World War II: Discover Places of Remembrance in Germany

The Second World War in
Europe ended on May 8, 1945. It raged from 1939 to 1945,
involving Asia and the US as well. After six years, large parts of
Europe and the world lay in ruins. Around 60 million people lost their
lives, a tragically high number. You can learn about the horrors of
this period at many memorials around the world, including in Germany. Which places commemorate the victims? And which tell stories about the perpetrators? And what became of all
the cities destroyed in the war? Let’s find out more. Our journey begins in Berlin. This is where the Second
World War was planned and where it ultimately returned to. The city still holds many reminders of the war and the period of Nazi rule. One such location is the Reichstag,
the seat of the German parliament. You can still see bullet holes and
Russian inscriptions left behind when Soviet soldiers stormed
the building in May 1945. But this was not the Nazis headquarters. More than a decade prior, in 1933,
Hitler dissolved parliament and banned all democratic parties. One of the Nazis’ most important
command centers can be seen at the Topography of Terror Documentation Center. Several of the National Socialists
most important headquarters were once located at this site, including
the Schutzstaffel, or SS for short, and the secret police or Gestapo. Here the Nazis organized many
of their cold blooded crimes. They plotted how to eliminate
political opponents, deport Jews and other victims to concentration camps and organized prisoners of war and forced labourers. We continue to Munich. Here, too, you’ll find a Nazi documentation center. The Bavarian capital played an
important role in the emergence of the National Socialist German
Workers’ Party, the Nazi party. It was founded here in 1920
and one year later Adolf Hitler was elected its chairman. He quickly organized the
party according to his own anti-democratic, anti Semitic and racist ideology. The Munich Documentation Centre is located where the so-called Brown House, the Nazi party headquarters, used to be. An entire NS district was once built
around it, consisting of 68 buildings with 6,000 employees. The Second World War lasted 6 years. At the end, many of
Germany’s cities lay in ruins. The scars of war can still be seen
today, even in places you might not expect, like on the Museum Island in Berlin. Here, in the Colonnade Courtyard,
you’ll find traces of some of the final battles of the war. Or visit the Neues Museum. It was almost completely destroyed
and only rebuilt in the early 2000s in a way that shows some
of the war related damage. The most famous item in the
Neues Museum is the bust of Egyptian Queen Nefertiti. Allied bombing devastated many
German cities, including Nuremberg, Magdeburg, LΓΌbeck, among others. In Cologne, 95 percent of
the old town was destroyed. However, miraculously, the cathedral remained nearly intact, standing tall amid the rubble. Today, the Cologne Cathedral is one
of the most visited sights in Germany. From above you can see how little
of the original cityscape remains. In the city of Dresden, people
gather every year on February 13 to observe a minute’s silence
to commemorate the destruction of their city 80 years ago, On that fateful night in 1945, around 1,000 British and US bombers dropped their deadly cargo over the city shortly before the end of the war. An estimated 25,000 people died
and 80,000 homes were destroyed. All that remained of the
famous Frauenkirche was a ruin. While the center of Dresden
was rebuilt in the post-war period, the ruins of the Frauenkirche
were preserved as a reminder of horrors of war. In the early 1990s reconstruction began, financed by donations from all over the world. Today the church shines
again in all its baroque splendor. Inside the church, you can still see
the old tower cross that was salvaged from the rubble. A replica was donated by
Britain as a gesture of reconciliation. If you want to know when and where
the Second World War came to an end in Europe, pay a visit to the museum
Berlin-Karlshorst in the city’s east. This is where the commanders-in-chief of the German armed forces, or Wehrmacht, signed the unconditional
surrender of Germany on May 8, 1945, in the presence of the four
victorious powers: the Soviet Union, the United States, France and Britain. In Berlin-Mitte, behind the
Brandenburg Gate, you’ll find the Soviet memorial in the Tiergarten. It was built immediately
after the end of the war in 1945. Around 2,500 Soviet soldiers are buried here. The British military cemetery is located in Berlin’s Westend district. Around 3,600 members of the
Commonwealth forces are buried here, most of whom died in air battles over Berlin. Memorials commemorating the victims
of the Second World War can be found all over Germany. The visit to a former concentration
camp is especially moving. In Thuringia, near Weimar, was one
of the largest forced labour camps in Germany, the
Buchenwald concentration camp. Around 266,000 people were imprisoned here: primarily opponents of the regime, Jewish people, queer people and prisoners of war. About 56,000 of them were murdered or died as a result of the inhumane conditions of imprisonment. But now back to Berlin. One of the largest Nazi memorial
sites is the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, dedicated to the approximately 6 million Jewish victims. It is located near the
Brandenburg Gate and consists of nearly 3,000 concrete slabs arranged in a wavelike pattern. Walk through the labyrinth and
let the impressions affect you. Loneliness, hopelessness, feeling lost – a powerful experience. Right next to the Reichstag is the
memorial to the approximately 500,000 murdered Sinti and Roma. The water basin symbolizes
the suffering and the tears shed. We end our tour at the Kaiser Wilhelm
Memorial Church at Breitscheidtplatz. You’ll recognize it by its distinctive appearance: the combination of the
new and old church tower. The church was
destroyed during World War II. In the 1960s it was given a modern new building. But the old tower ruin
was preserved as a highly visible memorial against war and destruction. And as a symbol of peace and reconciliation.

