Born into it so i born of no country when born a exile,told it,the cruelty of humans still,&humans who dont want the truth be,the story deserves needs to be told.Its amazing how being silenced really is still very real,for the very few. This is such a sad awful story&no lessons learnt,as we watch hear in the now, still there is these murderous vile,in this world,who go in against Ukraine. The innocent civilians&includes many children,being killed for bc its like just a blood sport for some who have no empathy in them, towards other humans.
Thank you for sharing this. My grandmother grew up in a town very close by to where this happened as well as born in a town that was even closer (Azerables).They never forget this and it just made the people more dedicated to helping the resistance. She was only 9 when this happened.
My French teacher lost her older sister in Oradour on that day. All she could find to remember her by was a scorched piece of the blue coat her sister was wearing, and on every jacket or coat my teacher wore she had sewn a small blue square of that material on the lapel. We were curious as to why that was, and one day a boy asked... The reason was given. along with a history and philosophy lesson which left us extremely moved and respectful. Needless to say there was never a need for the question to be asked or the reason given again for as long as we or the teacher stayed at the school... EVERY PUPIL KNEW... and so it is I am sure wherever that teacher went, and whichever school she taught at. I am now in my 70s and therefore I think the teacher will have met her sister again... but none of us have forgotten the blue squares I am sure. Like me... many will have one day gone to visit the French village near Limoges... Lest we forget...
I got a screenshot of your extremely moving comment. What a testimony to her sister’s memory, and testimony to all the people who lost everything to the brutality of this unforgettable time. God bless you and thank you for sharing this story.
@@mynamedoesntmatter8652 If only the world had learnt from such unforgettable and unforgivable episodes! The brutality is still here and rising all around despite the cruel and shameful lessons of History...
I went there a few years ago .. saw the bicycle and the car and the pram in the church. it was heartbreaking and never to be forgotten. The part that was most hurtful were the names of many villagers on their house and their profession. Made it all so real rather than imaginitive. This was very upsetting but thank you for keeping this alive. Never forget.
I visited when I was 14yrs old, I am now 48yrs old yet remember it like yesterday. Especially the pram, the car and the cemetery. I try to tell people about it but they simply don’t understand. Rest in eternal peace sweet people 😢
Thank you for your time and dedication in the making of this video to educate and document the horrific actions of that day back in 1944. Rest in peace Oradour-Sur-Glane. 🙏🏻
I visited Oradour with 2 friends about 4 years ago. We walked round almost in silence thinking of the people, families, children who died there. There is no valid justification and never will be. These place and others must be remembered and we must remember them every time an army seeks to invade another country. The actions of the SS were repellent, evil, but sadly the same is still happening today in Europe and around the world. We need to learn.
I actually visited the village when I was on holiday, there is a museum as well. It is heartbreaking walking around the village, it really hits home what happened there, a whole village murdered, men, women, children and even baby's.
@@alexperriman9298 French resistance hasn't dug weapons caches and subterranean bases under this villige, or used it's population as a shield. As far as i know.
I am British and like in a a large town near Oradour-Sur-Glane, I have visited this French nation monument one it was so upsetting I have not been back for a second visit. Nothing has been removed.
Thank you for the video. My nextdoor and his wife passed away a few years ago now, well into their 90's, but they would often come over with bags of garden produce or fruit they'd grown, and share a small tipple. They told me about friends and family they lost in nearby Oradour; the hardships of near starvation, surviving on chestnuts, turnips and Jerusalem artichokes during winter months, and how in our local woods, some French were taken out and shot for denouncing others to the Germans.
There was no bravery in the German actions at Oradour-Sur-Glane, only the villagers showed that. The German soldiers and their leaders, proved how cowardly they were, when faced with unarmed men, woman, children and babies they tortured and murdered the lot, but for a handful that survived. German soldiers replaced bravery, with senseless bastardry. This video brought me to tears.
The town of Lidice in today's Czech Republic also suffered a similar fate. I wonder what today's residents of Oradour-sur-Glane think of this atrocity. I have read the website outlining these events, and the story and the inescapable events are hard to forget.
I visited this village a few years back and it is still fresh in my memory I also visited the resistance museum in Limoges and spent some time with a old resistance volunteer and talking about his experiences fighting against the invasion and his old comrades he lived in a small hamlet near Bellec.
I lived 25 minutes from Oradour went there many times to show visitors who came to visit me ,and every time just couldn’t believe that men could do such a terrible terrible thing .
a French man was recently apprehended in Scotland and extradited to France and jail. his purported crime? he didn't just question this narrative so sacred to the French, he had plenty of evidence. So he's in jail awaiting trial.
When I was a boy I watched an episode of World at war narrated by Lawrence Olivier which featured this atrocity and from then I always wanted to visit the village. I got my chance in 2013 whilst on a motorcycle trip to France. Walking round on a miserable wet day and reading the plaques with pictures of the inhabitants of each wrecked building was hard going but walking into the church knowing quite a lot of women and children were killed there broke me. I'm glad I got to visit though.
My wife and I visited Oradour Sur Glane some 5 years ago. It was heartbreaking we as visitors reading the story whilst walking the streets we could not comprehend the sheer brutality that went on that day, we will never forget that day.
So many stories have come to light through the aid of technology. Stories that were nearly forgotten by the most are now widely available . Thank you for putting this together.
I visited here and it was one of those places that stayed with me. After I left. Walking around the village was truly a sad experience. Strangely there were no bird sounds just a silence. Heartbreaking memorial to the cruelty of war and those poor villagers mindlessly murdered. May their souls rest in peace.
Thank you for this very intresting video and reconstruction of the village. The immortality of this horrendous and barbaric act is that most of the SS involved never paid for their acts, after the Bordeaux trail of 1953, freed after only a few years in prison. I have been there and was shocked to see that noting grows, not a bird sings. A village frozen in time May they all rest in peace.😢😢
The television series The world at war, starts the premier episode in the village and ends the last episode with images of the village. The voice of Laurence Olivier, haunts me fifty years later.
My wife and I visited here in 2017 on a trip to France. I was at once both appalled and fascinated by the scene. My wife could barely speak. Strangely enough the day we were there the was a school group, who, sadly, maybe didn't understand the gravity of the village, and spend more time laughing and on their phones! It made a surreal place even more sad. Every 10th of June I remember the village and those poor souls, and remind myself that cruelly today, this is happening STILL around the world. Thank you for creating and sharing.
