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1-9 of 9
- 99% of those who carried out the murders in the Holocaust were never prosecuted. Why not?
- In 1970, protests broke out in several coastal cities in Communist Poland. Workers went on strikes to object to price increases. Growing numbers of protesters walked out onto the streets. As the situation became tense, a crisis team gathered in the capital. With the help of animations combined with telephone recordings, we can peek behind the closed doors of dignitaries' offices. Hundreds of cigarettes are smoked. Conversations get cut off. Strategies to break up protesters and future repressions are planned. Propaganda activities are thought up. The protests get out of control.
- The creativity and uncompromising attitude of Józef Mackiewicz were a challenge and a problem, not only for the authorities of the People's Republic of Poland, but also for the emigration circles. Mackiewicz was the first Pole (along with Ferdynand Goetel and Jan Emil Skiwski) to see the corpses of Polish officers in Katyn. Being an opponent of any agreement with the Soviets, he always spoke loudly and consistently about the truth about the Katyn massacre.
- In June 1941, the German army invades the USSR. Following behind are the Einsatzgruppen, 3000 men grouped into four "intervention groups" each given a designated geographical region, sent to exterminate Jews and enemies of the Reich.