On May 8, 1945, the Second World War, started by Germany, came to an end. In many countries, there are now places of remembrance, memorials and documentation centers about this war which cost millions of people their lives. How and where do Germans remember World War II and honor its victims? We take you along a tour through the countryβ€”from Berlin to Dresden.

00:00 Intro
00:51 Nazi command centers
01:07 Reichstag building
01:37 Topography of Terror
02:16 Munich Documentation Centre for the History of National Socialism
03:07 Reconstructing destroyed cities
03:20 Berlin, Museum Island
04;07 Cologne and Cologne Cathedral
04:37 Dresden
05:22 Frauenkirche
06:00 Places of remembrance
06:08 Museum Berlin-Karlshorst
06:30 Soviet War Memorial, Berlin-Tiergarten
06:51 Berlin 1939-1945 War Cemetery
07:07 Buchenwald concentration camp, Thuringia
07:47 Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, Berlin
08:17 Memorial to the Sinti and Roma Victims of National Socialism
08:32 Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church

CREDITS:
Report: Kerstin Schmidt
Editing: Klaus Hellmig
Supervising editors: Christina Deicke/Elisabeth Yorck
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34 Comments

  1. It is so important to remember the horrors, as time goes on, and more of our elders who had experienced WWII passes away.

    We must never forget there is nothing glorious about wars and killing.

  2. They should paint over the Red Army’s graffiti. They committed some of the worst atrocities of the war when they got to Berlin. By that point, it was just regular Germans fighting and mostly just to keep their families safe