Hello, I live 150km from Oradour sur Glane which I have never visited and whose tragic history I know, you have really told it very well with the right amount of detail and information, your 3D animation of the town takes you back to what this small village was like before this heinous massacre! Congratulations to the person who comments on this video and who took the care and trouble to pronounce all the French words and names in French, it's important, because it gives more strength and realism to the story!😊
Very well presented. My father took us there when we were young. I will never forget it. I’ve read several articles about it over the years. The tragedy of war, of man’s inhumanity to man is shown there. May the souls of all martyred for France rest in peace 🙏🙏🙏
My wife and I visited about 10 years ago on a chilly December day. We walked through the village then up the lane to the cemetery. I was moved by the inscription on many graves “murdered by nazis”. Made it real for this man from Australia who had never seen such a thing before. Thanks for the video so I could revisit and remember.
This atrocity was not the only massacre committed in France by Nazis. It happened in many other places, like in the village of Maillé, central France, where 124 civilians were killed by another SS unit, on August 25, 1944. More than 2 months after DDAY. Among them many children and women. But unlike Oradour Sur Glane, this village was rebuilt after the war. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maill%C3%A9_massacre During 4 years, about 30000 French civilian hostages or captured Maquis fighters had been executed on the spot without any trial, just after their capture. It was not uncommon to shoot 30 or 40 civilian hostages taken at random, for only 1 Nazi officer or soldier killed : ua-cam.com/video/dsvA0UkdRuw/v-deo.html
Oh man, my gf and I stumbled upon this place in 93, looking for a campsite. We checked it out and we were the only people there, late afternoon in June. It was haunting. The pamphlet we were given said Souvenir-Vous. We still have it.
Hello, I have been there several times, I lived maybe 50 miles from Oradour, now I live in Normandy. Of all the messages written on this page, you wrote the most accurate word to describe the atmosphere there: HAUNTING. When you walk in those streets, you can hardly talk...I do not have the words to describe it, I felt not only sad, but also really scared. The pamphlet actually says "Souvenez-vous", which means "Remember".
It looked like a fruit-stand on the side of the road, only next to a fenced area I thought might be a campsite. The bored girl in the stand mentioned one nearby and since we had already stopped, we went in. We didn't expect a Nazi atrocity. Not in that part of Europe. It was a lonely feeling. When we left the stand had closed and the sun was low. We found the campsite and didn't say much until the next day.
I visited this village with a Dutch school group about 15 years ago. I expected the teens to not understand the significance of what they were viewing. Instead, the total impact of it all fell down upon my formally laughing students. The ride back to Limoges was in total silence. The horrors of war had seized them all. I will never forget this village and the horrible actions of the Germans.
I've visited here a few times, and my in-laws lived quite close. It's a very sobering and sombre place. Great video and explanation, as I wasn't aware of the whole story. Thanks.
Thank you very much for bringing this village to life once again. The horrors experienced by the people of Oradour-sur-Glane are hard to bear even today. Even if a clash with the French resistance was the motive for the tragedy, it remains a cowardly and unforgivable act by vengeful German soldiers who were nothing but murderers. All honour to the mothers of Oradour!
One of the most well made documentary's I have ever seen ! First I have ever heard of this event . Myself a US Army vet of 2 wars & 70 years old . I am sickened by anyone calling themselves a soldier that intentionally kills unarmed civilians . Orders be damned . Events like these are so disgusting it makes me ashamed of my German Ancestry . No soldier should ever follow any such orders & should do everything to stop it .
Germen were in total panic. In lorient submariner refused to go in uboat and hiddent in the streets city totally destroyed feared to be kill by population.
"Nobody should follow such order" U know american bomb have kill 200 000 french civil. Big cities have been totally erased of the map by american army.😅 In neutral point of views death is death.
An interesting post script, I discovered when I visited a few years ago. The people of the village were awarded, by De Gaulle, a combined Legion de Honeur and a massive bronze plaque that was presented and hung in the new village. After the amnesty of the French SS soldiers convicted of the massacre in the ‘53 trials, the village sent back both the medal and plaque in disgust. Even removing the notation of the medal from the town name. They also withdrew the open invite for French Govt officials, including De Gaulle, to parade with the survivors and relatives annually at the remembrance service in the old village. This lasted to the early 80’s, before accepting the govt back. But they’ve still, as of 2019, asked for the medal, plaque or heading on the town name. It’s an eerie place to visit. People are all quiet and treat it with great respect. Children can’t play there, or make a noise. It’s only very recently that photography in the old village has been allowed. Thank you for a very interested video. It’s very thorough and detailed. 👍
Here in greece we have ours oradour sur glan. The name of village is kalavrita.A BIG MASSACRE .in 13 december 1943 the 117 gebirgsjager division burned kalavrita and other 26 villages.1300 greeks inhabidans massacred with mg 42 machine gun on a hill out of the kalavrita and in the other villages in the orthodox churches with mp 40 submachineguns and grenades by the german beasts..all the male population from 12 -80 years old.you can find it if you google it.KALAVRITA MASSACRE
@@mikiszezas2731 how it possible that German nation don't pay full prize for inaction in ww2 and survive. That is prof that vikings have intention vith Russia
i visited this village with my family many years ago now, but the impact of walking the streets, seeing items standing or hanging on walls, in many cases the names of the family that live in houses attached to burnt walls, the sadness of walking the church yard, but most of all you could still smell burning throughout the village, that experience never left my family or myself, everybody should make an effort to go see for themselves, in wars NO body wins
I also visited the town 28 years ago. The silence and the way things are frozen in time profoundly shakes the soul. The scale of the indiscriminate inhumanity, to destroy an entire town in a few hours, is so distressing. The drive home was silent and I have never forgotten that day.
We will never fully identify the contribution made by the people of Oradour-Sur-Glane regarding the Normandy landings without their efforts D-Day may not have been as successful on day one as we now know with hindsight. The sacrifice of the citizenry of Oradour should never be forgotten.
Wonderful presentation and re-telling of this savage and brutal slaughter. From research I did myself after visiting Oradour-sur-glane, it seems likely that Helmut Kampfe was captured on 9th June and, along with some other SS officers, was burned alive in the back of a German field ambulance. Diekmann, a personal friend of Kampfe came across his remains on the morning of the 10th June, outside the village. Some speculate this is why he locked the women and children inside the church before setting it alight, as retribution. Either way, I'll never forget my visit to the village. It's shocking and stark. Excellent job with your video.
