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Book Cover
Streaming video

Title Where Birds Never Sang: The Ravensbrueck Concentration Camp
Published [San Francisco, California, USA] : Kanopy Streaming, 2016
Films for Thought, 2011

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Description 1 online resource (streaming video file) (27 min.)
Summary RAVENSBRUCK CONCENTRATION CAMP 1939 - 1945. Seventy-six kilometers north of Berlin is a pastoral setting accessible by a road that winds through a woods of pine trees, with splashes of wild flowers leading down to a lake. There, one can recline on the sandy beach and look across to the medieval town of Furstenberg, or watch local fishermen working from their docks and small boats, old men smoking pipes as they calmly fish for a living, as they have for centuries. Furstenberg is a sylvan setting; its quiet broken only by the breeze moving through the trees and an occasional church bell, quiet, peaceful, a place of refuge for citizens escaping the hubbub of Berlin or simply wishing a moment of reflection and solace. Not far from the center of this village is a wall, rather tall and imposing, made not of hand-cut stones, but of concrete. Even more startling, more incongruous, is the second wall of barbed wire. It is only then that we realize that behind this wall separating tranquility from history is Ravensbruck. Ravensbruck was not the only concentration camp for women, there were many others. Ravensbruck was the largest concentration camp for women on the grounds of the German Reich. SACHSENHAUSEN CONCENTRATION CAMP 1936 - 1945. Located in Oranienburg, a small town at the northern edge of Berlin, Sachsenhausen concentration camp was built in the summer of 1936 by prisoners from other concentration camps. It was the first camp to be built after "Reichsfuhrer SS" Heinrich Himmler was put in charge of the German police in July 1936. The new concentration camp was designed and planned by SS architects to be the ideal camp. It was to express the world view of the SS in its architecture and at the same time symbolically subdue the prisoners to the absolute power of the SS. Sachsenhausen concentration camp took on a special position in the system of NS concentration camps. This was highlighted by the move of the concentration camp inspectorate's administrative department from Berlin to Oranienburg. The inspectorate was responsible for all of the concentration camps within the German realm of power. Between 1936 and 1945, more than 200,000 people were imprisoned in Sachsenhausen. At first the prisoners were political opponents of the National Socialist regime, then came the people declared by the National Socialists to be racially or biologically inferior, and from 1939 onwards, increasing numbers of citizens from occupied European countries were transported to the camp
Analysis European/Baltic Studies
Jewish Studies
Notes In Process Record
Title from title frames
Film
Credits Cinematographers, Thomas Meeves, John Henry Marcell, Thomas Wind ; editor, Dina Potocki ; music advisor, Ralph Selig
Performer Narrator, Jill Eikenberry ; actors, Sam Harry, Ania Keal, Jon Laskin, Suzanne Toren, Robert Zimmerman
Event Originally produced by Films for Thought in 2011
Notes In English
Subject History, Modern.
Politics
History, Modern.
Genre/Form Educational films.
Educational films.
Films éducatifs.
Form Streaming video
Author Films for Thought (Firm),
Kanopy (Firm)