  3. I AM NOT GERMAN … BUT I HAVE FULL RESPECT πŸ™ 🫑 TO THE GERMANS AS A NATION & TO THEIR COUNTRY GERMANY πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺ … WAR IS WAR … WAR IS UGLY … BUT … HOW EVER YOU LOOK AT IT FROM DIFFERENT ANGLES … YOU CAN NEVER BUT ONLY CONFESS OF HOW THE GERMANS ARE A GREAT NATION TO BE ADMIRED … UNBELIEVABLE HOW THEY RECOVERED IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE WAR & STOOD TO BE THE STRONGEST ECONOMY IN EUROPE πŸ‡ͺπŸ‡Ί … NOT ONLY THAT BUT ALSO MAYBE THE 3RD STRONGEST ECONOMY IN THE WORLD … USUALLY … WHEN YOU LOSE IN WAR … THE WINNERS GET TO WRITE ✍️ & SET THE RULES … AMAZING πŸ‘ WITH ALL THOSE COUNTRIES AGAINST GERMANY πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺ IN SECOND WORLD WAR TWO … STILL GERMANY πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺ RECOVERED … & BEING A STRONG ECONOMY πŸ’ͺ… BUT THROUGH THE CONTINUOUS REMEMBRANCE OF THE GUILT OF WAR … THEY KEEP MILKING THIS HEALTHY RICH COW πŸ„ GERMANY πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺ (( MILK πŸ₯›)) IN MONEY πŸ’° AS COMPENSATIONS FOR THE WAR & GUILT OF WAR RESULTS … [[ SAD TO SEE & SAD TO WRITE ABOUT … ]] … THIS HAS TO STOP βœ‹οΈ 🫸 🫷 … THE WAR FINISHED 80 YEARS AGO PLUS … A NEW GERMAN GENERATION IS BORN BUT STILL HAS TO SUFFER & PAY COMPENSATIONS FOR THE PAST … IT IS NOT CORRECT … IT IS TIME TO MOVE & GET ON IN LIFE … AGAIN I AM NOT GERMAN … BUT I HAVE FULL ADMIRATION TO THE GERMANS FOR THEIR DNA & THEIR GREATNESS & LOVE TO THEIR NATION & THE ABILITY TO RECOVER & STAND UP HEALTHY & STRONG AGAIN … I PRAY FOR ALL THOSE WHO DIED IN THE WAR FROM ALL NATIONALITIES TO REST IN PEACE … & PRAY FOR ALL TO HEAL … & HOPE THE GERMANS CAN MOVE IN THEIR LIVES FROM SUCCESS TO πŸ™Œ βœ…οΈ βœ”οΈ πŸ‘ πŸ₯‡ πŸ† πŸ™Œ … TO SUCCESS … //ENOUGH IS ENOUGH // … THOSE NEW GERMAN GENERATION MUST ENJOY THEIR LIVES … YOU CAN'T HOLD THEM RESPONSIBLE FOR THE MISTAKES OF THE PAST … THEY ALREADY PAID DEARLY & KEEP PAYING UNTIL TODAY … GIVE THEM A BREAK PLEASE πŸ™ … AGAIN I AM NOT GERMAN … BUT I WISH THE GERMANS TO GET ON WITH THEIR LIVES ESPECIALLY THE NEW GENERATIONS … LET THEM ENJOY THEIR ECONOMIC PROSPERITY … & THEIR LIVES … ((( PAST IS PAST ))) … MAY GOD BLESS ALL THE NATIONS IN THE WORLD 🌎 πŸ™ πŸ™Œ FOR THE BEST INTEREST OF ALL … πŸŽ‰πŸŽ‰πŸŽ‰ …

  4. Typhus was the number 1 killer in the concentration camps, basically in any camp of that period. Hence, the prisoners' heads were shaved to prevent lice from spreading. Every camp had what is called a delousing house, where gas was used to kill lice on the prisoners.

  5. Charles Lindbergh in 1970 β€˜β€™ We won in a military sense, but our western civilisation lost.’’ Just look at our cities….

  6. I'm sorry, but maybe the Germans would remember how many cities they destroyed before the Allies flew over Dresden to destroy it. Dresden looked untouched next to Warsaw. Warsaw was destroyed by the Germans, they never paid for the destruction. Today they complain about what a sad fate Dresden suffered, and I say it was fully deserved and it's a shame that so much has remained.

  7. Had the allies after the first world war helped germany rebuild non of this evπŸ˜‚il would have happened. Just look at Japan today. The west helped Japan rebuild with a flourishing democracy.

  8. Through out history, dictators, monarchs, kings, emperors and pharaohs ALL would create conflicts for any reason they wanted. Its foolish to think all power is resident within ONE person and one person alone, with no checks and balances, can drag his country into war with his neighbors. Democracies tend to be peaceful neighbors but are prone to economic exploitation of their neighbors. Its good to see that Germany maintains visible reminders of what extreme hatred can really do. I can happen again.

  9. It's good to get a German perspective and the sights of urban destruction. I was walking through the Berlin streets as a child around 1952; I was four. I looked at bombed buildings and asked my German grandfather, how? He told me they were bombed. "What are bombs?" I asked him. "Fires that fall from the sky!" See the book Three Royal Terrace, chapter 3, Ronald McGill. My Scottish father took me home to Edinburgh when I was six.

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