Visited the village in July this year. I found it to be a desperately sad place, and the massacre was difficult to understand. The new village really does convey a feeling of a new beginning. Excellent film.
According to the narative writen when you enter Oradour, things where a lot more vicious than this story tells. In the church, the SS poured petrol by the windows and hand grenades to make the bodies unrecognisable. The men, where to stand on street corners then shot only in the legs. While they where partially immobilised laying down, then also, petrol was poured over them and lit to burn them alive. That is the more accurate sad reality of Oradour sur Glane ! Leaving the parking, passing by the tunnel leading to the town, there are pictures and describtives of what did happen there. I saw there a lot of people starting to cry before even entering the town.
Having watched the series ''The World at War' narrated by Sir Lawrence Olivier in the early seventies I had to vist Oradour myself. In 2019 I made that special trip. Heartbreaking experience heightened by the families buried together at the cemetery. Elderly alongside infants was indeed painful. Unimaginable wickedness that sadly, today, some people still show.
A nicely filmed documentary of the horrific SS deed, they were the worst, because they did not shy away from killing women and children. Here in Bohemia, a similar fate befell the villages of Lidice and Ležáky. It was terrible and one does not even want to imagine it, but we must not forget!
It’s so important for people to see what “civilized” society is capable of, not only a few generations ago. These poor people were just trying to live their lives, and were rounded up by monsters, and killed. These things still happen even today, and go unreported……
I came across Oradour by accident l was travelling by car driving up from the South to look at a property near Limoges, l knew nothing of the history, but as l approached l honestly felt a real chill go right through me, a sixth sense if you will or foreboding of something terrible, on this warm summer afternoon, l actually felt it before l saw it, l didn’t realise what it was but l knew l had been affected by something and stopped and wrote down the name intending to look up later this place, l hardly stopped a minute by the side of the road but will remember it as l still do for the rest of my life that eerie feeling. Later that evening l telephoned my wife and told her l had this weird experience of something dreadful (still ignorant) as my first thought something terrible may have happed at home - lm not normally a person to get these awful premonitions
I visited Oradour to see for myself what happened that awful day. It will live in my memory forever. Thank you for making this video. As the plaque at the entrance says ‘Remember’.
I'm American and 61. I watched the World at War series all the time in my teens. I have always been interested in history and that show was impactful. . I also speak French and have been to France/Europe 3 times in my life. I spent 3 months there in 1983 but for some reason I didn't get to the beaches at Normandie until my last visit in 2018. (Altho I was at Mont St Michel) I do not remember the details of the WaW series, but this fall I plan to go to France with my friend of 40+ years who grew up in Paris and moved to the US at age 22. I will ask her if we can go here. I would like to, to pay respects. Such a sad story of the cruelty of mankind. Thank you for the very well done video.
@@sextempiric7137 haha. I lost my dance studio to covid and have lots of time on my hands. Entertaining myself by watching UA-cam. Sorry for infringing on your life! Lol
Very importantly reminds us that the SS Panzer Division responsible were just beasts We should always remember the inhabitants of Oradour-Sur-Glane. A story well told of a Crime against humanity never to be forgotten.
Great video!! Ive been to Oradour its so haunted and sad..i was the only one walking around..the cemetary has glass coffins with bones of the victims ...I agree when you enter the village and see the word "Remember " carved in stone it is really haunting..
Yep agreed! There are some absolute idiots out there. Don’t know why they feel the need to comment what they do on these videos. What an awful atrocity, needs to be remembered!
A lot of frenchmen didn`t want to know what their relatives did in WW2 ; at least the only thing they got teached in shool they are a nation of winners! .....
I live in rural eastern France, five minute away from my town is another one where the SS locked a hundred people in the church before setting it on fire, it happened after D DAY with German forces leaving France and going full scorched earth. In my hometown they blew up 2 bridges and the railway over the river to stop allied advance, nothing was burnt to the ground and no civilians were rounded up as the germans present were not SS. The mayor from back then begged the Germans not to destroy anything and spare the people, the commander of the garrisson replied he wouldn't do it anyway as it would be pointless and horrible, he had apparently seen the other side of scorched eath on the eastern front.
Never fails to amaze me just how many people back then got away without much of a sentence for their parts in massacres. People who literally murdered thousands of civilians and likely never even saw the inside of a prison, and lived long lives. Unbelievable what people can get away with in times of war.
@@Great_Lakes_Discus no it doesn't. Look at north Korea, China and the massacres in Africa. That's only a quick example. These massacres are still happening, just not on the same scale.
Did you know that on the exact same day as the Oradour-sur-Glane massacre, another massacre took place in Greece : The Distomo massacre, by the SS Polizei Panzergrenadier.
I visited my parents in France, many years ago and my Father took me to the village. Although the village is in ruins, you can still get a feel of the tragedy that happened. It certainly tugs at the heart strings.
My Wife and I along with two friends visited Oroudor sur glane in 2001 , that was such a memorable day , we were all shocked to the core , and could not believe our eyes , what a dreadful case of Mans inhumanity To Man , what struck me about this place was the eerie feeling we all felt , and strange though it may seem , I did not see or hear a single Bird , it was a very humbling experience , all those poor souls taken from this earth , and for WHAT ? for , RIP.
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I have been here, no birds can be heard here its void of all sound my wife just wept and that was before we experienced everything , young people need to touch these places to truly understand the horror of war. Its not like a game on a computer
I visited many years ago. A truly moving experience. As Roger says it's eerily silent. In the 5 minutes or so it took to walk back to the car nobody in our party spoke!
~ Lest We Forget ~
Try to make documentary about Kragujevac massacre in 1941. Brutal story of small town in Sebia unknown in west. Thank you for making this videos. NEVER FORGET
@@tapasdechance7473 Starting with you.
I visited this place with my wife and son in 1978. There was a sign I couldn't bring myself to translate for my wife as I couldn't speak. The silence and peace of the ruins can't obliterate the sense of horror of what was done to ordinary people.
As a Limoges resident I would like to say that this was superbly narrated and the respect shown to the subject is quite evident. The digitally reconstituted village was quite moving. Very well done and thank you for remembering.
You were a survivor of this massacre? How did you survive sorry I'm just curious since it sounded like the nazi soldiers left no stone unturned by even burning the village down. I am very curious about history and I never heard about this horrible incident and like to hear stories from those of the time if possible. Condolences for your losses!
im guessing this is a french tv station production and not the channel owners handiwork
😂😂😂😂😂 you’re silly
@@KazukoLight he's not a survivor. He lives nearby in Limoges and is familiar with the place.
@@riadyl3311 seriously?!
"This is the village of Oradour-Sur-Glane. Nobody lives here anymore" -- literally the opening words of the MOST authoritative documentary series on WWII - "The World at War"
Yes, I remember that truly GREAT series. My father and I watched it every Sunday night. And I remember that section on Oradour. It was awful but World at War handled it magnificently.
They built a new town, next to oradour
It is somewhat outdated having been made in the 1970s, before the Soviet Union was dismantled. Definitely the most iconic WW2 series from west though.
Last survivor died February 2023. The brutality of the Warren SS is astonishing. Thank you for this video.
Partisans aré forbbiden in the war.
@@easterworshipper730 Bit less forbidden than murdering an entire town, I'd wager.
@@Spudtron98 the allies killed 70k french civillians during the normandy bombing campaign, they need to keep this Little stories alive to keep the crimes of the Mass murderers under the rug.
@@Spudtron98 the allies killed 70k french civillians during the normandy bombing campaign, they need this type of Little stories alive to keep the crimes of the Mass murderers under the rug.
One sided propaganda
Thank you for reporting about this sad and often forgotten moment of history. I grew up in Limoges, not far from Oradour sur Glane, and I visited the place many times as part of school trips. But more tragically, my grand mother sister died in the church with her 7 year old son, while her husband was killed in the Milord Barn. The pain was still there until my grand mother passed away in 2004. I recommend to everyone to visit the site as it’s an eternal reminder of the horrors of war. There is a bunker, next to the preserved village, where artefacts from that terrible day are exposed, frozen in time, like bullet-riddled baby strollers, watches melted and frozen at the time of the massacre and many more personal and deeply emotional items. Let’s not forget. Peace everyone.
So sorry 😢. .my dad flew US bomber in Italy. The innocent died too. His parents German immigrants here. ❤
Thanks so much for sharing this - such horrible things to have carried through your family’s journey, through your own journey. Did the SS mistake the village for another?
@@peopleofconcience thank you Paul. Actually, it was bad luck. They first stopped at another village, Vigeois, but as the mayor was fluent in German, they moved on to Oradour… Anyway, they had already set they mind on annihilating a village as one of their officer was killed by the resistance. They started by hanging 98 men and one woman in Tulle. Sadly, as mentioned in this video, this happened all around Europe… War is evil.
Muslims do not believe in peace (,read the Quran)..how do you get peace with people who do not want peace with you?...I am listening🤨
Please do a similar story video on Liddice.
I visited this village a few years ago. This documentary is outstanding in bringing it to life. I left the site with a few questions, you just answered them all. Thank you.
I really like that you bring up these awful things without making it a sensational thing about it, the story itself is so powerfull!
I discovered your channel a couple month ago and really liked it, subscribed immidiately, then forgot about it, saw some clip that came up on my feed yesterday from you. Watched it and wanted to subscribe, because it was so well made and saw that I allready subscribed!
Anyway you own me a night of sleep because I more or less watched all your videos which missed and got to sleep about 3:00...
This clip is scary and really good, it is something that our schoolchildren ought to watch and understand what happened during WW2!
Keep up the good work you're doing! 👍
I visited Oradour-sur-Glane a few years ago but I found this video enlightening. I didn't know that there were convictions of some of the surviving SS men. Thanks for taking the time to put this together.
Heart breaking. The atrocities. And so many children. Thank you for this memorial video
In the fall of 2019, while staying in the French village of Bellac, we visited this site. It's interesting to visit and truly shows "man's inhumanity to man." I strongly encourage visiting this site, going through their displays, and then walking through the destroyed village.
It is still happening in every corner of the world. No body cares 😢. the only thing changed is the titles . Some in the name of terrorism some in the name of nationalism and in the name of democracy .
All the deaths are horrible but I can't even wrap my head around the children. Your content is amazing and valuable.
Yes, its horrific Phil - thanks for taking the time to watch.
I stopped the video at the picture of kids and the mention of kills at the very start....I'll watch it later when I will be ready to hear all that..........
Kids death bleeds my heart....
Having visited this village around ten years ago was an incredibly sobering experience. Standing in the doorway to the church, I cried. I had my young son at my side, and I couldn't imagine the horror that befell these inhabitants.
I have visited this village , I found it a very sombre experience. Its a time for reflection on those that make war .🇬🇧
I have as well when I was a teenager. I’ve never forgotten the horrors.
The world is a graveyard at this point @@larrybroxton
I have visited Oradour-Sur-Glane. I arrived early on a Sunday morning, and found myself alone for quite some time, just wandering from house to house, street to street. There is a sign at the entrance that says "SILENCE." Oradour-Sur-Glane is one of the saddest places you will ever visit.
Thank you for this informative and very respectful film. I visited Oradour in the early 1970’s whilst on a touring holiday in France and it left an impression on me that lasts to this day. I managed the walk through the village,stopping respectfully at the varying sites of the barbaric murders, until I arrived at the cemetery. It was the fact that the dates of death on the gravestones were all the same just set me off and I shed many a tear over them.
Excellent documentary, I've just returned from Oradour-Sur-Glane, it was a very moving and humbling experience, never forget.
I would like to visit there one day. Did you hire a car or is there public transport there from Paris or another nearby city?
I knew this story from my French mother, a child during WW2. Thank God for the English Channel and Spitfires.
I was born in Tulle, the town where the 99 men were hanged (one of the 100 escaped jumping into the Correze river but was shot), and I visited Oradour.
in somtimes in the late 80s early 90s (did not rememeber, I must have been 6 or 7 years old, the town of tulle organized a reconstitution with mannequin of the hanged, I did not well understood but I still remember it. There is still a memory garden outside of the town, beautiful.
My grand uncle fought in the battle of Tulle against the german garrison, and they fled when the SS Div came; he has told me a few time about this before his death.
My grand ftaher was working in a field south of oradour the day before the massacre, and he has seen the vehicles passing, everyone hiding because nobody knew what they can do, and my great grandparents were hiding jews.
What a sad period, books have been written, but I had already bring my children to visit Oradour after 10 years old, I think "Souviens Toi", remember, is the most important thing there
I visited the village today with my wife. God rest their souls.
Excellent work. Brilliant to see the village as it would have been. I've been to Oradour and it was a sobering visit.
"Down this road on a summer day in 1944, the soldiers came. Nobody lives here now. They stayed only a few hours. When they had gone, the community, which had lived for a thousand years, was dead. This is Oradour-sur-Glane, in France."
Laurence Olivier opening the first episode of "The World at War".
Probably the best series on
British television. Ever.
@@gazza2933It really is.
Partisans aré forbbiden in war.
I am French and Oradour is still a painful memory for me, however I support the friendship with German peoples because they made a remarkable collective work on their past that should inspire other folks including French.
As it was,even after the war,Germans were bombing,still bombing elsewhere 2nd war may ended forUK but war hadnt ended,as history says tells,what went down,just as despicable,the others involved,dads great city,story untold truths not being told, &wasntGermans who assassinated my g.pa,nor who targeted my dad,forced exile just bc his titles,not bc done wrongs,the hidden stories,abuses still behind the scene,politics lies deceit.Born into it so i born of no country when born a exile,told it,the cruelty of humans still,&humans who dont want the truth be,the story deserves needs to be told.Its amazing how being silenced really is still very real,for the very few. This is such a sad awful story&no lessons learnt,as we watch hear in the now, still there is these murderous vile,in this world,who go in against Ukraine. The innocent civilians&includes many children,being killed for bc its like just a blood sport for some who have no empathy in them, towards other humans.
🙌 👏 🙏 🤝 👍 most of the poor german folks were obedient victims. One innocent single joke about the "Fueher" -> K Z !!!
Germany knows it’s past, that’s why they say it out loud, so no other country or people go this route. To bad ruzzia can’t get truths.
Thank you for sharing this. My grandmother grew up in a town very close by to where this happened as well as born in a town that was even closer (Azerables).They never forget this and it just made the people more dedicated to helping the resistance. She was only 9 when this happened.
My French teacher lost her older sister in Oradour on that day. All she could find to remember her by was a scorched piece of the blue coat her sister was wearing, and on every jacket or coat my teacher wore she had sewn a small blue square of that material on the lapel.
We were curious as to why that was, and one day a boy asked... The reason was given. along with a history and philosophy lesson which left us extremely moved and respectful. Needless to say there was never a need for the question to be asked or the reason given again for as long as we or the teacher stayed at the school... EVERY PUPIL KNEW... and so it is I am sure wherever that teacher went, and whichever school she taught at.
I am now in my 70s and therefore I think the teacher will have met her sister again... but none of us have forgotten the blue squares I am sure.
Like me... many will have one day gone to visit the French village near Limoges... Lest we forget...
That's a moving story. Wow.
I got a screenshot of your extremely moving comment. What a testimony to her sister’s memory, and testimony to all the people who lost everything to the brutality of this unforgettable time. God bless you and thank you for sharing this story.
@@mynamedoesntmatter8652 If only the world had learnt from such unforgettable and unforgivable episodes! The brutality is still here and rising all around despite the cruel and shameful lessons of History...
Rubbish fairy tale
@@3bebles And now Putin is devastating and laying waste to Ukraine. So sad and such a waste. 🥲
RIP
To the 643 French civilians who were murdered by the Waffen-SS under Adolf Diekmann and Heinz Lammerding in the Oradour-sur-Glane massacre
Thank you for keeping this horror alive so that history does not repeat itself.
You think this does not still happen? It happens in all wars, all of the time.
Already has, and will continue to happen. We are just as savage as chimps in the jungle. We just have better weapons.
I went there a few years ago .. saw the bicycle and the car and the pram in the church. it was heartbreaking and never to be forgotten. The part that was most hurtful were the names of many villagers on their house and their profession. Made it all so real rather than imaginitive. This was very upsetting but thank you for keeping this alive. Never forget.
I visited when I was 14yrs old, I am now 48yrs old yet remember it like yesterday. Especially the pram, the car and the cemetery. I try to tell people about it but they simply don’t understand. Rest in eternal peace sweet people 😢
Thankyou for taking the time and trouble to reconstruct this.
Thank you John, it was a video we really felt needed doing.
I have been there. I will never forget, the silence and the sadness when we walk through that memorial. very moving.
Thank you for your time and dedication in the making of this video to educate and document the horrific actions of that day back in 1944.
Rest in peace Oradour-Sur-Glane. 🙏🏻
I visited Oradour with 2 friends about 4 years ago. We walked round almost in silence thinking of the people, families, children who died there. There is no valid justification and never will be. These place and others must be remembered and we must remember them every time an army seeks to invade another country. The actions of the SS were repellent, evil, but sadly the same is still happening today in Europe and around the world. We need to learn.
Ukraine n Gaza
I actually visited the village when I was on holiday, there is a museum as well. It is heartbreaking walking around the village, it really hits home what happened there, a whole village murdered, men, women, children and even baby's.
Kind of seriously messed up that the IDF are adopting the same mentality in 2024. But, here we are. 😢
@@alexperriman9298 The IDF aren't using women and children as human shields though, are they. So not the same mentality or circumstances.
@@alexperriman9298 French resistance hasn't dug weapons caches and subterranean bases under this villige, or used it's population as a shield. As far as i know.
I am British and like in a a large town near Oradour-Sur-Glane, I have visited this French nation monument one it was so upsetting I have not been back for a second visit. Nothing has been removed.
Thank you for the video. My nextdoor and his wife passed away a few years ago now, well into their 90's, but they would often come over with bags of garden produce or fruit they'd grown, and share a small tipple. They told me about friends and family they lost in nearby Oradour; the hardships of near starvation, surviving on chestnuts, turnips and Jerusalem artichokes during winter months, and how in our local woods, some French were taken out and shot for denouncing others to the Germans.
There was no bravery in the German actions at Oradour-Sur-Glane, only the villagers showed that.
The German soldiers and their leaders, proved how cowardly they were, when faced with unarmed men, woman, children and babies they tortured and murdered the lot, but for a handful that survived.
German soldiers replaced bravery, with senseless bastardry.
This video brought me to tears.
The town of Lidice in today's Czech Republic also suffered a similar fate. I wonder what today's residents of Oradour-sur-Glane think of this atrocity. I have read the website outlining these events, and the story and the inescapable events are hard to forget.
This video deserves all the recognition it can get. Very well put together, thank you.
No, its just hate.
I visited this village a few years back and it is still fresh in my memory I also visited the resistance museum in Limoges and spent some time with a old resistance volunteer and talking about his experiences fighting against the invasion and his old comrades he lived in a small hamlet near Bellec.
I lived 25 minutes from Oradour went there many times to show visitors who came to visit me ,and every time just couldn’t believe that men could do such a terrible terrible thing .
“ The day the soldiers came” see the classic World At War tv series, narrated by Laurence Olivier , about this village..
Still my favorite documentary.🇦🇺
I think it's clear that the narrator of this video has also watched The World at War series and been influenced by Olivier's narration.
A total disgrace
Starts with it finishes with it, I’ve been there it’s moving!
a French man was recently apprehended in Scotland and extradited to France and jail. his purported crime? he didn't just question this narrative so sacred to the French, he had plenty of evidence. So he's in jail awaiting trial.
When I was a boy I watched an episode of World at war narrated by Lawrence Olivier which featured this atrocity and from then I always wanted to visit the village. I got my chance in 2013 whilst on a motorcycle trip to France. Walking round on a miserable wet day and reading the plaques with pictures of the inhabitants of each wrecked building was hard going but walking into the church knowing quite a lot of women and children were killed there broke me. I'm glad I got to visit though.
My wife and I visited Oradour Sur Glane some 5 years ago. It was heartbreaking we as visitors reading the story whilst walking the streets we could not comprehend the sheer brutality that went on that day, we will never forget that day.
It reminds me of the hellstorm documentary. There were terrible atrocities in that as well.
So many stories have come to light through the aid of technology. Stories that were nearly forgotten by the most are now widely available . Thank you for putting this together.
I visited here and it was one of those places that stayed with me. After I left.
Walking around the village was truly a sad experience.
Strangely there were no bird sounds just a silence. Heartbreaking memorial to the cruelty of war and those poor villagers mindlessly murdered. May their souls rest in peace.
Thank you for this very intresting video and reconstruction of the village. The immortality of this horrendous and barbaric act is that most of the SS involved never paid for their acts, after the Bordeaux trail of 1953, freed after only a few years in prison. I have been there and was shocked to see that noting grows, not a bird sings. A village frozen in time
May they all rest in peace.😢😢
I don't believe any of this.
@@redwater4778 You had better go and have a look at the remains of this village. - You will then believe. I have been there and it is very sobering.
@@redwater4778 In that case you're an idiot.
A great video! Thank you for making it. I've seen the footage of the aftermath of the massacre and it is haunting.
Thabks very much Brad, glad you enjoyed it! DH
@@BattleGuideVT It's very well done! I hope to see more like this on the channel. This something I'd love to be able to do on my channel some day.
The television series The world at war, starts the premier episode in the village and ends the last episode with images of the village. The voice of Laurence Olivier, haunts me fifty years later.
My wife and I visited here in 2017 on a trip to France. I was at once both appalled and fascinated by the scene. My wife could barely speak. Strangely enough the day we were there the was a school group, who, sadly, maybe didn't understand the gravity of the village, and spend more time laughing and on their phones! It made a surreal place even more sad. Every 10th of June I remember the village and those poor souls, and remind myself that cruelly today, this is happening STILL around the world. Thank you for creating and sharing.
It killed me. "spent more time laughing" Stupid parents who give to children a stupidphones.
Yes. Adults need to be adults, and make those kids put away their damn phones.
Hello, I live 150km from Oradour sur Glane which I have never visited and whose tragic history I know, you have really told it very well with the right amount of detail and information, your 3D animation of the town takes you back to what this small village was like before this heinous massacre!
Congratulations to the person who comments on this video and who took the care and trouble to pronounce all the French words and names in French, it's important, because it gives more strength and realism to the story!😊
Thank you very much for the kind comments.
@@BattleGuideVT 😊
So many horrific acts during WWII. I had not heard about this atrocity before and want to thank you for doing this video and uploading it up here.
No problem, thanks for taking the time to watch.
Very well presented. My father took us there when we were young. I will never forget it. I’ve read several articles about it over the years. The tragedy of war, of man’s inhumanity to man is shown there. May the souls of all martyred for France rest in peace 🙏🙏🙏
My wife and I visited about 10 years ago on a chilly December day. We walked through the village then up the lane to the cemetery. I was moved by the inscription on many graves “murdered by nazis”. Made it real for this man from Australia who had never seen such a thing before. Thanks for the video so I could revisit and remember.
This atrocity was not the only massacre committed in France by Nazis. It happened in many other places, like in the village of Maillé, central France, where 124 civilians were killed by another SS unit, on August 25, 1944. More than 2 months after DDAY. Among them many children and women. But unlike Oradour Sur Glane, this village was rebuilt after the war.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maill%C3%A9_massacre
During 4 years, about 30000 French civilian hostages or captured Maquis fighters had been executed on the spot without any trial, just after their capture. It was not uncommon to shoot 30 or 40 civilian hostages taken at random, for only 1 Nazi officer or soldier killed :
ua-cam.com/video/dsvA0UkdRuw/v-deo.html
@@alainproviste3523 don’t forget Lidice
Oh man, my gf and I stumbled upon this place in 93, looking for a campsite. We checked it out and we were the only people there, late afternoon in June. It was haunting. The pamphlet we were given said Souvenir-Vous. We still have it.
Hello, I have been there several times, I lived maybe 50 miles from Oradour, now I live in Normandy.
Of all the messages written on this page, you wrote the most accurate word to describe the atmosphere there: HAUNTING.
When you walk in those streets, you can hardly talk...I do not have the words to describe it, I felt not only sad, but also really scared.
The pamphlet actually says "Souvenez-vous", which means "Remember".
It looked like a fruit-stand on the side of the road, only next to a fenced area I thought might be a campsite. The bored girl in the stand mentioned one nearby and since we had already stopped, we went in. We didn't expect a Nazi atrocity. Not in that part of Europe. It was a lonely feeling. When we left the stand had closed and the sun was low. We found the campsite and didn't say much until the next day.
I visited this village with a Dutch school group about 15 years ago. I expected the teens to not understand the significance of what they were viewing. Instead, the total impact of it all fell down upon my formally laughing students. The ride back to Limoges was in total silence. The horrors of war had seized them all. I will never forget this village and the horrible actions of the Germans.
Dumb take. Next you'll want to expell chimpanzees from the Animal Kingdom.
And did you ever take them to Deir Yassin?
@@henryb160 Would you like a side of fries with your whataboutism, Adolf?
I've visited here a few times, and my in-laws lived quite close. It's a very sobering and sombre place. Great video and explanation, as I wasn't aware of the whole story. Thanks.
Thank you very much for bringing this village to life once again. The horrors experienced by the people of Oradour-sur-Glane are hard to bear even today. Even if a clash with the French resistance was the motive for the tragedy, it remains a cowardly and unforgivable act by vengeful German soldiers who were nothing but murderers. All honour to the mothers of Oradour!
Amazing video, cuts to the bone.
May all who perished RIP
Went there in 2008.
It's an eery experience what was sobering was the cemetery with so many headstones dated 10th June 1944
One of the most well made documentary's I have ever seen ! First I have ever heard of this event . Myself a US Army vet of 2 wars & 70 years old . I am sickened by anyone calling themselves a soldier that intentionally kills unarmed civilians . Orders be damned . Events like these are so disgusting it makes me ashamed of my German Ancestry . No soldier should ever follow any such orders & should do everything to stop it .
Germen were in total panic. In lorient submariner refused to go in uboat and hiddent in the streets city totally destroyed feared to be kill by population.
"Nobody should follow such order"
U know american bomb have kill 200 000 french civil. Big cities have been totally erased of the map by american army.😅
In neutral point of views death is death.
An interesting post script, I discovered when I visited a few years ago. The people of the village were awarded, by De Gaulle, a combined Legion de Honeur and a massive bronze plaque that was presented and hung in the new village. After the amnesty of the French SS soldiers convicted of the massacre in the ‘53 trials, the village sent back both the medal and plaque in disgust. Even removing the notation of the medal from the town name.
They also withdrew the open invite for French Govt officials, including De Gaulle, to parade with the survivors and relatives annually at the remembrance service in the old village. This lasted to the early 80’s, before accepting the govt back. But they’ve still, as of 2019, asked for the medal, plaque or heading on the town name.
It’s an eerie place to visit. People are all quiet and treat it with great respect. Children can’t play there, or make a noise. It’s only very recently that photography in the old village has been allowed.
Thank you for a very interested video. It’s very thorough and detailed. 👍
Here in greece we have ours oradour sur glan. The name of village is kalavrita.A BIG MASSACRE .in 13 december 1943 the 117 gebirgsjager division burned kalavrita and other 26 villages.1300 greeks inhabidans massacred with mg 42 machine gun on a hill out of the kalavrita and in the other villages in the orthodox churches with mp 40 submachineguns and grenades by the german beasts..all the male population from 12 -80 years old.you can find it if you google it.KALAVRITA MASSACRE
Ja sam Srbin i čitao i gledao o kalavriji
@@VasaSavanovic write it in english.we dont understund
@@mikiszezas2731 how it possible that German nation don't pay full prize for inaction in ww2 and survive. That is prof that vikings have intention vith Russia
Beautifully and respectfully put together. It brought tears to my eyes knowing what those innocent people went through. God bless them and RIP.
Thank you for this video. It was hard to watch even now, but I think it is important to remember so we do not forget and repeat history.
Thank you for your comment!
Another village that suffered this fate was Lidice, Czechoslovakia. You can that story on UA-cam also.
i visited this village with my family many years ago now, but the impact of walking the streets, seeing items standing or hanging on walls, in many cases the names of the family that live in houses attached to burnt walls, the sadness of walking the church yard, but most of all you could still smell burning throughout the village, that experience never left my family or myself, everybody should make an effort to go see for themselves, in wars NO body wins
I also visited the town 28 years ago. The silence and the way things are frozen in time profoundly shakes the soul. The scale of the indiscriminate inhumanity, to destroy an entire town in a few hours, is so distressing. The drive home was silent and I have never forgotten that day.
We will never fully identify the contribution made by the people of Oradour-Sur-Glane regarding the Normandy landings without their efforts D-Day may not have been as successful on day one as we now know with hindsight. The sacrifice of the citizenry of Oradour should never be forgotten.
Never heard of this. Thank you. Left as it was...necessary for us to remember.
Wonderful presentation and re-telling of this savage and brutal slaughter.
From research I did myself after visiting Oradour-sur-glane, it seems likely that Helmut Kampfe was captured on 9th June and, along with some other SS officers, was burned alive in the back of a German field ambulance.
Diekmann, a personal friend of Kampfe came across his remains on the morning of the 10th June, outside the village. Some speculate this is why he locked the women and children inside the church before setting it alight, as retribution.
Either way, I'll never forget my visit to the village. It's shocking and stark.
Excellent job with your video.
Visited the village in July this year. I found it to be a desperately sad place, and the massacre was difficult to understand. The new village really does convey a feeling of a new beginning. Excellent film.
It is the most haunting and moving place which I have ever visited . May they continue to Rest in Peace .
Went several times as a kid. We had a house nearby. It’s a haunting place. Going into the church and seeing the bullet holes in the walls. Unreal
This was also used in the introduction of the 1970s war documentary The World at War. Thanks for the video!
A superb presentation of a nauseatingly sad and downright evil event in history…
According to the narative writen when you enter Oradour, things where a lot more vicious than this story tells. In the church, the SS poured petrol by the windows and hand grenades to make the bodies unrecognisable. The men, where to stand on street corners then shot only in the legs. While they where partially immobilised laying down, then also, petrol was poured over them and lit to burn them alive. That is the more accurate sad reality of Oradour sur Glane !
Leaving the parking, passing by the tunnel leading to the town, there are pictures and describtives of what did happen there. I saw there a lot of people starting to cry before even entering the town.
Having watched the series ''The World at War' narrated by Sir Lawrence Olivier in the early seventies I had to vist Oradour myself. In 2019 I made that special trip. Heartbreaking experience heightened by the families buried together at the cemetery. Elderly alongside infants was indeed painful. Unimaginable wickedness that sadly, today, some people still show.
I remember watching that too. We are never too young or too old to take lessons ftom history.
Thank you for sharing this heartbreaking piece of history.
A nicely filmed documentary of the horrific SS deed, they were the worst, because they did not shy away from killing women and children. Here in Bohemia, a similar fate befell the villages of Lidice and Ležáky. It was terrible and one does not even want to imagine it, but we must not forget!
It’s so important for people to see what “civilized” society is capable of, not only a few generations ago. These poor people were just trying to live their lives, and were rounded up by monsters, and killed. These things still happen even today, and go unreported……
I came across Oradour by accident l was travelling by car driving up from the South to look at a property near Limoges, l knew nothing of the history, but as l approached l honestly felt a real chill go right through me, a sixth sense if you will or foreboding of something terrible, on this warm summer afternoon, l actually felt it before l saw it, l didn’t realise what it was but l knew l had been affected by something and stopped and wrote down the name intending to look up later this place, l hardly stopped a minute by the side of the road but will remember it as l still do for the rest of my life that eerie feeling. Later that evening l telephoned my wife and told her l had this weird experience of something dreadful (still ignorant) as my first thought something terrible may have happed at home - lm not normally a person to get these awful premonitions
I visited Oradour to see for myself what happened that awful day. It will live in my memory forever. Thank you for making this video. As the plaque at the entrance says ‘Remember’.
I'm American and 61. I watched the World at War series all the time in my teens. I have always been interested in history and that show was impactful. .
I also speak French and have been to France/Europe 3 times in my life. I spent 3 months there in 1983 but for some reason I didn't get to the beaches at Normandie until my last visit in 2018. (Altho I was at Mont St Michel)
I do not remember the details of the WaW series, but this fall I plan to go to France with my friend of 40+ years who grew up in Paris and moved to the US at age 22. I will ask her if we can go here. I would like to, to pay respects. Such a sad story of the cruelty of mankind.
Thank you for the very well done video.
You advertising yourself or?
@@sextempiric7137 haha. I lost my dance studio to covid and have lots of time on my hands. Entertaining myself by watching UA-cam.
Sorry for infringing on your life! Lol
The last survivor of the Oradour massacre, Robert Hebras, passed in February of this year, age 97. God rest his soul.
Very importantly reminds us that the SS Panzer Division responsible were just beasts We should always remember the inhabitants of Oradour-Sur-Glane. A story well told of a Crime against humanity never to be forgotten.
Great video!! Ive been to Oradour its so haunted and sad..i was the only one walking around..the cemetary has glass coffins with bones of the victims ...I agree when you enter the village and see the word "Remember " carved in stone it is really haunting..
That comment section is absolutely wild. Some people are absolute garbage but the worst part is they need to let the world know.
Yep agreed! There are some absolute idiots out there. Don’t know why they feel the need to comment what they do on these videos. What an awful atrocity, needs to be remembered!
A lot of frenchmen didn`t want to know what their relatives did in WW2 ; at least the only thing they got teached in shool they are a nation of winners! .....
@@yurigagarine6998 Yes , even most of the russian population actually think similar.
No kidding
@@wolfgangemmerich7552 do you go in French school ? You talk about French school following your own expérience ?
Its insane to think that within living memory these despicable acts were carried out by a so called "Civilised nation"......So hard to take in!!!!!
Thank you for making an effort to tell this very important story.
Beautifully put together. Love the reconstructions.
@@candyclews4047 thank you
Thank you Paul.
Thank you for compiling this video ,it was very well done .Very well put together .
LEST WE FORGET ❤
I live in rural eastern France, five minute away from my town is another one where the SS locked a hundred people in the church before setting it on fire, it happened after D DAY with German forces leaving France and going full scorched earth.
In my hometown they blew up 2 bridges and the railway over the river to stop allied advance, nothing was burnt to the ground and no civilians were rounded up as the germans present were not SS.
The mayor from back then begged the Germans not to destroy anything and spare the people, the commander of the garrisson replied he wouldn't do it anyway as it would be pointless and horrible, he had apparently seen the other side of scorched eath on the eastern front.
Impressive video. Even though I had read a book about Oradour-sur-Glane, this video touched me deeply. What a cruelty to humanity. Indescribably sad.
This place reduces grown men and women to tears. Visit, and you will feel it too.
I have visited this place. It's haunting to say the least. It really affected me and I still remember how I felt at the time.
I’ve actually visited there, it’s so chilling and there are no birds, no noise at all. It’s like the universe mourns it too.
Ive been to Oradour Its really creepy especially the cemetery with glass coffins containing bone fragments of the victims .
Never fails to amaze me just how many people back then got away without much of a sentence for their parts in massacres. People who literally murdered thousands of civilians and likely never even saw the inside of a prison, and lived long lives. Unbelievable what people can get away with in times of war.
The main perpetrator of the My Lai massacre, William Calley, lives in Florida, a free man.
They got away with as the USA preferred nazis to socialists .
Well the internet nowadays prevents this from occurring or at the very least it will ensure the culprits won’t go unpunished
@@Great_Lakes_Discus no it doesn't. Look at north Korea, China and the massacres in Africa. That's only a quick example. These massacres are still happening, just not on the same scale.
@@prestigious5s23 that’s not the same thing, those countries are doing that to their own people, we’re talking about WAR crimes
Greece suffered too many massacres under the Nazi occupation- the bloodiest being the Kalavryta massacre where over 500 civilians were executed.
Did you know that on the exact same day as the Oradour-sur-Glane massacre, another massacre took place in Greece : The Distomo massacre, by the SS Polizei Panzergrenadier.
Most of Europe was devastated by World War Two and Axis occupation. It was a human tragedy that will haunt us until the end of time.
I visited my parents in France, many years ago and my Father took me to the village. Although the village is in ruins, you can still get a feel of the tragedy that happened. It certainly tugs at the heart strings.
My Wife and I along with two friends visited Oroudor sur glane in 2001 , that was such a memorable day , we were all shocked to the core , and could not believe our eyes , what a dreadful case of Mans inhumanity To Man , what struck me about this place was the eerie feeling we all felt , and strange though it may seem , I did not see or hear a single Bird , it was a very humbling experience , all those poor souls taken from this earth , and for WHAT ? for , RIP.